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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Highwayman, by H. C. Bailey
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Highwayman
+
+Author: H. C. Bailey
+
+Posting Date: November 23, 2011 [EBook #9749]
+Release Date: January, 2006
+First Posted: October 15, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HIGHWAYMAN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan and PG
+Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE HIGHWAYMAN
+
+ BY
+
+ H. C. BAILEY
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. THE COMPLETE HERO
+
+ II. THE HOUSE OF WAVERTON
+
+ III. A MAN OF MANY WORLDS
+
+ IV. A GENTLEMAN'S PURSE
+
+ V. THE WORLD'S A MIRACLE
+
+ VI. HARRY IS NOT GRATEFUL
+
+ VII. GENEROSITY OF A FATHER
+
+ VIII. MISS LAMBOURNE LOOKS SIDEWAYS
+
+ IX. ANGER OF AN UNCLE
+
+ X. YOUNG BLOOD
+
+ XI. ABSENCE OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+ XII. IN HASTE
+
+ XIII. DISTRESS OF A MOTHER
+
+ XIV. SPECTATORS OF PARADISE
+
+ XV. MRS. BOYCE
+
+ XVI. THE AFFAIR OF SIR GEORGE
+
+ XVII. RETURN OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+ XVIII. HARRY IS DISMISSED
+
+ XIX. ALISON FINDS FRIENDS
+
+ XX. RETURN OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+ XXI. CONSOLATIONS BY A FATHER
+
+ XXII. TWO'S COMPANY
+
+ XXIII. THE HOUSE IN KENSINGTON
+
+ XXIV. QUEEN ANNE IS DEAD
+
+ XXV. SAUVE QUI PEUT
+
+ XXVI. REVELATIONS
+
+ XXVII. VIRTUE IS ITS OWN REWARD
+
+ XXVIII. IN THE TAP
+
+ XXIX. ALISON KNEELS
+
+ XXX. EMOTIONS BY MR. WAVERTON
+
+ XXXI. CAPTAIN McBEAN TAKES HORSE
+
+ XXXII. PERPLEXITIES OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+ XXXIII. REMORSE OF COLONEL BOYCE
+
+ XXXIV. HARRY WAKES UP
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE COMPLETE HERO
+
+
+Harry Boyce addressed Queen Anne in glittering verse. She was not
+present. She had, however, no cause to regret that, for he was tramping
+the Great North Road at four miles by the hour--a pace far beyond the
+capacity of Her Majesty's legs; and his verses were Latin--a language not
+within the capacity of Her Majesty's mind. Her absence gave him no grief.
+In all his twenty-four years he could not remember being grieved by
+anyone's absence. His general content was never diminished at finding
+himself alone. He chose the Queen as the subject of his verses merely
+because he did not admire her. She appeared to him then, as to later
+generations, a woman ineffectual and without interest; a dull woman
+physically, mentally, and perhaps morally; just the woman upon whom it
+would be hardest to make an encomium of any splendour. So he was heartily
+ingenious over his alcaics, and relished them.
+
+From this you may divine much that you have to know about the soul of
+Harry Boyce. It was more given to mockery than enthusiasms, apter to
+criticisms than devotion, not very gentle nor very kind, and so quite
+satisfied with itself and by itself. To be sure, it was yet only
+twenty-four.
+
+You discover also other things less fundamental. He was something of a
+scholar, as scholarship was reckoned in those placid days. He had even
+some Greek--more than Mr. Pope and quite as much as Mr. Addison. His
+Latin verses would have brought him a fellowship at Merton if he had
+been willing to take Holy Orders, "I may take them indeed; but how
+believe they have been given me?" quoth he to the Warden with a tilt of
+one eyebrow. Whereat the Warden, aghast, wrote him off as a youth
+unreasonable, impracticable, and impish. Many others had the same
+opinion of Harry Boyce before the world was done with him. Few of them
+saw in his antics the uncertain spasms of too tender a conscience. But
+you must judge.
+
+Of course he was poor. He could only boast a bob wig, a base thing,
+which, for all the show it made, might have been a man's own hair. He
+wore no sword. His hat lacked feather and lace. His coat and breeches
+were but black drugget, shiny at each corner of him and rusty everywhere.
+His stockings were worsted, and darned even on his excellent calves. His
+shoes had strings where buckles should have been, and mere black
+heels--and low heels at that. As you know, he could walk at a round pace
+with them--a preposterous, vulgar thing. There was nothing in him to give
+this poverty a romantical air. To be sure, he had admirable legs, but the
+rest was neither good nor bad. He was of the middle size and a wholesome
+complexion. You would look at him long and see nothing rare enough to be
+worth looking at. If you looked longer yet you might begin to be
+surprised: his so ordinary face was extraordinary in its lack of
+expression.
+
+The man who owned it must be either very dull of heart and mind, or
+self-contained and of self-control beyond the common. But whatever the
+heart might be, no one ever took the eyes for the eyes of a fool. They
+were keen, alert, perpetually on guard. There is a letter extant--it was
+indeed a dear friend who wrote it--which mocks at Harry for his "curst
+stand-and-deliver stare." But it is a queer thing that most men had to
+know Harry Boyce a long time before they remarked that his eyes were not
+quite of the same colour. The common English grey-green-blue was in both
+of them, but one had a bluer glint than the other. The oddity, when it
+was discovered, seemed to make the challenge of the eyes more defiant and
+more baffling, as though they gleamed from the shadow of a mask.
+
+Not that anyone cared yet whether he wore a mask or his soul in that
+placid, ordinary face. Who should care a pinch of snuff for "a scholar
+just from his college broke loose" with a penny farthing in his pocket,
+who had to pioneer young gentlemen through their Horace and their Tully
+for his bed and board? When you meet him, Harry Boyce was happy in having
+caught for his pupil a young fellow who had not merely money but brains,
+and so sublime a condescension that Harry was not sent away from table
+with the parson when the puddings came. Mr. Geoffrey Waverton was pleased
+to have a value for him, and defended him from his natural duty of being
+gentleman usher to Lady Waverton. So, Mr. Waverton having taken horse,
+Harry was free to go walking.
+
+It was late in a wet autumn, and all the clay of Middlesex slippery as
+butter and, withal, affectionate as warm glue. Harry kept to the highway.
+Though its miles of mud and water were, on the surface, even worse than
+the too green meadows or the gleaming brown furrows of plough land, a
+careful man could count upon its letting him go no further than knee
+deep. When he came to Whetstone, Harry's feet were brown, shapeless,
+weighty masses, but he had not lost either shoe, and he was still in
+hopes of reaching Barnet and a pint of small beer before it was time to
+struggle back. At the worst a dry throat and wet legs were a cheap price
+for escaping the voice of Lady Waverton, who, in the afternoons, read the
+romances of Mlle. de Scudéry aloud.
+
+He could see the tufts of smoke above Barnet and its church on the
+hill-top. He was winding down to the bottom of the valley from which that
+hill rises, when eloquence arrested him. He may at other times have heard
+profanity as copious, but never profanity so vehement or at such speed.
+The orator was a woman.
+
+Harry stood to listen with critical admiration. Madame mixed the ugly and
+the pleasant rarely; she made a charming grotesque. Her mind was very far
+from nice and provided her with amazing images; but she had a pretty,
+womanly voice, and hard though she drove it, it would not break to one
+ugly note. Disgusting epithets, mean threats, poured out in mellow
+music. Harry splashed on round the corner. He was eager to see her.
+
+In the morass at the cross-lanes by the green, a coach was stuck--a coach
+of splendour. It was a huge thing as big as a room, half glass, half gold
+and garter blue, and it swayed luxuriously on its great springs. Six
+horses heaved at it in vain with great splashing and squelching, and a
+whole company of servants, some mounted, some afoot, struggled with them.
+
+The profane woman had half her body and two gesticulating arms out of the
+coach window. She was plainly neither a drab nor in liquor. Harry halted
+out of range of the splashes to examine and enjoy her. She had been
+comely, and still could hold a man's eye with her curves of neck and
+bosom. The piquant features must have been adorable before they sharpened
+and her cheeks faded and the lines came. Her abundant hair must once have
+been gold, and was not yet altogether grey.
+
+"You filthy slug," said she. "Samuel! Stand to it, I say. Damme, I'll
+have a whip about that loose belly of yours! Now pull, you swine, pull.
+Odso, flog the black horse. You, devil broil your bones, lay on to him.
+What now? Od rot you, Antony, you'll see no money this month, you--" She
+became unprintable. As she took breath again, she saw Harry Boyce calmly
+contemplative. "You dog, who bade you stand and gape? Go, give a hand
+there, I say."
+
+Harry touched his hat. "By your leave, ma'am, I am too busy admiring
+you."
+
+"William, put that rogue into the ditch," said she.
+
+All this while a man in the coach had been writing, calmly intent upon
+his tablets as though there was not a sound or a rage within a mile. He
+now stood up, and, while his lady was still execrating through one door
+of the coach, he opened the other and came out. Two of the servants,
+obedient to the lady's oaths, were approaching Harry, who waited them
+with calm and a swinging stick. The man waved his hand at them and they
+turned tail. But he had no further interest in Harry. He stood to watch
+the struggles of his horses and his men. He was of some height, and,
+though past middle age, bore himself with singular grace and vigour. He
+had still a rarely handsome face--too handsome, by far, for Harry's
+taste. The features were of an impossible, absurd perfection. There was
+something superhuman or fatuous, at least something vastly irritating, in
+his assured calm, his air of blandly confident supremacy.
+
+He walked on to the leaders and, with a gesture and a word, set the whole
+team pulling at an angle. Meanwhile the lady had earnestly continued her
+abusive orders, but none of the servants now professed to heed her.
+Dragging the horses on, or labouring hand and shoulder at the wheels,
+they were now effective, and they watched the man's eye as though it were
+an inspiration. Wondering why he did, Harry, too, put his weight on a
+wheel. The horses found a footing in the mire, the coach was dragged on
+to the higher, firmer ground beyond.
+
+My lady subsided. The man came back to the coach and touched his hat to
+Harry. "I'm obliged for your help, sir," he said, and climbed in. They
+drove away towards London.
+
+As the servants swung to their saddles, "Who's your obscene lady?"
+said Harry.
+
+"What, don't you know him, bumpkin?"
+
+"She will never be him. Her shape is all provocative she."
+
+This humble wit was not remarked. His ignorance occupied them, "Oh Lud,
+not to know the Old Corporal!"
+
+One of Harry's eyebrows went up. "That the Old Corporal? Faith, I am
+sorry for him."
+
+He received a handful of mud in his face. With a cry of "Rot your
+impudence," they splashed off.
+
+While he wiped the mud out of his eyes, Harry felt a very comfortable
+self-satisfaction. It was agreeable to pity His Grace of Marlborough. For
+the Duke of Marlborough was still the greatest man in Europe, the
+greatest man in the world--credibly the greatest man that ever lived. A
+pleasant fool, to marry such a wife and to keep her.
+
+Harry Boyce at no time in his life had much admiration for human
+eminence. In this, his hungry youth, he was set upon despising rank and
+power, great fame and pure virtue, as no more than the luck of fools. He
+would always atone by finding sympathy and excuses for any rogue's
+roguery. Highly fortified in this faith by the exhibition of
+Marlborough's matrimonial happiness, he trudged back.
+
+The delay over the coach had left him no time for small ale at Barnet.
+Mr. Waverton, though amiably pleased to deliver Harry from attendance on
+his mother, required constant attendance on himself. He would be, in his
+superb way, disagreeable if Harry were not in waiting when he was wanted
+to take a hand at ombre. Harry liked Mr. Waverton well enough, as well as
+he liked anybody, but found him in the part of offended majesty
+intolerable. So there was some hard walking back to Whetstone. On the way
+his temper was not sweetened by two horsemen at the gallop who gave him a
+shower-bath of mud.
+
+As he came through the village, behold another coach labouring up to the
+high road from Totteridge lane. This had but four horses, no array of
+outriders, no gilt splendours. It was a sober, old-fashioned thing, and
+it rumbled on at a sober gait. "Some city ma'am," Harry sneered at it,
+"much the same shape as her horses."
+
+But half an hour after he saw it again. Where the road was dark through a
+thicket it had come to a stand. "Oh Lud," said Harry, "here's more fair
+madames in the mud. They may sit on it till they hatch it for me." But he
+wondered a little. It was indeed nothing very strange in such an autumn
+to find a coach stuck upon the highway. But two for one afternoon, two so
+near was a generous provision. And hereabouts, where the road ran level
+and high, was a strange place for a coach to choose to stick. "Madame
+seems to be a gross girl," quoth Harry.
+
+And then he saw what made him step out. There were two men on horseback
+by the halted coach--two men with black upon their faces which must be
+masks, and that in their hands which must be pistols.
+
+"Egad, the road's joyful to-night," said Harry. "And two and one make
+three," and he began to run, and arrived.
+
+Of the two highwaymen one was dismounted. The other, holding his friend's
+horse, held also a pistol at the coachman's head, muttering lurid threats
+of what he would do if the coachman drove on. The dismounted man was half
+inside the coach where two women shrank from him, and thence his
+blusterous voice proceeded, "Now, my blowens, hand over, or I'll rummage
+you. A skinny purse? Come, now, you've more than that. What's under your
+legs, fatty? Stand up, I say. Ay, hand out the jewel-box. Now, my tackle,
+what ha' you got aboard? What's under that pretty tucker?" He threw the
+jewel-case out into the mud and, leaning across one woman, reached with a
+fat, foul hand to the younger bosom beyond.
+
+He was prevented by a whistle and a cry, "Behind you, Ben." His companion
+announced the arrival of Harry.
+
+Ben came out of the coach with an oath and thrust his pistol into Harry's
+face. "Good e'en to you, bully. Now cut and run or I'll drill you. Via,
+my poppet."
+
+Harry looked along the pistol and stood fast. The highwayman was no
+bigger than he, and bloated. "I am studying arithmetic, Benjamin," said
+he.
+
+"Burn your eyes, be off with you; run while you may."
+
+Harry laughed and swung his stick at the mud. "But, I wonder, is it
+addition or subtraction? Is it two and one makes three, or--"
+
+"Kick the bumpkin into the ditch, Ben," the man on horseback advised.
+
+"Off with you," Benjamin thrust him back, and in the act the pistol
+wavered. Harry slashed with his stick at the pistol hand. A yell, an
+oath, and the shot came together--a shot which went into the mud and sent
+it spattering about them. Harry sprang away from Benjamin's rush and
+brought his stick down on the hindquarters of the horses. They plunged
+forward, and the man in the saddle, wrestling with them, let off another
+aimless shot. Harry dodged round them and lashed them again, and they
+bolted down the road. He returned to fling himself upon Benjamin, who was
+ramming another charge into his pistol. "It seems to be subtraction,
+Benjamin," said he, embracing the man fervently. "One from two leaves
+one," and they swayed together, and he found Benjamin's body soft.
+
+Benjamin, panting, cursed him. "Od rot you, why must you meddle, bully?
+What's your will, burn you? Ha' done now, and--" Benjamin went down on
+his back in the mud with Harry on top of him. "Ugh! What's the game,
+bully?"
+
+"I think you call it the high toby," said Harry delicately and began to
+sing to the tune of a catch:
+
+"Oh, three merry men, three merry men, three highwaymen were we.
+You in a quag and he on a nag and I on top of the three."
+
+"Lord love you, are you on the road?" Benjamin cried. "Why, rot you,
+did you want a share then? You should ha' said so, bully. Come on now, my
+dear, let's up. We do be gentlemen and share fair enough."
+
+"I warrant you I am having my share," Harry laughed; "and I like it very
+well. But oh, Benjamin, there would have been nought to share if I had
+not come up. No fun at all, Benjamin." He wrenched the pistol away. "'Tis
+I have made the business joyous. You are a dull fellow by yourself."
+
+"Rot you," said Benjamin frankly. "When Ned comes back he'll shoot you
+like vermin."
+
+On which they both heard horses, and both, according to their
+abilities--Benjamin in the mud, and Harry keeping a sure hold of
+him--wriggled to look for them.
+
+Harry laughed. It was certainly not a returning Ned. These horses came
+from the other way, and there were four of them and each had a rider. "I
+fear your Ned will come too late, Benjamin--if, by the grace of God, he
+comes at all." So said Harry, chuckling, and to his amazement Benjamin
+also laughed. Why should Benjamin find consolation in the coming of this
+_posse_? It was not credible that they could be allies of his. Highwaymen
+did not work in gangs of half a dozen.
+
+The four horsemen, urged by the shots or by what they saw, came at a
+gallop and reined up almost on top of Harry and Benjamin. One of them, a
+little man with a lean, brown face, called out, "By your leave, sir!
+What's this?"
+
+"It's a rude fellow, sir," Harry said. "I fear a lewd fellow. By trade a
+highwayman. The highway, indeed, is his life's love, his adored mistress.
+Observe how he cleaves to it." He compressed Benjamin, who squelched,
+into the mud, and rose, standing on Benjamin's chest and stomach.
+
+Benjamin groaned, and the eyes behind his mask rolled towards the little
+man.
+
+"Filthy dog," that little man said with sincere disgust. "Can I serve
+you, sir?" he touched his hat to the women in the coach.
+
+"Why, Benjamin has a friend, one Ned. Ned hath a pistol or so and two
+horses which have bolted with him. But he may yet persuade them to bring
+back his pistols and him. Now, if you would be so good, it would be
+convenient in you to ride on and destroy Ned."
+
+"It's a pleasure, sir," the little man showed his teeth. "And the fat
+rogue there, can I help you with him? Shall we take him on to the
+constables?"
+
+"Oh, I thank you, but my Benjamin is docile. I'll e'en tie him up with
+his garters, and all will be well."
+
+The little man scowled at Benjamin. "I shall hope to be at his hanging,"
+he said incisively. "Sir, your most obedient! Ladies!" he bobbed at them
+and rode off, his three companions close about him in eager talk.
+
+As they went, Benjamin let out a cry of anguish: "Captain!"
+
+The little man and his company used their spurs.
+
+Harry looked at their hurry and then down at Benjamin.
+
+"Now why did you call him that, my Benjamin?" said he. "Indeed, why did
+you call on him at all?"
+
+From behind the mask Benjamin's prominent eyes stared sullenly. He
+said nothing.
+
+Harry shook his head. "I feel that I do not know you, Benjamin. I must
+see more of you," With which he fell upon the man again and twitched
+off the mask. The wig came with it. Benjamin was revealed the owner of
+a big, bald, shiny head with a face which was puffed and purple. "You
+were right, Benjamin," said Harry sadly, "You were kind. To wear a mask
+was charity, nay, decency--what breeches are to other men. That obese
+and flaccid nose--pah, let us talk of something else." He lay upon
+Benjamin and tugged at his sword-belt. Benjamin writhed and groaned.
+His sword was caught underneath him, the hilt deep in the small of his
+back. Harry hauled the sword-belt off at last and gripped at Benjamin's
+wrists. He began to struggle again. "Do not be troublesome or I'll tap
+the beer on your brain. So." He hauled the belt taut about the fighting
+arms and made all fast. Then he sat himself on Benjamin's legs, which
+thus ceased to be turbulent, and, taking off the garters, therewith
+tied the ankles together.
+
+Sighing satisfaction, Harry picked up the pistol and sword, spoils of
+victory, and rose at his leisure. He contemplated the hapless highwayman
+with benign interest for a moment, and turned to the coach. "You are
+still there, ladies? Benjamin is flattered and so am I. But the play is
+over. He will not be amusing for some time, and at any moment he may be
+profane. I see him bursting with it. Pray drive on and remove your chaste
+ears." He restored to them the jewel-case.
+
+"Put him up on the box, sir," the younger woman cried.
+
+"I beg your pardon, madame?"
+
+"We will take him to the constables at Finchley."
+
+"But why? He is beautiful there, my Benjamin, and I doubt he was never
+beautiful before. And I have planted him so firmly. I think if we leave
+him there he may grow and blossom. Do not dig him up again yet. Imagine
+Benjamin in flower! A thing to dream of."
+
+"You are pleased to be witty, sir. Come, we have lost time enough. Put
+the rogue up, and do you mount with us."
+
+Harry became aware that this young woman had a brow of pride. It was
+ample and broad and, after the Greek manner, it rose almost in a line
+with her admirable nose. A noble head, to be sure, but alarming to a mere
+human man. So Harry thought, and he touched his hat and said: "Madame,
+your most humble. Pray what do you want with my Benjamin? Your gentle
+heart would never have him hanged."
+
+Her eyes made Harry feel that he was impudent, which, unhappily, amused
+him. "I desire the fellow should be given up to the law, sir," she said
+coldly. "Have you anything against it?"
+
+"Oh, ma'am, a thousand things, with which I'll not weary you. For I see
+that you would not understand. You are very young (as I hope). Perhaps
+you may soon grow older (which I pray for you). Let this suffice then.
+My Benjamin may deserve a hanging. Who knows? We are not God, ma'am,
+neither you nor I. Therefore I have no mind to be a hangman. And
+you--why, you are young enough to wait another occasion. And so I give
+you good-night. Home, coachman, home."
+
+The young woman stared at him as though he were grovelling stupidity, and
+then lay back on her cushions with a "You will drive on, Samuel."
+
+Harry made his bow, and then, as the coach began to move, there was a
+cry: "Alison! Alison! It is not right!" The older woman leaned forward,
+and for the first time he remarked a gentle, motherly face, much lined
+and worn. "Sure, sir, you will ride with us," she said, and he liked the
+voice. "We may carry you home."
+
+Harry smiled at her. "Nay, ma'am. I am too dirty for such fine company."
+
+"Drive on," said Mistress Alison. And the coach rolled away.
+
+Harry looked down at the wretched Benjamin, whose eyes answered with
+apprehension and anxiety. "What's the game?" said Benjamin hoarsely. "I
+say, master--what d'ye want with me?"
+
+Harry did not answer. He was finding that motherly face, that pleasant
+voice, curiously vivid still. This annoyed him, and he forced himself
+back with a jerk to the oddity of events. "A queer business, my
+Benjamin," he said. "Who was your captain, I wonder?"
+
+Benjamin scowled. "I know nought o' no captain."
+
+"Ah, I thought you did. But I fear you have annoyed the captain,
+Benjamin. Now what had you done--or what had you not done?"
+
+"It's not fair, master," Benjamin whined. "You do be making game of me,
+and me beat."
+
+"I am rebuked, Benjamin. Good-night."
+
+"Oons, ye won't leave me so?" Benjamin howled. "I ha' done you no harm,
+master. Come now, play fair. What d'ye want of me?"
+
+"Nothing, Benjamin, nothing. I like you very well. You are a beautiful
+mystery. Pleasant dreams."
+
+The hapless Benjamin howled after him long and loud. Thereby Harry, who
+had a musical ear, was spurred to his best pace. "It's a vile voice," he
+reflected; "like Lady Waverton's. The marmoreal Alison was right. He
+would be better hanged. But so also would Lady Waverton. She will
+acridly want to know why I am late. Well! It will be a melancholy
+satisfaction not to tell her. That will also annoy Geoffrey, who'll
+magnificently indicate that I owe him an apology. The poor Geoffrey! He
+is so fond of himself!"
+
+His evening was as pleasant as he had anticipated. He won two shillings
+from Lady Waverton at ombre, which made her angry; and lost them to
+Geoffrey, which made him melancholy. For Mr. Waverton loved (in small
+things) to be a martyr.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE HOUSE OF WAVERTON
+
+
+Mr. Waverton had an idea in his head. That was not the least unusual. It
+was, unhappily, a wrong one. That was not unusual either. We must have a
+trifle of Latin. Mr. Waverton, studying Horace, desired to translate,
+_Civium ardor prava jubentium_ "the wicked ardour of the overbearing
+citizens." In vain Harry urged that he was outraging grammar. Mr.
+Waverton did not believe him, did not want to believe him--the same
+thing. Mr. Waverton was convinced that he had an insight into the soul of
+Horace which Harry's pedantic eyes could not share. He explained, as one
+explains to a dull child, the rare poetic beauty of the sentiment which
+he had produced. The hero whom Horace was celebrating, you know, was the
+man superior to the common herd. Now common men (as even Harry might be
+aware) are all overbearing. It is this quality in the vulgar which most
+distresses fine souls (like Mr. Waverton) who desire nothing but their
+just rights.
+
+"I dare say it is," Harry yawned. "If Horace had wanted to mean that, he
+would have said so."
+
+"I often think, Harry, you dry scholars have no sense for the thought of
+a poet," said Mr. Waverton elegantly, and lay back in his chair and
+surveyed Harry.
+
+He was a handsome lad and knew how to set it off. He had height and
+bulk--almost too much of that indeed, and so made light of it by a
+careless, lounging ease. At this time he was only twenty-two, but of a
+precocious maturity. He had the self-possession--as well as the
+full-bottomed wig--of experience and worldly wisdom, and would have liked
+to hear you say so. In its dark aquiline style his face was finely
+moulded and imposing, and already it had a massive gravity. "A mighty
+grand fellow indeed," said Lady Dorchester once, "if only his mouth had
+grown since he was a baby." It has to be admitted that Mr. Waverton's
+mouth, a small, pretty feature, was oddly assorted with the haughty
+manner in which the rest of him was constructed. The ladies who lamented
+that were, for the most part, consoled by his eyes--large, dark eyes of a
+liquid melancholy. But my Lord Wharton complained that they looked at him
+like a hound's.
+
+Mr. Waverton was an only son, and fatherless. He had also great
+possessions. From his house of Tetherdown all the fields that he could
+see stretching away to the Essex border were of his inheritance. His
+mother was no wiser than she should have been. She consisted spiritually
+of admiration for herself, for the family into which she had married, and
+the son whom she had borne. "After all," said Harry Boyce in moments of
+geniality, "it's wonderful the boy has come out of it so well."
+
+Mr. Waverton, thanks to vacillation of himself and his mother, doubt as
+to what career, what manner of education, what university, could be
+worthy his talents, went up to Oxford at last and (for those days) very
+late. After doing nothing for another year or two, he decided (which was
+also unusual for a gentleman of means in those days) that he had a genius
+in pure literature. Therefore Harry was hired to decorate him with all
+the elegances of Greek and Latin.
+
+The appointment was considered a great prize for a lad so awkward as
+Harry Boyce. It might well end in a luxurious competence--a stewardship,
+for example, and marriage with my lady's maid. "That is, if you play your
+cards well, sirrah," the Sub-Warden felt it his duty to warn Harry's
+difficult temper.
+
+"Oh, sir, I could never play cards," said Harry, for the Sub-Warden was a
+master at picquet. "I am too honest."
+
+Yet he had not fallen out with Mr. Waverton. It is probable that he was
+careful to keep on good terms with his bread and butter. But he had
+always, I believe, a kindness for Geoffrey Waverton, and bore no ill will
+for his parade of supremacy. Tyranny in small things, indeed, Mr.
+Waverton did not affect. He had a desire to be magnificent. Those who did
+not cross him, those who were content to be his inferiors, found him
+amiable enough and, on occasion, generous....
+
+"Shall we try another line, Mr. Waverton?" said Harry wearily.
+
+"I have a mind to make an epigram," Mr. Waverton announced. "The
+arrogance of the vulgar, the--the uninstructed--perhaps I lack the _mot
+juste_, but _quand même_--the mansuetude of the loftier mind. A fine
+antithesis that, I think." He stood up, walked to the window, and looked
+out. Away down the hill the fields lay in a mellow mist, the kindly
+autumn sun made the copses glow golden; it was a benign scene, apt to
+encourage wit. Mr. Waverton lisped in numbers, but the numbers did not
+come. He turned to seek stimulus from Harry. "You relish the thought?"
+
+"It is a perfect subject for your style," said Harry.
+
+Mr. Waverton smiled, and turned again to the window for productive
+meditation.
+
+A third man came lounging in, unheard by Mr. Waverton's rapt mind. He
+opened his eyes at the back which Mr. Waverton turned upon Harry and the
+space between them. "Why, Geoffrey, have you been very stupid this
+morning? And has schoolmaster stood you in the corner? Well done, Mr.
+Boyce. I always told you, spare the rod and spoil the child. Shall I go
+cut a birch for you?"
+
+"I wonder you are not tired of that old jest, Charles," said Waverton
+with a dignity which did not permit him to turn round.
+
+"Never while it annoys you, child."
+
+"Mr. Waverton is in labour with a poem," Harry explained.
+
+"And it's indecent in me to be present at the ceremony? Well, Geoffrey,
+postpone the birth." He sat himself down at his ease in Geoffrey's chair.
+He was a compact man with only one arm. He looked ten years older than
+Geoffrey and was, in fact, five. The campaign in Flanders which had
+destroyed his right arm had set and hardened a frame and face by nature
+solid enough. That face was long and angular, with a heavy chin and an
+expression of sardonic complacency oddly increased by the jauntiness of
+its shabby brown wig.
+
+Waverton turned round wearily upon the unwelcome guest. "Well, Charles,
+what is it?"
+
+"It is nothing. My dear Geoffrey, if I had anything to do or anything to
+say why should I come to you?"
+
+"_Merci_, monsieur," Waverton smiled gracious indulgence.
+
+Mr. Hadley chuckled, and in French replied: "Yes, let's talk French; it
+embellishes our simple wit and elevates our souls above the vulgar."
+
+There is reason to believe that Waverton liked his French better in
+fragments than continuously. He still smiled condescension, but risked no
+other answer.
+
+"Come, Geoffrey, what's the news?" Mr. Hadley reverted to English.
+"Could you say your lessons this morning? And did you wear a new coat
+last night?"
+
+"You may go if you will, Harry. Mr. Hadley will be talking for some
+time," Waverton said. "Indeed, he may, perhaps, have something to say."
+
+Harry was used to being turned out for any reason or none. He well
+understood that Waverton was not fond of an audience when he was being
+laughed at. "If you please," he said, and made his bow to Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Why, what's the matter? I don't bite. You are too meek for this life,
+Mr. Boyce." He looked at Harry with some contempt in his grey eyes.
+"Oons, you're a man and a brother, ain't you? Sit down and be hearty.
+Lud, Geoffrey, why do you never have a pipe in the room?"
+
+"It's death to a clean taste, your tobacco smoking, and I value my wine."
+
+"Value it, quotha! Ay, by the spoonful. You ha' never known how to drink
+since they weaned you. And you, Mr. Boyce, d'ye never smoke a pipe over
+your Latin?"
+
+"I hope I know my place, Mr. Hadley," Harry said solemnly.
+
+Charles Hadley stared at him. "Hear the Scripture, Mr. Boyce: 'What shall
+it profit a man though he gain a pretty patron and lose his own soul?'"
+
+"You are very polite, sir," said Harry.
+
+"Upon my honour, Charles, this is too much," Mr. Waverton cried in noble
+indignation. "Mr. Boyce is my friend, and you'll be good enough to take
+him as yours if you come to my house."
+
+Charles Hadley was not out of countenance. He eyed them both, and his
+sardonic expression was more marked. "You make a pretty pair," said he.
+"When two men ride a horse, one must ride behind. Eh, Mr. Boyce? I
+wonder. Well, Geoffrey, it's a wicked world. Had you heard of that?"
+
+"The world is what you make it, I think," said Mr. Waverton with
+dignity.
+
+"Oons, I could sometimes believe you did make it. A simple, pompous
+place, Geoffrey, that is kind to you if you'll not laugh at it. And full
+of petty, pompous mysteries. Maybe you make the mysteries too, Geoffrey.
+Damme, it is so. It's perfectly in your manner," he chuckled abundantly.
+"Come, child, what were you doing on the highway yesterday?"
+
+Harry stared at him. "When you have finished laughing at your joke,
+perhaps you will make it," said Waverton. "Pray let us have it over
+before dinner."
+
+"My dear child, why be so touchy? Were you bitten? Well, you know, this
+morning one of my fellows brings in a miserable wretch he had found on
+the road by Black Horse Spinney. The thing was half-dead with wet and
+cold. He had been lying there all night--so he said, and it's the one
+thing I believe of him. He was found trussed as tight as a chicken in his
+own sword-belt and his own garters. Damme, it was a fellow of some humour
+had the handling of him. He had not been robbed, for there was a bag of
+money at his middle. He professed that he could tell nothing of who had
+trussed him or why he was set upon. He would have nought of law or hue
+and cry. Egad, empty and shivering as he was, he wanted nothing but to be
+let go. A perfect Christian, as you remark, Geoffrey. Now, you or I, if
+we had been tied up in the mud through one of these damned raw nights,
+would take some pains to catch the fellow who did the trussing. But my
+wretch was as meek as the Gospels. So here is a silly, teasing mystery.
+Who is the footpad that is at the pains of tying up a fellow and never
+looks for his purse? Odds fish, I did not know we had a gentleman of such
+humour in these parts. I suspect you, Geoffrey, I protest. There's a
+misty fatuousness about it which--"
+
+"By your leave, sir," a servant appeared, "my lady waits dinner."
+
+"Then I fear we shall pay for it," said Hadley, and stood up.
+
+"You dine with us, Charles?" Mr. Waverton was not hearty about it.
+
+"I'll give you that pleasure, child. Well, Mr. Boyce, what do you make of
+my mystery?"
+
+Harry had to say something. "Perhaps your friend was carrying more than
+guineas," he said.
+
+"What then? Papers and plots and the high political? I don't think it. If
+you saw him--a mere tub of beer--and a leaky tub this morning, for he had
+a vile cold in the head and dribbled damnably."
+
+"I give it up then. Have you let him go?" They were moving out in the
+corridor and Hadley did not answer. "Is he gone?" Harry said again.
+
+Hadley turned round upon him. "Why, yes. Does it signify?"
+
+"I wonder who he was," said Harry.
+
+Upon that they entered the drawing-room of Lady Waverton. It was
+congested and dim. The two oriel windows were so draped with curtains of
+pink and yellow that only a faint light as of the last of a sunset
+filtered through. The wide spaces were beset with screens in lacquer,
+odd chairs, Dutch tables, and very many cabinets,--cabinets inlaid with
+flowers and birds of many colours; cabinets full of shells, agates,
+corals, and any gaudy stone; cabinets and yet again more cabinets full of
+Eastern china. In the midst Lady Waverton reclined.
+
+She had been handsome in a large, bold style, and might still have been
+but for excessive decoration. Her dress was voluminous white satin
+embroidered in a big pattern of gold and set off with black. It was low
+at her opulent bosom, to the curves of which the eye was directed by
+black patches craftily fixed. There were many more patches on her face
+which, still only a little too full and too loose, had its colours laid
+on in sharp and vivid contrasts. Her black hair was erected in
+symmetrical waves high above her brow, and one ringlet was brought by
+glossy, frozen curls to caress her bosom. She held out the whitest of
+hands drooping from a large but still fine arm for Mr. Hadley to kiss.
+
+"You are a bad fellow, Charles Hadley," she pouted. "You make me
+feel old."
+
+"There's a common childish fancy, ma'am."
+
+"You never come to see me now. And when you do come, 'tis not to see me."
+
+"A thousand pardons. Mr. Boyce delayed me awhile with the beauties of his
+conversation."
+
+"Mr. Boyce?" she looked at Harry as if wondering that he dared exist. "Go
+and see why they do not bring in dinner."
+
+Having thus diminished Harry, she proceeded, without waiting for him to
+be gone, to criticize him. "You know, I would never have a chaplain in
+the house. This tutor fellow is of the same breed, Charles. They tease
+me, these men which are neither gentlemen nor servants. Faith, life's
+hard for the poor wretches. They are torn 'twixt their conceit and their
+poverty. They know not from minute to minute whether they will fawn or be
+insolent. So they do both indifferent ill."
+
+Harry, who chose not to hear, was opening the door. There came in upon
+him a woman--the young woman of the coach. Even as he recoiled, bowing,
+even as he collected his startled wits, he was aware of the singular
+beauty of her complexion. Its delicacy, its life, were nonpareil. The
+first clear process of his mind was to wonder how he had contrived not to
+remark that complexion when first he saw her.
+
+Lady Waverton lifted up her voice. "Alison! Dear child! And are you home
+at last? It's delicious in you. You seek us out first, do you not? My
+sweet girl!" Alison was engulfed. Conceive apple blossom in the embraces
+of a peony.
+
+The apple blossom emerged with a calm, "Dear Lady Waverton."
+
+"You are a sad bad thing. I writ you five letters, I think, and not one
+from you."
+
+"You are so much cleverer than I am. I had nothing to say." Alison's
+voice was sweet and low, but too sublimely calm for perfect comfort in
+her hearers. "So here I am to say it and make my excuses," she dropped
+a small curtsey, "my lady. Why, Geoffrey, I thought you had been back
+at Oxford!"
+
+Mr. Waverton came forward, smiling magnificence. "I am delighted to
+disappoint you, Alison."
+
+"Nay, never believe her, Geoffrey," Lady Waverton lifted up her voice
+and was arch. "I vow she counted on finding you here. Why else had she
+come? I know when I was a toast I wasted none of my time going to see old
+women," she languished affectionately at the girl.
+
+"Dear Lady Waverton,"--if it was possible, Alison's voice became calmer
+than ever--"how well you know me. And how cruel to expose me. If Geoffrey
+had his mother's wit, faith, I should never dare come here at all."
+
+"It is not my wit which you need ever fear, Alison," Geoffrey's eyes were
+ardent upon her.
+
+"Why, you are merciful. Or is it modest?"
+
+"I can be neither, Alison. I am a man."
+
+"My dear Geoffrey, I am sorry for all your misfortunes." She turned from
+him to Mr. Hadley, who was content in a corner. "Have we quarrelled?"
+
+"We never loved each other well enough."
+
+"Is that why I am always very glad to see Mr. Hadley?"
+
+"It is why he can tell Miss Lambourne that she looks divinely beautiful."
+
+"That means inhuman, sir."
+
+"Which is not my fault, ma'am."
+
+Geoffrey was visibly restive at his exclusion, "Charles never could pay a
+compliment without a sting in it."
+
+"That is why they are agreeable, sir," said she.
+
+"That is why they are true," said Hadley in the same breath, and they
+laughed together.
+
+Lady Waverton interfered imperiously. "Alison, dear, come sit by me and
+tell me all about yourself."
+
+"Faith, not with the gentlemen to listen," said she, and was saved by
+Harry and the butler, who came in together announcing dinner.
+
+Lady Waverton rose elaborately. "Give me your arm, Charles. My
+dear Alison--"
+
+"But who is this?" Alison said, and she stared with placid, candid
+interest at Harry. With equal composure Harry stared back. But there was
+no candour in his expressionless face. For he had become keenly aware of
+her beauty. It was waking in him desire and already something deeper and
+stronger, and he vehemently resented the disturbance. He had no wish to
+be troubled by any woman, and for this woman, judging her on her
+behaviour, he felt even a little more contempt than the store which he
+had for all her sex. It was cursedly impertinent in her to be such a joy
+to the blood. She stood there, her eyes level with his eyes, and dared to
+look as strong as he--slighter to be sure, but not too slight for a
+woman, and delectably deep bosomed. There was life and laughter in that
+calm Greek face, and the vivid, delicate colour of it maddened him. The
+great crown of black hair was just what her brow needed for its royalty.
+He could find no fault in the irksome wench. Even her dress, dark grey as
+her eyes, perfectly became her, perfectly pleased in its generous
+modesty. And she knew of her power too. There was a mocking confidence in
+every line of her.
+
+"But who is this, Lady Waverton?" she was saying again.
+
+Lady Waverton tried to draw her on. "'Tis but Geoffrey's new factotum."
+
+"My good friend, Harry Boyce, Alison," said Geoffrey with a patronly hand
+on Harry's shoulder.
+
+Harry made his bow.
+
+"Faith, sir, we have met before," she smiled.
+
+"No, ma'am," Harry bowed again. "I have never had an honour, which, sure,
+I could not forget."
+
+Her brow wrinkled. Lady Waverton swept her on, and Harry in the rear had
+the pleasure of hearing Lady Waverton say: "A poor, vulgar wretch, my
+dear. An out-at-elbows scholar which Geoffrey met at Oxford and keeps out
+of charity. He is too soft of heart, dear boy, and such creatures stick
+to him like burrs."
+
+The dinner-table was a blaze of silver, but otherwise not bountifully
+provided. Lady Waverton looked down it with pride. "I am of Mr. Addison's
+mind, my dear," she announced. "Do you remember? 'Two plain dishes with
+two good-natured, cheerful, ingenious friends make me more pleased and
+vain than all your luxury.'"
+
+"Why, then, you must now be sore out of countenance," Alison protested.
+"For I am not good-natured and I vow Mr. Hadley is not cheerful." Mr.
+Hadley's face, set in contemplation of the food, shed gloom and
+apprehension. "But perhaps Mr. Boyce is ingenious."
+
+"I hope so," said Hadley.
+
+It was Harry's task to carve, which dispensed him from answering the
+girl or even looking at her. One not abundant fowl and a calf's head
+smoked before him. Under a heavy fire of directions from Lady Waverton
+he did his duty.
+
+Miss Lambourne may have suddenly grown weary of Lady Waverton's eloquence
+upon the daintiest bits of these unexciting foods. She may have been
+waiting for the moment when Harry would have no occupation to prevent him
+listening to her. While my lady was still explaining the superiority of
+her calf, as bred and born in the house of Waverton, to all other calves,
+just when Harry had finished his work, Miss Lambourne broke out: "Faith,
+I was almost forgetting my splendid story. I wonder, now, have any of you
+met any ventures on the North Road?"
+
+Harry began to eat. Charles Hadley ceased an anxious examination of his
+plate and looked at her. Lady Waverton cried out: "Dear Alison! Don't
+tell me you have been stopped. Too terrible! I vow I could never bear it.
+I should die of shame. They tell me these rogues are vilely impudent to a
+fine woman."
+
+Geoffrey exhibited a tender agitation. "Why, Alison, what is it? Zounds,
+I cannot have you go travelling alone! You must give me news when you
+make a journey, and I'll ride with you."
+
+"Thank you for your agonies. But the virgin in distress found her
+knight-errant duly provided. He rose out of the mud romantically apropos.
+To be sure, I think he was mad. But that is all in the part. The complete
+hero. Geoffrey, could you be a little mad?"
+
+"More than a little," said he with proper ardour. "Pray don't torture us,
+Alison. Let us hear."
+
+"It's on my mind that I am going to hear news of my funny friend," said
+Hadley solemnly. "Don't you think so, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+Harry, who had been eating with the humble zeal appropriate to a poor
+scholar, looked up for a moment: "Why, sir, I can't tell at all. If you
+say so, indeed--" and he went on eating.
+
+"Come, are you in it too, Mr. Hadley?" Alison cried.
+
+"In it, odds life, I am bewilderingly out of it," quoth Hadley, and again
+told his tale of the mysterious man found tied up in the mud who knew
+nothing of his assailants and wanted no vengeance on them.
+
+"That's our Benjamin," Alison laughed. "Oh, but you did not let him go?"
+
+"Not let him go, quotha! For what I know, he was a poor, suffering
+martyr, though to look at his nose, I doubt it. And yet he was fool
+enough. Nay, how could I stay him?"
+
+"Why, send him to gaol for a rogue and a vagabond. Should he not?" she
+invited the suffrages of the table.
+
+"Dear Alison, to be sure, yes," Lady Waverton murmured. "These fellows
+must be put down."
+
+"You owed it to yourself to look deeper into the matter, Charles," said
+Geoffrey gravely.
+
+"Come, Mr. Boyce, your sentence too," Alison cried, wicked eyes
+intent upon him.
+
+He met them with bland meekness. "Indeed, ma'am, I can't tell. It's Mr.
+Hadley's affair."
+
+"From a virtuous woman, good Lord deliver us," Hadley groaned. "You would
+make a rare hanging judge, Alison. Now, i' God's name, let's have your
+tale. What's the rogue to you?"
+
+"Oh, sir, a great joy. Why, he gave me the only knight-errant ever I had.
+A vile muddy one, to be sure, but poor maids must not be choosers. We
+were driving home, Mrs. Weston and I, and by Black Horse Spinney we were
+stopped by two highwaymen. They had just begun to be rude, when out of
+the mud comes my knight-errant, bold as Don Quixote and as shabby withal,
+and with a pretty wit too--which is not much in the way of
+knight-errants, I think. He scared the highwaymen's horses and set them
+bolting with the one fellow which held them, then he knocked the other
+down, took his pistol, and tied the rogue up in his own garters. Oh, the
+neatest knight-errant ever you saw. Then we bade him put the fellow on
+the box and drive on with us. But monsieur was haughty, if you please. He
+wanted none of our company. Off he packed us, for me to cry my eyes out
+for love of him. Which I do heartily, I warrant you."
+
+"Alison!" Geoffrey cried, and laid his hand on hers.
+
+"Faith, yes, give me sympathy. I have loved and lost--in the mud. To be
+sure, I can ne'er be my own woman again till I find him and give him--a
+brush, I think, and maybe a pair of breeches too, for his own can never
+recover their youth. Dear Geoffrey, help me to find him."
+
+Geoffrey had taken his hand away in a hurry. He contemplated her with
+cold reproof. It did not trouble her. She was giving all her attention to
+Harry; gay, malicious eyes challenged him to declare himself, mocked him
+for his modesty, vaunted what she had to give.
+
+"Damme, this is madder and madder yet," Hadley broke in. "Who is your
+Orlando Furioso that's a champion of dames and too haughty to ride in
+their carriage; that ties up highwaymen and forgets to tell the constable
+where he left 'em? Odso, I thought I knew most of the fools in these
+parts, but there's one bigger than I know."
+
+"Dear Alison--I could never have survived it--but you are so strong--and
+what a person! My dear, I could not bear to think of him. A rude, low
+fellow, to be sure," Thus Lady Waverton coherently.
+
+Alison laughed. "I doubt I'm not so delicate," Then she leaned towards
+Harry. "Well, and you? Come, Mr. Boyce, why leave yourself out?"
+
+"I beg pardon, ma'am?"
+
+She made an impatient sound. "And what do you think of my hero?"
+
+"I wonder who the gentleman was, ma'am," Harry said.
+
+Her eyes fought a moment more with his bland, meaningless face. "Faith, I
+think he's a fool for his pains," said she.
+
+"Grateful woman," Hadley grunted. "Humph. _Spretae injuria formae_, ain't
+it, Mr. Boyce? Give miss a construe."
+
+Harry gave a deprecating cough instead.
+
+"Oh, be brave, sir," she jeered.
+
+"I am afraid it means 'the insult of slighting your beauty,' ma'am," said
+Harry meekly.
+
+Lady Waverton straightened her back and looked ice at him. But the
+butler was at her elbow, whispering. "Colonel Boyce?" she repeated. "What
+Colonel Boyce? Who is Colonel Boyce?
+
+"It might be my father," Harry suggested.
+
+"Why, Harry, I never knew you had a father," Waverton sneered amiably.
+
+"Is your father a colonel?" Lady Waverton was torn between incredulity of
+such presumption and rage at it.
+
+"Not that I know of, my lady. But he has always surprised me."
+
+"Shall we have him in, Geoffrey?" said Lady Waverton.
+
+"My dear mother!" Geoffrey waved his hand to the butler. "Ask the
+gentleman to be so good as to join us."
+
+Mr. Hadley turned in his chair, and over the remnants of the fowl and the
+calf's head directed a grim smile at Harry. "Thank you for a very
+pleasant dinner," said he.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A MAN OF MANY WORLDS
+
+
+There came in a man of many colours. Dazzled eyes, recovering from their
+first dismay, might admit that his splendours were harmonious. A red coat
+with gold buttons, a waistcoat of gold satin embroidered in blue,
+breeches of blue velvet with golden garters were topped by a face burnt
+brown and a great jet-black periwig. He carried off all this with airy
+ease. "My lady, your most humble and devoted," he bowed to Lady Waverton.
+"Harry, dear lad," he held out his hands, and Harry, rising, found
+himself embraced and kissed on both cheeks.
+
+"Colonel Boyce is it?" said Lady Waverton with some emphasis on
+the title.
+
+"In the service of your ladyship," he laughed, and bowed to her again,
+and turned upon the company. "Pray present me, dear lady." She made
+some stumbling about it, but Colonel Boyce appeared to enjoy himself
+with an "I account myself fortunate, ma'am," for Miss Lambourne; with a
+"My boy's friends are mine, sir--and his debts too," for Geoffrey; and
+to Mr. Hadley, "You have served, sir?" with a look of respect at the
+empty sleeve.
+
+Hadley nodded. "Ay, ay. The red field of honour. Well, there's no
+life like it."
+
+"That's why I left it," Hadley grunted.
+
+"Come, sir, draw up a chair and join us," Geoffrey said. "Be sure you are
+very welcome."
+
+"Ten thousand thanks." Without enthusiasm Colonel Boyce looked at the
+calf's head. "But--egad, I am sorry for it now--but I have dined."
+
+"At least you'll drink a glass of wine with us?"
+
+"Oh, I can't deny myself the pleasure, sir." He drew up a chair, Geoffrey
+reached at a decanter, and so Lady Waverton rose and Alison after her.
+
+Colonel Boyce started up. "But no--not at that price. Damme, that would
+poison the Prince's own Tokay. Nay, you are too cruel, my lady. I come,
+and you desolate the table to receive me. Gad's life, ma'am, our friends
+here will be calling me out for my daring to exist."
+
+Lady Waverton was very well pleased. "Sir, you will let me give you a
+dish of tea. I warrant the men were already sighing to be rid of us."
+
+"Then I vow they be blind," quoth Colonel Boyce, and opened the door,
+from which he came back with a laugh to his glass of port. Over drinking
+it he went through all the tricks of the connoisseur and ended with a
+cultured ecstasy.
+
+"I see you are a man of the world, Colonel," Hadley sneered.
+
+"A man of many worlds, sir," the Colonel laughed easily.
+
+"I wonder which this is?"
+
+"Why, this is the world of good company and good fellowship--" he smiled
+and bowed to Geoffrey--"of sound wine and sound learning."
+
+"Sir, you are very good. But I hope my wine is better than my
+scholarship. This is our man of learning," he slapped Harry on the
+shoulder. "And Harry counts me a mere trifler, a literary exquisite, an
+amateur of elegances."
+
+"If your scholarship has the elegance of your wine, Mr. Waverton, you do
+very well. I doubt my Harry is no judge of the graces. He has always been
+something of a plodder."
+
+"Have I?" Harry found his tongue. "How did you know?"
+
+The Colonel laughed. "He has me there, the rogue. The truth is,
+gentlemen, I have not seen him in these six years. Damme, Harry, you are
+grown no fatter."
+
+"Servitors don't make flesh," said Harry.
+
+"And soldiers don't make money. Still; there's enough for two now, boy."
+
+"I am glad you have been fortunate," the tone suggested that though
+the father had quite enough for two; there would be none to spare
+for the son.
+
+"Why, sir," Waverton was grandly genial, "I hope you don't mean to rob me
+of Harry. He's the most useful fellow, and, I promise you; I value him."
+
+"Thank you very much," said Harry.
+
+"I'll take you into my confidence, Mr. Waverton," the Colonel leaned
+across the table.
+
+"Then I'll take my leave," said Hadley.
+
+"No need, sir. At this time, we all know, there are higher claims on a
+man than a friend's or a father's."
+
+"I feel like a pawn," Harry complained.
+
+"Egad, sir, a pawn may save a queen or check a king."
+
+"But do you suppose it enjoys it?"
+
+"Are you away to the war, sir?" Geoffrey smiled. "I doubt our Harry has
+no turn for soldiering."
+
+"You are always right, Mr. Waverton," Harry nodded at him.
+
+"It is not only soldiers who fight our battles, Mr. Waverton," said the
+Colonel with dignity. "There's danger enough for a quick wit and a cool
+judgment far behind the lines. And you need not go to Flanders to find
+the war. It's flaming all over England, all over--France," he dropped the
+last word in a lower tone, as if his heat had carried him away and it was
+a blunder. He flung himself back and emptied his glass, and looked
+gloomily at the empty decanter. "Why, Mr. Waverton, you have made me into
+a babbler. It's time you delivered me to the ladies."
+
+"Aye, aye," Hadley yawned. "Let's try another of the worlds."
+
+They marched out, but the Colonel and Waverton, waiting on each other,
+were some distance behind the other pair.
+
+"You must know I have often had some desire for the life of action," said
+Mr. Waverton.
+
+To which the Colonel earnestly, "I have never known a man more fit for
+it," and upon that they entered my lady's drawing-room.
+
+Miss Lambourne was singing Carey's song of the nightingale:
+
+"While in a Bow'r with beauty blest
+ The lov'd Amintor lies,
+While sinking on Lucinda's breast
+ He fondly kiss'd her Eyes.
+A wakeful nightingale who long
+ Had mourn'd within, the Shade
+Sweetly renewed her plaintive song
+ And warbled through the Glade."
+
+On the coming of the men the wakeful nightingale broke off her plaintive
+song abruptly.
+
+Lady Waverton, who was again at full length on her couch, then opened
+her eyes. "Delicious, delicately delicious," she sighed. "Why did you
+stop, dear?" she controlled a yawn. "Oh, the men! Odious creatures!" she
+rose on her elbow and looked at them, and looked down at her dress and
+patted it.
+
+Colonel Boyce accepted the challenge briskly, and marched upon her.
+"Egad, my lady, your name is cruelty."
+
+"Who--I, sir? I vow I never had the heart to see any creature suffer."
+
+"Nay, your very nature is cruelty. You exist but to torture us."
+
+"Good lack, sir," says my lady, well pleased, "and must I die to serve
+your pleasure?"
+
+"Why, there it is. We can neither bear to be with you nor to be without
+you. I protest, ma'am, your sex was made for our torture. 'Tis why you
+parade it and delight in it."
+
+"Lud, sir, you are mighty rude," my lady simpered. "I parade my sex?
+Alack, my modesty!"
+
+"Modesty--that's but another weapon to madden us. Fie, ma'am, why do you
+clothe yourself in such beauty but to flaunt upon our senses that sex of
+yours?" My lady was duly shocked and hid behind her fan. "Aye, there it
+is! We catch a whiff of paradise and straightway it is denied us. Our
+nightingale there is silent when we draw near. Our Venus here hides
+herself when our eyes would enjoy her. As His Grace said to me, you women
+are like heaven to a damned soul."
+
+"You are a wicked fellow," said Lady Waverton with relish.
+
+Geoffrey at his elbow put in, "'His Grace,' Colonel?"
+
+"The Old Corporal, Mr. Waverton. The Duke of Marlborough."
+
+"You have served with him, sir?"
+
+Colonel Boyce gave a laugh of genial condescension. "Why, yes, Mr.
+Waverton, I stand as close to His Grace as most men."
+
+After a moment of impressive silence, the Wavertons vigorously directed
+the conversation to the Duke of Marlborough. Colonel Boyce made no
+objection. In the most obliging manner he admitted them to a piquant
+intimacy with His Grace's manners and customs. He mingled things personal
+and high politics with a fascinating air of letting out secrets at every
+word; and, throughout, he maintained a tantalizing discretion about his
+own position. My lady and Mr. Waverton were more and more fascinated.
+
+So that Miss Lambourne had good opportunity to try her maiden steel upon
+Harry. As soon as he came in, he withdrew himself to a cabinet of medals
+in a remote corner. Mr. Hadley approached the harpsichord and reached it
+just before it fell silent. Miss Lambourne looked up into his face.
+
+"Yes, shall we lay our heads together?" said he.
+
+"But I doubt mine would turn yours."
+
+"If you'll risk it, ma'am, I will."
+
+"La, sir, is this an offer? I protest I am all one blush."
+
+"Then your imagination is bolder than mine, ma'am. I mean--"
+
+"Oh, fie for shame! To disgrace a poor maid so! To betray her weakness!
+It is unmanly, Mr. Hadley. Sure, my father (in the general resurrection)
+will have your blood. I leave you to your conscience, sir," which she
+did, making for Harry.
+
+Mr. Hadley, remaining by the harpsichord, contemplated them, and with his
+one hand caressed his chin. "It's a fascinating family, the family of
+Boyce," said he to himself.
+
+Miss Lambourne sat herself down beside Harry before he chose to be aware
+of her coming. He started up and obsequiously drew away.
+
+"You are very coy, Mr. Boyce," said the lady.
+
+Harry replied, with the servile laughter of a dependent, "Oh, ma'am, you
+are mocking me."
+
+"Tit for tat"--Alison's eyes had some fire in them.
+
+"Tat, ma'am?"
+
+"Lud, now, don't be tedious. Sir, the house of Waverton is entranced by
+your splendid father: and Charles Hadley (as usual) is entranced by
+himself. You have no audience Mr. Boyce. Stop acting, and tell me--what
+is wrong with me?"
+
+Harry considered her with calm criticism. "It's not for me to tell Miss
+Lambourne that she is too beautiful."
+
+"Indeed, I thought you had more sense."
+
+"Too beautiful," Harry persisted deliberately; "too beautiful to be
+good company."
+
+"That will not serve, sir. You are not so inflammable. Being more in the
+nature of a tortoise."
+
+"If you had a flaw or so: if your nose had a twist; if your cheeks had
+felt the weather; if--I fear, ma'am, I grow intimate. In fine, if you
+were less fine, you would be a comfort to a man. But as it is--permit the
+tortoise to keep in his shell."
+
+"I advise you, Mr. Boyce--I resent this."
+
+Harry bowed. "I dare to remind you, ma'am--I did not demand the
+conversation."
+
+"The conversation!" Her eyes flashed. "What do I care if a lad's
+impudent? Perhaps I like it well enough, Mr. Boyce. There is more than
+that between you and me. You have done me something of a service, and
+you'll not let me avow it nor pay you. Well?"
+
+"Well, ma'am, you're telling the truth," said Harry placidly.
+
+The lady made an exclamation. "I shall bear you a grudge for this, sir."
+
+"I am vastly obliged, ma'am."
+
+The lady drew back a little and looked at him full, which he bore
+calmly. "I suppose I am beneath Mr. Boyce's concernment."
+
+"Not beneath, ma'am. Above. Above. Do you admire the Italian medals?
+They are of a delicate restraint," He turned to the cabinet and began
+to lecture.
+
+Miss Lambourne was not repulsed. He maintained a steady flow of
+instruction. She waited, watching him.
+
+By this time Colonel Boyce was growing tired of his Duke of Marlborough
+and his State secrets, and seeking diversion. "Odds fish, it's a hard
+road that leads to fortune. You are happy, Mr. Waverton. You were born
+with yours."
+
+"I conceive, sir, that every man of high spirit must needs take the
+road to fame."
+
+"A dream of a shadow, Mr. Waverton," said the Colonel, with melancholy
+grandeur. "'Take the goods the gods provide you,'" he waved his hand at
+the crowded opulence of the room and then, smiling paternally, at Miss
+Lambourne.
+
+Lady Waverton simpered at her son. He chose to ignore the hint.
+"Why, Colonel, if a man is happily placed above vulgar needs, the
+more reason--"
+
+"Vulgar needs! Oh, fie, Mr. Waverton. A divine creature." Colonel
+Boyce looked wicked, and his easy hand designed in the air Miss
+Lambourne's shape.
+
+Lady Waverton tittered. Geoffrey blushed, and "You do me too much honour
+sir, indeed," he stammered.
+
+Colonel Boyce turned smiling upon Lady Waverton. "I vow, ma'am, a man
+hath twice the modesty of a maid."
+
+"You are a bad fellow," said Lady Waverton, very well pleased.
+
+"You go too fast, sir;" with so much mirth about him Geoffrey feared for
+his dignity. "There is nothing between me and Miss Lambourne."
+
+The Colonel shook his head. "I confess I thought better of you, sir.
+What, is miss her own mistress?"
+
+"Miss Lambourne has no father or mother, sir."
+
+"And her face is her fortune? Egad, 'tis the prettiest romance!"
+
+Geoffrey and his mother laughed together. "Not quite all her fortune,
+sir. She is the only child of Sir Thomas Lambourne."
+
+"What! old Tom Lambourne of the India House?" Colonel Boyce whistled. He
+looked with a new interest at her as she stood by Harry, absorbing the
+lecture on medals, and as he looked his face put on a queer air of
+mockery. This he presented to Geoffrey. "Something of a plum, sirrah.
+Well, well, some folks have but to open their mouths."
+
+Mr. Waverton, not quite certain whether the Colonel ought to be so
+familiar, concluded to be pleased, and laughed fatuously. During which
+music the butler announced "Mrs. Weston."
+
+Lady Waverton and Geoffrey exchanged a glance of disgust. Lady Waverton
+murmured, "What a person!" It escaped their notice that Colonel Boyce had
+stiffened at the name. His full face lost all its geniality, all
+expression. He was for the first time singularly like his son.
+
+Mrs. Weston was Alison's companion of the coach, a woman of middle age,
+inclining to be stout; but her face was thin and lined, belying her
+comfortable aspect,--a wistful face which had known much sorrow, and had
+still much tenderness to give.
+
+Lady Waverton put out a languid and supercilious hand. "I hope you
+are better."
+
+"Thank you. I have not been ill."
+
+"Oh, I always forget."
+
+"Your servant, ma'am." Geoffrey bowed.
+
+"Oh,"--Lady Waverton turned on her elbow. "Colonel Boyce--Mrs. Weston,
+Alison's companion. Faith, duenna, I think."
+
+"Your most obedient, ma'am." Colonel Boyce bowed low.
+
+Mrs. Weston stared at him, seemed to try to speak, said nothing, and
+hurried across the room.
+
+"Alison, dear, are you ready?" her voice sounded hoarse.
+
+"Am I ever ready?" Alison laughed. "Weston, dear, we are finding friends
+here;" she pointed to Harry.
+
+Colonel Boyce had followed. He laid his hand on Harry's shoulder: "My
+son, ma'am," said he.
+
+Mrs. Weston's eyes grew wide, and her face was white and drawn, and she
+swayed. As Harry bowed to her, a lacquered box was swept off the table
+with a great clatter, and Colonel Boyce cried, "Odds life, Harry, you are
+a clumsy fellow. Here, man, here," and made a great commotion over
+picking it up.
+
+Alison had her arm about Mrs. Weston: "Why, Weston, dear, what is it? Are
+you seeing a ghost?" She laughed. "Pray, Mr. Boyce, come to life."
+
+"I ask pardon, ma'am." Harry rose with the box.
+
+"'Bid me to live and I will live,'" said the Colonel, with a grand air.
+
+"Come away, dear, come," Mrs. Weston gasped, in much agitation.
+
+"Why, Weston, he is not our highwayman, you know," Alison was still
+laughing, and then seeing her distress real, took it in earnest. "You are
+shaken, poor thing. Come!" She mothered the woman away and, turning,
+called over her shoulder--
+
+"_Revanche_, Mr. Boyce." There was an explanation to Lady Waverton: poor
+Weston had been so alarmed by the highwaymen that she was not fit to be
+out of her bed, and anything alarmed her; even Mr. Boyce; so dear Lady
+Waverton must forgive them. And Geoffrey took them to their carriage.
+
+"What a person!" said Lady Waverton.
+
+Mr. Hadley came out of his corner and looked Harry up and down with
+dislike. "Let me know when you play the next act, Mr. Boyce," he
+said, and turned to Lady Waverton. "My lady, I beg leave to go with
+my friends."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+A GENTLEMAN'S PURSE
+
+
+In a small, bare room Colonel Boyce sat himself down on a pallet bed and
+made a wry face at his son. "My poor, dear boy," he said, and shifted
+uneasily, and looked round at the stained walls and shivered. "It's damp,
+I vow it's damp," he complained.
+
+"Oh yes. It's damp after rain, and it's hot after sun, and it's icy after
+frost. It's a very sympathetic room," said Harry.
+
+"They are barbarians, these Wavertons. I vow they give their horses
+better lodging."
+
+"Oh yes. I am not worth so much as a horse," said Harry.
+
+"Lud, Harry, don't whine,"--his father was irritated. "Have some spirit.
+I hate to hear a lad meek."
+
+"I thought you did," said Harry.
+
+The Colonel laughed. "Oh, I am bit, am I? _Tant mieux_. But why the devil
+do you stay here?"
+
+"Now why the devil do you want to know?" said Harry.
+
+"No, that is not kind, boy."
+
+"Oh, Oh, are we kind?"
+
+"My dear Harry, I have not seen you for six years, and I have not come
+now to quarrel."
+
+"Then why have you come?" said the affectionate son.
+
+"You are a gracious cub." Colonel Boyce would not be ruffled. "When I saw
+you last, Harry--"
+
+"You borrowed a shilling of me. I remember I was glad that I had
+not another."
+
+"You can have it back with interest now. There is plenty in the purse,
+Harry, and half of all mine is yours."
+
+"You have changed," Harry said. "Odds life, Harry, bear no grudges. I
+dare say I was hard in what you remember of me. Well, things were hard
+upon me and I lived hard. You shall find me mellow enough now."
+
+"Hard? I don't know that you were hard. I thought you were as cold as
+ice. I believe, sir, I am still frozen."
+
+"Egad, Harry, you must have had a curst childhood."
+
+"Oh, must we be sympathetic?" said Harry.
+
+"You're right, boy. The past is past. 'Tis your future which is the
+matter. So again--why do you stay here?"
+
+Harry laughed. "They give me bed and board, and a shilling or two by
+the month."
+
+"Bed?" His father shifted upon it. "A bag of stones, I think. And for the
+board--bread of affliction and water of affliction by what I saw of the
+remains. Egad, Harry, they are savages, these Wavertons."
+
+"I did not hear you say so to madame. And Geoffrey is not a bad fellow
+as far as he has understanding."
+
+"A dolt, eh? He might take a woman's eye, though. These big dreamy
+fellows, the women hanker after them queerly. Take care, Harry." He
+looked knowing. "Bed and board--bah, you can do better than that. Now
+what do you think I have been doing?"
+
+"Something profitable, to judge by your genial splendours. Have you
+turned highwayman?"
+
+"You all talk about highwaymen in this house," said the Colonel with a
+frown and a keen glance.
+
+"Damme, no."
+
+"Why, are you really a colonel?"
+
+"Faith, you may come see my commission,"--Colonel Boyce was not
+annoyed,--"and, egad, share my pay." He pulled out a fat purse and thrust
+some guineas upon Harry. "Don't deny me now, boy," he said, with some
+tenderness.
+
+"I never meant to," said Harry, and counted them. "But how long have you
+been a soldier? I never knew you were anything."
+
+"I have been with his Grace of Marlborough in every campaign since
+Blenheim. Do you think it's a good service, Harry?" he smiled at his
+own opulence.
+
+"For a versatile man," said Harry, and looked at his father curiously.
+
+"Why, I can take the field as well as another. Egad, when Vendome fell
+back from Oudenarde I was commanding a battalion. But it is not in the
+field that my best work is done."
+
+"Faith, I had guessed that," Harry said.
+
+"You have a sharp tongue, Harry. It's a dangerous weakness. Be careful
+to grow out of it. Then I think you may do well enough."
+
+"In your profession, sir? To be sure, you flatter me."
+
+"In my profession--" His father looked at him keenly. "I am not sure.
+Maybe you can do better, which will be well enough. Now, what can you do?
+You can use a sword, I suppose, though you wear none?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "I know the rigmarole, the salutes; I could begin a duel,
+_par exemple_. It's the other man who would end it."
+
+"Duels--bah, only dolts are troubled with them. You must learn to hold
+your own in a flurry. You can ride, I suppose?"
+
+"If the beast has a mane."
+
+"Humph. You speak French?"
+
+"As we speak it in England."
+
+"Yes." His father nodded. "When a man is no fool, he finds his profit in
+not doing things too well. Well, Harry, are you Whig or Tory--Jacobite or
+Hanoverian?"
+
+"Whichever you like, sir."
+
+"By the Lord, you take after me mightily. Now look 'e, thus it is. The
+Queen grows old. She eats too well and drinks too well, and she has the
+gout. It's common among all who know her ways that she cannot last long.
+The poor soul will not be wise at dinner. But even if she should last, we
+are in an odd case. For Anne hath a conscience as well as a stomach, and
+it seems they grow together. As the old lady gets fatter, she feels
+remorse. When she's tearful after dinner now she asks her women what
+right she has to be queen and keep a good cellar while her poor
+half-brother Prince James lives in exile on _vin ordinaire_."
+
+Harry shrugged his shoulders. "'Poor, dear lad,' says she, 'and to
+be sure I am a sad, bad woman. But I think I'll die a queen.' What
+then, sir?"
+
+"I don't say you are wrong, Harry. She's more like to drown the lad in
+tears than right him. And meanwhile our rightful king, James the
+Pretender, is left to his _vin ordinaire_. Faith, it's a proper liquor,
+for rightful heirs which can't right themselves. And yet there is a
+chance. The Queen has always been religious, and when a woman hath
+religion she may play the devil with your reason any minute. But here is
+what's more likely. You know when an old fellow hath played the knave
+with some wardship or some matter of trust, often he holds fast to it all
+his life and then seeks to commend himself to the day of judgment by
+bequeathing his spoils to those from whom he stole them. Well, it's
+whispered among them that know her that Madame Anne will do her possible
+to make Prince James King when she is gone."
+
+"A dead Queen is but a corpse," said Harry. "When she is gone 'twill not
+be for her to say who shall reign."
+
+"That's half a truth. You know the law is so that Prince George of
+Hanover should be the King. About him no man knows anything save that he
+hath a vile taste in women. I do suspect Marlborough is in the right--he
+has a nose for men--when he saith there is nought to know. Well, we
+tried a Dutchman once for our King and liked him ill enough. Who is to
+say that we shall like a German better? Now Prince James--he is half an
+Englishman at least, though they say he has his father's weakness for
+priests. I'll not hide from you, Harry, that I am in the confidence of
+some great men. It's laid upon me to go to France with an errand to
+Prince James."
+
+"I suppose that is high treason, sir."
+
+Colonel Boyce smiled queerly. "You see how I trust you, Harry. Bah, you
+are not frightened of words. Who is the worse for it, if I find out
+what's Monsieur's temper and how he would bear himself if he were King?"
+
+"And what he would pay any kind gentlemen who chose to turn
+Jacobites apropos."
+
+"If you like." Colonel Boyce laughed. I promise you, Harry, there are
+great men in this. Now I need a trusty fellow to my right hand: a fellow
+who can talk and say nothing: a fellow who is in no service but mine: and
+all the better if he hath some learning to play the secretary. So I
+thought of you. And since it may carry you to something of note, I chose
+you with right good will."
+
+"Do you wonder that you surprise me?"
+
+"I profess you're not generous, Harry. It's true enough, I have done
+little for you yet. But the truth is I could do nothing. As soon as I
+have it in my power, I come to you--"
+
+"And offer me--a game at hazard."
+
+"Why, Harry, you're not a coward?"
+
+"Faith, I can't tell. Perhaps I will go with you. But I have no
+expectation in it."
+
+"I suppose you have some here," his father sneered. "What do they call
+you? You seem to be something better than Master Geoffrey's valet and a
+good deal worse than my lady's footman."
+
+"Why, I believe you have lost your temper." Harry laughed. "Oh, admirable
+sight! Pray let me enjoy it! The father rages at his son's ingratitude!"
+
+But Colonel Boyce had quickly recovered his equanimity. "They used to
+tell me that I was a cold fellow. But I vow you are a very fish. So you
+have half a mind to stay here, have you? Well, I bear no malice."
+
+"It is only half a mind," Harry said. "Are you in a hurry?"
+
+"Oh, you may sleep on it. Damme, I suppose there is little to do here but
+sleep. What does Master Geoffrey want with you? He is old to keep a tame
+schoolmaster."
+
+"I listen to his poetry."
+
+"Oh Lud!" said Colonel Boyce, with sincere sympathy. "I suppose they are
+wealthy folk, your Wavertons. Do they keep much company?" Harry shrugged.
+"Who is this Mrs. Weston?"
+
+"I never saw her before." Harry paused, and then with a laugh
+added--"before yesterday."
+
+"That's a fine woman, her mistress. Do you do anything in that
+quarter, sirrah?"
+
+"Why should you think so?"
+
+"She was willing enough that you should try."
+
+"She is meat for my betters," said Harry meekly.
+
+"For Master Geoffrey?" The Colonel looked knowing. "Do you know, Harry, I
+think Master Geoffrey is a pigeon made to be plucked. Well. What was the
+pretty lady's talk about highwaymen?"
+
+Harry looked at his father for some time. "The truth is, I don't
+understand Benjamin," he said at last. "I wonder if you will. Faith, sir,
+here is a pretty piece of family life. The good son confides in his
+father alone of all the world."
+
+"Go on, sir," Colonel Boyce chuckled. "I play fair."
+
+So Harry told his tale of Benjamin and Benjamin's companion and their
+disaster. It was that appearance in the crisis of the fight of other
+gentlemen on horseback which most interested Colonel Boyce. "So they went
+in pursuit of the fellow who had fled and they never came back again." He
+looked quizzically at his son. "These be very honest gentlemen."
+
+"Why, sir, I thought nothing of that. They were plainly travelling at
+speed. I suppose they missed him, and had no time to waste in searching."
+
+"Then why o' God's name did he not come back to help his fellow? He was
+mounted, he was armed, and only you and your cudgel against him. Bah,
+Harry, do not be an innocent. Consider: these fellows went after him at
+speed. He cannot have been far away. It is any odds that he had his
+bolting horses in hand before he had gone two furlongs. Then--allow him
+some sense--then he must have turned and come back for his friend. And
+then these other honest gentlemen swept down on him. Well. Why have you
+heard no more of them or him?"
+
+"Faith, sir, you are right," Harry conceived for the first time some
+admiration for his father. "I had missed that: and, egad, it is the chief
+question of the puzzle. But--"
+
+"Puzzle! Oh Lud, there's no puzzle. They were all one gang, these
+fellows."
+
+Harry laughed. "Then there was not much honour among the thieves. They
+abandoned their Benjamin to me with delight."
+
+"Ah, bah, you do not suppose they were out for such small game as your
+pretty miss. They would not work in a gang to stop a simple, common
+coach, be it never so rich. Come, Harry, use your wits. Did you hear of
+any great folks on the road yesterday?"
+
+Harry made an exclamation. "Odds life, sir, you would make a great
+thief-catcher. You have hit it. There was your friend, the Duke of
+Marl-borough, stuck in the mud below Barnet Hill." And he told that part
+of the story.
+
+"Humph. So they came too late," his father said. "You see how it is. This
+gang was charged to stop his Grace, and was something slow about it. The
+two first, your Benjamin and his friend, I suppose they should have held
+the Duke's fellows in play till the others came up. They missed him, or
+they shirked it, and instead, tried to stay their stomachs with some
+common game. The rest of the gang would be well enough pleased that you
+should baste Benjamin while they hurried on after the Duke. Did you mark
+any of them, what like they were?"
+
+"Not I. I was too busy with Benjamin."
+
+"And your pretty miss, eh? A pity. But it's well enough for your
+first affair."
+
+"First? Why, am I to spend my life tumbling with gentlemen of the road?"
+
+"And a profitable, pleasant life too, if you use your wits."
+
+Harry opened his eyes. "Do you know it well, sir? Now, what I don't
+understand is why a gang of highwaymen should appoint to set upon the
+Duke of Marlborough. It's dangerous, to be sure--"
+
+"You will understand why, if you come to France," said Colonel Boyce,
+with a queer smile. "There be many would pay high for a sight of his
+Grace's private papers," and he laughed to himself over some joke. "Nay,
+but you have done very well, Harry," he condescended. "I like this
+business of leaving Benjamin tied up on the road. 'Tis damned nonsense,
+to be sure, but it has an air, a distinction. Your pretty miss will like
+that. And I judge you have not told the Wavertons you were the hero, nor
+let miss tell them. 'Tis your little secret for yourselves. A good touch,
+Harry. Odds life, I begin to be proud of you. I suppose you will soon go
+pay your respects--to Mrs. Weston." He laughed heartily.
+
+Harry was not amused. "Do you know, I think I like you much less than you
+like me," he said.
+
+Colonel Boyce seemed very well content.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE WORLD'S A MIRACLE
+
+
+Colonel Boyce was established in the house, a guest of high honour.
+
+Harry, dazed at the mere fact, could not be very sure how it had happened
+or why. The Wavertons, mother and son, had assaulted the Colonel with
+hospitality--for a night--for another--for longer and longer--and he,
+appearing at first honestly dubious, remained with a benign
+condescension.
+
+There is no doubt that, in an honourable way, Lady Waverton was
+fascinated by Colonel Boyce. She saw nothing coarse in his
+highly-coloured manners, suspected no guile in his flattery or his parade
+of importance. Harry, who had never supposed her a wise woman, was
+surprised by her complete surrender. He had credited her with too much
+pride to succumb to flattery, which was to his taste impudently gross.
+But he was not yet old enough to allow that other folks might have tastes
+wholly unlike his own, and he had himself--it is perhaps the only trait
+of much delicacy in him--a shrinking discomfort under praise.
+
+Colonel Boyce took his victory with a complacency which Harry thought
+oddly fatuous in a man so acute.
+
+"Egad, the old lady would go to church with me to-morrow if I asked her;"
+he laughed, and seemed to think that in that at least my lady showed
+sense.
+
+"You had better take her, sir," said Harry, with a sneer. "I know she has
+a good dower. And a fool and her money are soon parted."
+
+"Damme, Harry, you are venomous!" For the first time in their
+acquaintance Colonel Boyce showed some signs of smarting. "What harm have
+I done you? No, sir, you have a nasty tongue. I intend the old lady no
+harm, neither. What if she has a tenderness for me? I suppose that does
+not make me a fool."
+
+"To be sure, sir, I did not know your affection was serious." Harry
+laughed disagreeably.
+
+"I believe you would not miss a chance to say a bitter thing though it
+ruined you, Lud, Harry, if you can't be grateful, don't be a fool too.
+What a pox are your Wavertons to me? I don't value them a pinch of snuff.
+What I am doing, I am doing for you. You know what you were when I found
+you--no better than a footman out of livery. Now, they treat you like a
+gentleman."
+
+"And all for the _beaux yeux_ of my father. Well, it's true, sir. But I
+don't know that I like any of us much the better for it."
+
+To his great surprise his father looked at him with affectionate
+admiration. "Egad, you take that tone very well," said he. "It's a good
+card. Maybe it's the best with the women."
+
+Harry had to laugh. "I think you have the easiest temper in the
+world, sir."
+
+"Aye, aye. It has been the ruin of me."
+
+And so they parted the best of friends. Indeed Harry had never liked his
+father so well or felt so much his superior. Thus from age to age is
+filial affection confirmed.
+
+But he had to allow some adroitness in his father. Not only Lady
+Waverton, but Geoffrey too, succumbed to the paternal charms. That was
+the more surprising. Geoffrey, behind his vanity and his affectation, was
+no fool. He had also a temper apt to dislike any man who made a show of
+position or achievement beyond his own. Yet he hung upon the lips of
+Colonel Boyce. What they gave him was indeed a pleasing mixture--secrets
+about great affairs flavoured with deference to his ingenious criticisms.
+There was something solid about it, too. The Colonel, displaying himself
+as a man of much importance, perpetually hinted that only the occasion
+was needed for Mr. Waverton to surpass him by far, and to that occasion
+he could point the way. It appeared to Harry that his father had in mind
+to enlist Geoffrey for the proposed mission to France, or some other
+scheme unrevealed. And being unable to see any reason for wanting
+Geoffrey as a man, he suspected that his father wanted money.
+
+He saw clearly that nobody wanted him, and was therewith very well
+content. At this time in his life he asked nothing better than to be left
+alone with his whims and the open air. He covered many a mile of sticky
+clay in these autumn days, placidly vacant of mind, and afterwards
+accounted them the most comfortable of his life.
+
+Mr. Waverton's house was set upon a hill, at one end of a line of hills
+which now look over the wilderness of London, falling steeply thereto,
+and upon the other side, to northward and the open country, more gently.
+In the epoch of Harry Boyce those hills were all woodland--pleasant
+patches still remain,--and if the need of great walking was not upon him
+he was often pleased to loiter through their thickets. It was on a wild
+south-westerly day when the naked trees were at a loud chorus that Alison
+came to him.
+
+The dainty colours of her face laughed from a russet hood, russet cloak
+and green skirt wind-borne against her gave him the delight of her shape.
+
+"'Stand, sir, and throw us that you have about you,'" she cried.
+
+"You're poetical, ma'am."
+
+"I vow not I. I say what I mean. There's an unmaidenly trick. And, faith,
+I am here to rifle you, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Wish you joy, ma'am. What of?"
+
+"Of your conceit, to be sure. Have you anything else?"
+
+"I have nothing which could be of any use to Miss Lambourne. So God knows
+why she runs after me."
+
+"Oh, brave!" Miss Lambourne was not out of countenance. "'Tis a shameless
+maid indeed which runs after a man"--she made him a curtsy. "But what is
+the man who runs away from a maid?"
+
+Harry Boyce cursed her in his heart. She was by far too desirable. The
+rain-fraught wind had made the dawn tints of her clearer, lucent and yet
+more delicate. Her grey eyes danced like the sunlight ripples of deep
+water. Her lips were purely, brilliantly red. She fronted him and the
+wind, flaunting the richness of her bosom, poised and strong. She seemed
+the very body of life. For the first time he felt unsure of himself. "Did
+you come to call names, ma'am?" he growled.
+
+"I allow you the privileges of a gentleman, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Gentleman? Oh Lud, no, ma'am. I am an upper servant. Rather better than
+the butler. Not so good as the steward."
+
+"It won't serve you, sir. You have insulted me, and I demand
+satisfaction." She drew off her gauntleted glove and flicked him in the
+face with it. "Now will you fight?"
+
+"Oh, must we slap and scratch then?" Harry flushed darker than the mark
+of the glove. "I thought we had been fighting."
+
+Miss Lambourne laughed. "You can lose your temper then? It's something,
+in fact. Yes, we have been fighting, sir, and you don't fight fair."
+
+"Who does with a woman?" Harry sneered. "I cry you mercy, ma'am. You are
+vastly too strong for me. Let me alone and I ask no more of you."
+
+To which Miss Lambourne said, very innocently, "Why?" Harry looked up and
+saw her beautiful face meek and appealing, with something of a demure
+smile in the eyes. "Come, sir, what have I asked of you? You have done
+me something of a great service. There was a man handling me--do you know
+what that means? "--she made a wry face and gave herself a shaking
+shudder--"You rid me of him, and with some risk to your precious skin.
+Well, sir, I am grateful, and I want to show it. Odds life, I should be a
+beast did I not. I want to thank you and to sing your praises--to
+yourself also perhaps. And you are pleased to be a churl and a boor."
+
+"In effect," said Harry coolly. "Egad, ma'am, let me have the luxury of
+hating you. For I am the Wavertons' gentleman usher and you are the
+nonpareil Miss Lambourne, vastly rich and--" he ended with a shrug and
+a rueful grin.
+
+"And--?" Miss Lambourne softly insisted.
+
+"And damnably lovely. Lord, you know that."
+
+"I thank God," said Miss Lambourne devoutly.
+
+"Is it true, Mr. Boyce--do the meek inherit the earth?" She held out her
+hands to him, one bare, one gloved, she swayed a little towards him, and
+her face was gentle and wistful. "Nay, sir, I ask your pardon. Call
+friends if you please and will please me."
+
+Harry lost hold of himself at last. The blood surged in him, and he
+caught at her and kissed her fiercely.
+
+It was he who was embarrassed. As he stood away from her, eyeing her with
+a queer defiant shame, she smiled through a small matter of a blush, and
+breathing quickly said: "What does it feel like, sir?"
+
+"The world's a miracle," Harry said unsteadily and would have caught
+her again.
+
+She turned, she was away light of foot, and in a moment through the wind
+he heard her singing to a tune of her own the child's rhyme:
+
+"Fly away, Jack,
+ Fly away, Jill,
+Come again, Jack,
+ Come again, Jill."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HARRY IS NOT GRATEFUL
+
+
+Where the lane from Fortis Green crosses the high road there stood an
+ale-house. On the wettest days, and some others, the place was Harry's
+resort. Not that he had a liking for ale-house company--or indeed any
+company. But within the precincts of the Wavertons' house tobacco was
+forbidden and--all the more for that--tobacco he loved with a solid
+devotion. The alehouse of the cross roads offered a clean floor, a clean
+fire, air not too foul, a tolerable chair, a landlord who did not talk,
+and until evening, sufficient solitude. There Harry smoked many pipes in
+tranquillity until the day when on his entry he found Mr. Hadley's
+sardonic face waiting for him. He liked Charles Hadley less than many men
+whom he more despised. Nobody in a position just better than menial can
+be expected to like the condescending mockery which was Mr. Hadley's
+_metier_. But Harry--it is one of his most noble qualities--bore being
+laughed at well enough. What most annoyed him was Mr. Hadley's parade of
+a surly, austere virtue. He did not doubt that it was sincere. He could
+more easily have forgiven it if it had been hypocritical. A man had no
+business to be so mighty honest.
+
+Mr. Hadley nodded at Harry, who said it was a dirty day, and called for
+his pot of small ale and his pennyworth of Spanish tobacco. Mr. Hadley
+was civil enough to pass him a pipe from the box. Both gentlemen smoked
+in grave silence.
+
+"So you are still with us," said Mr. Hadley.
+
+"By your good leave, sir."
+
+"I had an apprehension the Colonel was going to ravish you away."
+
+"I hope I am still of some use to Mr. Waverton."
+
+"Damme, you might be the old family retainer. 'Faithful service of the
+antique world,' egad. I suppose you will end your days with Geoffrey, and
+be buried at his feet like a trusty hound."
+
+"If you please, sir."
+
+They looked at each other. "Well, Mr. Boyce, I beg your pardon," Hadley
+said. "But you'll allow you are irritating to a plain man."
+
+"I do not desire it, sir."
+
+"I may hold my tongue and mind my own business, eh? Why not take me
+friendly?"
+
+"I intend you no harm, Mr. Hadley."
+
+"That's devilish good of you, Mr. Boyce. To be plain with you, what do
+you want here?"
+
+"Here? Oh Lord, sir, I come to smoke my pipe!"
+
+"And what if I come to smoke you? Odds life, I know you are no fool. Do
+me the honour to take me for none. And tell me, if you please, why do you
+choose to be Master Geoffrey's gentleman in waiting? You are good for
+better than that, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"No doubt, sir. But it brings me bread and butter."
+
+"You could earn that fighting in Flanders."
+
+Harry shrugged. "I am not very brave, Mr. Hadley."
+
+"You count upon staying here, do you?"
+
+"If I can satisfy Mr. Waverton," said Harry meekly.
+
+Hadley's face grew harder. "I vow I do my best to wish you well,
+Mr. Boyce. I should be glad to hear that you'll give up walking in
+the woods."
+
+There was a moment of silence. "I did not know that I had asked for your
+advice, sir." Harry said. "I am not grateful for it."
+
+"Damme, that's the first honest answer you have made," Hadley cried.
+"Look 'e, Mr. Boyce, I am as much your friend as I may be. I have an
+uncle which was the lady's guardian. If I said a word to him he would
+carry it to Lady Waverton in a gouty rage. There would be a swift end of
+Mr. Boyce the tutor. Well, I would not desire that. For all your airs,
+I'll believe you a man of honour. And I ask you what's to become of Mr.
+Boyce the tutor seeking private meetings with the Lambourne heiress?
+Egad, sir, you were made for better things than such a mean business."
+
+"Honour!" Harry sneered. "Were you talking of men of honour? I suppose
+there is good cover in the woods, Mr. Hadley."
+
+Hadley stared at him. "It was not good enough, you see, sir." He knocked
+out his pipe and stood up. "Bah, this is childish. You don't think me a
+knave, nor I you. I have said my say, and I mean you well."
+
+"I believe that, Mr. Hadley"--Harry met him with level eyes--"and I am
+not grateful."
+
+"You know who she is meant for."
+
+"I know that the lady might call us both impudent."
+
+"Would that break your bones? Come, sir, the lady hath been destined for
+Master Geoffrey since she had hair and never has rebelled."
+
+"Lord, Mr. Hadley, are you destiny?"
+
+Mr. Hadley let that by with an impatient shrug. "So if you be fool enough
+to have ambitions after her, you would wear a better face in eating no
+more of Master Geoffrey's bread."
+
+"It's a good day for walking, Mr. Hadley. Which way do you go? For I go
+the other."
+
+"I hope so," Mr. Hadley agreed, and on that the two gentlemen parted,
+both something warm.
+
+We should flatter him in supposing Harry Boyce of a chivalrous delicacy.
+Whether the lady's fair fame might be the worse for him was a question of
+which he never thought. It is certain that he did not blame himself for
+using his place as Geoffrey's paid servant to damage Geoffrey in his
+affections. And indeed you will agree that he was innocent of any
+designed attack upon the lady. Yet Mr. Hadley succeeded in making him
+very uncomfortable.
+
+What most troubled him, I conceive, was the fear of being ridiculous. The
+position of a poor tutor aspiring to the favours of the heiress destined
+for his master invites the unkind gibe. And Harry could not be sure that
+Alison herself was free from the desire to make him a figure of scorn.
+Such a suspicion might disconcert the most ardent of lovers. Harry
+Boyce, whatever his abilities in the profession, was not that yet. But
+the very fact that he had come to feel an ache of longing for Alison made
+him for once dread laughter. If he had been manoeuvring for what he could
+get by her, or if he had been merely taken by her good looks, he might
+have met jeering with a brazen face. But she had engaged his most private
+emotions, and to have them made ludicrous would be of all possible
+punishments most intolerable. The precise truth of what he felt for her
+then was, I suppose, that he wanted to make her his own--wanted to have
+all of her in his power; and a gentleman whom the world--and the
+lady--are laughing at for an aspiring menial cannot comfortably think
+about his right to possess her.
+
+There was something else. He was not meticulously delicate, but he had a
+complete practical sanity. He saw very well that even if Alison, by the
+chance of circumstance, had some infatuation for him, she might soon
+repent: he saw that even if the affair went with romantic success--a
+thing hardly possible--his position and hers might be awkward enough.
+Her friends would be long in forgiving either of them, and find ways
+enough to hurt them both. Mr. Hadley, confound him, spoke the common
+sense of mankind.
+
+There was one solution--that estimable father. By the time he came back
+to the house on Tether-down, Harry was resolved to enlist under the
+ambiguous banner of Colonel Boyce.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+GENEROSITY OF A FATHER
+
+
+With grim irony Harry congratulated himself on his decision. When first
+he came into the house he heard Alison singing. There was indeed (as he
+told himself clearly) nothing wonderful about her voice--it resembled
+the divine only in being still and small. Yet he could not (he called
+himself still more clearly a fool) keep away from it, and so he slunk
+into Lady Waverton's drawing-room. Only duty and stated hours were wont
+to drag him there. Lady Waverton showed her appreciation of his unusual
+attendance by staring at him across the massed trifles of the room with
+sleepy and insolent amazement. But it was not the glassy eyes of Lady
+Waverton which convinced Harry that flight was the true wisdom. Over
+Alison at the harpsichord, Geoffrey hung tenderly: their shoulders
+touched, eyes answered eyes, and miss was radiant. She sang at him with a
+naughty archness that song of Mr. Congreve's:
+
+"Thus to a ripe consenting maid,
+Poor old repenting Delia said,
+Would you long preserve your lover?
+ Would you still his goddess reign?
+Never let him all discover,
+ Never let him much obtain.
+
+Men will admire, adore and die
+While wishing at your feet they lie;
+But admitting their embraces
+ Wakes 'em from the golden dream:
+Nothing's new besides our faces,
+ Every woman is the same."
+
+She contorted her own face into smug folly by way of illustration. Then
+she and Geoffrey laughed together. "I vow you're the most deliciously
+wicked creature that ever was born a maid."
+
+"D'ye regret it, sir? Faith, I could not well be born a wife."
+
+"No, ma'am, that's an honour to be won by care and pains."
+
+"Pains! Lud, yes, I believe that. But, dear sir, I reckon it the
+punishment for folly. Why,"--she chose to see Harry--"why, here is our
+knight of the rueful countenance!"
+
+Mr. Waverton laughed. "It is related of the Egyptians--"
+
+"God help us," Alison murmured.
+
+He went on, giggling. "It is related of the Ancient Egyptians that they
+ever had a corpse among the guests at their feasts."
+
+"Were their cooks so bad?" said Alison.
+
+"To remind them that all men are mortal. Now you see why we keep Harry."
+
+"I wonder if he looked as happy when he was alive," said Alison,
+surveying his wooden face.
+
+"_De mortuis nil nisi bonum_," Geoffrey laughed. "No jests about the
+dead, Alison. But to tell you a secret, he never was alive. He doesn't
+like it known."
+
+Colonel Boyce, who had listened to the song and the first
+coruscations of wit with the condescending smile of a connoisseur,
+now exhibited some impatience. "Egad, Harry, why will you dress like
+a parson out at elbows?"
+
+"His customary suit of solemn black," said Geoffrey.
+
+"He is in mourning for himself, of course," Alison laughed.
+
+"I have two suits of clothes, ma'am," said Harry meekly. "This is
+the better."
+
+"Poor Harry!" Geoffrey granted him a look of protective affection. "I vow
+we are too hard on him, Alison." And then in a lower voice for her
+private ear. "A dear, worthy fellow, but--well, what would you have?--of
+no spirit." Alison bit her lip.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Waverton," Harry protested, "indeed, I am proud to be the cause
+of such wit."
+
+Colonel Boyce stared at his son with an enigmatic frown. Alison's eyes
+brightened. But Geoffrey suspected no guile. "Not witty thyself, dear
+lad, but the cause of wit in others, eh? Odds life, Harry, you are
+invaluable."
+
+"'Tis your kindness for me makes you think so, Mr. Waverton. And, to be
+sure, I could ask no more than to amuse your lady."
+
+Alison said tartly, "Oh, it takes little to amuse me, sir."
+
+"I am sure, ma'am," Harry agreed meekly.
+
+"It's a happy nature." and he bowed to Geoffrey, humbly congratulating
+him on a lady of such simple tastes.
+
+Geoffrey, who had now had enough of his good tutor, eliminated him by a
+compliment or so on Alison's voice and the demand that she should sing
+again. He found her in an awkward temper. She would not sing this, she
+would not sing that, she found faults in every song known to Mr.
+Waverton. Yet in a fashion she was encouraging. For this new method of
+keeping him off was governed by a queer adulation of him: no song in the
+world could be worth his distinguished attention; her little voice must
+be to his accomplished ear vain and ludicrous; the kind things he was so
+good as to say were vastly gratifying, to be sure, but they were merely
+his kind condescension. And, oh Lud, it was time she was gone, or poor,
+dear Weston would be imagining her slaughtered on the highway.
+
+Geoffrey could not make much of this, but was pleased to take it as
+flattering feminine homage to his magnificence. By way of reward, he
+announced an intention of riding home with her carriage. "Faith, you are
+too good"--her eyes were modestly hidden--"but then you are too good to
+everybody. Is he not, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+"Oh, ma'am, we all practise on his kindness," Harry said.
+
+"A good night to your mourning," she said sharply, "dear Lady Waverton."
+They kissed. "Colonel Boyce, I hold you to your promise."
+
+"With all my heart, ma'am. Your devoted."
+
+She was gone, and Harry, with a look of significance at his father, went
+off too....
+
+In that shabby upper chamber of his, Harry again offered the Colonel a
+choice between the bed and the one chair. Colonel Boyce made a gesture
+and an exclamation of impatience, and remained standing. "Now, what the
+devil do you want with me?" he complained.
+
+"I want to be very grateful. I want to enlist with you. When shall
+we start?"
+
+His father frowned, and in a little while made a crooked answer, "Do you
+know, Harry, you are too mighty subtle. I was so at your years. It's very
+pretty sport, but--well, it won't butter your parsnips. The women can't
+tell what to make of it. Having, in general, no humour, pretty
+creatures."
+
+"I am obliged for the sermon, sir. Shall we leave to-morrow?"
+
+"Egad, you are in a fluster," his father smiled. "Well, to be sure, he is
+a teasing fellow, the beautiful Geoffrey."
+
+Harry made an exclamation. "You'll forgive me, sir, if I say you are
+talking nonsense."
+
+"Oh Lud, yes," his father chuckled.
+
+"Whether I am agreeable to women, whether Mr. Waverton is agreeable to
+me--odds life, sir, I don't trouble my head about such things. Pray,
+why should you? As well sit down and cry because my eyes are not the
+same colour."
+
+"No. No. There is something taking about that, Harry," his father
+remonstrated placidly.
+
+"When you please to be in earnest, sir," Harry cried, "if this affair of
+yours is in earnest--" "Oh, you may count on that." Colonel Boyce was
+still enjoying himself.
+
+"Then I am ready for it. And the sooner the better."
+
+"Hurry is a bad horse. The truth is, something more hangs on this affair
+than Mr. Harry's whims. Oh, damme, I don't blame you, though. He is
+tiresome, our Geoffrey."
+
+"Why, sir, if we have to waste time, we might waste it more comfortably
+than with the Waverton family. Shall we say to-morrow?"
+
+Colonel Boyce tapped his still excellent teeth. "Patience, patience," he
+said, and considered his son gravely. "As for to-morrow, I have friends
+to see, and so have you. Your pretty miss engaged me to ride over with
+you to her house. And behind the brave Geoffrey's back, if you please.
+She is a sly puss, Harry." He expected so obviously an angry answer that
+Harry chose to disappoint him.
+
+"I shall be happy to take leave of Miss Lambourne. And shall I ride
+pillion with you, sir? For I have no horse of my own."
+
+"Bah, dear Geoffrey will lend me the best in the stable."
+
+"I give you joy of the progress in his affections."
+
+Colonel Boyce laughed. "You are pledged for the forenoon then," he
+paused. "And as to that little affair of mine--you shall know your part
+soon enough."
+
+"It cannot be too soon, sir."
+
+"No." Colonel Boyce nodded. "I think it's full time."
+
+He took leave of his son with what the son thought superfluous
+affection.
+
+Half an hour afterwards he was in Mr. Waverton's room--a place very
+precious. Everything in it--and there were many things--had an air of
+being strange. Mr. Waverton slept behind curtains of black and silver.
+His floor was covered with some stuff like scarlet velvet. There was a
+skull in the place of honour on the walls, flanked by two Venetian
+pictures of the Virgin, and faced by a blowsy Bacchus and Ariadne from
+Flanders. The chairs were of the newest Italian mode, designed rather to
+carry as much gilding as possible than to comfort the human form. Colonel
+Boyce, regarding them with some apprehension, stood himself before the
+fire and waved off Geoffrey's effusive courtesy.
+
+"I hope you have good news for me, Mr. Waverton?" So he opened the
+attack.
+
+"Why, sir, I have considered my engagements," Geoffrey said
+magnificently. "I believe I could hold myself free for some months--if
+the enterprise were of weight."
+
+"You relieve me vastly. I'll not disguise from you, Mr. Waverton, that I
+am something anxious to secure you. I could not find a gentleman so well
+equipped for this delicate business. You'll observe, 'tis of the first
+importance that we should have presence, an air, the _je ne sais quoi_ of
+dignity and family."
+
+"Sir, you are very obliging." Geoffrey swallowed it whole.
+
+"When I came here I confess I was at my wit's end. Indeed, I had a mind
+to go alone. The gentlemen of my acquaintance--either they could not be
+trusted with an affair of such value, or they had too much of our English
+coarseness to be at ease with it. Faith, when I came to see my poor, dear
+Harry, little I thought that in his neighbourhood I should find the very
+man for my embassy." The two gentlemen laughed together over the
+incompatibility of Harry with gentlemanly diplomacy.
+
+"Not but what Harry is a faithful, trusty fellow," said Mr. Waverton,
+with magnificent condescension.
+
+"You are very good to say so. A dolt, sir, a dolt; so much the worse for
+me. Now, Mr. Waverton, to you I have no need of a word more on the
+secrecy of the affair. Though, to be sure, this very morning I had
+another note from Cadogan--Marlborough's _âme damnée_ you know--pressing
+it on me that nothing should get abroad. So when we go, we'll be off
+without a good-bye, and if you must leave a word behind for the anxieties
+of my lady, let her know that you are off with me to see the army in
+Flanders."
+
+"I profess, Colonel, you are mighty cautious."
+
+"Dear sir, we cannot be too cautious in this affair. There's many a
+handsome scheme gone awry for the sake of some affectionate farewell.
+Mothers, wives, lady-loves--sweet luxuries, Mr. Waverton, but damned
+dangerous. Now here's my plan. We'll go riding on an afternoon and not
+come back again. Trust my servant to get away quietly with your baggage
+and mine. We must travel light, to be sure. We'll go round London. I have
+too many friends there, and I want none of them asking where old Noll
+Boyce is off to now. Newhaven is the port for us. There is a trusty
+fellow there has his orders already. I look to land at Le Havre. Now, the
+Prince, by our latest news, is back at St. Germain. As you can guess, Mr.
+Waverton, to be seen in Paris would suit my health even less than to be
+seen in London. Too many honest Frenchmen have met me in the wars, and,
+what's worse, too many of them know me deep in Marlborough's business. I
+could not show my face without all King Louis's court talking of some
+great matter afoot. What I have in mind is to halt on the road--at
+Pontoise maybe--while you ride on with letters to Prince James. I warrant
+you they are such, and with such names to them, as will assure you a
+noble welcome. It's intended that he should quit St. Germain privately
+with you to conduct him to me. Then I warrant you we shall know how to
+deal with the lad." He paused and stared at Geoffrey intently, and
+gradually a grim humour stole into his eyes. He began to laugh. "Egad, I
+envy you, Mr. Waverton. To be in such an affair at your years--bah, I
+should have been crazy with pride."
+
+"You need not doubt that I value the occasion, sir," Geoffrey said
+grandly. "Pray, believe that I shall do honour to your confidence."
+
+"To be sure you will. Odds life, to chaffer with a king's son about
+kingdoms, to offer a realm to a prince in exile (if only he will be a
+good boy)--it's a fine, stately affair, sir, and you are the very man to
+take it in the right vein."
+
+"Sir, you are most obliging. I profess I vaunt myself very happy in your
+kindness. Be sure that I shall know how to justify you."
+
+"Egad, you do already," Colonel Boyce smiled, still with some touch of
+cruelty in his eyes.
+
+"Pray, sir, when must we start?"
+
+"When I know, maybe I shall need to start in an hour."
+
+"I shall not fail you. I shall want, I suppose, some funds in hand?"
+
+Colonel Boyce shrugged. "Oh Lud, yes, we'll want some money. A matter of
+five hundred pounds should serve."
+
+"I will arrange for it in the morning," said Mr. Waverton, too
+magnificent to be startled. "Pray, what clothes shall we be able
+to carry?"
+
+"Damme, that's a grave matter," said Colonel Boyce, and with becoming
+gravity discussed it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+MISS LAMBOURNE LOOKS SIDEWAYS
+
+
+Thus Colonel Boyce blandly arranged the lives of his young friends. It is
+believed that he had a peculiar pleasure in manoeuvring his
+fellow-creatures from behind a veil of secrecy. For in this he sought not
+merely his private profit (though it was never out of his calculations);
+he enjoyed his operations for their own sake; he liked his trickery as
+trickery; to push and pull people to the place in which he wanted them
+without their knowing how or why or to what end they were impelled was to
+him a pleasure second to none in life. And on a survey of his whole
+career he is to be accounted successful. Though I cannot find that he
+ever achieved anything of signal importance even for himself, at one time
+or another he brought a great number of people, some of them powerful,
+and some of them honourable, under his direction, he had his complete
+will of many of them, and was rewarded by the bitter hostility of the
+majority. He contrived, in fact, to live just such a life as he liked
+best. What more can any man have?
+
+So he told Harry nothing of his engagement of Mr. Waverton, and Harry,
+you have seen, was not likely to guess that anyone would enlist his
+Geoffrey for a serious enterprise. On the next morning, indeed, Harry did
+remark that Geoffrey was more portentous than usual, but thought nothing
+of it. He was embarrassed by thinking about himself.
+
+There was, as Colonel Boyce predicted, no difficulty about a horse for
+Harry. When the Colonel suggested it, Geoffrey showed some satirical
+surprise at Harry's daring, but (advising one of the older carriage
+horses) bade him take what he would. Colonel Boyce spoke only of riding
+with his son. He said nothing of where they were going. Harry wondered
+whether Geoffrey would have been so gracious if he had known that Alison
+was their destination, and, a new experience for him, felt some qualms of
+conscience. It was uncomfortable to use a favour from Geoffrey, even a
+trifling favour granted with a sneer, for meeting his lady; still more
+uncomfortable to go seek the lady out secretly. But if he announced what
+he was doing, there would be instantly something ridiculous about it, and
+he would have to swallow much of Geoffrey's humour. Geoffrey might even
+come with them, and Alison and he be humorous together--a fate
+intolerable. There was indeed an easy way of escape. He had but to stay
+away from the lady. But, though he despised himself for it, he desired
+infinitely to see her again. She compelled him, as he had never believed
+anything outside his own will could compel. After all, it was no such
+matter, for he would soon be gone with his father to France. He might
+well hope never to see her again.
+
+So on that ride through the steep wooded lanes to Highgate, his father
+found him morose, and complained of it. "Damme, for a young fellow that's
+off to his lady-love you are a mighty poor thing, Harry."
+
+"My lady-love! I have no taste for rich food. I thought it was your lady
+we were going to see."
+
+"What the devil do you mean by that?" Colonel Boyce stared.
+
+"Oh, fie, sir! Why be ashamed of her?"
+
+"God knows what you are talking about." Colonel Boyce was extraordinarily
+irritated. "Ashamed of whom?"
+
+"Of the peerless Miss Lambourne, to be sure. Oh, sir, why be so innocent?
+How could she resist your charms? And indeed--"
+
+"Miss Lambourne! What damned nonsense you talk, Harry."
+
+"I followed your lead, sir," said Harry meekly. "But if we are to talk
+sense--when shall we start for France?"
+
+"You shall know when I know."
+
+And on that they came to the top of the hill and the gates of the Hall.
+The wet weather had yielded to St. Martin's summer. It was a day of
+gentle silver-gold sunlight and benign air. With her companion, Mrs.
+Weston, Miss Lambourne was walking in the garden. She met the gentlemen
+at a turn of the drive by rampant sweetbriers. "Here's our knight of the
+rueful countenance, and faith, on Rosinante, poor jade," she patted
+Harry's aged carriage horse. "Oh, and he has brought with him Solomon in
+all his glory," she made a wonderful curtsy to the splendours of Colonel
+Boyce. "Now, who would have dreamt Don Quixote's father was Solomon?"
+
+"I suppose I take after my mother, ma'am," Harry said meekly. "It's a
+hope which often consoles me."
+
+"Why, they say Solomon had something of a variety in wives, and
+among them--"
+
+Colonel Boyce dismounted with so much noise that the jest was hardly
+heard and the end of it altogether lost.
+
+"You did not tell me"--Mrs. Weston was speaking and seemed to find it
+difficult--"Alison, you did not tell me the gentlemen were coming." It
+occurred to Harry that she looked very pale and ill.
+
+"Why, Weston; dear, I could not tell if they would keep troth." She
+began to hum:
+
+"Men were deceivers ever,
+ One foot on sea, and one on shore,
+To one thing constant never."
+
+"Nay, ma'am, sigh no more for here are we," Colonel Boyce said brusquely.
+
+"Oh Lud, he overwhelms us with the honour." She laughed. "How can we
+entertain him worthily? Sir, will you walk? My poor house and I await
+your pleasure."
+
+"I am vastly honoured, ma'am. I have never had a lady-in-waiting."
+
+"Oh, celibate virtue!" quoth Miss Lambourne. And so to the house Colonel
+Boyce led her and his horse, and a little way behind Harry followed with
+his and Mrs. Weston.
+
+She had nothing to say for herself. She looked so wan, she walked so
+slowly, and with such an air of pain that Harry had to say something
+about fearing she was not well. Then he felt a fool for his pains; as she
+turned in answer and shook her head he saw such a sad, wistful dignity in
+her eyes that the small coin of courtesy seemed an absurd offering. A
+fancy, to be sure, in itself absurd. Yet he could not make the woman out.
+There was something odd and baffling in the way she looked at him.
+
+She led off with an odd question, "Pray, have you lived much with
+Colonel Boyce?"
+
+"Not I, ma'am." Harry laughed. "If I were not a very wise child I should
+hardly know my own father. Lived with him? Not much more than with my
+mother, whom I never saw."
+
+"Oh, did you not?" Her eyes dwelt upon him. After a little while, "Who
+brought you up then?"
+
+"Schools. Half a dozen schools between Taunton and London, and
+Westminster at last."
+
+"Were you happy?"
+
+"When I had sixpence."
+
+"But Colonel Boyce is rich!" she cried.
+
+"I have no evidence of it, ma'am."
+
+"I cannot understand. You hardly know him. But he comes to you at Lady
+Waverton's; he stays with you; he brings you here. I believe you are
+closer with him than you say."
+
+"Why, ma'am, it's mighty kind in you to concern yourself so with my
+affairs. And if you can't understand them, faith, no more can I."
+
+She showed no shame at this rebuke of impertinence. In a minute Harry was
+sorry he had amused himself by giving it. There was something strangely
+affecting in the woman. Middle-aged, stout, faded, bound in manner and
+speech by a shy clumsiness, she refused to be insignificant, she made an
+appeal to him which he puzzled over in vain. Her simplicity was with
+power, as of a nature which had cared only for the greater things. He
+felt himself meeting one who had more than he of human quality, richer in
+suffering, richer in all emotion, and (what was vastly surprising) under
+her dullness, her feebleness, of fuller and deeper life.
+
+From vague, intriguing, bewildering fancies, her voice brought him back
+with a start. "He brought you here?" she was asking.
+
+To be sure, she was wonderfully maladroit. This buzzing, futile curiosity
+irritated him again into a sneer. "He is no doubt captivated by the
+beautiful eyes of Miss Lambourne."
+
+"He! Mr. Boyce?"--she corrected herself with a stammer and a
+blush--"Colonel Boyce? Oh no. Indeed, he is old enough to be her father."
+
+"I think we ought to tell him so." Harry chuckled. "It would do
+him good."
+
+"I think this is not very delicate, sir." Mrs. Weston was still blushing.
+
+"Egad, ma'am, if you ask questions, you must expect answers," Harry
+snapped at her.
+
+"Why do you sneer at her? Why should you speak coarsely of her? I suppose
+you come to the house of your own choice? Or does he make you come?"
+
+Harry saw no occasion for such excitement. "Why, you take away my breath
+with your pronouns. He and she--she and he--pray, let's leave him and
+her out of the question. Here's a very pretty garden."
+
+"Indeed, we need not quarrel, I think." She laughed nervously, and gave
+him an odd, shy look. "Pray, do you stay with the Wavertons?"
+
+"Alas, ma'am, I make your acquaintance and bid you farewell all in one
+day."
+
+"Make my acquaintance!" Again came a nervous laugh, and it was a moment
+before she went on. "We have met before to-day."
+
+"Oh Lud, ma'am, I would desire you forget it."
+
+"I am to forget it!" she echoed. "Oh ... Oh, you are very proud."
+
+"Not I, indeed. The truth is, ma'am, that silly affair with our
+highwayman, it embarrasses me mightily. I want to live it down. Pray,
+help me, and think no more about it."
+
+"I suppose that is what you say to Alison?" For the first time there was
+a touch of fun in her eyes.
+
+"Word for word, ma'am."
+
+"Why do you come here then?"
+
+"As I have the honour to tell you--to say good-bye."
+
+She checked and stared at him. She was very pale. But now they were at
+the steps of the house, and Colonel Boyce, who had resigned his horse to
+a groom, turned with Alison to meet them.
+
+"I am hot with the Colonel's compliments, Weston, dear," she announced.
+"I must take a turn with Mr. Boyce to cool me. 'Tis his role. A
+convenient family, faith. One makes you uncomfortably hot and t'other
+freezes you. You go get warm, my Weston. Though I vow 'tis dangerous to
+trust you to the Colonel. He has made very shameless love to me, and you
+have a tender heart."
+
+It occurred to Harry that Mrs. Weston and his father, thus forced to look
+at each other, wore each an air of defiance. They amused him.
+
+"I am not afraid," Mrs. Weston said.
+
+"I profess I am abashed," said Colonel Boyce. "Pray, ma'am, be gentle to
+my disgrace," and he offered his arm. She bowed and moved away, and he
+followed her.
+
+Harry and Alison, face to face, and sufficiently close, eyed each other
+with some amusement.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Boyce," said she, and shook her head.
+
+"Oh, Miss Lambourne," Harry exhorted in his turn.
+
+"You have fallen. You have walked into my parlour."
+
+"I am the best of sons, ma'am. I endure all things at my father's
+orders--even spiders."
+
+She still eyed him steadily, searching him, and was still amused. She
+moved a little so that the admirable flowing lines of her shape were more
+marked. Then she said, "Why are you afraid of me?"
+
+Harry shook his head, smiling. "Vainly is the net spread in the sight of
+the bird, ma'am. But, faith, it was a pretty question, and I make you my
+compliments."
+
+"So. Will you walk, sir?" She turned into a narrow path in the shadow of
+arches, clothed by a great Austrian brier, on which here and there a
+yellow flame still glowed. "Mr. Boyce--when I meet you in company you
+shrink and cower detestably; when I meet you alone, you fence with me
+impudently enough and shrewdly; and always you avoid me while you can. I
+suppose there's in all this something more than the freaks of a fool.
+Then it's fear. Prithee, sir, why in God's name are you afraid of me?"
+
+"Miss Lambourne got out of bed very earnest this morning," Harry grinned.
+"But oh, let's be grave and honest with all my heart. Why, then, ma'am,
+I've to say that a penniless fellow has the right to be afraid of Miss
+Lambourne's money bags."
+
+"Fie, you are no such fool. If one is good company to t'other, which is
+rich and which is poor is no more matter than which fair and which dark."
+
+"In a better world, ma'am, I would believe you."
+
+"And here you believe kind folks would sneer at Harry Boyce for scenting
+an heiress. So you tuck your tail between your legs and go to ground. I
+suppose that is called honour, sir."
+
+"Oh no, ma'am. Taste."
+
+"La, I offend monsieur's fine taste, do I?"
+
+"Not often, ma'am. But by all means let us be earnest. I believe I mind
+being sneered at no more than my betters. _Par exemple_, ma'am, when you
+laugh at me for being shabby, I am not much disturbed."
+
+She blushed furiously. "I never did."
+
+"Oh, I must have read your thoughts then," Harry laughed. "Well, what
+matters to me is not that folks laugh at me but why they laugh. That they
+mock me for being out at elbows I swallow well enough. That they should
+sneer at me for making love to a woman's purse would give me a nausea."
+
+Miss Lambourne was pleased to look modest. "Indeed, sir, I did not know
+that you had made love to me."
+
+"I am obliged by your honesty, ma'am."
+
+Miss Lambourne looked up and spoke with some vehemence. "It comes
+to this, then, you would be beaten by what folks may say about you.
+Oh, brave!"
+
+"Lud, we are all beaten by what folks might say. Would you ride into
+London in your shift?"
+
+"I don't want to ride in my shift," she cried fiercely.
+
+"Perhaps not, ma'am. But perhaps I don't want to make love to your
+purse."
+
+"Od burn it, sir, am I nothing but a purse?"
+
+"I leave it to your husband to find out, ma'am, and beg leave to take my
+leave. My kind father offers me occupation at a distance, and I embrace
+it ardently. Who knows? It may provide me with a coat."
+
+"You are going away?"
+
+"I have had the honour to say so."
+
+"And why, if you please?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "Because, ma'am, without my assistance, Mr. Waverton can
+very well translate Horace into his own sublime verse and Miss Lambourne
+into his own proud wife."
+
+He intended her to rage. What she did was to say softly: "You do not want
+to see me that?"
+
+"I have no ambition to amuse you, ma'am." Miss Lambourne looked
+sideways. "What if I don't want you to go away?"
+
+"Egad, ma'am, I know you don't." Harry laughed. "You amuse yourself
+vastly (God knows why) with baiting me."
+
+"Why, it amuses me." Alison still looked at him sideways. "Don't you
+know why?"
+
+He did not choose to answer.
+
+"Indeed, then, if I am nought to you why do you care what folks say of
+you and me?"
+
+Harry made a step towards her. "You mean to have it again, do you?"
+he muttered.
+
+"Pray, sir, what?" and still she looked sideways.
+
+"What you dragged out of me in the wood."
+
+"Dragged out of--oh!" She blushed, she drew back, and so had occasion to
+do something with her cloak which let a glimpse of white neck and bosom
+come into the light. "You flatter us both indeed."
+
+"I'll tell you the truth of us both"--he, too, was flushed: "you are a
+curst coquette and I am a curst fool."
+
+Now she met his eyes fairly, and in hers there was no more laughter,
+but she smiled with her lips: "I think you know yourself better than
+you know me."
+
+Harry gripped her hands. "You go about to make me mad with desire for
+you, you--"
+
+"I want you so," she breathed, and leaned back, away from him, her eyes
+half veiled.
+
+He had his arms about her body, held her close. The red lips curved in a
+riddle of a smile. He saw dark depths in the shadowed eyes.
+
+"_Malbrouck s'en va t'en guerre_" she murmured.
+
+Harry exclaimed something, felt her against him, was aware of all her
+form--and heard footsteps.
+
+Alison was out of his grasp, her back to him, plucking a rose. "You will
+see me again--you shall see me again. I ride in the wood to-morrow
+morning," she muttered.
+
+"You'll pay for it," Harry growled.
+
+His father arrived, Mrs. Weston, a servant at their heels.
+
+Alison came round with a swirl of skirts. "Dear sir, I doubt you have
+burnt up dinner by your long passages with my Weston. Come in, come in,"
+and she led the way.
+
+For once Colonel Boyce was without an answer. Harry, who was dreading
+witticisms, looked at him in surprise, and with more surprise saw that he
+looked angry. Mrs. Weston hurried on before them all. Her eyes were red.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+ANGER OF AN UNCLE
+
+
+It seems certain that on this day Alison wore a dress of a blue like
+peacock's feathers. That colour--as you may see, she wears it in both the
+Kneller and the Thornhill portraits--was much a favourite of hers, and
+indeed it set off well the rare beauty of her own hues. The clarity, the
+delicacy, of her cheeks were such as you may see on one of those roses
+which, white in full flower, have a rosy flush on the outer petals of the
+bud, and the same rose open may serve for the likeness of a neck and
+bosom which she guarded no more prudishly than her day's fashion
+demanded. For all the daintiness, her lips, a proud pair, were richly red
+(stained of raspberries, in Charles Hadley's sneer), and with the black
+masses of her hair and grey eyes almost as dark, gave her an aspect of,
+what neither man nor woman ever denied her, eager and passionate life.
+All this was flowering out of her peacock blue velvet, and Harry, I
+infer, went mad.
+
+She never expanded into the larger extravagances of the hoop, preferring
+to trust to her own shape. Her waist made no pretence of fine-ladyship,
+but the bodice was close laced _à la mode_ to parade the riches of her
+bosom. Strong and gloriously alive, and abundantly a woman--so she smiled
+at the world.
+
+It was a delirious hour for Harry, that dinner. He knew that Alison was
+pleased to be in the gayest spirits, and his father, in his father's own
+flamboyant style, seconded her heartily. He joined in, too, and seemed to
+himself loud and vapid, yet had no power of restraint. It was as though
+his usual placid, critical mind were detached and watched himself in the
+happy exuberance of drunkenness--which was a state unknown to him, for
+excess of liquor could only move him with drowsy gloom. And in the midst
+of the noise Mrs. Weston sat, pale and silent, a ghost at the feast.
+
+He was glad when his father spoke of going, though he found himself
+talking some folly against it, on Alison's side, who jovially mocked the
+Colonel for shyness. But Colonel Boyce, it appeared, had made up his
+mind, and Harry was surprised at the masterful ease with which, keeping
+the empty fun still loud, he extricated himself and his unwilling son.
+
+They were all at the door, a noisy, laughing company, and the
+horses waited.
+
+"It's no use, ma'am," Harry cried, "he knows how to get his way,
+_monsieur mon père_."
+
+"Pray heaven he hath not taught his son the art!"
+
+"Oh Lud, no, I am the very humble servant of any petticoat."
+
+"Fie, that's far worse, sir. I see you would still be forgetting which
+covered your wife."
+
+"Never believe him, Madame Alison." quoth the Colonel. "It's a strong
+rogue and a masterless man,"
+
+"Why, that's better again. And yet it's not so well if he'll be
+mistressless too."
+
+"Fight it out, child," the Colonel cried. "'Lay on, Macduff, and curst be
+she that first cries hold, enough!' Come, Harry, to horse."
+
+"See, Weston, he deserts me, and merrily!"
+
+There came upon the scene two other horsemen--Mr. Hadley's gaunt,
+one-armed frame and a big, lumbering elder with a rosy face.
+
+Harry bowed over Alison's hand. It was she who put it to his lips, and
+nodding a roguish smile at the other gentlemen, "So you run away,
+sir?" she said.
+
+Harry looked at her and "Give me back my head," he said in a low voice.
+"I have lost it somewhere here."
+
+"Oh, your head!" She laughed. "Well, maybe it's the best part of you."
+
+He mounted, and Colonel Boyce, already in the saddle, kissed his hand to
+her. They rode off, compelled to single file by the plump old gentleman
+who held the middle of the road and glowered at them. Mr. Hadley made an
+elaborate bow.
+
+The old gentleman watched them out of sight round the curve of the drive,
+then sent his horse on with an oath and, dismounting heavily at Alison's
+toes, roared out: "What the devil's this folly, miss?" He made angry
+puffing noises. "I vow I heard you laughing at Finchley. Might have heard
+him kissing too."
+
+"Kissing? Oh la, sir, my hand, and so may you." She held it out and made
+an impudent little curtsy. "I protest the gentleman is all maidenly. That
+is why he and I make so good a match."
+
+The old gentleman spluttered and was still redder. "Match, miss? What,
+the devil!"
+
+"Oh no, sir. Pray come in, sir. I see you are in a heat, and I fear for a
+chill on your gout."
+
+"You are mighty civil, miss. You are too civil by half," the old
+gentleman puffed, and stalked past her.
+
+Alison stood in the way of Charles Hadley as he made to follow. There was
+some pugnacity on her fair face. "It's mighty kind of Mr. Hadley to
+concern himself with me."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, if I come untimely it's pure happy chance."
+
+She whirled round on that and they went in. "Will you please to drink a
+dish of tea, Sir John?"
+
+"You know I won't, miss." The old gentleman let himself down with a grunt
+into the largest chair in her drawing-room. "Now who the plague is this
+kissing fellow?"
+
+"Sure, sir, it's the gentleman Mr. Hadley told you of," said Alison
+meekly. She hit both her birds. Mr. Hadley and his uncle looked at each
+other. Sir John snorted. Mr. Hadley shrugged and gave an acid laugh.
+
+"What, what, that fellow of Waverton's? Od burn it, miss, he's a
+starveling usher."
+
+"Oh, sir, don't be hasty. I dare say he'll be fat when he's old."
+
+"Don't be pert, miss. D'ye know all the county's talking of you and
+this fellow?"
+
+Alison paled a little. She spoke in a still small voice. "I did not know
+how much I was in Mr. Hadley's debt. I advise you, Sir John, don't be one
+of those who talk."
+
+"You advise me, miss! Damme, ain't I your guardian?"
+
+"I am trying to remember that you once were, sir. But you make it
+very hard."
+
+"What the devil do you mean?"
+
+"I mean--"
+
+"I vow neither of you knows what you mean," Mr. Hadley drowned her in a
+drawl. "I never saw such fire-eaters. Look 'e, Alison, we come riding
+over in a civil way and--"
+
+"Tell me you have been planning a scandal about me. Oh, I vow I am
+obliged to you."
+
+Mr. Hadley laughed. "Lud, child, you ha' known me long enough. Do I deal
+in tattle? And if we have seen what we should not ha' seen, if you're hot
+at being caught, prithee, whose fault is it? Egad, you know well enough
+there's things beneath Miss Lambourne's dignity."
+
+"Yes, indeed, and I see Mr. Hadley is one of them."
+
+"You're a fool for your pains, Charles," John shouted. "What's sense to a
+wench? Now, miss, I'll have an end of this. You're old Tom Lambourne's
+daughter for all your folly, and I'll not have his flesh and blood the
+sport of any greedy rogue from the kennel."
+
+There was a moment of silence. Then Alison, whose colour was grown high,
+said quietly, "Pray, Sir John, will you go or shall I? I do not desire to
+see you again in my house."
+
+"Go?" The old gentleman struggled to his feet. "Damme, Charles, the
+girl's mad. Yes, miss, I'll go--and go straight to my Lady Waverton. Od
+burn it, we'll have your fellow out of the county in an hour. Egad, miss,
+you're besotted. Why, what is he?--a trickster, a knight of the road.
+'Stand and deliver,' that's my gentleman's trade. He's for your father's
+money, you fool."
+
+"Good-bye, Sir John," Alison said, and turned away.
+
+With unwonted agility, Mr. Hadley came between her and the door. "You are
+not fair to us, Alison," he said. "Prithee, be fair to yourself." She
+passed him without a word. Mr. Hadley turned and showed Sir John a rueful
+face. "We have made a bad business of it, sir."
+
+Sir John swore. "Brazen impudence, damme, brazen, I say."
+
+"Oh Lord! Don't make bad worse."
+
+Sir John swore again. Upon his rage came Alison's voice singing:
+
+"When daffodils begin to peer
+ With heigh! the doxy, over the dale,
+Why, then comes in the sweet o' the year,
+ For the red blood reigns in the winter's pale."
+
+Sir John spluttered, and went out roaring for his horse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+YOUNG BLOOD
+
+
+There is reason to believe that from the first Mr. Hadley suspected he
+was making a fool of himself. This sensation, the common accompaniment of
+an attempt to do your duty, was just of the right strength to ensure that
+all his actions should be disastrous. It was, as you see, not strong
+enough to restrain him from exciting the dull and choleric mind of Sir
+John Burford; it did not avail to direct the ensuing storm. And then,
+having first failed to be sufficient check, it developed into a very
+paralysis.
+
+Startled by the furies he had roused in Alison, Mr. Hadley found that
+suspicion of his own folly develop into a gruesome conviction. It
+compelled him to labour with Sir John vehemently until that blundering
+knight consented to wait before exploding his alarms upon Lady Waverton.
+Even as the first blundering remonstrances had irritated Alison's wanton
+will into passionate resolution, so this ensuing vacillation and delay
+gave it opportunity.
+
+If the tale had been told to Lady Waverton, no doubt but Harry would have
+been banished from Tetherdown that night. It is likely, indeed, that the
+ultimate fates of Alison and Harry would have been the same. But many
+antecedent adventures must have been different or superfluous.
+
+Mr. Hadley was now full of common sense. Mr. Hadley sagely argued with
+his uncle that they would do more harm than good by carrying their tale
+to Lady Waverton. The woman was a fool in grain, and whatever she did
+would surely do it in the silliest way. Tell her a word, and she would
+swiftly give birth to a scandal which the world would not willingly let
+die, in which Mr. Harry Boyce, if he were indeed the knave of their
+hypothesis, might easily find a means to strengthen his grip of Alison.
+It was better to wait and (so Mr. Hadley with a sour smile) "see which
+way the cat jumped."
+
+Perhaps Madame Alison, who was no kitten, might not be altogether
+infatuated. The shock of the afternoon, for all her heroics, might have
+waked in her some doubt of the charms of Mr. Boyce. The girl was shrewd
+enough. She had dealt with fortune-hunters before--remember the Scottish
+lord's son--and shown a humorous appreciation of the tribe. She was not a
+chit with the green sickness; she was neither so young nor so old that
+she must needs fall into the arms of any man who made eyes at her. After
+all, likely enough she was but amusing herself with Mr. Boyce. Not a very
+delicate business, but they were full-blooded folk, the Lambournes.
+Remember old Tom, her father: there was a jolly bluff rogue. Well, if
+miss was but having her fling, it would do no good to tease her.
+
+Thus Mr. Hadley, cautiously recoiling, doubting or hoping he was making
+the best of things, brought Sir John, in spite of some boilings over,
+safe back to his home and his jovial daughter.
+
+When Harry and his father rode away from Alison, for once in a while
+Harry found his father's mood in tune with his own. Colonel Boyce
+suddenly relapsed from hilarity into a perfect silence. He soon reined
+his horse to a walk, and his wonted alert, soldierly bearing suffered
+eclipse. He gave at the back, he was thoughtful, he was melancholy--a
+very comfortable companion.
+
+"Pray, sir, when do we start for France?" said Harry at length.
+
+"What's that? Egad, you're in a hurry, ain't you? Not to-night nor yet
+to-morrow. Time enough, time enough. Make the best of it, Harry." It
+occurred to Harry that his father was preoccupied.
+
+But with that he did not concern himself. He was in too much tumult. It
+appeared that he would be able to meet Alison in the morning. He did
+not know whether he was glad. He had been telling himself that he would
+have snatched at the excuse to fail her, and yet was not sure that if
+his father had announced instant departure he would not have bidden his
+father to the devil. But still in a fashion he was angry, in a degree
+he was frightened. He knew that he would go meet the girl now; he could
+not help himself--an exasperating state. And when he was with her--her
+presence now set all his nature rioting--with other folk by, it was
+hard enough to be sane; when he was alone with her in the wood, what
+would the wild wench be to him before they parted? There was no love in
+him. He had no tenderness for her, he did not want to cherish her,
+serve her, glorify her. Only she made him mad with passion. But,
+according to his private lights, he was honest, and wished to be, and
+was therefore commanded to try to save the girl from his wicked will
+and hers. He despised himself for the gleam of cautious duty. What in
+the world was worth so much as the rose petals of her face, the round
+swell of her breast?
+
+"Damme, Harry, a man's a fool to be ambitious," so his father broke in
+upon this tumult. "Why do we fret and trick after a place, or a purse, or
+a trifle of power?"
+
+Harry stared at him. "Lord, sir, why are you so moral?"
+
+And then Colonel Boyce began to laugh. "I grow old, I think. Oh, the
+devil, I never had regrets worse than the morning's headache for last
+night's wine. I suppose if you live long enough, life's a procession of
+morning headaches. Well, I vow I've not lived long enough yet, Harry."
+
+"I dare say you are the best judge," Harry admitted.
+
+"There's a higher court, eh? Who knows? Maybe we are all the toys of
+chance." He shrugged. "Why then, damme, I have never been afraid to take
+what I chose and wait for the bill. Dodge it, or pay it. Odso, there is
+no other way for a hungry man."
+
+"Lord, sir, now you are philosophical! What's the matter?"
+
+"Humph, I suppose my stomach is weakening," said Colonel Boyce. "I don't
+digest things as I did."
+
+In this pensive temper they came back to Tetherdown. The Colonel's
+servant was waiting for him with letters, and he was seen no more that
+night. Harry did not know till afterwards that Mr. Waverton, as well as
+letters, was taken to the Colonel's room.
+
+Madame Alison was left by the exhortations of her anxious friends feeling
+defiant of all the world. It is a comfortable condition, but, for a
+passionate girl of twenty-two, fruitful of delusions.
+
+Alison was so far happier than Harry in that she knew what she wanted.
+You may wonder if you will how Harry Boyce, with nothing handsome about
+him but his legs, could rouse in the girl just such a wild longing as her
+beauty set ablaze in him. These problems, comforting to the conceit of
+man, are numerous. And, as usual, madame had dreamed her gentleman into a
+wonderful fellow. The overthrow of the highwayman became from the first a
+splendid achievement. Sure, Mr. Boyce must be of rare courage and
+strength, even as he was deliciously adroit, and that insolent air with
+which he did his devoir gave one a sweet thrill.
+
+Afterwards, he progressed in her imagination from victory to victory.
+What served him best was his capacity for puzzling her. That its hero
+should want to keep such a gallant affair secret proved him of amazing
+modesty or amazing pride--perhaps both--a titillating combination. It
+surprised her more that he should dare rebuff the advances of Miss
+Lambourne. Madame knew very well the power of her beauty over men. If she
+gave one half an inch she expected that he should be instantly mad to get
+an ell of her. But here was Mr. Boyce, though she gave him a good many
+inches, as supercilious about her as if he were a woman. It was
+incredible that the creature had no warm blood in him. Indeed, she had
+proof--she could still make herself feel the ache of his grasp in the
+wood--that he was on occasion as fierce as any woman need want a man.
+Why, then, monsieur must be defying her out of wanton pride. A marvellous
+fellow, who dared think himself too good for her.
+
+She made no account of all his wise, honest talk about being poor while
+she was rich. To her temper it was impossible that a man who wanted her
+in his arms should stop to weigh his purse and hers, or to consider what
+the world would say of him for wooing her. All that must be mere fencing,
+mere mockery.
+
+To be sure, he fenced mighty cleverly. The smug meekness which he put on
+when she attacked him before others was bewildering. If she had never
+seen him in action she must have been deceived. And, faith, it seemed
+certain that he wanted to deceive her, to put her off, to put her aside.
+The haughty gentleman dared believe that he could be very comfortable
+without Miss Lambourne. It must not be allowed. He was by far too fine a
+fellow to be let go his way. Faith, it was mighty noble, this
+self-sufficient power of his, capable of anything, caring for nothing,
+hiding itself behind an impenetrable mask, and living a secret life of
+its own. She was on fire to enter into him and take possession, and use
+him for herself.
+
+So she was driven by a double need, knew it, and was not the least
+ashamed. She longed to have Harry Boyce in her arms and his grip cruel
+upon her. But also she wanted to conquer him and hold his mind at her
+order. She imagined him under her direction winning all manner of fame.
+And she believed herself mightily in love....
+
+There is a moss on the birch trunks which makes a colour of singular
+charm, a soft, delicate, grey green. A hood of that colour embraced
+Alison's black hair and the glow of the dark eyes and her raspberry lips.
+The cloak of the same colour she drew close about her with one gauntleted
+hand, so that it confessed her shape.
+
+The birches could still show a few golden leaves, though each moment
+another went whirling away as the crests bowed and tossed before the
+wind. In the brown bracken beneath Harry Boyce stood waiting. His graces
+were set off with his customary rusty black. His hat was well down upon
+his bobwig, and he hunched his shoulders against the wind, making a
+picture of melancholy discomfort. He rocked to and fro a little,
+according to a habit of his when he was excited.
+
+Alison was very close to him before she stopped.
+
+"What have you come for?" he growled.
+
+She drew a breath, and then, very quietly, "For you," she said.
+
+"You have had enough fun with me, ma'am."
+
+Her breast was touching him, and he did not draw back.
+
+"Then why did you come?" She laughed.
+
+"Because I'm a fool."
+
+"A fool to want me?"
+
+"By God, yes. You know that, you slut."
+
+"No. You would be a fool if you didn't, you--man."
+
+"Be careful." Harry flushed.
+
+"Oh Lud, was I made to be careful?"
+
+He gripped her hand, and, after a moment, "Take off your hood," he
+muttered.
+
+"Is that all?" She laughed, and let it fall from hair and neck, and
+looked as though sunlight had flashed out at her. "Honest gentleman, you
+are lightly satisfied."
+
+"So are not you, I vow."
+
+She was pleased to answer that with a scrap of a song:
+
+"Jog on, jog on the footpath way,
+ And merrily hent the stile-a!
+A merry heart goes all the way,
+ A sad one tires in a mile-a."
+
+"Faith, yours is a mighty sad one, Harry. Pray, what are you the better
+for stripping me of this?" She flirted the hood.
+
+"I can see those wicked colours of yours. Lord, what a fool is a man to
+go mad for a show of pink and white!"
+
+"And is that all I am?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "Item--a pair of eyes that look sideways; item--a woman's
+body with arms and sufficient legs."
+
+"Lud, it's an inventory! I'm for sale, then. Well, what's your bid?"
+
+"I've a shilling in my pocket ma'am and want it to buy tobacco."
+
+"Oh, silly, what does a man pay for a woman?"
+
+Harry laughed. "Why, nothing, if she's worth buying."
+
+Then Alison said softly, "Going--going--gone," and clapped her hands
+and laughed.
+
+"You go beyond me at least," Harry said in a moment.
+
+She put her hands behind her and leaned forward till her bosom pressed
+upon him lightly, and then, with her head tilted back so that he saw the
+white curve from under her chin, and the line of the blue vein in it,
+"You want me, Harry," she said.
+
+"You know that too well, by God."
+
+"Too well for what, sir?"
+
+"Too well for my peace, ma'am." He flushed.
+
+"His peace!" She laughed. "Oh Lud, the dear man wants peace!"
+
+He flung himself upon her, holding her to him as she staggered back, and
+kissed her till she was gasping for breath, gripped her head to hold it
+against his kisses, buried his face in the fragrance of her neck. She
+gave herself, her arms still behind her, offering the swell of her
+breasts to him, her eyes gay....
+
+"You are mine, now. You're mine, do you hear?" he said unsteadily.
+
+"I want you," she smiled, and was crushed again.
+
+When he let her go, it was to step back and look at her, wondering and
+intent. She stood something less than her full height, her bosom beating
+fast. She was all flushed and smiling, but now her eyes were dim and they
+met his shyly.
+
+"Egad, you're exalting," he said with a wry smile.
+
+"I feel all power when you grasp at me so--power--just power."
+
+"No, faith, you are not. When I hold you to me, when you yield for me, I
+am all the power there is. Damme, the very life of the world."
+
+"So then," she looked at him through her eyelashes, "and have it so. For
+it's I who give you all."
+
+"In effect," Harry said: and then, "go to, you make us both mad."
+
+"I am content."
+
+"Yes, and for how long?"
+
+She made an exclamation. "Have I worn out the poor gentleman already?"
+
+"Would you keep yourself for me? Will you wait?"
+
+"Why, what have we to wait for now?"
+
+"Till I am something more than this shabby usher."
+
+"I despise you when you talk so." Her face flamed. "Fie, what's a word
+and a coat? You have lived with me in your arms. You are what I make of
+you then. Is it enough, Harry, is it not enough?"
+
+"I'll come to your arms something better before I come again. I am off
+to France."
+
+"Ah!" Then she studied him for a little while. "You meant to run away,
+then. Oh, brave Harry! Oh, wise! Pray, are you not ashamed?"
+
+"Yes, shame's the only wear."
+
+"I'll not spare you, I vow."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, mercy never was a virtue of yours."
+
+"Is it mercy you want in a woman?"
+
+"I'll take what I want, not ask for it."
+
+"Why, now you brag! And if there is not in me what monsieur wants?"
+
+"So much the worse for us both. But you should have thought of
+that before."
+
+"Faith, Harry, you take it sombrely." She made a wry mouth at him. "Pluck
+up heart. I vow I'll satisfy you."
+
+"You'll not deny me anything you have."
+
+She paused a moment. "Amen, so be it. And must we never smile again?"
+
+"I wonder"--he took her hands; "I wonder, will you be smiling to-morrow
+when I am away to France."
+
+"Oh, are you still set on that fancy?" She gave a contemptuous laugh.
+"Prithee, Harry, shall I like you the better for waiting till you have
+French lace at your neck and a frenchified air?"
+
+"You'll please to wait till I bring Miss Lambourne a fellow who has done
+something more than snuffle over a servitor's books. I want to prove
+myself, Alison."
+
+"You have proved yourself on me, sir. What, am I a lean wench in despair
+to hunger for a snuffling servitor? If you were that, I were not for you.
+But I know you better, God help me, my Lord Lucifer. Why then, take the
+goods the gods provide you and say grace over me." Harry shook his head,
+smiling. "Lord, it's a mule! Pray what do you look to do in France?"
+
+"I am pledged to my father and his policies--to go poking behind the
+curtains of the war and deal with the go-betweens of princes."
+
+"So. You talk big. Well, I like to hear it. What is the business?"
+
+"My father, if you believe him, has Marlborough's secrets in his pocket
+and is sent to chaffer for him. You may guess where and why. Queen Anne
+hath a brother."
+
+Her eyes sparkled. "You like the adventure, Harry?"
+
+"Egad, I begin to think so."
+
+"I love you for that!" she cried, and it was the first time she spoke the
+word. "Why then, first go with me to church and call me wife!"
+
+He drew in his breath. "By God, do you mean that?"
+
+"Why, don't you mean me honourably?" She gave an unsteady laugh, her eyes
+mistily kind.
+
+He sprang at her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+ABSENCE OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+
+It was always in after life alleged by Mr. Hadley that his steady
+interest in the family of his uncle was nothing but a desire to keep the
+old gentleman out of mischief. Sir John Burford was indeed of a temper
+too irascible to be safe with his bucolically English mind: a man who in
+throwing tankards at his servants and challenges at his friends was a
+source of continuous anxiety to his reasonable kinsfolk. But he had also
+a daughter.
+
+She received the benevolent Mr. Hadley when on the morning after the
+explosions in Alison's house he came to see whether Sir John was still
+dangerous or his daughter any thinner. It was the latter purpose which he
+professed to Susan Burford. She was not annoyed. In her cradle she had
+been instructed that she was a jolly, fat girl, and through life she
+accepted the status, like every other which was given her, with great
+good humour. She was, in fact, no fatter than serves to give a tall woman
+an air of genial well-being. It was conjectured by her friends that her
+father, needing all his irascibility for himself, had allowed her to
+inherit only his physical qualities. She had indeed the largeness of Sir
+John and his open countenance. Her supreme equanimity perhaps came from
+her mother. She was by a dozen years at least younger than Mr. Hadley,
+and always thought him a very clever boy.
+
+"Sir John is gone out to the pigs, Mr. Hadley. Perhaps you'll go too,"
+she said, and looked innocent.
+
+"Well, they are peaceful company, Susan. And you're so surly."
+
+"I thought you would find some joke in that," said Susan, with kindly
+satisfaction.
+
+"Damme, don't be so maternal. It's cloying to the male. Be discreet,
+Susan. You will talk as though you had weaned me but a year or two, and
+still wanted me at the breast."
+
+Susan was not disconcerted. "Will you drink a tankard?" said she. "Or Sir
+John has some Spanish wine which he makes much of."
+
+"Susan, you despise men. It is a vile infidel habit." He paused, and
+Susan dutifully smiled. "Why now, what are you laughing at? You! You
+don't know what I mean."
+
+"To be sure, no," said Susan. "Does it matter?"
+
+"Oh Lud, your repartees! Bludgeons and broadswords! I mean, ma'am, you
+think men are nought but casks--things to fill with drink and victuals.
+Is it not true?" Susan considered this, her head a little on one side and
+smiling. She wore a dress of dark blue velvet cut low about the neck, and
+so, nature having made her sumptuous, was very well suited. "Egad, now I
+know what you're like," Mr. Hadley cried. "You're one of Rubens' women,
+Susan; just one of those plump, spacious dames as healthy as milk and
+peaches, and blandly jolly about it."
+
+Susan looked down at herself with her usual amiable satisfaction and
+patted the heavy coils of her yellow hair and said: "Sir John often
+talks of having me painted. But that's after dinner. Will you stay
+dinner, Mr. Hadley?"
+
+"Damme, Susan, what should I say after dinner, if I say so much now?"
+
+Susan smiled upon him with perfect calm. "Why, I never can tell what you
+will say. Can you?"
+
+"You're a hypocrite, Susan. You look as simple as a baby, and the truth
+is you're deep, devilish deep. Here!" He fumbled in his pocket. "Here's a
+guinea for your thoughts if you tell them true. Now what are you
+thinking, ma'am?"
+
+"Why, I am thinking that you came to see my father, and yet you stay here
+talking to me;" she gurgled pleasant laughter and held out her hand for
+the guinea.
+
+Mr. Hadley still retained it. "That pleases you, does it?"
+
+"Yes, indeed. You're so comical."
+
+Mr. Hadley surrendered the guinea, looked at his empty left sleeve and
+made a wry face. "Lord, yes, I am comical enough. A lop-sided grotesque."
+
+"That's not fair!" He had at last made her blush. "You know well I did
+not mean that. I think it makes you look--noble."
+
+"It makes me feel a fool," said Mr. Hadley. "Lord, Susan, one arm's not
+enough to go round you."
+
+"So we'll kill the Elstree hog for Christmas;" that apposite
+interruption came in her father's robust voice. Sir John strode rolling
+in. "What, Charles! In very good time, egad. You can come with me."
+
+"What, sir, back to the swine? I profess Susan makes as pretty company."
+
+Sir John was pleased to laugh. "Ay, the wench pays for her victuals, too.
+Damme, Sue, you look good enough to eat." He chucked her chin paternally.
+"Well, my lad, I ha' thought over that business and I'm taking horse to
+ride over to Tetherdown."
+
+"Oh Lord," said Mr. Hadley. "And what then, sir?"
+
+"I'll talk to Master Geoffrey."
+
+"Oh Lord," said Mr. Hadley again. "Do it delicately."
+
+"Delicate be damned," said Sir John.
+
+"I had better ride with you," said Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Good boy. Here, Roger--Mr. Hadley's horse."
+
+Susan stood up. "Lud, sir, you will not be here to dinner then?"
+
+Sir John shook his head. Mr. Hadley scratched his chin. "I am not so sure
+that Geoffrey will give us a dinner," said he.
+
+"Why, sir," Susan was interested, "what's your business with Mr.
+Waverton?"
+
+"To tell him he's a fool, wench," quoth Sir John.
+
+"Oh. And will Mr. Waverton like that?"
+
+"Like it! Odso, he'll like it well enough if he has sense."
+
+Mr. Hadley grinned. "That's logic, faith. Well, sir, have with you."
+
+So off they rode. On the way Sir John was pleased to expound to Mr.
+Hadley the profound sagacity of his new plan. He would rally Geoffrey on
+his flaccidity; accuse him of being an oaf; and, describing all the while
+in an inflammatory manner the charms of Alison, hint that Geoffrey's
+tutor had ambitions after them. "And if that don't wake up my gentleman,
+he may go to the devil for me and deserve it."
+
+It crossed Mr. Hadley's lucid mind that a gentleman who required so much
+waking up did not deserve Miss Lambourne. But she was quite capable of
+discovering that for herself, if indeed she had not already. And
+certainly it would do Geoffrey no harm to be made uncomfortable. So Mr.
+Hadley rode on with right good will.
+
+But when they came to Tetherdown it was announced that Mr. Waverton had
+gone riding. "Why, then we'll wait for him." Sir John strode in. The
+butler looked dubious. Mr. Waverton had said nothing of when he would
+come back.
+
+"Why the devil should he?" Sir John stretched his legs before the fire.
+"He'll dine, won't he?"
+
+The butler bowed.
+
+"Prithee, William," says Mr. Hadley, "is Mr. Boyce in the house?"
+
+"Mr. Boyce, sir, is gone walking."
+
+Mr. Hadley shrugged. "Odso, away with you," Sir John waved the man off.
+"Let my lady know we are here."
+
+The butler coughed. "My lady is in bed, Sir John."
+
+"What, still?" quoth Sir John, for it was close upon noon.
+
+"Hath been afoot, Sir John. But took to her bed half an hour since."
+
+"What, what? Is she ailing?"
+
+The butler could not say, but looked a volume of secrets, so that Sir
+John swore him out of the room.
+
+"Vaporous old wench, Charles," Sir John snorted. And a second time Mr.
+Hadley shrugged.
+
+In a little while the butler came back even more puffed up. Her ladyship
+hoped to receive the gentlemen in half an hour.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+IN HASTE
+
+
+Oh, Harry, Harry, I give in. I am the weaker vessel. At least, I have the
+shorter legs."
+
+"What, you're asking me to spare you already? Lord, how will you bear me
+as a husband?"
+
+They were under the great beeches in Hampstead Lane, breasting the rise
+to the heath, on their march for that kindly chapel, where, if you dined
+in the tavern annexed, the incumbent would marry you for nothing, charge
+but the five shillings, cost price of the Queen's licence, and ask no
+questions.
+
+Harry shortened his stride, and looked down with grim amusement at
+Alison's breathless bosom.
+
+"I believe you mean to make an end of me before you have begun with me,"
+she panted. "Lord, sir, what a figure you'll cut if you bring me to
+church too faint to say, 'I will.'"
+
+"Why, the Levite would but take it for maiden modesty. Not knowing you."
+
+"You are trying to play the brute. It won't save you, Harry. I shan't be
+frightened."
+
+"You! No, faith, it's I. I am beside myself with terror."
+
+"I do believe that's true!" She laughed at him. "But, oh, dear
+sir, why?"
+
+"Lest I should not fulfil the heroical expectations of Miss Lambourne.
+Confess it, ma'am; you count on me to exalt you into heavens of ecstasy,
+to bewilder the world with my glories, and be shaved by breakfast-time."
+
+"To be sure, I'll always expect the impossible of you."
+
+"There it is. I suppose you expect me to begin by creating a
+wedding-ring."
+
+"Why, you have created me."
+
+"Oh, no, no, no. You're a splendid iniquity, but not mine, I vow."
+
+"This woman of yours never lived till you made her. I profess Miss
+Lambourne was ever known for a dull cold thing born 'to suckle fools and
+chronicle small beer.'"
+
+"So she wrote me down her property. Egad, ma'am, it was very natural."
+
+"You know what you have made of me," Alison said.
+
+"God knows what you'll make of me. And now in the matter of the ring--"
+
+"Oh Lud, what a trivial thing is a man!" She drew off her glove and held
+out a hand with two rings on it. "Marry me with which you will." One was
+a plain piece of gold, paler than the common, carved into an odd device
+of a snake biting its tail.
+
+"With thine own ring I thee wed," Harry said, and took it off. "I
+take you to witness, Mrs. Alison, the snake was in your paradise
+before I came."
+
+They were across the heath now and going down the steep, narrow lane
+beyond. The chapel of the Hampstead marriages stood raw red beside a
+garden with lawns and arbours shaggy in winter's untidiness. Even the
+tavern at the gate, a spreading one-story place of timber, looked dead
+and desolate.
+
+Harry forced open the sticking door and strode in, Madame Alison
+loitering behind. He was met by a dirty lad whose gaping clothes were
+half hidden by a leather apron, and whose shoes protruded straw--a lad
+who smelt of the stable and small beer.
+
+"Where's the priest?" said Harry.
+
+"In the tap," said the boy, and shuffled off.
+
+There came out into the passage, wheezing and wiping his chops, a little
+bloated man in a cassock, with his bands under his right ear. He leered
+at Harry and tried to look round him at Alison.
+
+"You're out of season, my lord," said he. "These chill rains, they play
+the mischief with lusty blood. Go to, you'll not be denied, won't you? Do
+you dine here?"
+
+"We have no time for it."
+
+"What, you're hasty, ain't you?" He gave a hoarse laugh. "There's my fee
+to pay then."
+
+"Here's a guinea to pay for all," said Harry.
+
+The dirty fist took it, the little red eyes peered at it closely, the
+dirty mouth bit it and was satisfied. "Go you round to the chapel door
+and wait. Lord, but man and wench never had to wait for me." He
+waddled off.
+
+Harry turned upon Alison. "So with all my worldly goods I thee endow," he
+said, with a crooked smile. "God give you joy of them. I vow I was never
+so frightened of spending a guinea."
+
+"Why, d'ye doubt if I'm worth it? Nay, sir, I'm honest stuff and
+challenge any trial."
+
+Harry looked down at her and was met by eyes as bold as his own.
+
+The chapel door opened, and the little priest beckoned them in. A pair of
+witnesses were already posted by the altar, the dirty lad of the tavern
+and a shock-headed wench.
+
+"Licence first, licence first." The parson bustled off to a table in a
+corner. "I warrant you we do things decently in Sion. Aye, and tightly,
+my pretty. Never a lawyer can undo my knots, never fear."
+
+He scratched laboriously over their names, while the dank smell of the
+place sank into them.
+
+They were marched to the altar. A hoarse muttering poured from the
+priest. He made no pretence of solemnity or even of meaning. He was
+concerned only to make an end and have done with them. Of all the service
+they heard nothing clearly but what they said themselves, and while they
+were deliberate over that the little priest grunted and puffed at them.
+
+He ended with a leer and drove them before him back to the table. There
+was more scratching in his register. The two uncouth witnesses scrawled
+something for their names and shambled off.
+
+"Let's breathe some free air," said Harry, and laid hold of his wife.
+
+The parson chuckled. "Free? You'll never be free again, my lord. I can
+see that in madame's eye. What, you ha' sold your birthright for a mess
+of pottage, ain't you? And mighty savoury pottage, too, says you." He
+rolled his eyes and smacked his lips. "Softly now, softly, madame wants
+her certificate. Madame wants to warrant herself a lawful married wife,
+if you don't ... There, my lady. And happy to marry you again any day at
+the same price."
+
+They were away from him at last and in clean air stretching their legs up
+the hill again.
+
+"Poor Harry!" Alison laughed. "Before you looked like a man fighting
+for his life. Now you look like a man going to be hanged. Dear lad!
+Pray how much would you give to escape me now?" She put her arm into
+his. He let her shorten his stride a little, but made no other
+confession of her existence. "Fie, Harry, it's over early to repent. In
+all reason you should first be sure of your sin. Who knows? I may not
+be deadly after all. 'Alack,' says he, 'I will not be comforted. Egad,
+the world's a cheat. A fool and his folly are soon parted they told me,
+and here am I tied to her till death us do part. So, a halter, gratis,
+for God's sake.'"
+
+"You're full of other folks' nonsense, Mrs. Boyce," said Harry with a
+grim look at her.
+
+"Oh, noble name!" She bobbed a curtsy. "Full? I am full of nothing but
+fasting, aye," she sighed, and turned up her eyes--"fasting from all but
+our sacrament."
+
+They were upon the ridge of the heath and Harry checked her, and stood
+looking away over the wide prospect of mist-veiled meadow and dim blue
+woods. She was beginning her mocking chatter again when he broke in
+with, "Ods life, ha' done!" and turned to look deep into her eyes.
+"There's mystery in this, and I think you see nothing of it."
+
+"Why, yes, faith. If you were no mystery, should I want you? If you had
+discovered all of me, would you want me?"
+
+"Bah, what do we know of living, you and I, or--or of love?"
+
+She laughed, with a scrap of twisted song:
+
+"Most living is feigning.
+Most loving mere folly,
+Then heigho the holly,
+This life is most jolly."
+
+He shrugged and marched her on again.
+
+"Pray, sir, will you dine at home?" she said demurely.
+
+Harry flushed. "I must go tell my father and all," he growled. "I'll be
+with you soon enough, madame wife."
+
+"Oh brave! Dear sir, have with you. I must see Geoffrey's face."
+
+"Egad, let's be decent!" Harry cried.
+
+"Decent! For shame, sir! What's more decent than man and wife?"
+
+"Man and wife!" Harry echoed it with a sour laugh. "Do you feel a wife? I
+never felt less of a man."
+
+"You shall be satisfied," she said, and looked at him gravely. "And I--I
+am not afraid, Harry."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+DISTRESS OF A MOTHER
+
+
+Mr. Hadley and Sir John Burford in the hall at Tetherdown looked at each
+other across the fire. "Would you call for a pipe now, Charles?" says Sir
+John, fidgeting.
+
+"There'll be none in the house, sir. Geoffrey has no stomach for
+tobacco."
+
+"Damme, if I know what he hath a stomach for," Sir John grumbled, and
+kicked at the burning logs. "He don't eat no more than an old woman, nor
+drink so much as a young miss. Ain't the half-hour gone, Charles?"
+
+"That's a poetic phrase, sir. It means a year or so--while she's tiring
+her hair."
+
+"What and painting her face, too? Same as Jezebel."
+
+My lady's waiting-woman, Arabella, came in. She minced in the manner of
+her mistress, but, being a foot shorter, with different effect. She stood
+before Sir John, who had the largest chair, and stared at him, with
+languid insolence. "Ods my life, don't ogle me, woman," says he.
+
+"At your leisure, sir, if you please." She tossed her head.
+
+"Leisure! Oh Lord, I'm at leisure, thank 'e."
+
+Arabella sniffed.
+
+"I think you are in madame's chair, sir," Mr. Hadley explained.
+
+"What, then? She ain't here, nor I don't carry the plague."
+
+"The lady-in-waiting wants to compose it for madame."
+
+"Compose!" Sir John exploded an oath, and jumped up. "I ha'n't
+decomposed it."
+
+Arabella dusted the chair, wheeled it a little this way and that, put two
+footstools before it, and three cushions into it, contemplated them for
+some time, and then shifted them a little. After which she minced out
+with a great sigh.
+
+"Good God!" says Sir John.
+
+"I wonder," says Mr. Hadley--"I wonder if we've come to take the breeks
+off a Highlander?"
+
+"What's your will?" Sir John gasped.
+
+"I wonder if my lady knows all we can tell her. It might have made her
+hypochondriac."
+
+"Hip who? Odso, I am hipped myself."
+
+My lady came. She had so much flowing drapery about her that she seemed
+all robes. She moved very slowly, she was bowed, and she leaned upon the
+shoulder of Arabella. With care she deposited herself in the big chair.
+Arabella arranged her draperies, arranged the cushion, and stood aside.
+My lady lay back, put back the lace about her head, and showed them her
+large pale face and sighed. "You are welcome, gentlemen," said she. "You
+are vastly kind."
+
+"Odso, ma'am, what's the matter?" Sir John cried.
+
+"Why, have you not heard? Arabella, he has not heard!" My lady was
+convulsed, and clutched at the maid, who comforted her with a
+scent-bottle. "He has gone!" she sighed. "He has gone."
+
+"What the devil! Who the devil?"
+
+My lady recovered herself. From somewhere in her voluminous folds she
+produced a letter. "If it would please you, be patient with me. My
+unhappy eyes." She dabbed at them with a handful of lace, and read:
+
+"My lady, my mother,--I have but time for these few unkempt lines,
+wherein to bid you for a while farewell. My good friend, Colonel Boyce,
+has favoured me with an occasion to go see something of the warring world
+beyond the sea. And I, since the inglorious leisure of the hearth irks my
+blood, heartily company with him. It needs not that you indulge in tears,
+save such as must fall for my absence. I seek honour. So, with a son's
+kiss, I leave you, my mother. G.W."
+
+On which his mother's voice broke, and she wept.
+
+"Lord, what a fop!" said Sir John. My lady swelled in her draperies. "So
+he's gone to the war, has he? Odso, I didn't think he had it in him."
+
+"Sir, if you jeer at my bereavement!" my lady sobbed.
+
+"And where's Harry Boyce?" says Mr. Hadley.
+
+Sir John stared at him. "Why, seeking honour too, ain't he? What's in
+your head, Charles?"
+
+"This is rude," my lady sobbed; "this is brutal. The tutor! Oh, heaven,
+what is the tutor to me? I would to God I had never seen him--him nor his
+wicked father."
+
+Sir John tugged at Mr. Hadley's empty sleeve and drew him aside. "What
+are you pointing at, Charles? D'ye mean the two rogues have took Geoffrey
+off to make away with him between 'em?"
+
+"Lord, sir, you've a villainous imagination." Mr. Hadley grinned. "I mean
+no such matter. Nay, I'll lay a guinea, Harry Boyce is not gone at all."
+
+"Sir John"--my lady raised herself and was shrill--"what are you
+whispering there?"
+
+"What, what? You mean the old fellow took Geoffrey off to leave the young
+fellow a clear field with Ally Lambourne? Odso, that's devilish deep,
+ain't it? But we can set the young fellow packing, my lad. We--"
+
+"Sir John!" my lady's voice rose higher yet.
+
+"Coming, ma'am, coming. Od burn my heart and soul!" That last invocation
+was not directed at her but an invading tumult.
+
+The butler entered backwards, protesting, between two men who did not
+take off their hats. They were in riding-boots and cloaks, and splashed
+from the road. They had pistol butts ostentatious in their side pockets,
+and one carried some papers in his hand.
+
+"Stand back, my bully, stand back, or you'll smell Newgate," says he to
+the butler.
+
+"Burn your impudence," Sir John roared, and strode forward.
+
+"In the Queen's name. Messengers of the Secretary of State, with his
+warrant." The man waved his papers under Sir John's nose. "Master of the
+house, are you?"
+
+"I am Sir John Burford of Finchley, and be hanged to you."
+
+"There is the mistress of the house, sirrah," says Mr. Hadley
+
+"Thank'e. In the Queen's name, ma'am. Warrants to take Oliver Boyce,
+Colonel, and Geoffrey Waverton, Esquire."
+
+My lady shrieked, fell back, and was understood to be fainting.
+
+"You come too late, sirrah," says Mr. Hadley. "Your foxes be gone away."
+
+The man tapped his nose and grinned. "That won't do, sir. Set about it,
+Joe," and he nudged his fellow.
+
+"What's the charge against them?" says Mr. Hadley.
+
+The man laughed. "Come, sir, you know better than that. I ain't here to
+answer questions." Mr. Hadley put his hand in his pocket. The man grinned
+and shook his head, and went out pushing his comrade in front of him. Mr.
+Hadley followed them. As soon as they were out in the corridor and the
+door was shut behind them, the man turned and held out his hand to Mr.
+Hadley, who dropped into it a couple of guineas. "Lord, now, what did you
+think it was?" says the messenger genially. "Treasonable
+correspondence--Pretender--Lewis le Grand and so forth. Quite
+gentleman-like, d'ye smoke me?"
+
+"Prithee, who set you on?" says Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Now you go too far, ecod, you do. I don't mind obliging a gentleman,
+but you want to lose me my place. We'll be searching the house, by
+your leave."
+
+Off they went, and Mr. Hadley went back to my lady. She had been revived,
+and the air was heavy with scent. She fluttered her hands at the
+ministering Arabella and said faintly, "What is it, Charles?"
+
+"It seems there's some talk of their having dealings with the Pretender."
+
+"Lord bless my soul," Sir John puffed.
+
+"The Pretender?" Lady Waverton smiled through her powder. "La, now,
+Geoffrey's father always had a kindness for the young Prince."
+
+"I vow, ma'am, you take it with a fine spirit," says Mr. Hadley in
+some surprise.
+
+"You'll find, Mr. Hadley, that such families as ours, the older families,
+know how to bear themselves in this cause."
+
+Sir John stared at her and puffed the louder, and muttered very audibly,
+"Here's a turnabout!"
+
+"Oh, ma'am, to be sure it's a well-born party," Mr. Hadley shrugged.
+"D'ye give us leave to remain and see that these fellows show no
+impudence?"
+
+"Oh, sir, you are very obliging," says my lady superciliously.
+
+Mr. Hadley bowed, and withdrew to the recess of a window with Sir John
+following. "Here's a queer thing, Charles. Did ever you know Master
+Geoffrey was a Jacobite?" Mr. Hadley shook his head. "Nor this Colonel
+Boyce neither?"
+
+"I never saw a Jacobite in so good a coat, and I never thought Geoffrey
+would risk his coat for any king. And thirdly and lastly, I never knew
+Whitehall put itself out in these days whether a man was Jacobite or no.
+Why, damme, they be all half Jacobites themselves, from the Queen down."
+
+"Aye, aye," says Sir John sagely. "A devilish queer thing indeed."
+
+And on that came Alison and Harry--Alison rosy and smiling, Harry a
+pale and deliberate appendage. "Dear Lady Waverton, let me present
+my husband."
+
+Lady Waverton sat up straight. Lady Waverton embraced the pair of them
+with a bewildered glare.
+
+"I married him this morning," Alison laughed.
+
+"Alison, this is unmaidenly jesting," said my lady feebly.
+
+"Why, if it were, so it might be. But the truth is, it's unmaidenly
+truth. For I am Mrs. Harry Boyce. Give me joy."
+
+"Joy!" my lady gasped. "It's unworthy! It's cruel! Oh, Geoffrey,
+Geoffrey! How dare you?" She was again understood to faint.
+
+Through the rustle of Arabella and the odours of scent came the
+explosions of Sir John, swearing.
+
+Mr. Hadley moved forward, and, ignoring Alison, addressed himself to
+Harry. "Pray, sir, did you know that Mr. Waverton this morning left
+Tetherdown in your father's company, your father taking him, as he says
+in a letter, to the wars?"
+
+"Knew?" Lady Waverton chose to speak out of her swoon. "To be sure they
+knew. They would not have dared else. Dear Geoffrey! A villain! And you,
+miss--you whom he trusted! Oh!" She again took scent.
+
+"La, ma'am, he trusted me no more than I him. You are not well, I think."
+
+"You give me news, Mr. Hadley," Harry said. "I knew that my father meant
+to go abroad, and understood that I was to go with him."
+
+"Perhaps you'll go after him." Mr. Hadley shrugged and turned away.
+
+"Why, what's all this, Harry?" Alison laughed. "Your wise father hath
+chosen to take Geoffrey instead of you?"
+
+"In spite of my modesty, I'm surprised, ma'am," says Harry.
+
+"Burn your impudent face," quoth Sir John from the background.
+
+"Well, sir, if you were in your father's plans, maybe you'll pay your
+father's debts," quoth Mr. Hadley.
+
+"What do I owe you, Mr. Hadley?" says Harry, bristling.
+
+The two messengers came back again. "Right enough, sir, gone away." The
+spokesman nodded at Mr. Hadley. "We'll be riding. Trust no offence?" He
+looked hopeful.
+
+"Here's Colonel Boyce's son, wishing to answer for his father."
+
+The man looked Harry up and down and chuckled.
+
+"Lord, and mighty like. Servant, sir," he winked at Harry. "Tell the
+Colonel, sorry we missed him," He winked again and laughed.
+
+"What's this comedy of yours, Mr. Hadley?" says Harry.
+
+"Your friends have warrants to arrest your father and Mr. Waverton for
+treasonable correspondence with the Pretender. But none for you, I fear,
+Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Devil a one," the man laughed. "Come, Ned, we'll be jogging," Out
+they swung.
+
+A bewildered company, full of suspicions, stared at one another.
+
+"Come, Harry, let us go home," Alison said.
+
+"Home!" Lady Waverton gasped with an hysterical laugh. "Hear her!"
+
+"My lady"--Alison made her a curtsy--"gentlemen--all the friends of Mr.
+Boyce will be very welcome to me."
+
+Sir John swore. "You for a fool and he for a knave, damme, you're
+well matched."
+
+"When you were younger, sir, I suppose you were less of a boor," says
+Harry. "Mr. Hadley--my lady--" he made two stiff bows and gave his arm
+to Alison.
+
+"Humph, they go off with the honours." Mr. Hadley shrugged, and held out
+his arm in front of Sir John, who was plunging after them.
+
+"Be hanged to you. What did the rogue mean, telling me I was old?"
+
+"Why, he meant that a man who is too old to fight should be civil."
+
+"Too old?" Sir John fumed. "Burn him for a coward."
+
+"I think not," says Mr. Hadley. "But for the rest--God be with you. My
+lady--sincerely your servant."
+
+My lady was now weeping. "You never loved him," she complained. "You were
+never his friend," and she became speechless.
+
+The two men looked at each other. "Well, Charles, we'll to horse," Sir
+John concluded. "Servant, ma'am." They left her in the scented embraces
+of Arabella.
+
+To Harry as he went out came the butler, who, with something of a furtive
+manner, produced and gave him a letter. Harry looked at the writing and
+thrust it into his coat. Alison saw and took no notice.
+
+They walked on for some way before silence was broken. Then Harry said:
+"Well, madame wife, so you feel you've been bit."
+
+"Who--I? What do you know of what I feel?"
+
+"Oh, I can tell hot from cold. I know when you are thinking you ought to
+have thought twice. Egad, I agree with you. You've been badly bit. Here
+you were told that I was just off out of the country; that you must catch
+me at once if you wanted to catch me; that if you took me you would soon
+have me off your hands. And now we're tied up, you find I'm not going at
+all. I vow it's disheartening. But if you'll believe me, I did honestly
+believe my old rogue of a father. I did think he meant to take me."
+
+"And now you can't be comforted because you have to stay with me. Oh,
+Harry, you're a gloomy fellow to own a new wife. But why did the good man
+take Geoffrey when he might have had you? I should have thought he knew a
+goose when he saw one."
+
+"I can't tell. I never saw much meaning in the old gentleman."
+
+"You might as well look at his letter."
+
+Harry stared. "How did you know that was his?"
+
+"You like doing things mysteriously, the family of Boyce."
+
+The letter said this:
+
+"MR. HARRY,--I flatter myself that you will be offended. But 'tis all for
+your good. When I came after you I did not know that you were so clever a
+fellow. No more did I expect that I should have to like you. But since I
+do, I prefer that I should do without you. And since you have some of my
+wits, you may very well do without me. But I believe you will do the
+better without friend Geoffrey. Therefore I take him, who will indeed do
+my business much more sincerely than your worthy self. With the dear
+fellow safe out of the way, I count upon you to push on bravely with Mrs.
+Alison. You'll not find two such chances in one life. If you were master
+of her you could promise yourself anything in decent reason you please to
+want. For all your wits you are not the man to make his own way out of
+nothing. So don't be haughty. Why should you? It's a mighty pretty thing,
+Harry, and (trust an old fellow who hath made some use of the sex in his
+day) as tender as you may hope for in an heiress. She has looked your way
+already, and in her pique at the good Geoffrey deserting her, you'll find
+her warmer for you. If you don't make her warm enough for wiving, you're
+an oaf, which is not in my blood--nor your mother's, to be honest. Nor if
+I was young again and played your hand, I wouldn't let her grow cold when
+I had her safe.... So be a man, and I give you my blessing.
+
+"O. BOYCE"
+
+Harry held it out to Alison. "We're a noble family--the family of
+Boyce," said he.
+
+But Alison read it without a blush or a sneer, and when she gave it back
+she was laughing. "Oh, he's more cunning than any beast of the field! Oh,
+he knows the world! Poor, dear fellow."
+
+"Oh Lud, yes, he's a fool for his wisdom. But he's my father."
+
+"Well, sir?" Harry scowled at the ground. "Oh, what does he matter?
+Harry, what does anything matter to-day--or to-morrow, or to-morrow's
+to-morrow?"
+
+"I had no guess of all this." Harry crushed the paper. "You
+believe that?"
+
+"Oh, silly, silly."
+
+"You're still content?"
+
+"Not yet," Alison said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+SPECTATORS OF PARADISE
+
+
+In the old house on the hill Mrs. Weston sat alone. She was looking out
+of the oriel window at a garden of wintry emptiness and wind swept. The
+westerly gale roared and moaned, the heavy earth was sodden and beaten
+into hollows and pools through which broke tiny pale points of snowdrops.
+Away beyond the first terrace of lawn the roses bowed and tossed wild
+arms. A silvery gleam of sunlight fell on the turf, glistened, and was
+gone. Mrs. Weston sat with her hands in her lap and her needle at rest in
+a half-worked piece of linen. A veil of languor had fallen upon the
+wistfulness of her face. Her bosom hardly stirred. The sound of the
+opening door broke her dream, and she picked up her work and began to sew
+eagerly. It was Susan Burford who came in, royally neat in her
+riding-habit, for all the storm. She walked in her leisurely, spacious
+fashion to Mrs. Weston, who started and stood up, laughing nervously.
+"Indeed Alison will be pleased. You are kind. I know she has been longing
+to see you."
+
+Susan laughed and, a large young goddess of health, stooped to kiss the
+worn face. "You always talk about somebody else. Are you pleased?"
+
+"My dear!" Mrs. Weston protested. "You know I am."
+
+"We match very well. You never want to talk, and I never have anything to
+say." Susan sat down, and for some time the only sound was from Mrs.
+Weston's needle. At last, "You are still here, then," Susan said.
+
+"My dear! Why not, indeed?"
+
+"Oh. But you would always stay by Alison if she needed you."
+
+"Why, she never has needed me. And now less than ever."
+
+"Oh." Susan considered that. "And is he kind to you?"
+
+Mrs. Weston flushed. "Indeed he has been very good to me."
+
+"That is all I wanted to ask you," said Susan, and again there was
+silence.
+
+After a little while Mrs. Weston dropped her sewing and looked anxiously
+at Susan. "Have you ever seen him?"
+
+"Only his back. He used to keep in the corners at Tetherdown."
+
+"I suppose people--talk about him."
+
+"I don't listen," said Susan, "People are always in such a hurry. I
+can't keep up."
+
+"I suppose you think Alison was in a great hurry."
+
+"Only Alison knows about that."
+
+"Yes." Mrs. Weston looked at her with affectionate admiration, as though
+she had been endowed with rare understanding of the human heart. "Do you
+know you are the only one of the people Alison liked who has come
+here--since?"
+
+"Oh." (Susan's favourite eloquent reply.) "I don't mind about people."
+
+"He doesn't mind at all. She doesn't mind yet."
+
+"What is that you are working?" said Susan.
+
+"But indeed they are most perfectly happy," said Mrs. Weston, in a hurry.
+
+"Is it for a tucker?" said Susan.
+
+In a greater hurry, Mrs. Weston began to explain. She was still at it
+when Alison and Harry came back.
+
+They too had been riding. The storm had granted Alison none of Susan's
+majestic neatness. She looked a wild creature of the hills, her wet habit
+clinging about her, black ringlets broken loose curling about her, brown
+eyes fierce with life, and all the dainty colours of her face very clear
+and bright. She saw Susan and cried out, "Oh, my child, I love you."
+
+Susan rose leisurely to her majestic height and smiled down upon her. "I
+think you are the loveliest thing that ever was made," said she. Alison
+laughed, and they kissed.
+
+"I am quite of your mind, ma'am," said Harry. "Or I was," he made Susan a
+bow, "till this moment."
+
+"I was going to ask her if she was happy, sir," Susan said. "I shan't ask
+her." She held out her hand.
+
+"But I want you to ask me a thousand things." Alison put an arm round
+her, "Come away, come. At least I am going to tell you"--she shot a
+wicked glance at Harry--"everything." Off they went.
+
+"What's this mean, ma'am?" Harry stood over Mrs. Weston. "Is our wise
+Sir John sending to spy out the land?"
+
+"I wish you would not talk so." Mrs. Weston shivered. "It is like your
+father. Oh, sure, you have no need to be suspicious of every one."
+
+"Suspicious? Faith, I don't trouble myself." Harry laughed. "All the
+world may go hang for me. But you'll not expect me to believe in it."
+
+"I think you need fear no one's ill will. You are fortunate enough now."
+
+"Miraculously beyond my deserts, ma'am. As you say. But there's the
+wisdom of twenty years' shabbiness in me. And I wonder if the good Sir
+John wants to be meddling."
+
+"You need not be shabby now."
+
+"Lord, I bear him no malice. For he can do nought. Only I would not have
+him plague Alison."
+
+At last Mrs. Weston smiled upon him. "Aye, you are very careful of her."
+
+"I vow I would not so insult her." Harry laughed.
+
+"But you need not be afraid. Susan is here for herself. She is like that.
+She is the most independent woman ever I knew. She has come because she
+loves Alison."
+
+"Why, then, I love her. And egad it will be easy. She's a splendid
+piece."
+
+Mrs. Weston gave him an anxious glance. "She is very loyal," said she,
+with some emphasis.
+
+"It's a virtue. To be sure it's a virtue of the stupid." Harry cocked a
+teasing eye at her. "And I--well, ma'am, you wouldn't call me stupid."
+
+"I don't think it clever to jeer at what's good--and true--and noble."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, you are very parental!" Harry grinned. "You will be talking
+to me like a mother--and a stern mother, I protest."
+
+"Am I stern?" Mrs. Weston looked at him with eyes penitent and tender.
+
+"Only to yourself, I think. Lud, ma'am, why take me to heart?"
+
+"What now, Harry?" Alison and Susan close linked came back again. "Whose
+heart are you taking?"
+
+"Why, madame's," said Harry, with a flourish. "You see, ma'am," he turned
+to Susan, "I've a gift for making folks cry."
+
+"Oh. Like an onion," says she, in her slow, grave fashion.
+
+"Susan dear! How perfect," Alison laughed. "Now I know why I am growing
+tired of him. A little, you know, was piquant. But a whole onion to
+myself--God help us!"
+
+"Yet your onion goes well with a goose," Harry said.
+
+"Alack, Harry, but there's nothing sage about you and me."
+
+"Oh, fie! See there she sits, our domestic sage"--he waved at Mrs.
+Weston.
+
+"To be sure we couldn't do without her." Alison caressed the grey hair.
+
+"I must be riding, Alison," Susan said.
+
+Alison began to protest affectionate hospitality. Harry shook his head.
+"I have warned you of this, Alison. We are too conjugal. It embarasses
+the polite."
+
+"I am not embarassed," said Susan, with her placid gravity. "I want to
+come again."
+
+"By the fifth or sixth time, ma'am, I may feel that I am forgiven."
+
+"I have nothing to forgive you, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Then you can do it the more heartily." Harry smiled and held out his
+hand.
+
+"Oh." There was a faint shadow of a blush. "I did not think I should like
+you." She turned. "I beg your pardon, Alison."
+
+"I beg, ma'am, you'll come teach my wife to be kind. She also is frank.
+But for kindness--well, we are all sinners."
+
+"There it is, Mr. Boyce," said Susan, holding out her hand.
+
+And when she was gone. "Now, why did I not marry her first?" said Harry
+pensively.
+
+"Because she would never have married you, child. Being of those who like
+the man to ask."
+
+As Susan rode down the north slope of the hill, she was met by Mr.
+Hadley, gaunt upon a white horse, like death in the Revelation. The
+comparison did not occur to Susan, who had a fresh mind, but she did
+think white unbecoming to Mr. Hadley, and said, gurgling, "Where did you
+find that horse? Or why did you find it?"
+
+"He was a bad debt. But he has a great soul. And don't prevaricate,
+Susan. Where have you been?" Mr. Hadley bent his sardonic brows.
+
+"To gossip with Alison."
+
+"Odso, I guessed you would turn traitor."
+
+"No. I haven't turned at all, Mr. Hadley."
+
+"She has declared war on us. Your dear father fizzes and fumes like a
+grenade all day. And you go gossip with her. It's flat treason, miss.
+Come, did you tell Sir John you were going?"
+
+"No. But he would guess. He is so clever about me. Like you."
+
+"Humph. If he guesses you're a woman, it's all he does. And, damme, I
+suppose it's enough. So your curious sex bade you go and pry. Well, and
+what did you see in Mr. Harry Boyce?"
+
+"I suppose you are scolding me," said Susan placidly.
+
+"With all my heart."
+
+"Oh. Why do you ride that horse?"
+
+"Damme, miss, don't wriggle. You had no business at Highgate!"
+
+"He looks as if he had the gout."
+
+Mr. Hadley grinned. "But as you went, let's hear what you saw."
+
+"I always loved Alison."
+
+"Your business is to love your father, Susan--till some other man
+asks you."
+
+"I love her better now. She is so happy."
+
+"Damn her impudence," said Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Why did you lose your temper with her?"
+
+"I never lose my temper with any one but you."
+
+"Well. You made my father lose his."
+
+"Ods life, Susan, don't you know it's a man's right to tell women how
+they ought to live? Dear Alison wouldn't listen."
+
+Susan laughed. "She has made you look very foolish."
+
+"If she has I'll forgive her."
+
+"Oh. You do then," said Susan.
+
+"On your honour, miss, what did you think of Mr. Harry Boyce?"
+
+"I wondered Alison should love him."
+
+"Ods life, yes. But what's this you're saying?"
+
+"He is so quiet and simple."
+
+"Simple! Damme, the fellow's an incarnate mask."
+
+"Oh. I think I know all about him. I never thought I knew all about
+Alison. She wants so much."
+
+"And she hasn't got all she wants, eh?"
+
+"Yes, I believe," said Susan, after a moment.
+
+"Pray God you're right."
+
+"Oh. I like to hear you say that. You have been so"--for once her placid
+words stumbled--"so sordid about this."
+
+"Damme, Susan, don't be a saint." Mr. Hadley grinned. "They die virgins."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+MRS. BOYCE
+
+
+It was a time of wild plots. The long war of Marlborough had left England
+impregnably triumphant, and France ambitious of nothing but peace. No
+fear remained that foreign arms would carry James, the Pretender by right
+divine, to his sister's throne. Who should reign when Anne's growing
+weakness ended in death was for England alone to decide, and English law
+gave the succession to Prince George of Hanover. But there was a party,
+or at least the leaders of a party, who saw more profit to themselves in
+importing the Pretender.
+
+Harley and Bolingbroke, they had thrust out of the Queen's confidence and
+the government the friends of Hanover. They had undermined the authority
+of Marlborough at home and abroad, and were now ready, honourably or
+dishonourably, to put an end to the war which made him necessary. If he
+were dispatched into ignominy or exile, there could be no one strong
+enough, they believed, to prevent them driving England the way they
+chose. What that way would be no one clearly knew, themselves, perhaps,
+least of all. But together and singly they set going many strange secret
+schemes which were to make a new king, a new England, and new
+magnificence for themselves, singly or together. All which the mass of
+England watched with shrewd, incurious eyes. It could not long be a
+secret that plots were afoot. To shoulder out of power all who were
+committed friends of the lawful order was a confession of designs against
+it. As if that were not enough, Bolingbroke and Harley so managed their
+business that everything they did was wrapped in a mist of trickery and
+intrigue. And yet, though they were vastly mysterious over what could
+have borne the light without much shame, they contrived to let the agents
+of their deeper treachery blunder into notice and fill the air with
+rumours of untimely truth. Still England gave no sign.
+
+"Under which King"--Hanoverian or Pretender--perhaps there were few in
+England who cared. If the Pretender was bred French and a Papist, Prince
+George was a German born. Some of those who had joined heartily in
+driving out his father began to put it about that the son would be a
+better king for that lesson. George of Hanover had the right of law, but
+the Parliament of to-morrow might undo what the Parliament of yesterday
+had done. Who could be ardent for the right of an unknown foreigner over
+England? And few were ardent, but there were many who, caring nothing for
+Pretender or Hanoverian, had a solid resolution that England should not
+be torn in the cause of either. Whatever was done, must be done quietly
+and in good order. Since it seemed that the Hanoverian had no need to
+change anything in law or State or Church, best that he should be king.
+As for the devious politics, the tricks, and the mystery of Harley and
+Bolingbroke, they were of no account to plain men.
+
+There was yet another party not content to watch and wait till the
+plotters lost themselves in their own mysteries. The men whom Harley and
+Bolingbroke had driven from power had no mind to submit to impotence.
+They well knew what they wanted: the Hanoverian, the lawful, limited king
+upon the throne and themselves as his ministers. They were not delicate
+about the means they used. Since there were treason and plots, they too
+turned their hands to plotting and with a vigour and ruthless resolution
+of which the other camp was innocent.
+
+So the wise and eminent were busy while Harry Boyce and his Alison made
+trial of their marriage. Harry lived in a dream of bewildered happiness.
+He had counted on nothing but the need of his passion, hoped for nothing
+but its ecstasy in her beauty, and at its wildest the strain of gloom in
+him had bade him dread what lay beyond. She gave him a miracle of mad
+delight. A new force of life was born in him while he enjoyed her joy. It
+was a discovery of intoxicating power that he could wake that rare,
+consummate creature to such eager exultation as his own. In those
+wonderful hours it seemed that they passed out of themselves into a world
+where every part of their being was one and in the happiness of unbounded
+strength. So passion and she kept faith with him and something more. But
+the miracle of passion in her arms had less enchantment than the joy of
+the quiet hours. It was with this that she bewildered him. Before she
+yielded to him, he would have jeered at the hope that she might bring the
+gift of peace in her bosom. As the first days of marriage passed he
+learnt that all his placid loneliness had been the mere endurance of
+hunger. He had stayed himself with the husk of life. She satisfied him
+with the fruit. For she too could be calm, delighting in the little daily
+things, utterly happy with nonsense. To share all that with her was to
+find in it a strange, lulling enchantment of content.
+
+His fortune seemed too good to be real. For he possessed all that ever
+fancy had pretended was worth coveting: his life was a perfect happiness.
+No doubts from within, no troubles from without, had power to assail him.
+All the old, reasonable, practical fears were become ludicrous cowardice,
+only remembered for Alison to tease with. As for other people, and what
+they said and thought and did, some folks were kind and were welcome, no
+folks were of account. He and she deliciously sufficed themselves. And
+there was no dread of change, save in age and death, infinitely distant
+and insignificant--no matter but to glorify the power of life. Sometimes
+he was aware that the wonder of passion must grow faint and fail, but he
+saw nothing which could take from him the quiet, exquisite, daily joys.
+Was it real, or a charmed dream, this perfect fortune of content? Indeed,
+nothing was real in those days but the delight in being with her.
+
+Alison had her share. He did not deceive himself. She had her ecstasies
+and her exultations, she thought herself even madder than he was. And in
+these days, perhaps, her passion was deeper and stronger than his. She
+was satisfied, she felt herself accomplished, and gloried in her new
+power with a more profound, a more secret delight than his. She had given
+him eagerly all that she had, and in the giving found herself more than
+ever her own. For all the union, the deepest, truest self in her stood
+aloof in a mystery. It was not of her will, for she desired to deny him
+nothing. She did not reckon him weak in failing to take all of her. This
+must needs be the way of life. No man's passion could be stronger than
+his. Doubtless he too had his secret soul apart. And indeed it was
+glorious not to lose self in love, to stay always, through the ecstasies,
+aloof, to give always anew of will and choice--never to merge helpless in
+some unknown double being and become only half a body, half a soul,
+capitulating always to the rest, to the other.
+
+This self-glorious pride of hers gave her for a while that zest in all
+the trivial common things which made her a companion so delightful to
+Harry's temper. But she enjoyed them in a spirit different from his. All
+the bread-and-butter business of living was to him delightful in itself
+and for itself. He was born to want no better bread than is made of
+wheat. She played with it, made a dainty mock of it, amused herself with
+it, and at the back of her mind despised it.
+
+So they lived, and you imagine Mrs. Weston's dim, wistful eyes watching
+them with a great tenderness. For she understood them no better than
+they themselves.
+
+It was Alison who first grew tired. Not of love or passion, but of the
+trivialities and the quiet life at Highgate. She had ambitions, or
+thought she had. It had been just rediscovered that women could be
+leaders in the world--at least in politics and the tricks of statecraft.
+Women were the fiercest partisans and their voices powerful in the
+warring parties. It was a woman, his termagant duchess, who had given
+Marlborough his ascendancy in England, made him dominate all Europe. It
+was a clever woman who had contrived Marlborough's downfall and given his
+enemies the government of England. It was a woman--another duchess--who
+beat Swift. You need not suspect Alison, who had some humour, of
+imagining Harry Boyce a Marlborough. But he did believe him able to make
+a noise in the world, and coveted much the sensation of owning him while
+the world listened. She did not see herself controlling queens and kings
+and parties, but she was well aware of her beauty and its power, and had
+a mind to use it widely. She was hungry for excitement.
+
+So Mrs. Alison determined to set her man upon a larger, busier stage. The
+decree went forth that old Tom Lambourne's house in the Lincoln's Inn
+Fields was again to be inhabited. Harry was asked for his advice
+afterwards. Perhaps he would have been wiser if he had begun their first
+quarrel then. But he was enjoying her too much to deny her her ways or
+her whims, and he only laughed at her. He was not pleased, to be sure. He
+had a taste, which cannot have come from his father, for copse and
+field. He never found anything in the town which was worth the living in
+other folk's smoke. He disliked crowds and in particular crowds of fine
+ladies and gentlemen. So with some horror he saw before him a vista of
+polite splendours, and said so.
+
+"Oh Lud, sir," says she, "if I had wanted to sleep my life away I should
+not have married you. And if you wanted to sleep out yours you should not
+have married me."
+
+"I was born for innocence and green fields. You'll make me a bull in a
+china shop."
+
+"I'll love you the better, child. Faith, Harry, I would be very glad to
+have you break something."
+
+"Madame's heart, _par exemple_?"
+
+"That would be an adventure."
+
+So you find them arrived in the Lincoln's Inn Fields as the first step
+to the conquest of the world. The world was not as excited as Alison
+thought fit. Her father, old Tom Lambourne, had commanded reverence in
+the City and some respect even as far west as St. James's by sheer
+weight of wealth. A rare capacity for living hard had won him an army of
+diverse friends. But neither his business nor his pleasures provided him
+with many who could be bequeathed to his daughter. Her mother, born a
+baker's daughter in Shoe Lane, having died in giving Alison birth, had
+left her nothing besides her admirable body but some grumbling objects
+of charity. It remained for Alison to make her own way in the world of
+fine ladies and gentlemen. Since she was by certain fame an heiress of
+great possessions, her way might have been easy if she had not found
+herself a husband. The taint of the city, if she had borne herself
+humbly, need not have made her quite intolerable to people of birth. But
+since her money was already married she could only be reckoned as a city
+goodwife; pretty enough, indeed, to be game for fine gentlemen, but to
+fine ladies a nobody.
+
+Folks were slow in coming to the grand house in Lincoln's Inn Fields;
+slower still, if they had houses of elegance, to ask Mrs. Alison back. It
+suited Harry very well. He would, as his wife complained, go mooning
+across the fields to Islington almost as happily as through the woods at
+Highgate. His books had almost as good a savour in town as in the
+country. When she dragged him to hear Nicolini or Wilks or the
+Bracegirdle, he could console himself by gentle jeering over the fact
+that in a playhouse where everybody knew everybody not a creature had a
+bow for him or her. Of course she smarted. Day by day he chose to affect
+astonishment over her failures, believing with infatuated content that he
+was slowly driving her back to the country and sanity, though he was but
+driving her away from him. And she, choosing to feel humiliated, blamed
+him for the shame of it.
+
+"Why, child," says he in his supercilious way, "'tis not failing to be in
+the _beau monde_ that's ridiculous, but wanting to be."
+
+To such monitions she began not to answer back--a symptom very dangerous.
+
+She set up a basset table. That, if anything could, must proclaim her a
+woman of fashion--a woman, indeed, who had a fancy to be a trifle
+daring. There's no doubt that Alison about this time and afterwards did
+want to dabble in danger. She was not her father's daughter for nothing.
+She encouraged high play. For herself, she enjoyed the excitement of it,
+having no need to care if she lost. She wanted to have about her people
+who affected heavy stakes, believing in the innocence of her heart that
+they were exhilarating company. So she made for herself a queer society,
+which Harry to her angry disgust defined as a mixture of sheep and
+wolves. There were good wives and lads from the city anxious to make a
+jingling show with the funds of the family counting-house, there were
+hungry beaux and madames from the other end of the town seeking their
+fortune impudently wherever it might be found.
+
+To one of these happy parties there was introduced a Mrs. Boyce. She
+was a faded, handsome creature much jewelled about lean shoulders.
+Alison, who hardly heard her name in the rout, took no account of it
+and little of her. But on the next day this Mrs. Boyce came early and
+caught Alison alone.
+
+She began with such a fuss about apologizing for her earliness that
+Alison set her down for an ill-bred, tiresome creature. She had a high
+voice which, like the rest of her, was a trifle faded. "I protest, ma'am,
+I have long desired to know you better." Alison languidly muttered
+something civil. "Let me make myself known first, I beg. I am the niece
+of Sir Gilbert Heathcote."
+
+Alison, of course, had heard of Sir Gilly--one of the chiefs of high
+finance--but cared nothing about him. "I am vastly honoured, ma'am. I was
+only born Thomas Lambourne's daughter."
+
+"There is no need; ma'am." A long, lean hand was waved. "I wonder if we
+are in some fashion connected. We are both called Mrs. Boyce. The Boyces
+of Oxfordshire, ma'am?"
+
+Alison's laugh had something of a sneer in it, "Of nowhere that I know,
+ma'am. My husband is Mr. Harry Boyce, son of Colonel Oliver Boyce."
+
+The lady fluttered her fan, settled herself afresh in her chair,
+rearranged her close-fitting lips. Alison was reminded of a hen preening
+itself. "I had heard so, ma'am. And my husband is Colonel Oliver Boyce."
+
+"La, ma'am, do you mean the same?" Alison cried.
+
+Mrs. Oliver Boyce gave a lifeless smile. "That is why I did myself the
+honour of giving you my confidence, ma'am. I think there are not two
+Colonel Oliver Boyces. The younger son of one of the Oxfordshire family."
+
+"Oh Lud, how should I know? I never looked into the grandfathers."
+
+"No, ma'am?" The tone was patronizing contempt. "You might have been the
+wiser of it. Colonel Oliver Boyce--he has taken the title lately--when I
+knew him he was something in the service of the Duke of Marlborough. Oh,
+a fine man to the eye, ma'am, and very splendid in his talk."
+
+"Why, that's his likeness," Alison laughed. "And what then, ma'am? Have
+you come seeking the Colonel? He is the Lord knows where. Or is
+it--faith, you don't tell me Harry is your son?"
+
+"No, ma'am. At least I was spared bearing children."
+
+"Oh--why, give you joy if you would have it so. But how can I serve you?
+Maybe your Colonel is not my Colonel after all. At least he and Harry are
+father and son heartily enough."
+
+"It may be so, ma'am," said the lady heavily, and here Harry came in.
+
+Alison looked up laughing and then frowned. Harry would not ever dress
+fine. His wig was still unfashionably small, he wore some sombre stuff,
+and to her eye (as she said) looked like a mole. "Here's Mr. Boyce,
+ma'am. Harry, Mrs. Oliver Boyce, who is come to say that you never had
+father nor mother."
+
+"Your obliged servant, ma'am." Harry opened his eyes. "Pray, has my
+father married again?"
+
+"You'll find, sir, that Colonel Boyce has only been married once."
+
+"If you please, ma'am," said Harry blandly. "Pray, are you blaming him?
+Or--" a gesture expressed his complete ignorance of what she was doing.
+
+The lady seemed to force herself to laugh. "Oh, fie, sir. Sure it is not
+for me to blame him."
+
+"No, ma'am?" Harry was first interrogative then acquiescent. "No, ma'am.
+I wonder if you could give me the Colonel's direction."
+
+"I, sir? You are pleased to amuse yourself."
+
+"I vow, ma'am, I was never less amused."
+
+"Colonel Boyce was pleased to leave me five years ago. I have not
+forgotten it, if you have."
+
+"Faith, this is very distressing," Harry protested in bewilderment. "But
+you do me injustice, ma'am. I have forgotten nothing about my father. For
+I never knew anything."
+
+"As you please, sir," the lady drawled. "I was talking, by your leave, to
+Mrs. Boyce."
+
+"Oh, ma'am, a hundred pardons," Harry took himself off in a hurry. His
+chief emotion over the lady seems to have been satisfaction that she
+wanted nothing to do with him. As for her story of being his father's
+deserted wife, he had long supposed his father capable of anything. As
+for the lady herself, he wrote her down a tiresome busybody and perhaps
+he was not far wrong.
+
+Alison too was much of the same opinion, but it was unfortunately
+hampered by a natural curiosity to hear what the lady could tell
+about the mystery of Harry and his father. "You had something to say
+to me, ma'am?"
+
+"I count it my duty, ma'am, to give you warning of Colonel Boyce."
+
+Alison stood up. "Duty? I know nothing of your duty, ma'am. But I think
+it is mine not to listen to you."
+
+"I protest, I should have said the same," the lady drawled. "I too had
+spirit once, child. That was before I suffered. I would I had known you
+earlier. And yet perhaps I may do something to save you even now."
+
+"I cannot tell how, ma'am."
+
+"Listen, if you please!" the lady said dramatically. "I was something of
+an heiress as you are and maybe something of a toast too. The worse for
+me. I choose to believe it was not only my money which brought Oliver
+Boyce upon me. He took all I could give him and very soon gave me
+nothing, not even common courtesy. When I began to be careful he began to
+be brutal. But for my family--I told you that Sir Gilbert Heathcote was
+my uncle--he would have stripped me of every penny. When they stepped in
+to save me some rag of my fortune, my good Mr. Boyce left me. I have
+never had a word from him since. Pray, child, take warning."
+
+"If it is so, I am sorry for it," said Alison coldly, "I believe I hear
+company." She began to walk to the outer room.
+
+Behind her, "As for your Harry Boyce," said the lady, "oh, I make no
+doubt he's Oliver's son, though certainly he is none of mine."
+
+Alison made as if she did not hear, and she was spared more by the coming
+of some of her guests. The card tables filled. There was no more danger
+of being private with Mrs. Oliver Boyce. Indeed, the lady, as if she had
+done all she wanted, took her leave early. She was affectionate about it,
+for which Alison liked her none the better. Through most of that evening,
+amid the flutter of cards and the clatter--"Spadillio, on my life! What,
+it's Basto, is it? Did you hear of Mrs. Prue? She'll not show for a
+month. We win the Codille, ma'am. They say the Duchess and she pulled
+caps"--Alison was telling herself over and over that the creature was a
+detestable low thing who only wanted to make mischief. It should, you
+think, have needed no effort to believe that. But the obvious malice had
+power to annoy a mind already discontented. Alison could not stop
+wondering what the mystery was about Harry's birth and his father.
+Perhaps Harry knew more than the little he professed. Perhaps he was not
+the careless, indolent fellow he chose to seem, but something more
+cunning and less lofty. What if he were just such another as the woman
+painted his father--a fellow on the hunt for an heiress, who, once he had
+her and her money, cared no more about her? To be sure there was some
+evidence for that. Since they had come to town, he was always off by
+himself. If she wanted him with her, she had to plead and plague him. A
+proud office! Why, that very night monsieur did not please to appear at
+the card tables. He was too fine for her and her company. So she fretted
+and rubbed the poison in. And naturally, she fared ill at the card table.
+Her cards were bad and she made the worst of them. She was not a good
+loser and it was a wife much inflamed who, when her guests were gone,
+sought out her husband.
+
+Harry sat with Mrs. Weston, who was at needlework and, if Alison had been
+able to see, looked very benign. But it was he who demanded all the
+wife's angry eyes. His wig was on the table beside him. He had a pipe in
+his mouth. He was lolling in the deeps of a chair and smiling to himself
+over a book. "You might be in an ale-house, you look so slovenly."
+
+Harry grinned up at her. "Oh, madame wife hasn't been winning to-night.
+Tell me all about it."
+
+"Faugh! Your pipe," Alison coughed. "For God's sake keep it to the
+tavern. It's enough that you reek of it without making my house
+reek too."
+
+Harry gave a great sigh and put the pipe down. "We were so comfortable
+till you came. I am glad to see you, dear."
+
+"I was comfortable till you came." Alison snapped.
+
+"Pray, mother Weston," says Harry, "forgive our public caresses. We have
+not long been married."
+
+Alison looked ice at him. "Weston dear, would you leave us? I have
+something to say to Harry." Harry opened his eyes. Mrs. Weston looked at
+her anxiously, bade them a nervous good-night, and hurried out.
+
+"Harry--who was your mother?" Alison stood stern over the lolling
+husband.
+
+"Egad, what's this? Have you been brooding over your bony friend?
+Who is she?"
+
+"She says she is your father's wife; and says he left her."
+
+"Well, if she is his wife, I wager he did leave her. Faith, she was made
+to be deserted."
+
+"What do you know of her?"
+
+"Nothing, by the grace of God. Why should I? If my father got drunk and
+married her, he would not want to talk about it when he was sober."
+
+"I despise you when you talk so," Alison cried.
+
+"And yet you listened to her, child."
+
+"She says that he took all her money before he left her."
+
+"Oh! Pray, why has she so much to say, and to you?"
+
+"She wanted to warn me against Colonel Boyce."
+
+"And against his son, I think. And you were so kind as to listen. Egad,
+ma'am, I am obliged to you. Well, now you know what to do. You have the
+money and I have none. Pray, lock up your purse to-night."
+
+"You are childish," said Alison with lofty scorn. "Harry--who was
+your mother?"
+
+"Oh, I thought your kind friend told you I had none. I dare say it's as
+true as the rest."
+
+"You don't know?"
+
+"I never saw her."
+
+"She said--" Alison hesitated.
+
+"Oh Lud, don't be squeamish now."
+
+"She said your father had never been married except to her."
+
+"Odso! That is what you had to tell me. I am a bastard, am I?" He laughed
+and turned in his chair. "Give you good-night, madame wife."
+
+"Harry--"
+
+"Oh, God save you!" He took up his pipe. "I am no company for you. And,
+by God, you are no company for me."
+
+She looked at him a moment, hesitated, went slowly out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE AFFAIR OF SIR GEORGE
+
+
+The irruption of Mrs. Oliver Boyce could not easily have been foretold.
+That the past life of Colonel Boyce was likely to throw shadows over his
+son Harry might have considered, but the nature of the lady and her care
+and the successful opportunity of her malice were hardly to be
+calculated. There is less excuse for him in the affair of Sir George
+Anville. Given the conditions of that hasty marriage and the state into
+which it had brought them and the society about them, some Sir George or
+other was a natural consequence.
+
+The ugly quarrel which Mrs. Oliver Boyce had made for them was never
+composed. When they met again in the morning they were coldly and
+haughtily civil, and so they chose to remain. Mrs. Weston, not being
+blind, saw that something was amiss and tried with blundering motherly
+affection to push them back into one another's arms. She hardened, as is
+usual, their hostility. Each was mortally afraid of weakening, each
+suspected the other at once of softness and of guile and so held aloof
+and fed upon scorn. They had both enough of that pride of sex which gives
+one pleasure in the sufferings of the other. And of course the quarrel
+was poisoned with a sordid taint. The colder, the haughtier Harry was,
+the more Alison inclined to believe that he had wanted nothing of her but
+her money. The haughtier, the colder Alison was, the more Harry raged
+against her for a mean creature who desired to make him feel his
+dependence upon her money bags.
+
+In himself Sir George Anville was of no importance. If Harry had been
+comfortable he could never have taken the trouble to be angry over the
+man. It is certain that Alison never thought him worth any thought of
+hers, still less worth one finger's surrender. And yet Sir George
+contrived to be disastrous to the pair of them.
+
+That was not, as Lady Mary Wortley Montagu said of him in another matter,
+altogether his fault. "The fool has excuses," quoth she, "which others
+have not. He is so great a fool that you hardly believe his folly is but
+folly." Sir George was a man born without impulse or capacity for
+anything. Lady Mary, who was fond of using him for her wit, made a
+grammarian's jest on him, "The creature's an anomaly: active in form,
+passive in meaning." He was bred in a society which made it a fashion to
+be vicious. He affected to follow the fashion. If vice must needs be
+something active, or at least, something of the will, Sir George Anville
+must escape punishment. But he was to a wholesome taste more offensive
+than sinners who did more damage. It was Harry's worst blunder in the
+affair that he treated Alison as if she did not feel that.
+
+Sir George knew no other way of passing his life than in dangling about
+women. He was generally tolerated as a butt, and being impervious to
+contempt, supposed that his fascinations procured him immunity. He
+did--it must be reckoned the first of his two accomplishments--he did
+know a pretty woman from a plain one, and therefore as soon as he knew
+Alison much resorted to her. His other accomplishment was to dress well.
+He was lean and had an air of languor which was not affected, but a
+natural lack of vigour. It may be believed that Alison tolerated him
+because he made a not disagreeable decoration to her rooms. But at this
+era she was cynical, and perhaps told herself that Sir George was as good
+a man as another.
+
+He began to come at hours when she could be found alone and was sometimes
+admitted. So Harry caught him once or twice, was ironically obsequious to
+him (which Sir George took for solemn earnest), and afterwards amused
+himself by congratulating Mrs. Alison on the power of her charms. "Odds
+fish, I can't tell where you'll stop, ma'am. You'll have a corpse on his
+knees to you yet. Maybe the corpse of a lord. I vow I'm proud of you."
+Which was not likely to get the door shut on Sir George.
+
+So that dangling gentleman became convinced that Alison was yielding to
+his embraces. He was, in a limp way, gratified. A devilish fine woman to
+be sure. She might be a trifle exhausting to a man of _ton_. But what
+would you? Women were greedy and must be satisfied with what one could
+spare them. And it was pleasant to see the pretty creatures pining. He
+would lure madame on with a few tit-bits. In this kindly mood he went to
+her on a wet April day when Alison was fretting for a wild walk or a
+wilder ride in wind and rain. But even to herself she would not confess
+that she was tired of the town. It would have assimilated her to Harry.
+
+Sir George sat himself down by Alison's side, simpered at her, sniffed,
+put his thin hands on his thin knees and ogled them. Alison held out to
+him a cup of tea. He arranged his rings before he took it and then again
+simpered at her. After some humming and hawing, "D'ye go to the play
+to-night, ma'am?" he drawled.
+
+"What play is it?"
+
+"Ah--some curst play or other," said Sir George; and exhausted by that
+effort relapsed for a while into silence.
+
+Alison did not help him out. It is possible that she was wondering how a
+creature so vapid could go on existing. She looked Sir George over with
+an odd, close inspection. Sir George, who had some perceptions, became
+aware of it and according to his nature misunderstood it. He sniffed
+again, and "Pray, ma'am, what perfume do you use?" Alison stared at him.
+"I am delicate in such things," said he, and smelt his own handkerchief.
+
+Alison hesitated between disgust and amusement. To be sure the creature
+was such a fool that it was not fair to think of him save as a buffoon.
+So unfortunately she chose amusement. "Oh, I vow, Sir George, your
+delicacy is rare," she laughed.
+
+The poor creature took it for a compliment. He leered at her: "But you
+are exquisite, my Indamora."
+
+"Who?"
+
+"It's an amorous lady in a play," Sir George explained. "Pretty
+creature," he patted Alison's arm, and leaned upon her to kiss her neck.
+
+She was so surprised that his lips had almost time to reach her. "Lord,
+sir, are you mad?" she cried, as she thrust him off.
+
+"Pretty creature," Sir George giggled, and clung to her.
+
+"Your carriage is at the door, Sir George." Harry stood over them. His
+face was as much a mask as ever, his voice placid.
+
+Alison started up and stood to face him with a lowering brow. He did not
+appear to see her. Sir George shook down his ruffles. "Carriage? What
+d'ye mean?" says he. "I ha' had no carriage this year. I came in a
+hackney coach."
+
+Harry turned away from him and opened the door.
+
+"Eh? Oh, stap me!" Sir George giggled and got on to his feet, "Madame,
+your eternally devoted." He went out with a strut, waving his scented
+handkerchief in the direction of Harry.
+
+Then Alison spoke. Her eyes were furious. "You--oh, you boor! How
+dare you?"
+
+"Egad, that's very good!" Harry laughed.
+
+She beat her foot on the floor. "Oh, you are not to be borne! To make a
+noise of it! To make a scandal of me and that--that creature!"
+
+"To be sure, I came untimely. Well, ma'am, if you wanted to be quiet
+about it, I had rather it made a noise."
+
+"My God!" she was white. "You dare say that to me! Be careful, Harry."
+
+"Pray, ma'am, no heroics."
+
+"I warn you, there are things I'll not bear."
+
+"Is it possible?" Harry sneered.
+
+She swept past him and away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+RETURN OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+
+It seems that, years afterwards, Harry and Alison were afflicted with a
+dreary and remorseful wonder at these wars. Both, as they grew older, had
+something of a turn for moralising, and in their copious letters to their
+several children is evidence of much penitence and puzzling over the
+disasters of their youth. Each plainly took all the blame. Each is
+eloquent about the sins of pride and hardness. Harry preaches the duty of
+trust; Alison the folly of easy intimacies. Both of them, in those latter
+days when they could calmly estimate what they had lost, still wondered
+with a gloomy scorn how they had come to let the ugly, ridiculous affair
+of Sir George set them against each other. You find them both trying to
+recall (or guess) what exactly it was that, in the time of crisis, they
+felt and believed.
+
+When it was all part of their history, Harry could hardly persuade
+himself that ever he had fancied Alison untrue, even disloyal; or Alison
+believe that she had stormed against him for driving out of the house a
+man who had been impudent to her. Yet it is not to be doubted that Harry
+did let suspicions of her honesty poison him. He could not, at the worst
+of his anger, believe that she would play false with such a husk of a
+fop; but he told himself that she wanted to make the fellow into a
+waiting gentleman, a servant, and a toy at once--a thing more nauseous
+than a lover. And Alison, though at the back of her brain she was aware
+that Harry had excuse for what he had done, raged the more against him
+for the intolerable things he had said. His suspicions made her despise
+him. For his assumption of authority she hated him.
+
+There were almost from the first the usual sage and kindly friends to
+tell them that it was all a misunderstanding, that they had only to be
+frank with each other and commonly reasonable and there would be no
+quarrel left. But it is doubtful whether this sagacious advice could
+have done them much good if they had taken it. "Talk things over like
+rational creatures," was (as usual) the prescription. But if they had
+really been rational, they would only have come to the conclusion that
+they ought not to be married. The force of their passion, to be sure,
+was real enough and still moved in them. To hold them together they had
+nothing else. There was no consciousness of other need, no longing for a
+common life, no desire to help or give. If they had been most calmly
+wise and wisely calm in a dozen conversations, they would but have made
+this all the clearer.
+
+Still it is true, as the sagacious friends guessed, that they did not
+try to compose the quarrel. Each was by far too proud. Harry was
+pleased to consider that he had done his duty by a flighty wife, and
+would take no more account of her unless she were penitent--or provoked
+him again. Alison, reckoning herself meanly insulted, was resolved that
+he could never again be more than an unwelcome guest in her house. They
+were, to be sure, ridiculous. In private they avoided each other. In
+public they continued to meet, for each was too proud to confess to the
+world the failure of their marriage. You imagine how poor Mrs. Weston
+enjoyed life in an icy atmosphere, the temperature of which she was not
+permitted to notice.
+
+Such were their relations when the final blow fell upon them. They dined
+late in the Lincoln Inn Fields. It was as much as six o'clock and they
+were still at table--as jovial as usual. The butler came to Alison with
+an elaborate whispering. "Pray him come up," she said aloud, and looked
+defiance down the table at Harry. "It is Mr. Waverton."
+
+"Lord, Lord, is he still alive?" Harry grinned. "That's heroic."
+
+"Back from France? Is Colonel Boyce come back?" Mrs. Weston cried.
+
+"I know nothing of Colonel Boyce," said Alison coldly.
+
+"You couldn't please him better," Harry laughed. "Dear Geoffrey! I wonder
+if he knows anything? Well I It would be a new experience."
+
+Mr. Waverton came. He was more stately than ever--browner also, but not
+changed otherwise. His large and handsome face affected all the old
+melancholy.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Waverton!" Harry grinned. "You do honour me. Pray let me present
+you to my poor wife."
+
+Geoffrey took no notice of him. "Madame, your obedient," he bowed to
+Alison. "I beg leave to have some speech with you."
+
+"There's still some dinner. Draw up a chair," said Harry.
+
+"I did not come to dine, sir."
+
+"Oh, that's a sad stomach of yours. A glass of wine, then?"
+
+"I do not take wine with you, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"I wonder if you have made a mistake. For you have come into my house."
+
+"I will answer for all my mistakes, sir, with hearty goodwill."
+
+"Egad, you'll be busy."
+
+"Oh, be silent!" Alison cried. "You are welcome, Mr. Waverton. How can I
+serve you?"
+
+"I understand the gentleman's desire to hurry me into a quarrel, ma'am.
+Be sure that I shall not permit it." Harry laughed disagreeably. "It's
+very well, sir. But I choose first that you should listen to what I
+have to say."
+
+"Listen I Oh Lud, is it a poem?"
+
+Mr. Waverton flushed. "You are impertinent, sir. It shall not serve
+you. I intend that madame shall know the truth of your father's
+treachery and yours."
+
+Harry stood up. "Are we to stay for more of this, ma'am?"
+
+"I shall stay," Alison said.
+
+"You remark the gentleman's impatience to silence me, ma'am. I promise
+you that I shall tell you nothing which he or any man can deny."
+
+"It's a dull tale, then," Harry muttered.
+
+"I think it will excite you enough, ma'am. You are advised that I went to
+France with Colonel Boyce. The office which he offered me was to
+negotiate with Prince James. This I undertook readily, for to his party
+my family hath ever had an inclination, nay, an affection, and I saw in
+the affair duties of honour and moment."
+
+"To the greater glory of Geoffrey, first Duke of Waverton, whom God
+preserve," quoth Harry.
+
+"I did not, I will avow, foresee that the thing was but a trick to take
+me away from my house and out of the country. Though I may regret,
+ma'am"--he bowed magnificently to Alison--"I do not even now blame myself
+for my blindness, for I have ever accounted it unworthy of a man of
+honour to fear treachery in his servants"--he glared at Harry--"or
+weakness--ah--weakness in those to whom he gives his devotion"--he made
+melancholy eyes at Alison. "No more of that. In fine, I did not suspect
+that a fellow who was taking wages from my hand had plotted to rob me of
+what was my dearest hope, or that another--another--would surrender
+herself a prey to his crafty greed."
+
+"Damme, it is a poem after all," Harry groaned.
+
+"You said you had something to tell me, sir," said Alison coldly.
+
+"Nay, ma'am, be patient. I give you no reproaches. But what is, is. If it
+irks you that I remind you of it, do not give the blame to me."
+
+"I shall blame you for being tedious, by your leave." Alison yawned.
+
+"Wait till all's told. Well, ma'am, I left Tetherdown with Colonel
+Boyce, and we rode posthaste to Newhaven. He was there joined by some
+half-dozen fellows, low fellows to my eye. This much surprised me, and I
+took occasion to tell him so, for he had given out that his was a very
+secret errand of Marlborough's privy policy, into which he would admit
+none but me. He made out that these fellows were but messengers and
+escort, and I permitted myself to be satisfied, though I remarked that
+he was on familiar terms with them. But that gave me little concern, for
+I had from the first remarked in Colonel Boyce a coarse habit of
+intimacy with the vulgar."
+
+"Aye, aye, you and he took to each other famously," says Harry.
+
+"Lud, sir, must you be so wordy?" Alison cried.
+
+"You will find that every word has its import, ma'am. From some of these
+fellows Colonel Boyce learnt that there was a warrant out against him for
+treasonable practices with the Pretender. This affected him to great
+indignation, in which, as I frankly told him, I found matter for
+bewilderment. Since he was, as he professed, about to deal with the
+Pretender, it was but fair that the Government should arraign him on that
+charge. Over which he was pleased to laugh at me, and then, to explain
+his mirth, averred that the Government, and in particular Mr. Secretary
+St. John, was much more Jacobite than he, and so had no title to meddle
+with him. Then he said that what irked him was that they should have
+heard of his dealings with France, which must be done secretly or fail.
+So we went in a hurry aboard the schooner which was ready for him, and
+crossed to Dieppe, landing by night beyond the town. I make no doubt from
+his adroitness that Colonel Boyce hath done business in France before,
+but of what kind I leave you to guess when you have heard all. We were
+well furnished with horses and upon the road to Paris before noon. He
+gave out to some officers which questioned him that we were of Prince
+James's service upon our way to St. Germain. We rode to Pontoise, and
+there, as it had been planned from the first, Colonel Boyce stayed while
+I rode on to the Prince. He dared not, as he said, go himself to Paris,
+for fear that some of the French officers should recognize him as
+Marlborough's man and denounce him for a spy. Therefore was I to go with
+letters to the Prince, and messages which should persuade him to ride out
+to Pontoise and come to business with Colonel Boyce. I went on then
+alone, save that Colonel Boyce gave me one of his fellows to be my guide
+and servant, and he stayed with the rest at Pontoise. Thus far, I beg you
+remark, I had no cause to apprehend treachery. Upon the face, the scheme
+was fair enough, and all had been done even as Colonel Boyce proposed to
+me in England. I will maintain myself honourably free of any blame in the
+affair against any man whomsoever."
+
+"God bless you," said Harry heartily.
+
+Mr. Waverton visibly laboured with a repartee.
+
+"Oh, sir, a prayer from you is a rare honour," he said at length.
+"You're to understand, ma'am, that I was furnished with letters of
+credence from certain of the Jacobite agents in England--John Rogers and
+Mrs. White, I remember. How they were come by, I cannot now tell, though
+I may guess, for it is plain that there was no stint of money in the
+affair. So I came easily to speech with the Prince and his secretary, my
+Lord Middleton. And I will ever maintain that His Royal Highness is
+altogether such as a prince should be. Being of a dark complexion and a
+melancholy dignity, there is in him no lightness of thought or word. To
+me he was, I profess, very flattering, showing me courtesies beyond my
+rights or expectations. He received me, in a word, most favourably, and
+being influenced, as I regret I cannot doubt, by my person and address,
+was easily inclined to ride out to Pontoise. Only my Lord Middleton made
+difficulties. He is of a sardonic turn, and permits his wit to outrun his
+civility. He set me questions in a fashion which my honour could not
+brook. Yet I can relate that in the end I prevailed over my Lord
+Middleton's jealousy. For he said to the Prince: '_Enfin_, sir, I can
+tell no reason why you should not go see this Colonel if you choose. If
+there were any guile in the business, faith, they would never have
+trusted it to this fellow!'
+
+"So the thing was agreed. In the morning we rode for Pontoise, the
+Prince, my Lord Middleton, myself. His Royal Highness was pleased to
+limit himself to one servant. The man with whom Colonel Boyce had
+provided me went on to carry advice of our coming. We came to Pontoise
+towards evening. Colonel Boyce had put up at the Lion d'Or. He was
+waiting for us in the courtyard and received us, as I thought, something
+shortly, hurrying us into the house. But once inside, he made ceremony
+enough, with endless speeches about the condescension of His Royal
+Highness. All this too obsequious, in a boorish taste, so that the Prince
+bade him have done and come to business. Therewith Colonel Boyce was as
+full of apologies as he had been of servilities. I vow I never heard him
+so copious as that night.
+
+"He took us, you are to understand, to an upper room. And what first
+moved my suspicion was that he bade me be gone. Then my Lord Middleton
+countered him with, 'I believe, sir, the gentleman had best stay.'
+Immediately Colonel Boyce was all smiles over his blunder, and we sat
+down about the table in that upper room and came to the substance of his
+negotiation. He kept, I'll allow, to the purposes which, from the first,
+he had pretended to me: whether Prince James, if assured of support from
+Marlborough and his friends, would choose to avow himself Protestant; but
+he made so many conditions over it, he was so vague and wary that 'twas
+hard to tell what he would be at. When my Lord Middleton tried to pin him
+to something plain and certain he would ever evade, till it began to grow
+late and the Prince talked of supper and bed. This Colonel Boyce took up
+very heartily, and was indeed giving his orders when there came a noise
+in the courtyard and he ran to the window and looked out.
+
+"My Lord Middleton was behind him, with a 'What's your anxiety, sir?'
+
+"'Why, my lord, I would not have these roysterers break upon the Prince's
+incognito. Pray, sir, this way and you'll be secure'; he points to an
+inner door.
+
+"'I believe we are as safe here, sir,' says my Lord Middleton.
+
+"'Egad, sir, come away,' says Colonel Boyce; and he was in fact dragging
+the Prince across the room when the door bursts open and in comes a
+stranger, a little man. He flung himself across the room upon Colonel
+Boyce, making some play with a pistol. There was some grappling and
+wrestling. I recall that they gasped and breathed hard. But it's odd, I
+believe, that there was no word spoken. Then Colonel Boyce freed himself
+and bolted through that inner door. The stranger fired a shot after him,
+and while we were all deaf and sneezing with it and utterly amazed he
+turns on us. 'That's a miss,' says he. 'Please God they'll bag him below.
+Eh, Charles,' he wags his head at my Lord Middleton, 'I thought you had
+more sense,'
+
+"'Damme,' says my lord, 'it's Hector McBean. And prithee what's all this
+ruffling, Mac?'
+
+"'Why, you have let His Majesty walk into a stinking trap. That fellow
+Boyce, he hath been Marlborough's spy, Sunderland's spy, the devil's spy
+this twenty year.'
+
+"'Why, I thought he had something the smack of it,' says my lord.
+'And yet--'
+
+"'Who's this now?' Captain McBean turned on me. 'Yours or his?'
+
+"'His ambassador in fact,' My lord looked me over and took snuff. 'You
+won't tell me that hath any guile in it. Prithee, what is it you have
+against the man Boyce?'
+
+"'Eh, did ye see him run?' says Captain McBean. 'A man's not in that
+hurry if he hath a good conscience. If ye'll please to have him up, maybe
+we'll hear a tale.'
+
+"But as he spoke there came into the room a French officer of dragoons,
+who, saluting the Prince, asked Captain McBean if he had found his rogue.
+On which 'Have I found him?' Captain McBean cries out, 'Eh, sir, did he
+not run into your arms?' But it appeared that Colonel Boyce had not been
+caught, and they determined at last that he must have made his way out by
+a door at the back of the inn and won clear away. But I am sorry to tell
+you, ma'am, that he hath not yet been found. For if they catch him in
+France, he may count on a hanging."
+
+"Pray, sir, how did you dodge the rope?" Harry said. "Did you talk them
+to death, your Pretender and his tail?"
+
+"You're too eloquent for me, Mr. Waverton," Alison yawned. "I can't tell
+what you want to say. What is this mighty crime which you and Colonel
+Boyce were compassing?"
+
+"Sneers become you ill, ma'am," says Mr. Waverton magnificently. "I
+repudiate any charge whatsoever; and tell my story my own way. Some hot
+words passed between Captain McBean and the Frenchman, each blaming the
+other for Colonel Boyce's escape. Then Captain McBean says 'The fellows
+that were drinking in the tap, I suppose you've let them dodge you too?
+No? Well, that's a wonder. Tie this rogue up with them and have them in
+guard.' So he mocked at me, but the Prince brought him up roundly.
+
+"'You go too fast for me, my good captain,' quoth he. 'What's your charge
+against the gentleman?--who is to my mind a very simple gentleman.' So
+His Royal Highness was pleased to honour me."
+
+"Egad, he was right, Waverton," Harry laughed.
+
+"I think I know how to value your fair words now, sir," says Mr. Waverton
+grandly. "Be pleased to spare them. Upon that, as I was saying, Captain
+McBean lost command of himself and was grossly violent. Roaring that I
+was none the less a knave because I was so natural a fool, and the like
+empty insolence. Accusing me of being art and part in a vile plot with
+Colonel Boyce to kidnap and murder His Royal Highness."
+
+"Now we have it," Alison murmured and looked at Harry strangely.
+
+"Aye, ma'am. Now, perhaps (though late enough) your eyes are opened,"
+said Mr. Waverton with relish. "Well, I let the man run on. He was indeed
+not to be stopped. A rude, vehement fellow. When he was exhausted, I
+addressed His Royal Highness."
+
+"Lack a day, I believe you," says Harry.
+
+"I made it clear to him, sir, that my birth and position must warrant me
+innocent of any treachery, and though I might well disdain to answer
+these reckless charges I owed it to myself to remark to His Royal
+Highness that, but for my desire to serve him, I had never meddled in the
+affair. So that when I had done, my Lord Middleton says, laughing, 'Egad,
+sir, it seems you owe this fine gentleman thanks for his kindly
+condescension to you'; and the Prince was pleased to answer, 'We are too
+small for his notice, faith. But is he finished yet?' Then I bowed to His
+Royal Highness and sat down, well enough pleased, as you may believe.
+
+"But this Captain McBean called out in his rude fashion, 'Eh, sir, he may
+e'en be the booby he pretends. The better decoy, I allow. But by your
+leave, we'll look into it more narrowly. Would Your Majesty please to
+permit me have up the other rogues?'
+
+"This, in a word, they did, and Captain McBean and my Lord Middleton (who
+is to my mind something more of the attorney than becomes a man of rank)
+questioning the fellows shrewdly, it was made put--I crave your
+attention, madam--it was made out that Colonel Boyce had undertaken for
+the service of the Hanoverian junto here to kidnap or kill Prince James.
+And the plan was to bring the Prince out to Pontoise and so drag out
+affairs that he passed the night there. Then in the night they were to
+invade his room and command him to follow them. They pretended indeed
+that they meant only to carry him off. But 'tis not to be doubted that
+they looked for resistance and a bloody issue to the affair. So, ma'am,
+here is the trade of the family of Boyce--to procure murder, and the
+murder of a prince of the blood royal, of our lawful king. I give you joy
+of the name you bear."
+
+Alison bent her head. "You may well be proud of your part, Mr.
+Waverton."
+
+"They let you go, did they?" says Harry; "your captain and your lord and
+your prince?"
+
+"Let me go, sir? There is nothing against me. I defy your impudence. Nay,
+I thank you, I thank you. You lead me gracefully to the end of my story."
+
+"Good God! It has an end!"
+
+"When these rogues were questioned about me, not a man of them could
+pretend to have anything against me. They openly confessed that Colonel
+Boyce had warned them that I must be kept in innocence of the affair lest
+I should thwart it. For he said that he had brought me into it to show a
+good face to the Prince as one beyond suspicion of treachery. Nay and
+moreover--and here's my last word to you, ma'am--he avowed that he chose
+me because he wanted me out of England where I stood between his own son
+and a pretty heiress. At which, as I remember, my Lord Middleton chose to
+be amused."
+
+"Damme, I like that man," says Harry.
+
+"So, ma'am," Mr. Waverton tossed his head. "Here you have it. I am drawn
+into a murderous, vile, base treason that I may be kept out of the way
+while Mr. Boyce prosecutes his designs upon you. I give you joy of the
+loyal fidelity which yielded to him. I leave you to enjoy him with what
+appetite you may."
+
+He made a majestic bow, he turned and was gone.
+
+Harry and Alison were left staring at each other.
+
+From behind came a small strained voice: "Colonel Boyce--he--he is safe,
+then?" It was Mrs. Weston.
+
+The two turned with a start, surprised by her existence.
+
+Harry laughed. "Oh aye, he is safe. He would be."
+
+Mrs. Weston rose slowly and then made a rush for the door.
+
+The husband and wife were left alone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+HARRY IS DISMISSED
+
+
+Alison turned and stared into the fire. Harry filled himself a glass of
+port and drank it and laughed. She looked round at him. "Faith, Mr.
+Waverton is mighty good entertainment," he explained.
+
+"Is that all you want to say?"
+
+Harry would not be awed by that ominous voice. "Oh Lud, how could I dare
+talk after him? Our poetic orator!" He made flourishes in the air after
+Mr. Waverton's manner. "Nay, but I would give my new wig to have been in
+that upper chamber at Pontoise. Dear Geoffrey on his defence booming
+noble periods--and the Prince, poor gentleman, with his fingers in his
+ears! If dear Geoffrey was telling the truth. I wonder."
+
+"Oh, is that what you'll pretend?"
+
+"Pretend? I pretend nothing, ma'am. Why, to be sure, our Geoffrey always
+means to tell the truth--having, God bless him, no imagination. But
+you'll remark what when he tells a tale, it's Mr. Waverton has always the
+_beau rôle_. He sees the world like that, dear lad. So I should be glad
+to hear the Caledonian gentleman's notion of what happened."
+
+"I see. You'll make that your defence. Geoffrey imagined it all."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, you may lower your tone. I have nothing to defend, nor are
+you set in judgment."
+
+Alison started up. "Do you suppose all this is to make no change?"
+she cried.
+
+"You're a splendid creature, by heaven," says Harry, tilting his chair
+back and watching her with a little epicurean smile, the proud vigour of
+her, the blood in her cheeks, the flash of her eyes, and the sweep of the
+white arm.
+
+"I could hate you for that," she said, and her lips set.
+
+"Yes. I think you're in a fair way to it," says Harry. "I wonder if you
+know why."
+
+"Because I have come to despise you," she cried sharply.
+
+"You will be solemn, will you?" says Harry. "Much good may it do you. And
+so, egad, have at you heartily. For you have said things which both of us
+will find it hard to forget."
+
+"Oh, you can feel that?"
+
+"Look 'e, ma'am, if we are to be in earnest, we had best not snap at each
+other like a pair of puppies. Now, what's happened?"
+
+"You have to ask that? My God, if you have to ask, there's no use in
+words between you and me."
+
+"Oh Lud, don't be mystical. Mr. Waverton comes here to do his poor
+possible to make mischief between us. I suppose you saw that. He tells us
+that he went blundering with my father into a muddle of a plot."
+
+"He tells us that your father planned a vile base murder and sought to
+make him, a man of honour, part in it. Pray, sir, is that not infamous?"
+
+"Egad, if you haven't caught his style! You believe all that, do you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"We shall go far to-night, I think," Harry shrugged. "And shall I tell
+you why you believe it, ma'am? It's because you are looking about to find
+matter for blackening me."
+
+Alison hesitated a moment. "You cannot deny it. It is proved. Your father
+would not stay to face them."
+
+"Face a pistol and a furious Scot? Well, I never said he was a hero."
+
+"Do you pretend it was only a fight he feared? Do you dare tell me it was
+an honest, honourable plan? Nay, come, let me see if there's anything you
+think shameful."
+
+Harry shrugged. "I know my father not much better than you do, ma'am. I
+never thought him a Bayard. Some plot there was, I think, and these
+political plots are all dirty enough. But, Lord, who is clean of them?
+And I'm not ready to write my father off a murderer because Mr. Waverton
+went blundering into a business which, on his own confession, he does not
+understand."
+
+"He went in your place. You should have gone with your father."
+
+"Should have gone? D'ye wish I had, ma'am?"
+
+"Perhaps."
+
+Harry started up. "Oh, say it out. I knew we should go far to-night."
+
+They stood close, fronting each other fiercely. "My God, is it strange
+if I wish you had gone? Your father is a base wretch who should be on the
+gallows, and I am to be his son's wife and bear the name, and the while
+he goes bragging that he took Geoffrey Waverton off so that you should be
+free to come at me."
+
+"Aye, that. To be sure, that rankles. But you have known it long. I
+showed you the letter he left me which said he had taken Geoffrey out of
+my way and bade me snatch my chance of you. And you made light of that,
+ma'am. Oh, it was a base thing, if you will, but you know well enough it
+went for nought. We had done our work before. By God, Alison, Geoffrey
+there or Geoffrey here, you would have come to me."
+
+"Ah!" It was like a cry of pain. "You brag of it. I forced myself on you,
+I suppose." Harry exclaimed something, made a gesture. "Oh yes, you were
+all cold virtue and chastity and honour, and I--what was I?" She
+shuddered and drew back from him. "Yes, you would turn on me. You would
+taunt me with that."
+
+"Egad, you're in a frenzy," says Harry. "You cry aloud and cut yourself
+with knives. You will be hurting yourself."
+
+"I loathe you for that calm way of yours," she cried. "You mock me till
+I am mad, and then you please to be grave and lofty. You--I took you out
+of the gutter."
+
+"What now, ma'am?" Harry stiffened.
+
+"It's all a mask!" she cried. "Nothing of you shows in your voice or your
+face--your face, bah, it's always the same, when you kiss and when you
+strike. A mask! You're always in a mask. That's how you took me. I was a
+fool, and thought there must be something fine behind it." She laughed.
+"You were clever enough. You knew the trick and the mystery of it would
+take a woman. A mask! Yes, faith, that is the wear for a highwayman. I
+remember how Charles Hadley used to laugh at your 'Curst
+stand-and-deliver stare.' I liked it, I liked the challenge of it. But he
+knew you better. That's your trade, the highwayman, faith, the
+highwayman! You trick us all and prey upon us, as you dare. So you marked
+me down, who was rich and a girl, and you have caught me, and you have
+rifled me, and, for what you care I may now go hang. I ask you for my
+pride again, my honour, and you mock at me. Oh, I am ashamed for a fool
+and worse, and you know it, God help me, but you--you--"
+
+Harry shrugged. "I suppose we have come to the end now," he said coolly.
+"Well, ma'am, to be sure we married in haste, and it seems we have both
+come to repentance. As for wrong that I have done you--why, I can't make
+you a maid again, and, if you please, more's the pity. My apologies and
+regrets. For the rest, all of your money that hath been spent on me will
+go in a small purse, and, I promise you, you shall spend no more. So you
+may sleep sound, and I wish you good night."
+
+She watched him cross the room, and, as he was opening the door, cried
+out, "What do you mean?"
+
+He turned. "Why, would you still be talking?" Their eyes met in
+defiance. "You can go," she said.
+
+"I have had the honour to tell you so," he said, and was gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+ALISON FINDS FRIENDS
+
+
+It was on the second day after that Susan Burford and Mr. Hadley rode in
+to the Lincoln's Inn Fields. They found Alison and Mrs. Weston together,
+and both sewing--a fact which failed to interest Mr. Hadley, but
+surprised Susan, who knew Alison, without a taste for needlework.
+
+"My dear," says Susan, embracing Alison physically and spiritually in her
+large, buxom, genial way.
+
+"You have been a long time finding me," says Alison and put her off. "I
+suppose I know why you kindly come to me now."
+
+"B-r-r-r-r!" Mr. Hadley made the sound of one who comes into a cold
+draught. "The truth is, Susan has been so busy improving herself that she
+has had no time for her friends. In fine, she has been trying to make
+herself worthy the honour of my affections and large enough to support
+the burden of my dignity. I don't say she satisfies me, but she does her
+best." He propelled Susan forward with his one hand. "'A poor thing,
+ma'am, but mine own.'"
+
+"Oh, he is amusing himself, you see," says Susan, in her leisurely
+fashion.
+
+"Damme, Susan, you're so mighty innocent that sometimes I believe you
+are innocent."
+
+"But you have known me so long," Susan protested.
+
+Alison stood up with an air of ceremony. Her pale face constrained itself
+at last to smile at them. "My dear, I wish you may be very happy," says
+she, and gave Susan a matronly kiss. "Mr. Hadley, you're a fortunate
+man." She put out a stately hand.
+
+Having bowed over it. "B-r-r-r," says Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Damn these east winds. Susan, you're a plague with your affections. You
+will have me talk about you, and I can't make you interesting, I hope,
+ma'am, we find Mr. Boyce well?"
+
+Alison drew back. "Why do you ask that? You have seen Mr. Waverton,
+of course."
+
+Mrs. Weston put down her work and folded her hands upon it.
+
+"Why, yes, I have seen Geoffrey; and what's worse, heard him. I hope he
+did not plague you too long."
+
+"Pray, Mr. Hadley, don't be ironical. You can spare me that. Mr. Waverton
+told us his story the night before last. Thereupon Mr. Boyce and I parted
+company. He left my house immediately and I do not know where he is."
+
+Mr. Hadley distinguished himself by containing an oath. Susan said, "Oh,
+my dear," in that slow, calm way which might mean anything.
+
+It was Mrs. Weston who cried out, "Alison, you never told me."
+
+"You asked once or twice where he was, and I told you I did not know.
+What does it matter?"
+
+"You quarrelled with him?"
+
+"Quarrelled!"
+
+"Because of what this Mr. Waverton said?"
+
+"Do you think it could make no difference?"
+
+Mrs. Weston clasped her hands and swayed in her chair.
+
+"Alison; we had no guess of this. I am sorry. I am so sorry," Susan said.
+
+"There is no need." Alison held her head high.
+
+"If we have, in some sort, forced your confidence, I beg you believe,
+ma'am, it was not meant," So Mr. Hadley in the grand style. "For I
+protest it never came into my head that Geoffrey would make mischief
+between you and Mr. Boyce."
+
+"You say that?" Alison stared at him. "Oh, you mean I was so besotted
+with him."
+
+Mr. Hadley relapsed to his ordinary manner. "Damme, d'ye think we came
+for nothing but to jeer at you? I promise you we have pleasanter matter
+to hand. Neither to jeer at you, nor to meddle with you, Alison, but
+friendly. So take us friendly in God's name. If you will go about to find
+a sneer in every word, why, a sneer you'll find, but not of my making. We
+bring you nothing but goodwill, and want nothing more of you. But if we
+irk you, why, let us go and we'll see you again in good time."
+
+"That's a pretty speech to begin with an oath," Alison said, through the
+flicker of a smile. "And, faith, I should be slow to take offence at you.
+For we quarrelled before, because you were at pains to warn me. Well,
+sir, I humble myself before your wisdom."
+
+There was a pause. "Oh. Now we are all ill at ease," says Susan.
+
+"Odso, ma'am, it's not fair," Mr. Hadley cried. "I am not here to say, 'I
+told you so,' I am not so proud of it. Well, damme, I have no temptation
+to be meddling in your affairs. But I think you will have to know. It is
+with Mr. Waverton I have fallen out now."
+
+"With Mr. Waverton?" Alison repeated. "What is there between you and
+him?"
+
+"I believe he had the impertinence to expect my sympathetic admiration.
+While I was thinking him a low fellow. Which I took occasion to tell him.
+Without result." Mr. Hadley shrugged. "But I believe he did not feel it.
+It's a thick hide."
+
+"And what was your difference?"
+
+"Why, this precious story of his."
+
+There was some little time of silence. "You don't believe it," Alison
+said slowly. "Come, you must say more than that."
+
+"I profess, ma'am, I have no will to say anything. Whatever I say, I'll
+be impertinent."
+
+"Oh. Shall we mark it in you?" Susan said.
+
+"Well, sir, you were not always so shy of scolding me," says Alison, and
+again with a faint smile.
+
+"Scold you! God warn us, I have no commission. I can tell you what I
+thought of Waverton and his tale. Did I believe it? Ods fish, I never
+remember believing Geoffrey. If he had to tell you two and two was four,
+he would pretend that his genius first discovered it. So I don't know
+what happened at Pontoise. Likely the old Colonel did mix him up in some
+plot which some other fellows smoked. Maybe it was even such as Geoffrey
+said, kidnapping and murder to follow. These plots, they grow nastier and
+nastier the longer they are afoot. And Colonel Boyce--well, by your
+leave, I don't think him delicate. But for the rest of it, I'll wager
+that's Geoffrey's sprightly invention. You know very well, ma'am, I have
+no kindness for your Mr. Boyce. But, damme, he never thought of tricking
+Geoffrey out of the way to give himself a free hand with you. And it's a
+low trick in Geoffrey to go about with that tale."
+
+"Oh! But he is stupid," Susan said.
+
+"What if Colonel Boyce thought of the trick?" says Alison.
+
+"Egad, Mr. Boyce is unfortunate in his father. Maybe he knows that as
+well as we. But--damme, ma'am, you will have it--I believe there was not
+much trick in his affair with you."
+
+"I believe you once warned me of his tricks," Alison said coldly. "It's
+no matter now. I tease you with my affairs."
+
+"If I can serve you, I'm heartily at your command."
+
+"Oh, you have worked hard to make the best of a bad business. But I can
+do that for myself, and I like my own way of it."
+
+Mr. Hadley bowed.
+
+"Oh! Let us go home," Susan said.
+
+Alison looked at her in some surprise, and, as she stood up, came quickly
+to kiss her. "Have I been rude?" she whispered.
+
+"That would be no matter," Susan said, "You choose to be angry with me?"
+Alison stiffened.
+
+"Oh! One isn't angry. One is sorry," Susan said.
+
+Alison let her go, and Mr. Hadley, ceremonious but with visible relief,
+went after her.
+
+Then Mrs. Weston said suddenly, quickly, "Where is he?"
+
+"He?" Alison chose to be slow. "Mr. Boyce? I have no notion."
+
+"You drove him out?"
+
+"I could not endure him longer. Or he could endure me no longer. He went
+heartily enough. I think we were both glad it was over."
+
+"You taunted him till he had to go?"
+
+"Weston, dear!" Alison laughed at the sudden fierceness of the meek.
+"What's the matter?"
+
+"I have heard you mocking him."
+
+"Maybe. We both have sharp enough tongues."
+
+"You used to jeer at him for being poor."
+
+"Good lack, are you calling me to account, ma'am?"
+
+"Yes, you may well be ashamed! Where is he?"
+
+"Ashamed? What do you mean, Weston? What is the man to you?"
+
+"I am his mother," Mrs. Weston said.
+
+"You!... You! Oh, but this is mad!"
+
+"I am not mad."
+
+"But, Weston, dear, you knew nothing about him till he came; nor he of
+you. How could he be your son?"
+
+"I had never seen him since he was a baby. I was not married."
+
+"That is why you would not tell me? Oh, Weston, dear!"
+
+"I did not mean to tell you now. I knew it would hurt him with you. But I
+suppose it's no matter now. But these are my affairs, not yours."
+
+"My dear--"
+
+"You need not pity me."
+
+"What am I to say?" Alison held out her arms.
+
+"You have nothing to say now. You are not his wife now. You have never
+been anything but a bad wife." She gathered up her work with unsteady
+hands and turned away.
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+"I am going out of your house. Away from you."
+
+"But, Weston--not now, not to-night. Where can you go? What can you do?"
+
+"I can do well enough without you, as he can.... Why don't you tell me
+that I have been living on your money? You told him so often enough."
+
+"Oh ... you're cruel," Alison said.
+
+"What does it matter? You'll not be hurt. You are too hard." She hurried
+to the door.
+
+"Ah, don't go like this," Alison cried. "Weston, let's part kindly. I
+could not know. I have done nothing against you." Mrs. Weston laughed.
+"Stay a moment at least. I want to know. Harry's father--is Colonel
+Boyce--?"
+
+"Yes, there it is. That is all you want--to pry into all the story. It is
+nothing to you. He is nothing to you now."
+
+The door closed behind her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+RETURN OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+
+Harry was not gone far. In Long Acre stood a tavern calling itself 'The
+Hand of Pork.' This had always tempted Harry, whose tastes were of the
+people. While still a domesticated husband, he had tried its ale with
+satisfaction. When he left Alison it was to 'The Hand of Pork' that he
+brought his small, battered box.
+
+He had a few guineas in his pocket, and made a wry face over them.
+"Ill-gotten gains," says he, for some were the scraped savings of
+Geoffrey Waverton's tutor and some the pocket money of Alison's husband.
+But he was in no case to be delicate. Beef and bread had to be paid for,
+and, in fact, his scruples were little more than a joke. It is not to be
+concealed that in minor things Harry Boyce was not nicely honest. If you
+can imagine him seriously arguing over that money--a thing impossible--he
+would have said that the guineas were of consequence to him and none to
+Geoffrey and Alison, that whether he had dealt honestly by them or not,
+it would not better his case to pay them back a few shillings. You have
+seen that he had qualms of conscience over the rights of Geoffrey's
+service and Alison's arms. But the ugly, awkward details gave him no
+trouble. He may, if you please, have swallowed a camel or so, but he
+never strained at a gnat.
+
+Now that he was done with Geoffrey and Alison, both, his first feeling
+was comfort. It was a huge relief to be his own man again. He told
+himself indeed that he was mighty grateful to Geoffrey for bringing on
+the final explosion. For one thing, it wiped off all Geoffrey's score. If
+Master Geoffrey had been treated shabbily, Master Geoffrey had played a
+shabby trick. They could call quits--a pleasant sensation. It would have
+been awkward if Geoffrey had chosen to be magnanimous nobility. But he
+was never intelligent, the poor Geoffrey.
+
+He had done his best to be damaging, bless him, and in all ways had been
+a benefactor. For, in fact, it was a great relief to be done with Alison.
+What with her fretful discontent, her rages, her industrious hate, she
+had made herself intolerable. I do not suppose that he forgot, even in
+the heat of the divorce, the exquisite pleasure which for a while she had
+given him. I think he was always ready to acknowledge that to himself,
+for it is certain that he bore her no malice, and if he blamed her for
+their catastrophe, blamed himself as much. He might make the most or more
+of all the taunts, of her zeal to find occasions for despising him. He
+forgot nothing and forgave her nothing; he wrote her down a cruel enemy.
+But he did not pay her back with equal hate; he dismissed all the warfare
+and the wounds with a shrug of sagacious cynicism.
+
+She hated him? She had the right, she was his wife. And perhaps she was
+in the right too. He must fairly be reckoned a very poor match for her
+beauty and her wealth and her not insignificant brains. After all, he was
+essentially a nobody--a nobody in every department, body, mind, and soul.
+She might even claim that she had been cheated, for if she ought to have
+known that she was marrying a nobody, she could not guess that he had a
+bar-sinister or a disreputable father. Certainly Madame Alison could
+plead something of a case.
+
+You are not to suppose Harry in an ecstasy of meek devotion. He was quite
+sure that she had behaved to him very badly. He admitted no excuse for
+her eagerness to hurt him as soon as she was tired of him. She might hate
+him; but after all there were obligations of courtesy, of decency, of
+womanhood, and her venomous temper had broken them all. He was well rid
+of her. In fine, she and he could call quits as well as he and Geoffrey.
+There was no occasion to rage against her. She had treated him badly,
+but, first, he had brought her into an awkward mess. Faith, she ought not
+to have hurried into a marriage for passion if passion was so soon to
+sate her. But then, what man would blame a woman for marrying for
+passion? Not the man she married, who might rather humble himself because
+he had not been able to keep her passion alive. Well, it was over, and
+since it was over, nothing for it but to part. God be with her! She had
+given him his hour. And he--why, at least she had lived with him moments
+she would not forget. A glorious woman. It is probable that in these
+first hours of their parting he began to love her.
+
+So much for his emotions. But you will not suppose that Harry Boyce was
+wholly occupied with emotions. He could not indeed afford it. He had to
+make some provision for keeping alive. Perhaps you will be surprised to
+hear that he had a friend or two. There was an usher at Westminster, and
+a hack writer of Lintot's in Little Britain. He did not propose to live
+on them, who had hardly enough to feed themselves. But he looked for them
+to put him in the way of some pittance, and they did. The usher had news
+that, after Ascension-Day, Westminster would be wanting a writing master,
+for the man in possession hoped by then to marry the dean's cook and set
+up an ale-house. The author procured a commission to write two lampoons
+and a pamphlet against French wines. In the intervals of this occupation,
+Harry looked for his father.
+
+It would be hard to guess--Harry himself could not have told--what he
+hoped to gain by that. He wanted, of course, to find out the truth of the
+mission to France. Whether his father was likely to tell it, he could not
+make up his mind. What he would do with the truth if ever he learnt it,
+he did not know in the least. Suppose the best event: suppose his father
+could declare excellent intentions and Geoffrey a liar. Harry imagined
+himself going to Alison with the news and demanding to be taken on again.
+A nightmare joke.
+
+Yet to come at the truth seemed the most important task in life. The
+first step, though you think it impossibly difficult, did not dismay
+him. He had no doubt of discovering his father. That Colonel Boyce should
+have been killed or even caught was incredible. He was not the man so to
+oblige his enemies. It was incredible, too, that he would go long into
+hiding. Away from the importance of bustle and intrigue he could not
+exist. Therefore he would certainly come back to London: therefore sooner
+or later he would be found at one of the coffee-houses favoured by the
+brisk fellows in the underworld of politics--at Tom's, or the British, or
+Diggory's by the Seven Dials. He might be heard of among the fire-eating
+Jacobites of Sam's. There were not so many likely places, but Harry laid
+down more pennies than he could spare at the bars, and all in vain.
+
+He sat in Sam's on an afternoon chopping Greek tags with a jolly,
+fanatical old parson. The days were fast lengthening, and for one reason
+or another--the company at Sam's were not too fond of light--only a
+candle here and there was burning. A little man came in with a party very
+obsequious to him. As he walked up to the bar Harry had a glimpse of a
+lean, brown face. He remembered it and yet no more than faintly, and
+could not tell where he had seen it. It did not much engage him, and he
+went on with his Greek and his parson. The little man made some noise
+with the pretty girl behind the bar, claiming the privileges of an old
+friend and a good deal of liquor, and it was a little while before he was
+established at a table with his party. Harry chose to mouth out something
+Homeric and sounding. The little man stopped in the middle of lighting
+his pipe. "I know that roll, _pardieu_!" he muttered, and in a florid
+fashion declaimed, "Fol de rol de row," and laughed alcoholically. "Who's
+talking Hebrew here?"
+
+One of his party pointed out Harry and the parson. The little man blinked
+through the smoky twilight. He stood up, took his candle and lurched
+across the room to Harry. Down under Harry's nose he put the candle with
+a bang. Harry jerked back and glared at him, and he, rocking a little and
+blinking, said thickly, "It's a filthy likeness, after all, it is."
+
+"No, sir, there's only one of me," said Harry. "If you see two, give God
+the glory and go to bed."
+
+"I'm saying, bully, I'm saying," the little man's accent became more
+Caledonian and he clutched at Harry's shoulder. "I'm saying, my
+laddie--"
+
+"Damme, that's what I complain of."
+
+"I'm saying I do not like your complexion. It's yellow, my jo, it's a
+wee rotten orange, it is so." His company, a faithful tail, shook
+with laughter.
+
+"Sleep it off, sir," says Harry, with a shrug.
+
+"What's your will? Clip it off, do ye say so? Losh, you would have a face
+or two to spare. Eh, but I'm doubting you know too much o' clipping.
+There's clippit ears, and maybe you have a pair." He twitched Harry's bob
+wig awry; and with singular luck reeled out of the reach of Harry's
+answering blow. "Ay, and there's clippit shillings and maybe ye make your
+filthy living by their parings and shavings. Well a well, and there's
+clippit wings; and I'll clip yours, my bonny goose, the night." He
+clutched at the wig again and tossed it into the fire.
+
+Harry sprang up and struck at him. He flung himself backwards into the
+arms of his friends and with a surprising adroitness plucked out his
+sword. "Have at ye, my man;" he giggled and made a pass.
+
+"Easy, Captain," says one of his company. "The boy hath no sword."
+
+"Oh ay, 'tis the Lord that's a man of war. The devil was aye for peace.
+Well, what ails ye not to lend the imp a bodkin?"
+
+The fat old keeper of the coffee-house waddled into the midst. "Sure,
+Captain, you don't mean it. I would need to set my lads upon you. 'Tis
+disorderly homicide, indeed. Ye can't mean it. Not downstairs. I'll not
+deny there's the elegant parlour on the first floor."
+
+"Ye're a canting old devil, Sam," says the little man. "But I'll oblige
+you. Come up, my bully, and I'll show you a thing."
+
+"Here's for you, cully." One of the company thrust upon Harry a sword.
+
+"Oh, by your leave,"--Harry waved it oft--"I don't fight a drunken man."
+
+"Drunk!" the little man screamed. "Ods blades, there's a naughty way to
+mock a gentleman. I'll school you, bully; fou or fasting, I'll school
+you. What, you'll not lug out, like a bonny lad should? I jaloused it.
+I'm thinking you would take a beating like a lamb, laddie. Well a well.
+I'll be blithe to rub you down with an oaken towel. Here, Patrick, give
+us your staff."
+
+"Oh, I see you must be let blood." Harry shrugged. "Well, sir, do I
+fight the whole platoon?"
+
+"You're peevish, do you know, you're peevish. Here, Fraser, give him your
+hanger. Do you second the bairn, Donald? Come, Patrick, I'll have you.
+There's one for you and one for me, my man, and damn all favours."
+
+It seemed to Harry that the little man's company were something surprised
+at this turn, but they took it in a disciplined silence. So the party of
+four marched up the stairs. You will believe that Harry liked the
+business ill enough. He shot glances at the two chosen for seconds. There
+was nothing sottish about them. They were very soberly alert, they had
+the tan and the vigour of open-air life. They looked anything but the fit
+comrades for a swashbuckling tavern hero. They were as stiff as pokers,
+they said not a word, they showed not a sign of interest in the
+affair--rather like two soldiers on guard than ready seconds in a drunken
+brawl. Once in the upper room they made their arrangements with solemn
+care, locking the door, clearing a sufficient space, and setting the
+candles so that the light fell fairly. Harry was taken aside, helped out
+of his coat, asked if he needed anything, gravely advised to risk nothing
+and play close.
+
+"We are at your service, Mr. O'Connor," says Donald.
+
+"At your pleasure, Mr. Mackenzie," says the other.
+
+Harry was set against the little man and the swords crossed. It then
+occurred to him that the little man was very suddenly recovered from his
+liquor. The blustering chatter had been cut off as soon as they started
+up the stairs. Since then the little man had spoken not one word. Of the
+unsteadiness, the blinking, the rocking to and fro, nothing remained. He
+had marched to his place with a formal precision. There was the same
+manner, a correctness exact and staccato, about this sword play.
+
+The knave can never have been drunk, Harry said to himself as he
+sweated and was the more embarrassed by bewilderment. But he dared not
+let himself think. The little man was urgently dangerous, and Harry
+knew enough to know it. Harry had no pretensions to science. All he
+could use was the rudiments. He had kept his head at singlestick, held
+his own with the foil against other lads, and never before faced a
+point. The little man had the speed and certainty of a _maître
+d'armes_. So Harry fought, breathing hard, every muscle aching, mind
+numb and dazed under the strain, expecting--hoping--every moment the
+thrust that would make an end.
+
+It did not come. The ache and fever of the fight went on and on. Still
+the little man was masterful and precise. Still he demanded all Harry's
+vigour and more than all, kept him struggling desperately, beset by fear
+on the edge of death. Harry felt himself weakening, faltering, and still
+the opposing blade searched his defence sharply, still the little man was
+an exemplar of easy precision. And yet Harry's maladroitness always
+sufficed to save his skin. He was puzzled, and blundered and fumbled the
+more. The play grew slower and slower, and he was the more tortured,
+enduring many times the shame and the pain of defeat.
+
+At last he had hit upon the truth. He was wondering in a dazed fashion
+why that other sword seemed always to wait on him when he made a gross
+mistake. Visibly, palpably, the little man's blade halted to give him
+time for a parry. Harry dropped his point and gasped out, "Damme, sir,
+you are playing with me."
+
+"What's your will? I fight my own way. At your convenience, sir."
+
+"The Captain's within his right, sir," says Harry's solemn second.
+
+"Damn you, for a pack of mountebanks!" Harry cried.
+
+"On guard, sir," says the little man.
+
+Harry gave him an oath and dashed at him. There was a moment's wild
+fighting and then the little man forced it back to order. They were at
+the old game again, precise scientific thrust, pause, and blundering
+parry, when to Harry's amazement the little man's sword wavered and flew
+from his hand.
+
+Through a long minute Harry stood staring at him, and he waiting unarmed
+for Harry's thrust. Again Harry lowered his sword. At once the little
+man stooped and picked up his. "Do you demand to continue, Captain?"
+says his second.
+
+"You're a fool, Patrick," quoth the little man.
+
+The impenetrable second saluted and turned to his fellow. "Another bout,
+if you please, Mr. Mackenzie."
+
+"Would you grant it, sir?" says Harry's solemn Scot.
+
+"Egad, we are all mad here," Harry wiped his brow. "Oh, play it
+out to hell."
+
+The little man saluted formally and again they engaged. And now Harry was
+enveloped in another kind of fighting. Scientific it might be, but
+science far beyond his understanding. The little man's point was
+everywhere upon him and he thrusting blindly at the air. He might have
+been pinked a score times over, he was for all he knew. And then on a
+sudden his own point touched something. Next moment it was struck up to
+the ceiling. Some one called out "A hit." He saw the two seconds standing
+between the swords and a red scratch on the little man's cheek.
+
+"_Touché_," says he with a bow. "My compliments, if you please. It's some
+while since a man marked me. I am glad to know you, sir. Pray, what's
+your name?"
+
+"Harry Boyce, sir."
+
+"Egad, it's wonderful!" says the little man, with a laugh which appealed
+to Harry. "Hector McBean, at your service." Harry stared. "Aye, aye, I'm
+thinking we'll explain ourselves. Will you walk, sir?"
+
+"If you please."
+
+Captain McBean took his arm, said over his shoulder to the two seconds
+"To-morrow," and marched off with him. Once they were out in the
+street, "So you are Colonel Noll Boyce's son," says Captain McBean with
+an odd look.
+
+"He has often told me so."
+
+"If you had not such a look of him I wouldn't believe it. Oh, pardon,
+monsieur, _mille pardons_, _ma foi._ I have been insolent to you in all
+this affair. You'll please to observe that the whole of it, and the
+issue, is to your honour. Will I have to say more?"
+
+"Oh Lud, no. Pray, let's talk sense."
+
+"I take to you marvellously, _mon enfant_. Well now, have you
+heard of me?"
+
+"Enough to want much more."
+
+"What, has father been talking?"
+
+"D'ye know where he is, Captain McBean?"
+
+"I wish I did."
+
+"So do I. It was Mr. Waverton who told the tale. Now you know why I am
+eager to hear what you can say of my father or my father of you."
+
+"Are you a good son, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+"I pay my debts."
+
+"There's a crooked answer. Are you in the Colonel's secrets?"
+
+"I have no reason to think so."
+
+"I guess he did not trust you. I guess he was right. Do you remember
+where you met me first?"
+
+"I remember that I can't remember."
+
+"And me that thought I was a beauty! Well, but you were busy. You were
+making mud pies with Ben."
+
+"I have it. You were his captain on the horse. Pray, sir, what was my
+Benjamin's mystery?"
+
+"I am going to trust you, Mr. Boyce. I shall not require you to trust me
+unless you choose. I tell you frankly I hope for it. And so--come in
+with you."
+
+They turned out of the Strand into Bow Street. Captain McBean let
+himself into a house, and took Harry up to a room very neat and cosy.
+"D'ye drink usquebaugh? A pity. It's the cleanest liquor. Well, draw up."
+He pushed a tobacco-box across the table. "That's right Spanish. Now,
+_mon cher_, are you Jacobite or Hanoverian?"
+
+"I never could tell."
+
+"Oh, look you, I ask no confidences. And I make no doubt of your honour.
+If you had a mind to play tricks you would have tried one on me to-night.
+Well, I have proved you. Your pardon again. But when I saw Noll Boyce's
+son lurking in Sam's, how could I know he was without guile? Now there is
+something I must say to you. But how much I say is a question. I have no
+desire to embarrass you with awkward knowledge. So which is your king,
+_mon enfant_, James or George?"
+
+"I care not a puff of smoke for either."
+
+"So. I suppose there is something you care for. Well--you asked about
+Ben's mystery. It's a good beginning. The rascal should have stopped the
+Duke of Marlborough's coach and held it till I came up with my fellows.
+Instead of which he went about some private thieving. I am your debtor
+for giving the knave his gruel. What's Marlborough to me? It's not his
+dirty guineas I was after, but his papers. He was then pretending to
+negotiate with St. Germain. There were those of us who doubted the old
+villain had some black design in his head again, and it was thought that
+if we could turn over his private papers, we should know where to have
+him. It was certified that he had with him something from his agents
+abroad. Well, we missed him, and how deep he is dipped in this business,
+I know no more than you.
+
+"Now I come to your father, _mon enfant_, and I promise you I will be as
+delicate as I may. Do you know, _par exemple_, how Colonel Boyce is in
+the mouths of gentlemen?"
+
+"Oh, sir, that's another of the matters for which I care nothing."
+
+"_Tenez donc_. You were born old, I think. Well, Colonel Boyce has been
+in some few plots, devices, and manoeuvres. No man ever denied him wit,
+nor will I, _mordieu_. But it's his virtue that neither his friends nor
+his enemies were ever sure of him. I believe, Mr. Boyce, that if he heard
+me he would thank me for a compliment. _Bien_--I come back to my tale.
+
+"It was known to us poor Jacobites in England that Colonel Boyce was
+making salutes to St. Germain. Which much intrigued us, for we would not,
+by your leave, have him of our side. They don't know him there as we do,
+and King James, God save him! is young and honourable and sanguine."
+
+"Poor lad," says Harry with a shrug.
+
+"You may keep your pity, Mr. Boyce," McBean said stiffly. "I would have
+him so, by your leave. Now we heard that letters went to St. Germain from
+Colonel Boyce full of windy promises--_verbosa et grandis epistola_. D'ye
+keep up your humanities?--in the name of my Lord Sunderland and my Lord
+Stair. Black names both. But they were vastly intrigued at St. Germain.
+If Sunderland and Stair were ready to turn honest, then _pardieu_, there
+was hope of the devil himself. Oh, I don't blame the King nor even
+Charles Middleton, though he is old enough to be slow. The times are
+changing, and maybe Stair and Sunderland they see it as well as we, and
+mean to find salvation. I can't tell. But the thing looked ill. Stair and
+Sunderland--there is no treachery too foul for those names. And if they
+meant honestly, why--saving your presence, _mon enfant_--why did they
+choose Colonel Boyce for their agent? It was no good warranty. So we
+adventured a counter. We have friends enough now in the Government, _mon
+cher_, and it was arranged that the Colonel should be arrested as a
+Jacobite. A good stroke, I think. It was mine. Only the old gentleman
+dodged it."
+
+"Pray, what did you know of Mr. Waverton?"
+
+"That sheep's-head!" McBean laughed. "Why, a letter came to hand in which
+the Colonel talked of taking the pretty gentleman to France. So he was
+joined in the warrant. _D'ailleurs_--it made a good appearance. However,
+we missed him; but we found something in his papers which made me queasy.
+So I e'en was off to France after him.
+
+"The Colonel stayed at Pontoise and sent your Waverton off to St. Germain
+with a mighty plausible letter about secret proposals from the chiefs of
+the Whigs, which brought the King out to hear them secretly. _Ma foi_! I
+think Charles Middleton should have smelt a rat. But it was a clever
+trick, and to choose your Waverton to play it was masterly. For who could
+think that peacock would be in anything crafty? At Pontoise I tumbled in
+upon them, and your father, _mon cher_, he ran off on sight of me.
+Observe, I press nothing against him. I allow that the best evidence I
+have against him is just that--he ran away when he saw me. Secondly, he
+had with him some three-four rascals whose faces would hang them. And
+thirdly and lastly, beloved brethren, these fellows, when put to it and
+charged with a plot to murder King James, were frightened for their lives
+and babbled wildly, of which the sum was that they had been brought but
+to kidnap him. I grant ye, they may have lied, and I would not hang a dog
+(who was not a Whig) upon their word. But confess, _mon cher_, the thing
+is black enough. What did the Colonel want with King James alone? Why did
+he need his bullies? Why did he run away? I leave it with you."
+
+Harry knocked out his pipe. "I am obliged for the story, sir. Why did
+you tell it?"
+
+"You have a cold blood in you, _mon enfant_" says Captain MacBean.
+"Observe, I look for nothing wonderful from you. I allow your position is
+very difficult to a man of honour. And with all my heart--"
+
+"Oh Lud, sir, let's have nothing pathetic."
+
+"Aye, aye," McBean bowed. "Mr. Boyce! I do profess I feel the delicacy of
+the affair, and I detest it, _pardieu_. But I dare not absolve ye from
+your duty."
+
+"Oh, sir, you are very sublime."
+
+"Hear me out, Mr. Boyce. I have shown you cause to fear that your
+father has it in mind to compass a vile treachery, perhaps a murder.
+Would you deny it?"
+
+"Damme, sir, I am not the day of judgment."
+
+"_Bien_. I believe that is an answer. I declare to you there is yet a
+chance that he may succeed, aye, here in London."
+
+Harry swore. "If your friends must go walking into traps what is
+it to me?"
+
+"Well, sir, though you will own no loyalty to king or queen or country,
+I'll not be deceived. I call on you for your aid. It's believed your
+father is in London. It is likely he will seek you out, as he did before.
+Maybe at this hour you know where he is."
+
+"If I did, should I betray him to you, sir?"
+
+"I ask no treachery. But I do call on you, discover his purpose if you
+can, and if he intends violence to the King, prevent it. Lord, sir, it's
+to save your father from infamy, and your own name."
+
+"The King? The Pretender is in London?" Harry cried.
+
+"I told you that I should trust you far, Mr. Boyce."
+
+Harry stared at him, and after a moment stood up. "I can do nothing," he
+said. "It is of all things most unlikely that I should do anything. For
+what I know, my father is dead. He has been nothing else to me all my
+life. But I believe I should thank you."
+
+"Well!" quoth McBean. "God help you. I ha' drawn a bow at a venture. I
+think I have hit something, Mr. Boyce."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+CONSOLATIONS BY A FATHER
+
+
+Do you remember how frightened Swift was of the Mohocks? How he came
+home early, and even (that was bitter) spent some pence on being carried
+in a sedan chair to avoid the "race of rakes that play the devil about
+this town every night, slit people's noses," and so forth? He had some
+reason to fear.
+
+"Was there a Watchman took his hourly rounds
+Safe from their blows or new invented wounds"
+
+in these last days of Queen Anne? Their way was to gather and take
+plenty of liquor, "then make a general sally and attack all that are
+so unfortunate as to walk the streets through which they patrol. Some
+are knocked down, others stabbed, others cut and carbonadoed." The
+women would be turned upside down or clapped into barrels and rolled
+over the stones.
+
+It was a dark night with but a glimpse of the new moon when Harry left
+Captain McBean. From Bow Street to the "Hand of Pork" in Long Acre was
+only a few hundred yards, but murky enough, and Harry took Mr. Gay's
+advice for such night walking:
+
+"Let constant Vigilance thy footsteps guide,
+And wary Circumspection guard thy side."
+
+Nevertheless, as he was coming by the corner into Long Acre, he was
+surprised by a sound at his heels. He stepped quickly aside and turned
+upon it, felt a blow upon his head, saw flashes of light and the street,
+whirling round, rose up to meet him, and he knew no more.
+
+When he came to himself he was in a room with fire and lights. He raised
+himself and heard voices. Then some one was standing over him. He looked
+up into his father's face. "Who was that?" he said feebly.
+
+"Don't you see yet, Harry? It will soon pass off."
+
+"Lord, I know you. Who are the others?"
+
+"There is none here but me," said Colonel Boyce.
+
+Harry looked painfully round the room and saw that it had become empty.
+"What was it? A pistol?" said he, and began to feel his head.
+
+"Egad, nothing so gentlemanly. A cudgel, by the look of the bruise. A
+Mohock's club, I suppose. I found you lying in the kennel as I was
+coming home."
+
+"Oh, you're at home are you?" Harry laughed stupidly. "And where is
+home?"
+
+"These are my lodgings in Martin's Lane, Harry, and you are welcome. But
+what have you to do in town? Young husbands should not be night walkers."
+
+Harry stared at him for a moment. "I thought you knew everything," he
+said. Then, beginning to scramble up, he became aware that his clothes
+were all undone--coat, shirt, even breeches. "Odso, why were you
+stripping me?"
+
+"I found you so. They shave you close, the Mohocks."
+
+"They are a queer crew, your Mohocks." Harry looked at his father. "What
+should I carry inside my shirt?" Then he thrust his hands into his
+pockets. "Well, I had not much, but all's gone."
+
+"Damned rogues," said his father with honest indignation. "How much have
+you lost, Harry?"
+
+"Five guineas or so."
+
+"I can make that good at least. But what is it to you? You are a warm
+fellow now. What, you've made no hole in Madame Alison's money bags yet."
+
+"You're offensive, do you know?" Harry said. "I have been itching to
+tell you so."
+
+Colonel Boyce's face set. "What now? Are you against me, sirrah?"
+
+"Ods fish, you're a martyr, ain't you?" Harry laughed. But we are
+beginning at the end, I think. If you remember, sir, you promised to take
+me to France and went off without me."
+
+"D'ye quarrel with that? Why, you had a fatter fish to fry than you could
+catch with me. So I left you at her and you ha' dined upon her. What's
+the matter then?"
+
+"You were not honest with me--"
+
+Colonel Boyce laughed, "Ah, bah, you will be a Puritan. It must be your
+mother in you."
+
+"My mother! Thank you. We'll come to her. But one tale at a time. You let
+me think I was to go with you till you were gone without me. You took
+Waverton and told me nothing of that till you had him safe away."
+
+"Egad, boy, it was all for your good."
+
+"Perhaps you did think so," said Harry after a moment. "In fact it's what
+I complain of. You want to play Providence to me. Pray, sir, go about
+your business."
+
+Colonel Boyce shrugged. "You're a proper grateful son. So be it. You have
+your wealthy wench and want no more of me. Well, go to the devil your own
+way, Harry."
+
+"By your leave, I prefer it. But there's more, sir. Now comes Mr.
+Waverton and declares to my wife and me that you enticed him into a vile
+plot: for your pretence of a mission to the Pretender was nothing but a
+device for murder."
+
+"Mr. Waverton said that to Mrs. Harry Boyce? Egad, it wasn't civil of Mr.
+Waverton. And what did the lady say to him?"
+
+"That's no matter. What do you say to him, sir? Did you intend murder?"
+
+"Lud, Harry, you talk like a ranting parson. It was not your way. Who has
+put this buzz of morality into your head? I suppose your pretty wife
+would have you break with your father. He's a low, coarse fellow, faith,
+who might want some of her money."
+
+"We will leave my wife out, if you please. She will not trouble you. She
+and I have parted."
+
+"God's my life! What's the quarrel?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "Does one ever know? I was not good enough for her, I
+believe. And perhaps she was not good enough for me."
+
+"Damn you for a prig," says his father.
+
+"If you like. But you'll remark that I do not complain of her."
+
+"Bah, you make me sick, sir! Not complain of her! That luscious piece!
+Egad, you should be drunk with her. But you're not a man, Harry, you're
+a parson."
+
+"Oh, command your emotions! She rebelled against being wed to a man whose
+father ran about the world compassing murder, to a man who was withal a
+low fellow, a bastard. So far, it is your affair."
+
+"I see you are no hand with a woman."
+
+"Do I take after you, sir? We came upon a woman who said she was Mrs.
+Oliver Boyce and could not live with him, and boasted vehemently that she
+was no mother of mine."
+
+Colonel Boyce plucked at his mouth. "So dear Rachel has got her finger
+into the pie. Why, Harry, you have had no luck."
+
+"She is your wife, then. Oh, I admire your taste, sir. And pray, who was
+my mother?"
+
+Colonel Boyce began to say something and stopped. "It's no matter. I
+believe she would not wish you to know. Why, Harry, I profess I am sorry.
+If we had been married, better for us all."
+
+"Oh, you will be mysterious still. I suppose you are as tender of her
+honour as of mine or your own. And this matter of murdering the
+Pretender, pray, is that a mystery too?"
+
+Colonel Boyce became restless. "Ods life, sirrah, there is no matter
+of murder. Who told you so? The fool Waverton. And where did he get
+the tale?"
+
+"A gentleman who runs away tells his own tale."
+
+"Now mark, Harry. The plan was but to bring Prince James to England--"
+
+"Dead or alive," Harry laughed.
+
+"Pshaw. I had him at Pontoise and was doing well with him. Then in comes
+a swashbuckling Scots Jacobite which is my private enemy, and a dozen
+bullies at his tail. Well, I had no mind to have him stick me or turn me
+over to the French as a spy of Marlborough's, so I went off. The fool
+Waverton let himself be taken. I make no doubt the Scot filled him to the
+brim with slanders of me. But is that my fault?"
+
+"So you're done with the Pretender?"
+
+Colonel Boyce gave his son a queer look. "Why, there's not much to be
+done with him in Martin's Lane, boy."
+
+"Then what are you doing?"
+
+"Egad, Harry, I should think you want to lay an information against
+me. Waiting for better times is all my business now. My bolt's shot.
+And pray, sirrah, what may be your business now you've cut loose from
+Mrs. Alison?"
+
+Harry laughed. "Living on my means."
+
+"Why, does she settle something on you?"
+
+Harry looked at his father without affection. "Do you know, sir, I am not
+always proud of your name."
+
+"Egad, but you must have money somehow."
+
+"The family motto, I suppose. Well, sir, I write for the Press."
+
+"Good God, not for the newspapers? You have not fallen to that?"
+
+"Oh, sir, the shillings are clean by comparison."
+
+They looked at each other for a minute or two. "You walk abroad late, Mr.
+Author," says Colonel Boyce. "Do you make friends in your profession?"
+
+"I believe I have two in the town--a hack writer for Lintot and an usher
+at Westminster. And what then, pray?"
+
+"You were with them to-night?"
+
+"You are paternal on a sudden, sir. Do you think of putting me out to
+nurse again?"
+
+"So." Colonel Boyce stood up as if he had finished and then forced a
+laugh and slapped his son's shoulder, "Come, Harry, why quarrel? There's
+room enough for you here. I allow I owe you something. Join in with me."
+
+"I have no luck in mysteries, sir. I'll wish you goodnight."
+
+"Now you bear me a grudge," his father protested.
+
+"What, for getting me born? Sometimes, perhaps."
+
+"Egad, Harry, I should like to do something for you."
+
+"Then give me a sword."
+
+"A sword? And what for i' God's name?"
+
+"In case I meet any more of your Mohocks."
+
+Colonel Boyce was taken aback for a moment. Then he cried out heartily:
+"Damme, the rogues took five guineas from you too. Here, fill your purse,
+child." He shot out gold on the table.
+
+"I'll take back my five guineas," said Harry, and counted them, while
+his father watched with a frown.
+
+"There are swords of mine below," said Colonel Boyce.
+
+They went down and from a rack of arms Harry chose a plain black hanger
+with an agate hilt. As he did it on he saw below it some heavy staves
+loaded with lead--just such as the Mohocks used.
+
+"And where do you lodge?" says Colonel Boyce.
+
+"At the 'Hand of Pork' in Long Acre. Goodbye, sir."
+
+Colonel Boyce nodded, and for some time after he had gone stood at the
+door, watching.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+TWO'S COMPANY
+
+
+Alison was gone back to her house at Highgate--and immediately regretted
+it. She took her adventures in a youthful, egoistic fashion: saw herself
+as a lovely woman made the prey of man and robbed of her right to her
+own life, a tender, confiding soul deceived and tortured into despair.
+The Lincoln's Inn Fields became the abomination of desolation, her fine
+society was dust and ashes and mankind in general all mocking villainy.
+So it was natural that she should retire from the world and become a
+recluse of tragic dignity. What other part is there for the deserted
+wife to play?
+
+But she came upon awkward difficulties. The world would not be left
+behind. It was much more closely about her among the woods and meadows of
+Highgate than in her London drawing-room. The would-be fine ladies and
+gentlemen of her routs and her card parties, so the sweetmeats and the
+wines and strong waters were good enough, cared nothing whether she had a
+husband upstairs or somewhere else. Out in the country every one, gentle
+and simple, had a curious eye upon her. The very woods and meadows must
+be jogging her memory and putting her questions. Every one had known Miss
+Lambourne of the Hall and gone whispering about her strange, passionate
+marriage. Each pleasant path and lane had seen something of that first
+wild happiness. All day long she was driven back upon herself and what
+she had lost.
+
+There is no doubt that she suffered. Of course she still told her heart
+wonderful tales about the shame that she had to bear and her torturing
+wrongs, and beyond doubt she believed most of them. For she could still
+profess to herself a miserable degradation in being married to a man of
+no name: she would be gloomily convinced that Harry was by his father's
+villainy a proven knave. But what hurt her most was the growing suspicion
+that she was much to blame for her own plight. Alison Lambourne, who
+acknowledged no law but her own will, who had never dreamed that she
+could be wrong in her desires, driven to confess a ruinous blunder!
+Imagine her distress. At first she chose to pretend that she had been
+overthrown by passion. The more she tried to despise Harry, the more that
+fancy shamed her. But there was in her a strength which refused to be
+content with that. She would still boast to herself that she was not the
+woman to be swept away by a gust of longing for the man who chanced to
+take her eye. And so she brought down on herself the inexorable
+question--if Harry were man enough to wake passion in her and deserve her
+magnificence, why had she driven him off? For all her selfishness and her
+insolent pride, she had a vehement desire, a part perhaps of her very
+pride in her womanhood, to owe him nothing, to play him fair, to give
+him all that a man could ask. Little by little she forced herself to
+believe that she had failed of that. After all, he had offered her
+nothing but himself, poor, friendless, of no repute, indolent, careless
+of all the world--and she had professed content. What his father might do
+was no matter to that. He had offered her what he was and given it
+faithfully. And she had not played fair. When she found herself
+confessing that, she discovered a new power of being wretched. All the
+romantic, egoistic melancholy went down the wind. The finest, proudest of
+her, her own honour, told of a torturing wound.
+
+"I'll satisfy you"--that had been the boast before the wild marriage was
+done. And after all she had chosen to deny him. Nothing else could
+matter. There could be no excuse. It was he that she had taken, not his
+name or what he might be, and he had not changed. It was herself that she
+had promised--what other honour for woman or man than to give like for
+like?--and she had broken faith. She was humiliated--a state of all
+others the most dolorous for Alison.
+
+To it came on a merry spring day Mr. Waverton. She was in two minds
+whether to let him see her, and then--too proud to hide from him or
+greedy of a chance to hurt him--had him in.
+
+Mr. Waverton had decorated himself for a house of mourning. His large
+form was all black and silver and drooped sympathetically. His handsome
+face was set in a chastened melancholy as of one who grieves for
+another's trouble with a modest satisfaction. "Dear lady," says he
+tenderly, and bowed over her hand.
+
+"Dear Geoffrey," says she. "Here's a new song."
+
+"Madame?"
+
+"'Vengeance is mine' was the refrain last time. Now it's weeping over the
+penitent prodigal. How I love you, Geoffrey."
+
+Mr. Waverton made a gesture of emotion, an exclamation. "I wronged you,
+Alison," he said in a deep voice. "Nay, but you must forgive me. I have
+suffered too. Remember! I had lost all."
+
+"Ah, no," says Alison tragically, "you had still yourself, Geoffrey."
+
+His emotion was understood to be too much for Mr. Waverton. In a little
+while, "We have both been the sport of villainy," he said. "Forgive me,
+Alison. I remember that I spoke bitterly. Can you wonder? I had dreamed
+of you in his arms. To see you there in that knave's power--ah, I was
+beside myself. And he laughed, do you remember, he laughed!"
+
+"He never would take you to heart, in fact."
+
+"A treacherous hound!" said Mr. Waverton with startling vehemence.
+
+"Oh, he was honest when he laughed."
+
+Mr. Waverton swept Harry out of the conversation. "Forgive me, Alison, I
+should have known. My heart should have told me."
+
+"Oh Lud, and is your heart to give tongue now?"
+
+"My heart," said Mr. Waverton with dignity, "my heart is always crying to
+you. And now--now that the first agony is past, I know all."
+
+"I wish I did," said Alison and looked in his eyes.
+
+"But even then--ah, Alison, I have blamed myself cruelly--even then I
+should have known that when your eyes were opened, when you knew the
+truth, you would have no more of him."
+
+"You might have known," Alison said slowly. "You might have judged me by
+yourself."
+
+"Aye, that indeed," says Mr. Waverton heartily. "For we are very like,
+Alison, we are of the same spirit, you and I."
+
+"You make me proud."
+
+"It's our tragedy: we so like, so made to answer each other, should be
+betrayed to our ruin by this same vile trickster. Oh, I blame you no more
+than myself."
+
+"This is too generous."
+
+"No," says Mr. Waverton. "No. When I came on that woman of yours, that
+Mrs. Weston--faith, I am glad that you have cut her off too. I never
+liked that woman."
+
+"Yes, she is poor."
+
+"There it is! I doubt she was in Boyce's pay."
+
+Alison opened her eyes at him. "Oh, Geoffrey, you surpass yourself
+to-day. Go on, go on."
+
+"If you please," says Mr. Waverton, something ruffled. "I believe he
+hired her to play his game with you. Had you a suspicion of it when you
+sent her packing?"
+
+"By God, Geoffrey, I could suspect anyone when you talk to me."
+
+"She is bitter against you. When I heard from her that you had driven
+the fellow away from you, I was on fire to come to you."
+
+"To forgive the prodigal! Oh, your nobility, Geoffrey. And pray where did
+you meet Mrs. Weston?"
+
+"Why, in the High Street here. She lodges in one of those wretched
+cottages behind the street."
+
+"She is here?" Alison shivered a little.
+
+"Perhaps she has some game to play yet. She may be his spy. Be warned
+against her."
+
+Alison leant forward in her chair. Her face was hidden from him. "You are
+giving me a lesson, Geoffrey. I'll profit by it, I promise you!"
+
+"Alison!" Mr. Waverton gave a laugh of triumph. "I fight for us both. And
+I promise you I am eager enough. As soon as I learnt that you had left
+him, why, he was delivered into my hand. By heaven, he shall find no
+mercy now. Already I have him watched. I went to an attorney much
+practised in these treasonous cheating plots, and of him I have hired
+trusty fellows who know all the rogues in London and their hiding-holes.
+You said something?"
+
+But Alison was laughing.
+
+"I believe there is some humour in it," Mr. Waverton conceded grandly.
+"Well, they have tracked him down. Our gentleman lies at a filthy tavern
+in the Long Acre. The 'Leg of Pork,' or some such lewd name. He haunts
+Jacobite coffeehouses and the like low places. They believe that he makes
+some dirty money by scribbling for the Press. A writer in the newspapers!
+He is sunk almost to his right depth. They make no doubt that before
+long we shall catch him dabbling in some new treasonous matter. And
+then--" he made gestures of doom.
+
+"Well? And then?"
+
+"The law may revenge us on the treacherous rogue," said Mr. Waverton
+with majesty.
+
+Alison stood up. Mr. Waverton, always polite, started up too. "I give you
+joy, Geoffrey," she said very quietly.
+
+"Not yet! Not yet!" Mr. Waverton put up a modest hand.
+
+"I believe there is nothing you could feel." Mr. Waverton recoiled
+and stared his bewilderment. "You carry a sword, Geoffrey. Oh, that I
+were a man!"
+
+"To use it upon him! Bah, such rogues are not worth the honour of steel."
+
+"Oh! Honour! Honour!" she cried and flung out her arms, trembling. "The
+honour of you and me!"
+
+What was Mr. Waverton to make of that? "I believe I have excited
+you," says he.
+
+"By God, it is the first time," Alison cried and turned on him so
+fiercely that he started back.
+
+There was a servant at the door saying something which went unheard. Then
+Susan Burford came into the room, an odd contrast in her placid
+simplicity to the amazed magnificence of Mr. Waverton or Alison's
+tremulous, furious beauty. Alison was turned away from her and too much
+engaged to hear or be aware of her.
+
+"Here is Miss Burford," said Waverton in a hurry.
+
+Alison whirled upon her. "You! You have nothing to do here."
+
+"My dear Alison!" Waverton protested. "Miss Burford, your very obedient."
+
+Susan made him a small leisurely curtsy and sat down. "Oh, please give me
+a dish of tea," she said.
+
+"We have not seen you at Tetherdown in this long while," Mr. Waverton
+complained genially.
+
+"I believe not," says Susan.
+
+Alison stared at her. "Why do you come here? You know you despise me."
+
+"I do not come to people I despise," says Susan placidly.
+
+"Well. I am private with dear Geoffrey, if you please."
+
+"My dear Alison! I must be riding. We have finished our business, I
+think. I'll not fail to be with you again soon. I hope to have news for
+you. Miss Burford, your most obedient." Susan bent her head. "Alison--"
+he held out his hand and smiled at her protective affection.
+
+"Geoffrey," said Alison, and looked in his eyes. She did not take the
+hand. She was very pale.
+
+Mr. Waverton's smile was withered. He took himself out with a jauntiness
+that sat upon him awkwardly.
+
+Then Alison turned again upon Susan. "You want to know what I have to do
+with him?" she said fiercely.
+
+"No," says Susan.
+
+Alison stared at the fair, placid face and cried out: "You are a fool."
+
+"Oh, my dear," says Susan.
+
+"I hate that cold, flabby way of yours. You think it is all good and
+wise and kind. It's like a silly mother with a spoilt child. You've not
+spirit enough to scold, and all the while you are thinking me vile and
+base and mean."
+
+"But that is ridiculous. Nobody could think you mean," Susan said.
+
+"There it is again. You believe it is kind to talk so, and it drives me
+mad. I am shameful--do you hear? I am shameful and perhaps I want to be,
+and I loathe myself. Now, go. I shall not stay with you. Go."
+
+Susan stood up. "Alison, oh, Alison," she said. Alison flung out
+of the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+THE HOUSE IN KENSINGTON
+
+
+Late in that evening one of Alison's servants rode up to the "Hand of
+Pork" and inquired for Mr. Boyce. After some parley, he was told that Mr.
+Boyce had not been in the tavern that day. So he left a letter in the tap
+and rode back to Highgate.
+
+That letter, which was not heard of till long afterwards, ran thus:
+
+"Mr. Boyce,--I desire that you would come to me at Highgate. I have
+to-day heard from Geoffrey Waverton what you must instantly know. And the
+truth is, I cannot be content till I speak with you. But I would not have
+you come for this my asking. Pray believe it is urgent for us both that
+we meet, and I do require it of you, not desiring of you what you may
+have no mind to, but to be honest with you, and lest that should befall
+which I hope you would not have me bear.--A."
+
+An ungainly, confused composition, as you see, but it set forth very
+clearly the state of Alison's unhappy mind. She was revolted, of course,
+by Geoffrey's scheme of spying and trapping, loathed him for
+propounding it to her, and was eager to warn Harry against it and clear
+herself of any part in the vile business. But she would not have Harry
+suppose that she was praying him to come back to her. This time, at
+least, there should be no wooing on her side. If she wanted him
+hungrily, shamefully, he should not know till he chose to take her. But
+he must come to her and be told all the tale, and hold her free of any
+part in Geoffrey's baseness.
+
+So she fought with herself and wrote of her strife, and, as things
+went, it mattered nothing to Harry, for he never knew of it till much
+else had happened.
+
+When he woke on the morning after his affairs with Captain McBean and the
+Mohocks and his father--woke with a sore head and a very stiff shoulder,
+he was a prey to puzzled excitement. There is no doubt that McBean had
+engaged his affections. He was not, indeed, very grateful for the
+fantastic duel. Of all men, Harry Boyce was the least likely to be
+pleased by oddity or an extravagance of chivalry. He always thought, I
+believe, that Captain McBean was a little mad, and liked him none the
+better for it. But he confessed that with the madness there was allied a
+most persuasive mind, a very reasonable reason. The combination may not
+be so surprising to you as to Harry Boyce. He thought that McBean's
+exposition of the affair of his father, and his consequent duty, was
+exactly and delicately true--which means, of course, that it agreed with
+his own temper. He had no more doubt than McBean that his father had
+planned, was planning, treachery which, win or lose, would disgrace him.
+He admitted that it was his own wretched duty to do what he might to make
+an end of these plans.
+
+You smile, perhaps, at Harry Boyce claiming for himself the commands of
+duty. He was eminently not a saint. He was not delicate. And yet, thrust
+upon an awkward choice, it is certain that he chose what must be
+difficult, hazardous, and distressing, rather than stand aloof and let
+his father's villainy go its way.
+
+I make no pretence of exalting him into a tragic fellow. He had no
+affection for his father, no respect. Merely to work against his father's
+will, to smash his father's schemes, would certainly not have cost him
+one twinge. He had no hate for his father either, not the least ambition
+to ruin him or make him suffer. But he would heartily have liked to bring
+these murderous plots to nothing and yet save his father from vengeance.
+Harry had his share of the common human instinct to keep one's family out
+of mischief--or at least out of the newspapers.
+
+And it is not to be denied that there was also active in him a simple
+human animosity. He bore his father a grudge for being publicly a knave:
+a man who had received nothing from his parents but the gift of birth
+might fairly demand that they should not bother him with their rogueries.
+He did not extenuate his father's share in the catastrophe of the
+marriage. Perhaps it was in itself fated to miscarry, but if Colonel
+Boyce had not mixed up his affairs with it, the end need not have been
+ignominious. Harry vigorously condemned the old gentleman's meddling. It
+was an impertinence at the best to manipulate other folks, and a father
+who did it so stupidly as Colonel Boyce was a pestilent nuisance. But all
+this, I believe, rankled less than the behaviour of Colonel Boyce on the
+night before. If the old gentleman had acknowledged his offences, if he
+had even been content to talk of them frankly, man to man, he might have
+been forgiven. But his affectation of profound wisdom, his patronage, and
+above all, his parade of mystery infuriated Harry's lucid mind.
+
+It sought further causes of offence and had no difficulty in finding
+them. Everything about that conversation was suspicious. For how did it
+begin? With a broken head, with every button of his clothes torn open as
+though he had just been searched to the skin, he woke up in his father's
+presence. The father might pose as a good Samaritan who had come upon a
+sufferer by the wayside, but he should not have shown so nervous an
+anxiety to know what the sufferer had been about. The father talked of
+Mohocks; but what Mohocks were these who knocked a man down before making
+sport of him and, not content with taking his money, went through all his
+clothes? Why was a Mohock's club lying there beneath the father's swords?
+Harry made a ready guess at the riddle. His father must have fellows
+watching McBean's house. They had knocked him down to search him for
+papers. Then the father must have known that he had been with McBean, and
+those anxious questions were to discover how much he was McBean's friend.
+Colonel Boyce must have a lively interest in the affairs of McBean--and
+yet he professed that he had now nothing in hand. What if he knew of the
+secret of the Pretender's coming to London? What if he was still seeking
+a chance to accomplish his plot of murder?
+
+Well, Captain McBean expected no less of him. Captain McBean was in the
+right of it. It became a good son's duty to confound his father's
+politics. There's no denying that Harry went into the business with zest.
+
+While he ate his breakfast in the taproom, he caught sight of a fellow
+lurking about outside. Whose spy this was is, in fact, not certain.
+Afterwards Colonel Boyce vehemently denied that he had commissioned any
+man against Harry. Though you may not believe him, it is possible that
+the fellow was one of those in Waverton's pay. Harry made no doubt that
+his father was the offender.
+
+He went upstairs again and put a book in his pocket. (He had been
+commissioned for a translation of Ovid, which, let us be thankful, never
+came into print.) Thus characteristically provided, he went out to
+baffle the spy and the father. In the courts between Drury Lane and Bow
+Street he did some ingenious marching and counter-marching whereby--he
+was always confident and we cannot be quite sure--the spy was shaken
+off. He then came into St. Martin's Lane by the north end, and dodging
+in and out of it more than once, made for a tavern close to his father's
+lodging. He planted himself inside by a window, called for a tankard and
+a pipe, and divided his attention between the Tristia and his father's
+door across the lane.
+
+It soon appeared that Colonel Boyce was to have a busy morning. By ones
+and twos a dozen men went into his house. They were not, even to Harry's
+hostile eye, brazenly ruffians. Something of the bully they might have
+about them, for they ran to brawn and swagger, but they were trim enough
+and brisk, and had no smack of debauch--a company of old soldiers, by the
+look of them, and still not past their prime. They were with Colonel
+Boyce a long time, and Harry grew very sick of the Tristia, and had to
+drink more beer over it than was his habit of a morning.
+
+They came out at last singly, and yet with very short intervals between
+them. They all turned the same way--across Leicester Fields. There seemed
+to Harry something so uncommon in this that he was moved to follow. He
+made his way out by the back door and the tavern yard. As he came into
+Leicester Fields, he saw that the units had already amalgamated into
+three companies. They were all steadily marching westward. Keeping behind
+a cart he followed them, and after a while bought for twopence a lift in
+an empty hay wagon. I record all this because he seems to have been very
+proud of it, which is characteristic of his simple nature. The hay wagon
+rumbled him past two companies of them halted and coalescing at an inn.
+The first still headed him at a good round pace all the way to
+Kensington.
+
+The wagon was going through Kensington village when he saw that this
+vanguard too had found an inn. A little farther on he abandoned his
+wagon and, buying bread and cheese at a farm, made his dinner under
+the hedge. It was a long while before he saw anything more of the
+gentlemen of the inn, and lying among primroses and cowslips he nearly
+forgot all about them and his excitement and his wonderful tactics. He
+was, in fact, becoming sentimental, and had made three neat
+hendecasyllabics to the cowslips when the gentlemen came out again.
+They split into pairs and marched on briskly. Harry went through the
+hedge, and from behind it he watched them pass. Then, as now, the road
+ran straight, and it was not safe to come out and follow them till they
+were far ahead. While he waited he heard more tramping, and in a little
+while the rest of the company went by. He peeped out after them and saw
+an odd thing: though the road ran straight for a mile or more, the
+first party had vanished already.
+
+Harry climbed a tree. It was some little time before he discovered the
+lost party. They had scattered, they had taken to the fields and, under
+hedges, they were making southward. The rest of the company did likewise.
+Soon he saw what they were after. There was a lane running from the high
+road towards Fulham. A little way back from it, in a good garden, stood a
+house of modest comfort, doubtless the place to which some gentleman
+about town came for his pleasures or a breath of fresh air. About its
+grounds the company went into hiding.
+
+Harry came down from his tree in a hurry and, like an honest man, took to
+the high road. It was, you know, his one uncommon capacity to go easily
+at a round pace. He did his best along the road and down the lane and,
+though he caught a glimpse of a coat here and there, unchallenged he came
+up the drive and across the garden to the door of the house. He had
+hardly knocked before he was being inspected through a peep-hole. The
+door was opened and instantly shut behind him. He was in darkness dimly
+lit by one candle. The windows had their shutters closed and barred.
+
+"What's your will, sir?" says the man who let him in.
+
+"The master of the house, if you please," Two other men lounged
+into the hall.
+
+"And your name, sir?"
+
+"You may say that I came from Captain McBean."
+
+The man appeared to think it over. "That's true enough, faith," says
+another, advancing out of the shadow. Harry recognised one of the solemn
+seconds of the duel, Patrick O'Connor. "Will I serve your turn, sir?"
+
+"If you're master here."
+
+"I am not. Come on now." He led the way to a room where a cadaverous man,
+richly dressed, sat huddled over a fire. "'Tis a gentleman from the
+captain, my lord. Mr. Boyce, my Lord Sale."
+
+Harry bowed. My lord yawned. "You've a devil of a name, Mr.
+Boyce," says he.
+
+"I deplore it, and hope to disgrace it."
+
+"Is it possible?" said my lord, and yawned again.
+
+"I had the honour to tell you, my lord, that I answer for the gentleman,"
+says Mr. O'Connor.
+
+"You may endorse the devil, if you please," my lord sneered.
+
+Harry struck in, "I came to tell you, my lord, that your house is
+watched, and by now surrounded."
+
+"Damn them, they have found it out, have they?" says my lord, and spread
+out his lean hands to the fire.
+
+"How many, if you please?" says O'Connor.
+
+"A dozen or so. They marched out this morning, scattered, and met again
+in the village and came here across country. They are well-armed, I
+believe, and look men who would fight."
+
+"Ods fish, that nets this hole," says my lord. "Pray, Mr. Boyce, when
+will they put the ferret in?" Harry shrugged. "Oh, there's a limit to
+your kindness, is there? Do you choose to tell us who sent them?"
+
+Harry was silent a moment and then blurted out: "They came from Colonel
+Boyce's lodging."
+
+My lord laughed.
+
+"Sure, 'tis an honour to know you, sir," says O'Connor, and bowed to
+Harry.
+
+"Damned filial, indeed," my lord chuckled.
+
+O'Connor turned upon him. "They have you beat easily, my lord," he said
+fiercely. "Damned courageous indeed." But my lord only nodded at him.
+"What, we be six--to count Mr. Boyce. Sure, we could hold the house
+against the devil's christening."
+
+There came in briskly a tall fellow crying: "Come, Sale, it's full time,
+I believe."
+
+My Lord Sale got on his feet, "Stap me, sir, I believe not," he drawled.
+"We must stay at home. They have smoked us. Here's a gracious youth come
+to tell us that his Whiggish friends beset the house."
+
+The Pretender frowned and seemed slow to understand. Harry looked him
+over. He was certainly a fine figure of a man, and bore himself gallantly
+enough. His face was darkly handsome in a melancholy fashion, not unlike
+the youth of his uncle, Charles II. He turned upon Harry. "What is all
+this, sir?"
+
+"Oh, sir, it's that old rogue Noll Boyce," my lord put in. "And here's
+his son betraying the father."
+
+"Faith, my lord, I'll remind you of that," O'Connor said. "Sir, the
+gentleman is an honest gentleman."
+
+"Colonel Boyce--he is your father, sir?" the Pretender bent his black
+brows over Harry.
+
+"He begot me, he says." Harry shrugged. "I desire to defend you from him.
+He has surrounded your house here with a dozen sturdy knaves who intend
+you, I believe, the worst."
+
+"I am obliged by your service, sir," says the Pretender coldly. "Pray, my
+lord, is the coach ready?"
+
+My lord shook his head. "I don't advise it, sir. The good Mr. Boyce
+cannot be lying. Or allow the knaves mean but to frighten you. I dare not
+risk your person."
+
+"Dare? You dare too much, my lord, who command neither my person nor my
+honour. I do not thank you for your advice. You will have the coach
+brought instantly."
+
+"I ask your pardon, sir, and beg you to consider. What will the world
+say of me if I let you run into a gang of murderers? We can maintain
+the house against them till our friends come seeking us. In the open
+we are outnumbered desperately. Nay, sir, be advised; what is to lose
+by waiting? If you go, you grasp at a shadow and may throw away your
+life for it."
+
+"I say, my lord, I do not thank you for your care of me, which is
+careless of my honour and your own. I am promised to our friends. Do you
+desire me to go afoot, my lord?"
+
+"I have done, sir." My lord bowed and went out.
+
+"Sir, I believe they will not spare you," says Harry.
+
+"I have heard you," the Pretender said haughtily, and waved him away.
+
+"I'll not be put off so." The Pretender turned upon him. "Sir, I have
+done what I could to save your life from a base plot. If it succeeds, the
+shame of it must fall upon me and my name, for it's my cursed father that
+planned it. And you choose to run upon the danger. I entreat you, do me
+right. Your blood should not be upon my head."
+
+"You have done your duty, Mr. Boyce," the Pretender bowed. "I thank you.
+But I must do mine."
+
+"Why, faith, sir, 'tis the right principle of war to wait the rogues
+here," says O'Connor. "You will not?"
+
+"Go to, man, I say it again and again."
+
+For the first time in their acquaintance, Harry saw Mr. O'Connor smile.
+"I have the honour to take your orders, sir. But sure, we are not at the
+end of our tactics. I'll presume to advise you. Let the coach come to the
+door, and me and the other gentlemen will make some display of mounting
+her and guarding her; she moves off slowly; it's any odds the rogues will
+believe we have you with us and deliver their main attack, while you'll
+be mounting quietly in the yard with my lord and ride off with him to
+Kensington."
+
+"The plan is well enough. Have it so," said the Pretender carelessly.
+
+O'Connor went out in a hurry and Harry followed him. "I'll join you, if
+you please, Mr. O'Connor."
+
+O'Connor laughed. "Oh, your servant, your servant. No offence, Mr.
+Boyce. I profess I have an admiration for you. But, faith, you are not a
+man of war. Do you go round to the stable-yard, now, and watch there to
+see they prepare nothing against us from the back." He bustled off,
+calling up his fellows.
+
+So Harry, with a long face, I suppose, drifted away to the back of the
+house. The coach was already moving out of the yard, and he saw no sign
+of his father's legion. In a moment the groom, with one of O'Connor's
+men to help him, was busy again in the stable. Still the legion did not
+reveal themselves. O'Connor's man ran back into the house, leaving two
+horses saddled in the stable. Then the Pretender and my lord hurried
+out, and the horses were brought to meet them. As they mounted, Harry
+heard the clatter of the coach and then pistols and shouts, and the
+clash of fighting.
+
+The Pretender spurred off, my lord taking the lead of him through the
+gate. As they passed, a shot was fired out of the hedge. My lord swayed,
+fumbling at his holsters, and crying out: "Ride on, sir, ride," fell from
+the saddle. His foot was caught in the stirrup, and the frightened horse
+dragged him along the ground.
+
+Harry ran up and snatched the bridle. "How is it with you, my lord?"
+
+"I have enough, I believe," my lord gasped. "Damme, sir, don't fumble at
+me. Mount and after him."
+
+So Harry went bumping in the saddle after the Pretender.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+QUEEN ANNE IS DEAD
+
+
+The Pretender looked over his shoulder as Harry came up. "Where is he
+hit?"
+
+"He has it in the body and he suffers."
+
+The Pretender muttered something. "I bring ill-luck to my friends, you
+see. Best ride off, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"You can do me no harm, sir. God knows if I can do you any good."
+
+The Pretender looked at him curiously. "I think you are something of my
+own temper. In effect, there is little to hope with me."
+
+"Who knows?" Harry shrugged. "_Par exemple,_ sir, do you know where we
+are going now?"
+
+"This is a parable, _mordieu_! I leave my friends to be shot for me and
+die, perhaps, while I ride off and know not the least of my way."
+
+"Egad, sir, you were in enough of a hurry to go somewhere." Harry reined
+up. "Am I to be trusted in the affair?"
+
+The Pretender amazed Harry by laughing--a laugh so hearty and boyish that
+he seemed another man from the creature of stiff, pedantic melancholy.
+
+"Oh Lud, Mr. Boyce, don't scold. You might be a politician. Tell me,
+where is this damned palace?"
+
+"Kensington, sir? Bear to the left, if you please."
+
+So they swung round, and soon hitting upon a lane saw the village and the
+trees about the palace. In a little while, "Mr. Boyce: how much do you
+know?" the Pretender said; and still he was more the boy than the
+disinherited king.
+
+"Egad, sir, no more than I told you: that my father had bullies
+watching for you."
+
+"And I believe I have not thanked you."
+
+It was Harry's turn to laugh. "Faith, sir, you ought to be grateful to
+the family of Boyce."
+
+"I shall not forget."
+
+"He takes care that you shall remember him, my honourable father."
+
+"I do not desire repartees, Mr. Boyce. Come, sir, you carry yourself too
+proudly. You are not to disdain what you have done, or yourself."
+
+Harry bowed,--permitted himself, I suppose, some inward ironic smile,--he
+was not born with reverence, and the royal airs of this haughty, gloomy
+lad had no authority over him. Then and always the pretensions of the
+Pretender appeared to him pathetically ridiculous. But for the man he
+would sometimes profess a greater liking than he had learnt to feel for
+any other in the world.
+
+Harry was careful to avoid most of the village. As they came into it on
+the eastward side a horseman galloped up to them. "From my Lord Masham,
+sir. Pray you follow me at speed." He led them on to the palace, but not
+by the straight approach, and brought them to a little door in the garden
+wall upon the London side.
+
+There a handsome fellow stood waiting for them, and bowed them in with a
+"Sir, sir, we have been much anxious for you. I trust to God nothing has
+fallen out amiss?"
+
+"There was a watch set for me, my lord, and I fear some of our friends
+are down. But for this gentleman I had hardly been here."
+
+Masham swore and cried out, "They have news of the design! I profess I
+feared it. Pray, sir, come on quickly. The Queen is weaker, and my lady
+much troubled for her. By God, we have left it late. And the ministers
+must still be wrangling, and my Lord Bolingbroke like a man mazed. We
+must be swift and downright with the Council."
+
+Then at last Harry understood. The Pretender was to be brought face to
+face with his sister, the weakening weak Queen, and a Privy Council was
+to be in waiting. Suppose she declared him her heir; suppose she
+presented him to a Council all high Tories and good Jacobites! A good
+plot, a very excellent plot, if there were a man with the courage and the
+will to make it work.
+
+Within the palace it was now twilight. They were hurried up privy
+stairways and along corridors, and Harry fancied behind the gloom a
+hundred watching eyes, and could not be sure they were only fancy. As
+they crossed the head of the grand staircase Masham made an exclamation
+and checked and peered down. The Pretender turned and Harry, but Masham
+plunged after them and wildly waved them on.
+
+"What is it, my lord? Have you seen a ghost?" The Pretender smiled.
+
+"Oh God, sir, go on!" Masham gasped. "We can but challenge the hazard
+now," and he muttered to himself.
+
+"You are inconvenient, my lord," says the Pretender with a shrug. "Go
+before. Conduct me, if you please," Masham brushed by him and hurried on.
+
+Harry understood my lord's alarm. He, too, had seen a little company
+below by the grand entry, and among them one of singular grace, a rare
+nobility of form and feature, a strange placidity. There was no
+forgetting, no mistaking him. It was the gentleman of the bogged coach,
+the Old Corporal, the Duke of Marlborough.. Marlborough, who was in
+disgrace, who should be in exile, back at the palace when the Tories were
+staking their all on a desperate, splendid throw: Marlborough, who had
+betrayed and ruined James II, come back to baffle his son! No wonder
+Lord Masham was uneasy for his head.
+
+They were brought to a small room, blatantly an antechamber, and Masham,
+brusquely bidding them wait, broke through the inner door. He was back in
+a moment as pale as he had been red. "Come in, sir," he muttered. "I
+believe we had best be short." And through the open door Harry heard
+another voice. It was thin and strained, and seemed to make no words,
+like a baby's cry or an animal's.
+
+Across another antechamber, they came into a big room of some prim
+splendour, and as they passed the door Harry made out what that feeble
+voice was saying: "The Council, Abbie: we must go to the Council: we keep
+the Council waiting, Abbie:" that came over and over again, and he knew
+why he had not understood. The words were run together and slurred as if
+they were shaped by a mind drowsy or fuddled.
+
+A great fire was burning though the day was warm enough, and by the fire
+sat a mound of a woman. She could be of no great height, perhaps she was
+not very stout, but she sat heaped together and shapeless, a flaccid
+mass. She had a table by her, and on it some warm drink that steamed.
+Through the drifting vapour Harry saw her face, and seemed to see it
+change and vanish like the vapour. For it was all bloated and loose, and
+it trembled, and it had no colour in it but a pallid grey. And as he
+looked there came to him a sense of death.
+
+Yet she was pompously dressed, in a dress cut very low, a dress of rich
+stuff and colour, and there was an array of jewels sparkling about her
+neck and at her bosom, and her hands lay heavy with rings.
+
+There hung about her a woman buxom and pleasant enough, yet with
+something sly in her plump face. "Fie, ma'am, fie," she was saying, "the
+Council is here but for your pleasure:" she looked up and nodded
+imperiously at Masham.
+
+"The Prince James, ma'am," Masham cried.
+
+The Queen, who had seemed to see nothing of their coming, started and
+shook and blinked towards him. "He is loud, Abbie. Tell him not to be
+loud," she complained.
+
+"Look, ma'am, look," Lady Masham patted at her. "It is your brother, it
+is Prince James."
+
+The Pretender came forward, holding out his hand. "Am I welcome, Anne?"
+he said heavily.
+
+The Queen stared at him with dull eyes. "It is King Charles," she said,
+and stirred in her chair and gave a foolish laugh. "No, but he is like
+King Charles. But King Charles had so many sons. Who is he, Abbie? Why
+does he come? The Council is waiting."
+
+"I am your brother, Anne," the Pretender said.
+
+"What does he say, Abbie?" the Queen turned to Lady Masham and took her
+hand and fondled it feebly. "I am alone. There is none left to me. My boy
+is dead. My babies--I am alone. I am alone."
+
+"I am your brother and your King," the Pretender cried.
+
+She fell back in her chair staring at him. Her mouth opened and a mumble
+came from it. Then there was silence a moment, and then she began to
+shake, and one hand beat upon the table with its rings. So they waited a
+while, watching the tremulous, shapeless mass of her, and the tap, tap,
+tap of her hand beat through the room.
+
+Lady Masham took command. "Nay, sir, leave her. You can do no more now.
+Let her be. I will handle her if I can." She rustled across the room
+and struck a bell. "Masham, bring Dr. Arbuthnot. He irks her less than
+the rest."
+
+Harry followed the Pretender into the outer room, shambling
+awkwardly. The progress from failure to failure dazed him. He recalled
+afterwards, as many petty matters of this time stayed vivid in his
+memory, a preposterous blunder into a chair. The Pretender sat down
+and stretched at his ease. "We are too late, I think," he said coldly.
+"It is the genius of my family." He took snuff. "You may go, if you
+will, Mr. Boyce."
+
+Harry looked up and struggled to collect himself. "Not till you are in
+safety," he said, and was dully aware of some discomfort. The dying
+woman, the sheer ugliness of death, the sordid emotions about her numbed
+the life in him. He felt himself in a world inhuman. Yet, even
+afterwards, he seems not to have discovered anything ignoble in his
+admired Pretender. The blame was fate's that mocked coldly at the hopes
+and affections of men.
+
+"I am obliged, sir," said the Pretender, and so they waited together....
+
+After a little while of gloomy silence in that bare room, Masham broke
+in, beckoning and muttering: "Sir, sir, the Queen is dead."
+
+The Pretender stood up. "_Enfin_" said he, with a shrug.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+SAUVE QUI PEUT
+
+
+"Sir, you must be gone instantly," says Masham.
+
+"You are officious, my lord." The Pretender stared at him. "I have
+nothing to fear."
+
+"I warrant you have," Masham cried. "And so have others."
+
+"I believe that, _pardieu_. Come, my lord, command yourself. Where is
+this Council? I may still show myself to the lords and challenge them."
+
+"Damme, you cannot be so mad! 'Tis packed with Whigs. They must have wind
+of you, curse them. Marlborough is there, and Argyll and Sunderland, burn
+his foxy face. It might have gone amiss though the Queen armed you to her
+chair. Now she is dead, there is no hope for you. Go to the Council! Go
+to the Tower--go to the block."
+
+The Pretender turned to Harry with a smile and a shrug. "He trims his
+sails quickly."
+
+"That's unworthy, by God," Masham cried.
+
+"My lord is in the right, sir," Harry said. "It's true enough,
+Marlborough is here and he makes sure. You'll but extinguish yourself to
+try more now. The need is to bring you safe to your friends."
+
+"You also!" The Pretender shrugged again. "Faith, Mr. Boyce, you
+show yourself vastly anxious for my life. You are not much concerned
+for my honour."
+
+"Egad, sir, I should have thought your honour was to maintain your cause.
+You'll not do that from a prison or coffin."
+
+"Who knows?" the Pretender said. "My grandfather--"
+
+Masham was stamping with impatience. "Oh Lud, sir, must we gossip
+about your grandfather? Stay here, you cannot. It is not decent. The
+Queen's a corpse behind that door. Why, and if they take you in the
+palace, it's ruin for you and for us all. Oh, we shall not be spared
+if you are caught."
+
+"Yes. I am a curse to my friends." The Pretender laughed drearily. "Well,
+my lord, you shall be delivered at least. Lead the way." Masham hurried
+out on the word. As they followed the Pretender took Harry's arm. "I wish
+you may be right, Mr. Boyce," he said. "But my heart bids me stay."
+
+"Oh, sir, a king has no right to a heart," says Harry.
+
+They were suddenly thrown upon Masham as he checked and drew back without
+warning. He had come upon a woman who was leaving the Queen's apartments,
+a woman who had once been handsome, and was still proud of it. She
+stared haughtily at Masham and his companions, and swept on before them.
+He was much agitated.
+
+"What alarms you, my lord?" The Pretender sneered.
+
+"Carrots from Somerset, egad," Masham muttered, gazing after the
+disdainful lady's red head. "It's the Duchess of Somerset, sir, the
+damnedest Whig, and she came from the Queen. Now they will all know the
+Queen is gone. Come on, sir, come on for God's sake."
+
+They hurried after him through the palace. All was quiet enough.
+Afterwards, indeed, Harry could hardly believe that fancy had not played
+tricks with his memory; for the emptiness, the silence of the corridors
+must needs have been a dramatic invention of his own mind and no reality.
+But it is true that as they hurried their retreat he was haunted by the
+quiet of the place--the quiet of death, a quiet ominous of storm.
+
+They were down at the door by which they had entered, and Masham's
+servant-in-waiting there was dispatched for the horses. Masham fumed at
+the minutes of delay, ran out and in again, and then with some
+awkwardness apologized for himself. "Egad, sir, I warrant you we have
+done what we could. It is for you I fear, by God. I promise you, I doubt
+damnably how things may go. Pray, sir, put yourself in safety."
+
+"I am grateful for your emotions, my lord."
+
+Masham stared at him and then cried out, "Ods life, what now?" The horses
+were coming, but before the horses came two of the Guards at the double.
+They halted at the door, panting, and grounded their muskets. "What the
+devil's this, my lad?" says Masham.
+
+"None is to leave the palace, my lord."
+
+"Damme, sirrah, you know me?"
+
+"It won't do, my lord. That's the order. You must go speak with the
+captain at the main gate."
+
+"Come, sir, I have no time. Forget that you were here soon enough to stop
+me. You shall not lose by it."
+
+"It won't do, my lord. Nay, nay, don't force me to it." The corporal
+crossed muskets with his fellow as Masham was thrusting by. "Order is to
+spare none."
+
+"Damme, sir, what do your mean?"
+
+"Sure, my lord, you know better than that." The corporal grinned. "Ask
+the captain, if you please."
+
+Masham recoiled and drew the others back into the palace. They heard the
+corporal shout: "Put the nags up, my bully. My lord won't ride to-day."
+
+"They know you are here, sir," Masham said, with a very white face. "Damn
+the Somerset! She lost no time. What is to do now?"
+
+"It seems my own plan was the best, gentlemen. If I had gone into the
+Council we should at the worst have been in no worse case."
+
+"Oh Lud, sir, must we wrangle that out again?"
+
+"You are impudent, my lord. I will do without your company."
+
+"Good God, sir, it's no time for forms. What would you be at?"
+
+"I shall go to the main gate of your palace and see who will stand
+in my way."
+
+"That's ruin for certain," Masham groaned.
+
+"Be easy, my lord. I shall not boast myself your guest."
+
+"Oh, you are mad."
+
+"By your leave, sir," says Harry. "We need not so soon despair, I think,
+nor you run upon your death. There is something more to be tried. These
+sentries, they'll be on the watch for a gentleman of your distinction and
+in my lord's company or of some noble attendance. But a common fellow may
+pass them. If you would lend me your fine clothes and that great wig, and
+condescend to my subfuse and bob, there's no one would take so shabby a
+fellow for yourself. Maybe I might make a show to break out one way,
+while you slipped past by another."
+
+"And left you to bear the brunt for me? I complain of you again, Mr.
+Boyce--you do not much value my honour."
+
+"And I say again, sir, your honour is to maintain your cause. Nay, but
+what can they do to me? Faith, it's no sin to wear fine clothes. And
+I--well, I think the Whigs will never bring me into court. I know too
+much of my father."
+
+"Oh, you are specious, Mr. Boyce," the Pretender smiled at him. "Nay, if
+all my friends were such as you, I should not be in this queer plight."
+He put his hand on Harry's shoulder. "How am I to thank you, sirrah?"
+
+"Pray, sir, do as I advise."
+
+The hand pressed harder. "Be it so then."
+
+"Egad, I like it very well," says Masham heartily. The two exchanged a
+shrug and a sneer at him. "If Mr. Boyce will risk it, he may make a show
+of marching out by the garden entrance while you slip away by the
+servants' wicket beyond."
+
+"I believe I can trust you to get rid of me, my lord," the Pretender
+shrugged. "Pray, where may we exchange our characters--and our breeches?"
+
+"Oh, sir, follow me; we must be private about that."
+
+Harry burst out laughing. "Aye, faith, he is a gentleman of delicacy, our
+Masham," the Pretender said.
+
+But my lord had no ears or no understanding for irony. He brought them to
+his own quarters and, fervidly entreating them to lose no time, shut them
+in and mounted guard outside the door.
+
+They cut queer figures to their own eyes when they came out, and Masham
+was distressed by their laughter. "What ails you?" he protested
+nervously. "It does well enough, I swear."
+
+"I am flattered by your admiration, _pardieu_," says the Pretender, with
+a rueful grin down at the shabby clothes which were so tight upon him,
+and a clutch at the bob-wig's jauntiness.
+
+"Some are born great," says Harry, "and some have greatness thrust upon
+'em. I believe I can keep inside your periwig, sir, but damme if I am
+sure about your breeches. They disdain me, egad."
+
+"God's life, sir, if you make a jest of it you'll ruin us all," Masham
+cried. "I vow it's not seemly, neither. The Queen's dead but this
+half-hour, and--and, by God, our own heads are loose on our shoulders."
+
+"My lord's in the right, sir. It's no laughing matter," says Harry.
+
+"Aye, he's all noble feeling," the Pretender shrugged.
+
+"Come on, sir, in God's name," Masham groaned.
+
+"Look you, thus it goes. I'll bring you within sight of the garden
+entry. Then you make to go out, Mr. Boyce, with what parade you can. And
+you, sir, I'll take you to the head of the back stairs. You have but to
+go straight down and out, and I wish you God speed with all my heart.
+Come, come!"
+
+They marched along the corridor and must needs pass the end of that which
+led to the Queen's apartments. Masham was a little ahead of the others.
+He passed the corner. Then he checked and he turned sharp about and
+charged back on them, crowding them against the wall, trying to stand in
+front of both of them and hide them.
+
+It was Marlborough who alarmed my lord, Marlborough who came, alone,
+pacing slowly from the room where the Queen lay dead. No dismay, no
+emotion troubled his supreme grace. He disdained his splendours and his
+beauty with the wonted calm.
+
+He saw them, could not but see them, huddled together as they were and
+striving not to be seen. His face betrayed nothing. He paced slowly up to
+them. It seemed to Harry that from the first his placid eyes looked at
+none of them but the Pretender. "We have met before, sir, I think," he
+said gently.
+
+"On the field of battle," says the Pretender in French.
+
+Marlborough bowed. "Give me your company."
+
+"Oh, your family has always been too kind to mine."
+
+Marlborough pointed the way.
+
+The Pretender shrugged, and "_Enfin_," says he with a bitter laugh, and
+marched on with an air.
+
+Masham, leaning against the wall and very white, muttered to himself, "My
+God, my God!"
+
+Harry ran forward to look after them. He saw Marlborough glance over the
+Pretender's shabby clothes and then, making some ostentation of it, put
+on his hat. The Pretender with a stare of disdain put on his--or Harry's.
+They came to the head of the grand staircase and went down. The servants
+in the hall sprang up and ran to open the doors for His Grace. Harry
+heard a din and a clang and saw a flash of steel as the guard outside
+presented arms. The two passed out and out of sight. For a little while
+the servants stood staring after them, and then came back to their chairs
+whispering.
+
+Harry turned round to Masham. "What now?"
+
+"Now?" Masham stared. "Now we may go hang ourselves."
+
+"Like Judas? Damme, I don't feel the obligation. Do you, my lord?"
+
+Masham swore at him and began to walk off.
+
+"Can you lend me a humbler coat, my lord?" Harry cried. "I am no more
+use in this."
+
+"I'll do no more in it," Masham growled. "Look to yourself."
+
+"_Enfin,_ as His Majesty says," quoth Harry with a laugh, and went on to
+look for the garden entry or any other humble door. He found it soon
+enough and was going through it--to be instantly beset by a sergeant's
+party and a joyful shout, "Odso, 'tis himself, 'tis the Chevalier."
+
+"You flatter me," says Harry, and they marched him off.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+REVELATIONS
+
+
+Harry was kept a long time in a guard room. Once or twice an officer came
+in and looked him over, but he was asked no questions, and he asked none.
+He was ill at ease. Not, I believe, from any fear for himself. He knew,
+indeed, that he might hang for his pains. What he had done for the
+Pretender was surely treason, or would be adjudged treason, with the
+Whigs in power and the Hanoverian King. But death seemed no great matter.
+He was not a romantic hero, he had no faith, no cause to die for, and he
+saw the last scene as a mere horror of pain and shame. Only it must be
+some relief to come to the end. For he was beset by a hopeless, reckless
+distrust of himself. Everything that he did must needs go awry. He was
+born for failure and ignominy. Memories of his wild delight in Alison
+came stabbing at his heart, and he fought against them, and again they
+opened the wounds. Yes, for a little while he had been given the full
+zest of life, all the wonder and the glory--that he might know what it
+was to live maimed and starving. It was his own fault, faith. He should
+never have dared venture for her, he, a dull, blundering, graceless fool.
+How should he content her? Oh, forget her, forget all that and have done.
+She would be free of him soon, and so best. Best for himself, too; it was
+a dreary affair, this struggling from failure to failure. Whatever he put
+his hand to must needs go awry. Save the Pretender from the chance of a
+fight and deliver him into the hands of Marlborough! Marlborough, who
+would send him to the scaffold with the noblest air in the world! Why,
+but for that silly meddling at Kensington, the lad might have won free.
+Now he and his cause must die together before a jeering mob. So much for
+the endeavours of Mr. Harry Boyce to be a man of honour! Mr. Harry Boyce
+should have stayed in his garret with his small beer and his rind of
+cheese. He was fit for nothing better, born to be a servitor, an usher.
+And he must needs claim Alison Lambourne for his desires and rifle her
+beauty! Oh, it was good to make an end of life if only he could forget
+her, forget her as she lay in his arms.
+
+The door opened. The guard was beckoning to him. He was marched to a
+room in which one man sat at a table, a small man of a lean, sharp
+face. Unbidden, Harry flung himself into a chair. He must have been a
+ridiculous figure, overwhelmed by the black wig and the rich clothes
+too big for him. The sharp face opposite stared at him in
+contemptuous disgust.
+
+"Your name?"
+
+"La, you now!" Harry laughed. "I don't know you neither. And, egad, I can
+do without."
+
+"I am the Earl of Sunderland."
+
+"Then, damme, I am sorry for you."
+
+"Your name, I say?"
+
+"Why, didn't your fellows tell you? They told me."
+
+"Impudence will not serve you. I warn you, the one chance to save
+yourself is to be honest with me."
+
+Harry began to hum a song, and, between the bars, he said, "You may go to
+the devil. I care not a curse for anything you can do. So think of your
+dignity, my lord. And hold your silly tongue."
+
+Sunderland considered him keenly. A secretary came in and whispered. "I
+will see him," Sunderland said, and lay back in his chair.
+
+It was Colonel Boyce who broke in, Colonel Boyce something flushed and
+out of breath. "Egad, my lord," he began. Sunderland held up his hand.
+Colonel Boyce checked and stood staring at his son.
+
+Harry began to laugh. "Oh, sir, you're infinitely welcome. It only needed
+you to complete my happiness."
+
+"Od's life, sirrah." Colonel Boyce advanced upon him. "Are you crazy?
+What damned folly is this?"
+
+"You know him then?" says Sunderland.
+
+"Oh, my lord, it's a wise father knows his own son. And he is not
+wise, you know. Are you, most reverend? No, faith, or you would never
+have begot me. No, faith, nor enlist me to do murder neither. For I do
+but bungle it, you see. And make a fool of my Lord Sunderland, God
+bless him."
+
+"Is he mad?" says Sunderland.
+
+"I profess I begin to think so." Colonel Boyce frowned. "Lud, Harry,
+stop your ranting. What brought you here?"
+
+"You, sir, you. Your faithful striving to do my Lord Sunderland's murders
+for him. _Imprimis_, that work of grace. But, finally, some good soldiers
+who assured me I was the man my lord wanted to murder."
+
+"You came here with the Pretender?"
+
+Harry laughed and began to sing a catch:
+
+"'Tis nothing to you if I should do so,
+ And if nothing in it you find,
+Then thank me for nothing and that will be moe
+ Than ever I designed."
+
+"What a pox are you doing in his clothes, sirrah?" Colonel Boyce cried.
+
+"Faith, I try to keep them on me. Which is more difficult than you
+suppose. If I were to stand up in a hurry, my lord, we should all
+be shamed."
+
+"The lad is an idiot," said Sunderland, with a shrug.
+
+"Come, Harry, you have fooled it long enough. I had a guess of this mad
+fancy of yours. But the game is up now, lad. King George is king to-day,
+and his friends have all power in their grip. There's no more hope for
+your Jacobites. Tell me now--the Pretender is in your clothes, I
+see--where did you part from him?"
+
+"Why, don't you know?" Harry stared at him. "Oh, faith, that's bitter
+for you. You who always know everything! And your friends 'with all
+power in their grip,' Oh, my dear lord, I wonder if there's those who
+don't trust you?"
+
+Some voices made themselves heard from outside. Sunderland and Colonel
+Boyce looked at each other, and my lord bit his fingers. The Colonel
+muttered something in Sunderland's ear.
+
+Harry laughed. "Do you bite your thumb at me, my lord? No, sir, says he,
+but I bite my thumb. Odso, I bite my thumb."
+
+"Be silent, sirrah," Sunderland cried.
+
+The door opened. "Announce me," says a placid voice, and the secretary
+cried out in a hurry: "His Grace the Duke of Marlborough."
+
+Harry went on laughing. The contrast of Marlborough's assured calm and
+the agitation of the others was too impressive. "Oh, three merry men,
+three merry men, three merry men are ye," he chanted. "No, damme, it's
+more Shakespeare. The three witches, egad. And I suppose Duncan is
+murdered in the next act. When shall you three meet again? In--"
+
+"Oh, damn your tongue, Harry," his father exploded.
+
+Marlborough was not disturbed. His eye had picked out Sunderland. "Is
+this the whole conspiracy, my lord?" said he.
+
+"I beg your Grace's pardon," Sunderland started up. "You see, I am not
+private," and he called out: "Guard, guard."
+
+"No," Marlborough said, and, as the soldiers came in, dismissed them with
+"You are not needed."
+
+Sunderland fell back in his chair. "Oh, if you please," he cried
+peevishly. "At your Grace's command."
+
+"You have no secrets from Mr. Boyce, my lord." He turned to Harry. "Sir,
+we have met before," and he bowed.
+
+"Yes. The first time your wife was stuck in the mud. Now it's you."
+
+"Sir, you have obliged me on both occasions," Marlborough said. "Well, my
+lord? You had Mr. Boyce under examination. Pray go on."
+
+"I don't understand your Grace," Sunderland said sulkily. "I have done
+with the gentleman."
+
+Colonel Boyce thrust forward. "By your Grace's leave, I'll take the lad
+away. Time presses and--"
+
+"You may be silent," said Marlborough. For the first time in their
+acquaintance Harry saw his father look at a loss. It was an ugly,
+ignominious spectacle. Marlborough turned to Harry, smiling, and his
+voice lost its chill: "Well, Mr. Boyce, how far had it gone? Were they
+asking you what you had done with Prince James?"
+
+Harry stared at the bland, handsome condescension and hated it. "Oh,
+you have always had the devil's own luck," he cried. "Devil give you
+joy of it, now."
+
+"You mistake me, I believe. I can forgive you more easily than some
+others." He turned upon Sunderland. "I will tell you where Prince James
+is, my lord. Safe out of your reach. On his way to France."
+
+Sunderland made a petulant exclamation and spread out his hands. "Your
+Grace goes beyond me, I profess. Do you choose to be frank with me?"
+
+"Frank?" Marlborough laughed. "You know the word, then? By all means let
+us be frank. I found Prince James in the palace. He accepted my company.
+We had some conversation, my lord. I present to you the results. You have
+used my name to warrant a silly, knavish plot for murdering Prince James
+in France. You entered upon a silly, knavish plot to murder him on this
+mad visit to London, and while engaging me to aid your motions against
+the Jacobites you gave me no advice of this damning folly. To complete
+your blunders--but for the chance that I came upon him and took him
+through your guards you would have been silly enough to plant him on our
+hands in prison. I do not talk to you about honour, my lord, or your
+obligations. I advise you, I resent my name being confused with these
+imbecilities."
+
+Sunderland, who had been wriggling and become flushed, cried out: "I'll
+not submit to this. I don't choose to answer your Grace. You shall hear
+from me when you are cooler."
+
+"My compliments," Marlborough laughed. "I do not stand by my friends? I
+lose my temper? You will easily convince the world of that, my lord.
+Colonel Boyce!" Before Harry's wondering eyes his father came to
+attention and, with an expression much like a guilty dog's, waited his
+reward. "You have had some of my confidence and I think you have not lost
+by it. You have repaid me with an impudent treachery. I shall arrange
+that you have no more opportunity at home or abroad."
+
+"Pray leave to ask your Grace's pardon," Colonel Boyce muttered. "I
+swear--"
+
+"You may be silent," Marlborough said, and turned away from them. "Pray,
+Mr. Boyce, will you walk?" Something bewildered by this time, Harry stood
+up and they went out together. "I require a carriage for this gentleman,"
+said Marlborough to the sergeant of the guard, and with a smile to Harry,
+"That will be convenient, I think?"
+
+"Egad, sir, you might say, decent," says Harry with a wary hand on
+his breeches.
+
+"Spare me a moment while you wait," Marlborough turned into a recess of
+the corridor. "Prince James expressed himself much in your debt, Mr.
+Boyce. Consider me not less obliged. Thanks to you, I have freed myself
+of suspicions which I profess it had irked me to bear."
+
+"Your Grace owes me nothing. I never thought of you. Or if I did you were
+the villain of the piece."
+
+Marlborough laughed. "And now you are sorry to find I am not so
+distinguished. Why is it a pleasure to despise me, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+Harry had to laugh too. "It's a hit, sir. I suppose your Grace is so
+great a man that we all envy you and are eager for a chance to defame you
+and bring you down to our own level."
+
+"You're above that, Mr. Boyce," Marlborough said. "I make you my
+compliments on your conduct in the affair. And pray remember that I am in
+your debt. I don't know your situation. If I can serve you, do me the
+pleasure of commanding me."
+
+"Oh, your Grace does everything magnificently," says Harry, with a wry
+smile, and liked him none the better.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+VIRTUE IS ITS OWN REWARD
+
+
+There is reason to believe that the Earl of Sunderland and Colonel Boyce
+fell out. Sunderland, never an easy man, suspected that he had been
+ridiculous and was nervously eager to make some one smart for it. Colonel
+Boyce was in a despondent rage that any one should have heard Marlborough
+rate him so. They seem to have had some cat and dog business before they
+parted: each, I infer, blaming the other for their ignominy.
+
+But they took it in very different fashions. Colonel Boyce suffered in
+the more respectable part of his soul. Sunderland merely fumed and felt
+venomous. For it is certain (if absurd) that Colonel Boyce had a sincere
+reverence for Marlborough. He much desired (one of his few simple human
+emotions) that Marlborough should think well of him. If he had tacked
+Marlborough's name to a dirty business about which Marlborough knew
+nothing, he had honestly believed that His Grace would be very well
+content to know nothing of the means, and profit by the end. That his
+hero should retort upon him disgust and contempt wounded him painfully.
+Final proof of his devotion--he never thought of questioning
+Marlborough's judgment. He had no doubt that he had managed the affair
+with miserable stupidity, and bowed a humiliated head.
+
+Unfortunately, he was not ready to bow it before Sunderland. If there was
+to be scolding between him and Sunderland, he had a mind to give as much
+as he took. My lord had been art and part in the whole affair, and could
+have his share, too, in the disaster. But Sunderland had no notion of
+accepting Marlborough's opinion of him. Sunderland had no reverence for
+any of God's creatures, and with Marlborough safe out of the room,
+snarled something about an old fellow in his dotage. This much enlivened
+the quarrel, and they parted in some exhaustion, but still raging.
+
+The night brought counsel. Sunderland might tell himself and believe that
+Marlborough had become only the shadow of a great name. But the great
+name, he knew very well, was valuable to himself and his party, and he
+had no notion of throwing it away for the sake of his injured dignity. In
+his way, Colonel Boyce was quite as necessary to my lord. The fellow knew
+too much to be discarded. Moreover, he would still be valuable. His
+talents for intrigue and even that weakness of his, his fertility in
+multiplying intrigue, much appealed to Sunderland. So before noon on the
+next day, Colonel Boyce was reading a civil letter from my lord. He
+sneered over it, but it was welcome enough. He did not want to be idle,
+and could rely on Sunderland to find him agreeable occupation. He walked
+out to wait on my lord, and they made it up, which was perhaps
+unfortunate for Mr. Waverton.
+
+Later in the day my lord heard that a gentleman was asking to speak with
+him, a gentleman who professed to have information about the Pretender
+which he could give only to my lord's private ear. Thereupon my lord
+received a large and imposing young gentleman, who said: "My Lord
+Sunderland? My lord, I am Geoffrey Waverton of Tetherdown, a gentleman of
+family (as you may know) and sufficient estate. This is to advise you
+that I am in need of no private advantage and desire none, but only to do
+my duty against traitors."
+
+"You are benevolent, sir, but I am busy."
+
+"I believe you will be glad to postpone your business to mine, my lord,"
+says Mr. Waverton haughtily. "Let me tell you at this moment of anxious
+doubt," Mr. Waverton hesitated like one who forgets a bit of his prepared
+eloquence,--"let me tell you the Pretender has come to these shores. He
+has come to England, to London. He was in Kensington yesterday."
+
+"You amaze me, Mr. Waverton."
+
+"My lord, I can take you to the house."
+
+"You are very obliging. Is he there now?"
+
+"I believe not, my lord."
+
+"And I believe not too. Mr. Waverton, the world is full of gentlemen
+who know where the Pretender was the other day. You are tedious. Where
+is he now?"
+
+"My lord, I shall put in your power one who is in all his cunning
+secrets: one who is the treasonous mainspring of the plot."
+
+Sunderland, who was something of a purist, made a grimace: "A treasonous
+mainspring! You may keep it, sir."
+
+"You are pleased to be facetious, my lord. I warn you we have here no
+matter for levity. I shall deliver to your hands one who is deep in the
+most dangerous secrets of the Jacobites, art and part of the design
+which at this moment of peril and dismay brings the Pretender down upon
+our peace."
+
+"Mr. Waverton, you are as dull as a play. Who is he, this bogey of
+yours?"
+
+"He calls himself Boyce," said Mr. Waverton, with an intense sneer.
+"Harry Boyce, a shabby, scrubby trickster to the eye. You would take him
+for a starveling usher, a decayed footman. It's a lurker in holes and
+corners, indeed, a cringing, grovelling fellow. But with a heart full of
+treason and all the cunning of a base, low hypocrisy. Still a youth, but
+sodden in lying craft."
+
+Sunderland picked up a pen and played with it, and through the flutter of
+the feather he began to look keenly at Mr. Waverton. "Pray spare me the
+rhetoric," says he. "What has he done, your friend, Harry Boyce?"
+
+"He has this long time past been hand and glove with the Jacobites of
+Sam's. I have evidence of it. Now mark you what follows. Yesterday
+betimes he slunk out to Kensington, using much cunning secrecy. And there
+he made his way to a certain house--I wonder if you know it, my lord? It
+was close watched yesterday, and a coach that came from it was beset. I
+wonder if you have been asking yourself how the Pretender evaded that
+watch. I can dispel the mystery. This fellow Harry Boyce went in with
+news of the guard about the house. It was in his company that the
+Pretender rode away."
+
+"Why do you stop?" said Sunderland.
+
+"Where they went then I cannot tell you. You will please to observe, my
+lord, that I am precisely honest with you and even to this knave Boyce
+just. But it is certain that in the evening when Harry Boyce came back to
+the low tavern where he lodges--and he came, if you please, in a handsome
+coach--he was wearing the very clothes of the Pretender--aye, even to the
+hat and wig. I believe I have said enough, my lord. It will be plain to
+you that the fellow is very dangerous to the peace of the realm and our
+good and lawful king. If you lay hands on him, which I advise you to do
+swiftly, you will quench a treason which has us all in peril, and well
+deserve the favour of King George. For my own part I seek neither favour
+nor reward, desiring only to do my duty as a gentleman." Mr. Waverton
+concluded with a large bow in the flamboyant style.
+
+"Your name is Waverton?" Sunderland said coldly. Mr. Waverton was
+stupefied. That such eloquence should not raise a man's temperature! That
+he should not have made his name remembered! He remained dumb. "Pray when
+did you turn your coat?"
+
+"Turn my coat?" Mr. Waverton gasped.
+
+"You once professed yourself Jacobite. You went to France with a certain
+Colonel Boyce. You quarrelled with him because he was not Jacobite. Now
+you desire to get his son into trouble. You do not gain upon me, Mr.
+Waverton."
+
+"I can explain, my lord--"
+
+"Pray, spare me," says Sunderland. "You are not obscure. I see that you
+have a private grudge against the family of Boyce. Settle it in private,
+Mr. Waverton. It is more courageous."
+
+Mr. Waverton stared at him and began several repartees which were
+only begun.
+
+"I find you tiresome," Sunderland said. "I advise you, do not make me
+think of you again," and he struck his bell. But when Mr. Waverton was
+gone: "I fear he has not the spirit of a louse," my lord remarked to
+himself with a shrug.
+
+Thus Mr. Waverton's virtue was left to seek its own reward.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+IN THE TAP
+
+
+When Harry came back to his tavern, he was, you'll believe, not anxious
+to be seen. He made one step from the coach to the door, scurried through
+the tap and upstairs. But the coming of a coach, and a coach of some
+splendour, to the humble "Hand of Pork" had brought folks to the windows,
+and at the staircase window Harry bumped into his landlady, who gasped at
+him and began a "Save your lordship--" which ended in "God help us, it's
+Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Cook me a steak, Meg," Harry said, and went up the stairs three
+at a time.
+
+She screamed after him "Ha' you seen your letter? There's a letter for
+you in the tap."
+
+When Harry came down in his natural clothes, his best and one remaining
+suit, and shouted for his supper she was quarrelling with the potman and
+searching the shelves: "Meg, you villain--Meg, where's my steak?"
+
+"Lord love you, it's to the fire. I be looking for your letter. Ain't you
+had it now? Days it's been here, I swear, and I saw it again only this
+morning. By the black jar of usquebaugh it was, George, Od rot you."
+
+"Burn the letter," says Harry. "Go, bring me that steak, you slut."
+
+"Oh, God save you," Mrs. Meg cried in a pet, and so for Alison's letter
+there was no more search. But indeed they would not have found it.
+
+Harry, if he ever thought about it, supposed it one of the grumbling
+screeds of the bookseller for whom he scribbled and was glad to be rid of
+it so easily. But he was in no case to think usefully of anything. The
+amazement of his deliverance left him in a queer state of excited
+lassitude. His nerves were all tremulous, he must needs do everything
+vehemently, and felt the while as if he were being whirled along,
+passive, in the grip of some force outside himself One moment he was
+dreaming himself capable of miracles, the next he was limp with weariness
+and utterly impotent. And naturally, as soon as he had food inside him,
+weariness won and he was overwhelmed with great waves of languor. He
+hardly dragged himself up to his attic before he was asleep.
+
+When he woke, the world was grey. He could survey himself cynically and
+wonder why he had been such a fool as to be in a fluster overnight.
+Faith, it was a grand exploit to dabble in conspiracies and come out with
+your head still (for a while) on your shoulders. And that only by a turn
+of the luck, not any wit of his. Well! Neither winners nor losers would
+want more of the blundering offices of Mr. Harry Boyce. He was back again
+after his conversation with royalty--and royal breeches--a hack writer
+in his garret. And Alison as far away as ever. The wonderful Alison! The
+beauty of her flashed into his squalor. He felt her passionate life. Be
+hanged to Alison! Let the hack writer get to his writing.
+
+All that day he strove with the fluency of Ovid, and to this hour his
+labours, much flaccid verse, survive in a decent obscurity. It was late
+in the afternoon before he yielded to his growing disgust with the
+whinings of the Tristia and sought relief in the open air.
+
+There was not much movement in the air of Long Acre. The day had been
+warm and languorous, with heavy showers steaming up again in the sun.
+Clouds were darkening across the twilight for more rain. Harry turned off
+to stretch his legs and find some freer air across the fields by the
+Oxford road. But he was soon tired of them. The moist heat oppressed him
+still and lowering darkness across the sky threatened a storm. He had no
+desire for a wetting and an evening spent in the Pretender's clothes. He
+made for his tavern again by St. Martin's Lane and there came full upon
+his father.
+
+Colonel Boyce touched his hat. Harry touched his, gave him the wall
+and was going by. Then the Colonel laughed and caught his son's arm.
+"Well met, Harry. I was coming to seek you." (It's not known whether
+that was true.)
+
+"And I, sir--I had no notion of seeking you."
+
+"Fie, don't be haughty. I bear no malice."
+
+"Egad, sir, that's kind in you," Harry sneered and pushed on.
+
+Colonel Boyce linked arms with him. "Why, what's the matter? You
+went off with the honours. Od's heart, you left us like a pair of
+whipped dogs."
+
+"You've to thank yourself for that, sir. Not me."
+
+"No, zounds, you did very well. I profess I was proud of you, Harry."
+
+"Then I have to envy you."
+
+Colonel Boyce laughed. "You play that game well, you know. But sure, you
+need not play it all the time. No, but I never knew you could put on such
+an air, Harry. You carried it off _à merveille_. My lord was a
+whipper-snapper to you. I allow you were a thought too free of your wit.
+It's a young man's fault. But in the main you were admirable."
+
+"You make me uneasy," Harry said. "I hoped that I had quarrelled
+with you."
+
+"Oh Lud, Harry, why be so bitter? You have won, and sure you can afford
+to be civil. You have beat me and broken as pretty a plot as ever I knew.
+Why the devil should you snarl at me?"
+
+They were now turning into Long Acre and the coming storm had already
+brought darkness. Harry stopped and freed himself from his father's arm.
+"If you please, we'll have no more of this. I've no will to make an enemy
+of you. But if you seek to be friends, enemies we must be."
+
+"Why then? Harry, you are not so mad as to declare Jacobite now? It's a
+lost cause, boy. There's not a thing in it but noble hole-and-corner work
+and not a guinea for your pains. You--"
+
+"Aye, now we have it!" Harry laughed. "You want to be in my
+secrets. Sir, I'm obliged to you, and by your leave I'll
+discontinue your company."
+
+"I swear I wish you nothing but well," his father cried.
+
+"Dear sir, it's your good wishes that I dread. Pray cut me off without a
+blessing." He waved his hand to his father and strode off.
+
+For a moment Colonel Boyce looked after him--shrugged--went his way.
+
+So Harry walked alone upon his danger. He was near the tavern, he was
+passing the end of a court. From the blackness there men rushed upon him.
+They managed it well. He was almost borne down by the first onset, but
+hearing something in time, seeing a glimmer of steel, he swung aside and
+staggered back into the kennel slashing at them with his stick. They were
+borne past him by their vehemence, but he carried no sword and their
+swords were all about him. There was no hope. Two blades seared through
+his body and he fell.
+
+Colonel Boyce heard the clatter of ash and steel and turned at his
+leisure to look. It was a moment before he made out Harry in the midst
+of the mêlée. Then he shouted of help and threats and ran on with
+ready sword.
+
+He came too late. Harry was down and the dripping blades again at his
+body. Colonel Boyce had one fellow pinked before they were aware. The
+others bore upon him furiously and he was hard beset. He made a good
+fight--it's the best thing in his life--he understood the sword, and they
+were but hackers and hewers, they were in a mad hurry to finish him and
+he had a perfect calm. But he was hampered and overborne. He would not
+give ground for fear of more thrusts into the body at his feet, and they
+closed upon him and he could not break them.
+
+But now doors were opening and heads out of windows. From Harry's tavern
+a man came at a run. As Colonel Boyce reeled back with a point caught in
+his shoulder, gripping at the blade and thrusting at empty air, another
+sword shot into the fight. One man went down upon Harry's body. The other
+three broke off and bolted down the court by which they had come.
+
+"_Canaille_," says the deliverer mildly, and plucked at the cloak of the
+man he had overthrown to wipe his sword. "Is that a friend of yours
+underneath, sir?"
+
+"Egad, they have tickled me," quoth Colonel Boyce, feeling at his
+shoulder. "Pray, lend me your hand, sir."
+
+The deliverer looked him over without much sympathy: "And, egad, it's the
+ancient Boyce," he said. "Oh, you'll survive, _mon vieux_. Who is this in
+the mud?" He rolled his own victim, who groaned effusively, off Harry's
+body. "It's the boy, _mordieu_!" he cried.
+
+"In effect, Captain McBean, it's the boy," says Colonel Boyce, who was
+trying to fix a pad of handkerchief on his own wound.
+
+McBean was down on his knees beside Harry, handling him gently. "Twice
+through the body, by God," says he. "What does this mean, Boyce? Damme,
+did you set your fellows on him?"
+
+"I am not an imbecile," Colonel Boyce said fiercely, stared at McBean
+and laughed his contempt. Then with another manner, he turned to the
+little crowd which was mustered: "Bring me a shutter, good lads. We've a
+gentleman here much hurt. And some of you call the watch."
+
+McBean rose with bloody hands. "He has it I believe," he muttered.
+"Hark in your ear, Boyce. If this is your work, I'll see you dead, by
+God, I will."
+
+"Oh, damn your folly," says Colonel Boyce. "I struck in to help him. I
+know nothing who the knaves were. Your own tail, maybe."
+
+"Aye, aye," McBean looked at him queerly. "You would say that. Well,
+maybe this rogue can speak. He groans loud enough." Down he dropped again
+by his victim to cry out "Ben! You filthy rogue! Ben! Who a plague set
+you to this business?"
+
+"Oh, you've found a friend, then?" Colonel Boyce sneered.
+
+The man who groaned was Harry's old friend, Ben the fat highwayman of the
+North Road. He rolled his eyes and made hoarse, grievous noises.
+"Captain! Lord love you, captain, I didn't know you was in it. Oh, gad,
+and you ha' been the death o' me,'
+
+"I shall be if you lie," quoth McBean. "You rogue, who set you on
+Mr. Boyce?"
+
+"How would I know he was a friend of yours? 'Twas a squire out of
+Hornsey. Squire Waverton of Tetherdown. Paying handsome to have him
+downed. Oh, gad, captain, don't be hard. I ha' had no luck since you
+turned me off."
+
+Now the constables came running up and Colonel Boyce turned to them:
+"Secure that fellow. He and some others which have escaped stabbed my
+son who lies there. I am Colonel Boyce at the Blue House in St.
+Martin's Lane."
+
+The wretched Ben was haled off, groaning.
+
+Harry, lifeless still and bleeding, for all McBean's work, they lifted
+and carried away to his father's lodging.
+
+"What's your Waverton in this, sir?" says McBean.
+
+"The silly gentleman wanted Harry's wife. Egad, I never thought he had so
+much gall in him."
+
+"I believe I'll be letting some of it out," says McBean.
+
+"You'll be pleased to leave that to me," quoth Colonel Boyce.
+
+McBean looked up at him oddly. "_Ventrebleu_, I wonder if I'll make you
+my apologies. Have you bowels after all, sir?"
+
+"You're impertinent."
+
+"If you like." McBean cocked a wicked eye at him.
+
+"You concern yourself with the affairs of my family. I resent it,
+Captain McBean."
+
+"I believe you, _mon vieux_."
+
+"You have done me a notable service to-night and I am ready to forget
+the older injuries, your ill offices with my son. Let us call quits and
+part, sir."
+
+"It won't do," said McBean with a grin.
+
+"What now, sir?"
+
+"I must know how Harry does and make sure that he has the best there is
+for him. Surgery and friends--he will need both, sound and sure."
+
+"Be satisfied. I shall well provide him."
+
+Captain McBean shook his head.
+
+"Damn your infernal impudence." Colonel Boyce's temper gave way. "Od's
+life, sir, this is infamous. You put upon me that I would mishandle my
+own son as he lies wounded and near death! I shall murder him, I
+suppose. You had that against me before. Shall I rob him too, or
+torture him maybe? This is raving. Carry it where you will, I'll none
+of it. You may go."
+
+"Fie, what a heat!" says McBean placidly.
+
+They were now come to Colonel Boyce's lodging and he bade the bearers
+take Harry up to his own room.
+
+"I sent a brisk lad for Rolfe," says McBean. "I could but stop the blood.
+He'll be here soon enough. It's but a step to Chancery Lane. He knows
+more of wounds than any man in the town."
+
+Colonel Boyce was for a moment speechless. "I shall send for Dr.
+Radcliffe and Sir Samuel Garth," says he majestically. "I wish you good
+night, sir."
+
+"I believe they have sense enough to do no harm," said McBean. "And now,
+Boyce, a word with you. Not in the street."
+
+"I don't desire it, sir," which McBean answered by passing in front of
+him into the house. Colonel Boyce came after, fuming. "Egad, sir, you
+presume upon my wound," he cried. "You--"
+
+"Not I. Patch yourself up and I'll meet you at your convenience. There's
+more urgent matter. When the boy comes to himself--if ever he comes to
+himself--I must have speech of him."
+
+Colonel Boyce, who now completely commanded himself, had grown very pale.
+"You have gone too far, Captain McBean. I desired to forget that I have
+you in my power. You force me to use it. If you thrust yourself upon me I
+shall have you arrested as a traitor."
+
+McBean flushed. "Odso, then there is some villainy of yours in the
+affair! Devil take you, I have a mind to finish you now, a wounded man as
+you are." He had his hand on his sword.
+
+"Will you go, sir?"
+
+"Not I. If you ha' murdered him, you"--he slapped his sword home
+again--"no, _mordieu_, I can't touch you so. And you may meddle with me
+if you dare."
+
+"Oh, you have a great devotion to the boy," Colonel Boyce sneered with
+pallid lips. "You would have him deeper dipped in your mad treasons? I
+think you have done him harm enough." He struck his bell.
+
+"Harm?" McBean cried. "Is it harm? You that begat him for the heir to
+your damned infamy? You that soured him with your husk of a soul and your
+cold cunning? You that made a dirt-heap of his life to suit your muddling
+need? You--"
+
+But Colonel Boyce swayed in his seat and fell sideways fainting.
+
+A moment McBean surveyed him as if he thought this too a trick. Then,
+"_Ventrebleu_" says he, "here's Providence takes a hand," and he
+whistled, and it is not to be denied that he looked covetously at the
+cabinet which held Colonel Boyce's papers. "The poor old devil," he said
+with a shrug. "He grows old, in fact. I suppose there's more blood in his
+shirt now than his damned body," and he knelt down and began to feel
+about the wound.
+
+He was at that when a woman announced the surgeon. "Mr. Rolfe? Never more
+welcome. Here's old Colonel Boyce with a hole in his shoulder, and young
+Mr. Boyce with two holes through and through. A street brawl. Pray go up,
+sir, the lad's in bad case."
+
+"Faith, it's Captain McBean," says Rolfe, a brisk, big man, as they shook
+hands. "What have you to do with Noll Boyce?"
+
+"A friend of the family," says McBean. "Away with you to the lad;" and he
+knelt again and ministered to the unconscious Colonel. "A friend of the
+family, old gentleman," says he with a grin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+ALISON KNEELS
+
+
+So all this while Alison lacked an answer to her letter. She fretted at
+the delay, she grew angry soon, but it does not appear that she allowed
+herself any new pique against Harry. She was angry with circumstance,
+with herself, and something much more than angry with Mr. Waverton. It
+was detestable of Geoffrey to dare spy and plot against Harry,
+intolerable in him to suppose that she would favour the villainy. But she
+had been a fool and worse to give him any chance of insulting her so. And
+yet she might have hoped that her letter--sure, she had been humble
+enough in it--that her letter would bring Harry back in a hurry. It was
+maddening that some trick of circumstance should have kept it from him or
+him from her. For she had no notion that he would read the letter and
+toss it aside or delay to come. There was nothing petty about Mr. Harry,
+no spite. Nothing of the woman in him, thank God.
+
+What had happened that he gave her no answer? For certain the letter had
+gone safely to the tavern. She could be sure of her servant. Harry was
+living at the tavern. The people there gave assurance of that. It was
+strange that he made no sign. The servant, indeed, had waited for an
+answer late into the night and seen nothing of him. Perhaps he had
+discovered Geoffrey's spies and gone into hiding. It would be like
+Geoffrey to devise some mighty cunning villainy and so manage it that it
+was futile. Perhaps Harry really was at some secret politics, captured
+again by his father and sent off to France, or too deep in some matter of
+danger to show himself. Perhaps--perhaps a thousand things, so that she
+made no doubt of Harry. He would not deny her when she came seeking him.
+
+She had no fear either. Her nature could not imagine perils or disasters.
+There was too proud a force in her life for her to admit a dread of being
+defeated. Her man must live and be safe, because she needed him. Harry
+could not fail her. But she was desperately impatient. She wanted him
+every instant, and even more she wanted to stand before him and accuse
+herself, confess herself. For the truth is that Geoffrey Waverton had
+profoundly affected her. When she found Geoffrey daubing her with
+patronizing congratulations, when he dared to claim her as ally in mean
+tricks against her husband, she discovered that she must be miserably in
+the wrong. Approved by Geoffrey, annexed, used by Geoffrey--faith, she
+must have sunk very low before he could dare venture so with her. She
+received illumination. She saw herself in the wrong first and last, the
+sole sufficient cause of their catastrophe, a petty mean creature,
+snarling and spiteful and passionate for trivialities--just like
+Geoffrey, just such a creature as she hated most. Pride and honour
+instantly demanded that she must seek Harry, indict herself and read her
+recantation. She needed that, longed for it, and to satisfy herself, not
+him. It is possible that she then began to love.
+
+So monsieur must be found instantly, instantly. When she thought of all
+her tale of sins, she must needs think also of Mrs. Weston. Poor Weston
+had enough against her too--Weston--his mother. It still seemed almost
+incredible that poor, grey, puritan Weston should be mother to Harry. But
+if she was indeed, she might know something of him. At least, it would be
+good to make peace with her again; it was necessary. And so on the day
+that Harry fell, Mrs. Alison marched off to the little cottage behind the
+High Street.
+
+It was a room that opened straight from the path, and it seemed very
+full. Susan was sitting there, who was now Susan Hadley. Her fair
+placidity admitted no surprise. She smiled and said, "Alison!"
+
+Mrs. Weston stood up in a queer frozen fluster. "What do you need,
+ma'am?" says she.
+
+"Oh, Weston, dear, don't take me so," Alison cried, and she edged her way
+between the little table and the stiff chairs, holding out her hands.
+
+Mrs. Weston flushed. "Your servant, ma'am," says she with a curtsy, but
+she ignored the hands.
+
+Then Susan stood up. "I must go, I believe," she smiled, and bent to
+offer one fair cheek to Mrs. Weston. The other was then given to Alison.
+She smiled upon them both benignly and made for the door.
+
+"Susan! You'll dine with me to-morrow," Alison put in.
+
+"Oh. Mr. Hadley will be at home."
+
+"But of course you bring him."
+
+"Thank you then." The door shut behind her, and the room was larger.
+
+"I can't tell why you have come," says Mrs. Weston tremulously.
+
+"To say I was wrong and I'm sorry. Oh, Weston, dear, to say I have been a
+peevish wicked fool."
+
+Mrs. Weston sat down again. "Where is Harry?" she said.
+
+"I have writ to him to beg him come back to me."
+
+"I am asking you to come back to us."
+
+"You--"
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"Ah, you don't know then?"
+
+"I have not seen him since he left your house."
+
+"He has been living at a tavern in the Long Acre. I have made sure of
+that, and I wrote to him there. But he has not answered me. He does not
+answer me. I can't tell if he has gone away."
+
+"Where is his father?" Mrs. Weston asked quickly.
+
+"His father? Colonel Boyce? Oh, Weston! Colonel Boyce is his
+father, then?"
+
+"Did you come to pry?" Mrs. Weston flushed.
+
+"I do not deserve that," Alison said, and then very gently, "Oh, my dear,
+but I have been cruel enough to you."
+
+"It's very well," Mrs. Weston said faintly. "Where is Colonel Boyce?"
+
+"I know nothing. Does it matter, Weston, dear? He cannot help us
+to Harry."
+
+"I am afraid of him. Oh, it's all wrong maybe. I am so weak and stupid.
+But I am afraid what he may do with Harry."
+
+"Indeed, I think Mr. Harry can keep his head even against Colonel Boyce,"
+Alison smiled.
+
+"His head?" Mrs. Weston looked puzzled. "I don't mean that, I believe. I
+am afraid he may win Harry to be like himself. He is so clever and
+dazzling, and he is full of wickedness. He cares for nothing but his own
+will and to have power. When I saw him so friendly with Harry I thought I
+should have died."
+
+"My poor Weston," Alison said gently. "But I am not afraid of that. Mr.
+Harry won't be dazzled."
+
+"You dazzled him."
+
+"Oh, and am I full of wickedness too?" Alison laughed. "Dear,
+forgive me."
+
+"No, but you are strong and hard as his father was."
+
+Alison drew in her breath. "I shall teach you not to call me that,
+Weston," she said. "And Harry--well, Harry shall find me for him."
+
+There was silence for a while, and Alison watched with new emotions the
+tired, wistful face. "Weston, dear, I want you to come back to me. I want
+Mr. Harry to find you with me when he comes home."
+
+Mrs. Weston cried out, "He does not know who I am!" in anxious fear, and
+clutched at Alison's hand.
+
+"No, indeed. But he loves you already, I think."
+
+"But I do not want him to know," Mrs. Weston cried. "I--I was not married
+to Colonel Boyce."
+
+"Weston, dear," Alison pressed the hand.
+
+"I lived at Kingston. My father reared us strictly. He was harsh. I think
+that was because my mother died so young. Mr. Boyce--he was a gentleman
+in the Blues then, and very fine, much gayer than Harry and more
+handsome. He used to ride out to Hampton Court to an old cousin of his,
+who had a charge at the Palace. He met me one day by the river. I don't
+know why he set himself upon me. I was never much to his taste, I think.
+But I thought him the most wonderful man in the world. I let him do what
+he would with me. I don't blame him for that. He never promised me
+anything. In a while he grew tired. Then Harry came. My father could not
+forgive me. Afterwards they said that I had killed him. Harry was born. I
+lay very ill and they believed that I should die. I never knew whether it
+was my father or my brother sent for Mr. Boyce. My brother boasted
+afterwards that it was he made him relieve them of the baby. And I--I did
+not die, you know. When I began to be well again my baby was gone. My
+father lay dying then. He would not see me. My brother was the head of
+the family, and he--I could not stay there. I tried to find Mr. Boyce,
+but he had left the regiment. He had gone to Holland, they said, after
+the Duke of Monmouth. I could do nothing. And my brother had told me that
+Mr. Boyce would soon find a way to be rid of my baby. I--I believed that
+he had. I never saw Harry again till--you know. I never saw his father
+till that day at Lady Waverton's. He told me afterwards that they had
+said to him I was dying, and he supposed me dead. I believe that is
+true. He would not have troubled himself with the child else."
+
+"Oh, Weston, dear," Alison murmured, and caressed her.
+
+Mrs. Weston pushed back the hair from her wrinkled brow. "Mr. Boyce
+promised me that Harry need know nothing of me now. I do not know if he
+has kept his word about that."
+
+"There's nothing about Harry that is not safe with me," Alison said. "Oh,
+my dear, now I know where Harry has his strength from and his
+gentleness."
+
+Mrs. Weston looked at her in a puzzled fashion. "I wonder what he is
+doing now?" she said wearily. "I think I have told you everything,
+Alison. Oh! Your father. Your father was very kind to me. When I did not
+know what to do--I had no money left--they gave me five pounds--I went to
+him. He used to come to my father's house, you know, when he had business
+in Kingston. He used to go all over the country about his trading. My
+father said he was a godless man, but he was always kind to me. I told
+him everything. He took me into his house, and indeed I did not know
+where to go for food. I was your mother's servant while she lived, but I
+think she doubted me. Your father never told her anything, and she--but
+she let me be."
+
+"Oh, Weston, Weston," Alison said. "And you have spent all your life
+caring for me."
+
+"There was nothing else to do. But I was glad to do that." She looked
+at the girl with strange, puzzled, wistful eyes and saw Alison's eyes
+full of tears. She put out her hand shyly, awkwardly, and touched
+Alison's cheek.
+
+Alison smiled, laughed with a sob in her voice. "It is a long while since
+I cried," she said, and put her arms round Mrs. Weston and laid her head
+on Mrs. Weston's bosom and cried indeed.
+
+Mrs. Weston held her close. "Alison! But this isn't like you."
+
+"Indeed it is," Alison sobbed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+EMOTIONS BY MR. WAVERTON
+
+
+You behold Mr. Waverton exhibiting a high impatience. He was alone in the
+best room of the "Peacock" at Islington, a well-looking place after its
+severe old oak fashion. Disordered food upon the table showed that Mr.
+Waverton had been trying to eat with little success. Mr. Waverton's hat
+upon one chair, his whip upon another, and his cloak tumbled inelegantly
+over a third proved that he was not himself. For he was born to treat his
+clothes with respect. Mr. Waverton would be jumping up to look out of the
+window, flounce down again in his chair to drink wine and stare with
+profound meaning at the table, start up and stride to the hearth and
+glower down at its emptiness--and repeat the motions in a different
+order. He must be theatrical even without an audience.
+
+But he had some excuse for his uneasiness. It was the evening of his
+conversation with my Lord Sunderland, and that fiasco had stimulated him,
+you know, to a grand exploit. He was waiting for news of it.
+
+The twilight darkened early. Mr. Waverton pushed the window open wider,
+and leaned out only to come in again in a hurry as if he were afraid of
+being seen. The room was close, and he wiped his large brow and flung
+himself down and drank. There was a dull sound of thunder rolling far
+away. In a little while came the beat of rain--slow, big drops. That was
+soon over. Then lightning stabbed into the room, and the storm broke.
+
+Candles were brought to Mr. Waverton's petulant appeal, and an excited
+maid-servant bustled and blundered over clearing his table with pious
+invocations at each thunder-clap. She fretted Mr. Waverton, who
+admonished her and made her worse.
+
+Upon him and her there came a man cloaked from heel to eye, streaming
+rain from every angle. He shook a shower from his hat. "Hell! What a
+night," says he, breathless. "Save you, squire!"
+
+"Begone, girl! Begone, I say. Od's life, leave us, do you hear?" says Mr.
+Waverton, in much agitation.
+
+"Bring us a noggin of rum, Sukey, darling," says the wet gentleman,
+dragging himself out of his sodden cloak. He flung it upon Mr.
+Waverton's.
+
+"Run, girl!" says Mr. Waverton, in a terrible voice. "Go, you fool." He
+advanced upon her, and she stopped gaping, and got herself out with a
+great clatter of crockery.
+
+"Od burn and blast it! I want it," says the wet gentleman, and collapsed
+into a chair. "I believe you, squire. I want it."
+
+"What is the news with you?" Mr. Waverton said.
+
+"Od's bones, ha' you got the megs? The megs, I say. Oh, rot you, the
+ready, the hundred guineas?"
+
+"Is it done then?" Mr. Waverton's voice dropped.
+
+"Out with the cole, burn you."
+
+Mr. Waverton put a bag of money down on the table. The man snatched at
+it, tore it open, and began to count. "Is it done, Ned, I say?" Mr.
+Waverton cried.
+
+Ned showed some broken teeth. "I believe you, by God. He has it. He's
+dead meat. Two irons through and through his guts."
+
+Mr. Waverton flung back in his chair. "How then?" he said, in a low
+voice. "Ned--was it in fight? You brought him into a fight?" Ned went
+on counting the guineas, and sometimes tried one in his yellow teeth.
+"Oh, have done with that!" Mr. Waverton cried. "They come straight
+from my goldsmith, man. Tell me--you said you would force a fight on
+him. Did he--"
+
+"Lay your life!" Ned grinned. "There was a fight, sure. Old Ben knows
+that, by God. Aye, aye, you're fond of fighting ain't you, squire?"
+
+"I fight with gentlemen, sirrah," says Mr. Waverton. "For such base
+rogues as this fellow, I must provide otherwise."
+
+"Provide my breeches!" says Ned coarsely, and swept up his money.
+"Where's that damned rum?"
+
+"You may take it in the tap." Mr. Waverton rose. "Nay, she'll bring it.
+Nay, but, Ned--how did he take it?"
+
+"Rot you, how would you take an iron in your gizzard?"
+
+"He said nothing?"
+
+"Now, stap me, do you think we waited for him to say his prayers?"
+
+"Prayers!" says Mr. Waverton grandly, "They would little avail him."
+
+"Well now, burn me, you're a saint yourself, ain't you?"
+
+The rum arrived, and the servant, with frightened eyes upon the
+bedraggled Ned, went stumbling out of the room again. "You are
+impertinent, sirrah," says Mr. Waverton. "The fellow well deserved his
+end. I may tell you that I was advised to deal with him thus privately by
+a noble lord in high place."
+
+"Then it's worth more than a hundred megs."
+
+"You have your pay, I believe. I am satisfied with you."
+
+"Damn your airs," says Ned, but something awed by this parade. "Well, I
+must quit."
+
+"It is better," Mr. Waverton agreed.
+
+"Oh! There was a letter for my gentleman at his tavern. We pouched that
+while we were waiting for him. D'ye care for it? It's a pretty, tender
+thing. I reckon it's cheap for another five pieces."
+
+"You are a scoundrel," said Mr. Waverton, and tossed another guinea on
+the table.
+
+"Pot to you," says Ned, but slapped down the letter. "Well, I'll march.
+Maybe you'll have some more in my way. I won't forget you, squire," and
+out he went.
+
+Mr. Waverton, left alone, fingered the letter contemptuously. His great
+mind was indeed possessed by thoughts of victory. He had hated Harry
+rarely with the chief count in his enmity that Harry was a low fellow,
+hireling, menial. He could have borne defeat with some grace, he might
+even have sought no revenge for being made ridiculous, if the offender
+had been of a higher station than his own. But such insolence from a
+pauper! The fellow must needs be crushed like an insect. Only such
+ignominious extinction could satisfy Mr. Waverton's dignity. He inclined
+to despise himself for a shadow of human concern about the manner of
+Harry's death. Faith, it was an extravagance of chivalry to desire that
+the rogue should have had a chance to fight--that generous chivalry which
+had ever been his bane. He felt nothing but exultation at the issue. The
+wretched creature had been properly punished--stamped out by knaves of
+his own class in a vulgar street brawl--a dirty hole-and-corner end.
+Egad, my lord was very right. These petty, shabby knaves should be dealt
+with privately. Mr. Waverton found revenge very sweet.
+
+So Mr. Harry Boyce had gone to his account, and Alison was happily
+delivered. Dear child! Mr. Waverton felt a pleasant warmth of heroism
+steal over him, felt himself a knight-errant rescuing his lady from the
+powers of darkness. Dear Alison! She was free now. To be sure, she need
+not be told the manner of the deliverance. That would be an outrage on
+her delicacy. Enough for her that the cunning wretch who had cozened her
+was dead, and she a happy widow. She had but to show a pretty penitence,
+and Mr. Waverton proposed to be magnanimous. The prospect much pleased
+him. He saw himself grandly accepting her; permitting her to be very
+tender; wittily, but with a touch of magnificence, restraining her from
+too much humility....
+
+He came out of this golden dream in the end, and was conscious again of
+the letter, and sneered at it. A nasty, infected thing, to be sure,
+damp and filthy from Ned's handling. What was it the fellow said? A
+tender composition? Pah, some blowsy paramour of the knave Boyce. But,
+perhaps it would be well that Alison should know the fellow had
+paramours in his own class. She ought to be made to feel how low she
+had sunk by yielding to him.
+
+Mr. Waverton opened the letter and saw Alison's writing:
+
+"MR. BOYCE,--I desire that you would come to me at Highgate. I have
+to-day heard from Geoffrey Waverton what you must instantly know. And the
+truth is, I cannot be content till I speak with you. But I would not have
+you come for this my asking. Pray, believe it is urgent for us both that
+we meet, and I do require it of you, not desiring of you what you may
+have no mind to, but to be honest with you, and lest that should befall
+which I hope you would not have me bear.
+
+"A."
+
+Mr. Waverton read with swelling eyes.
+
+It was a little while before the meaning came home to him. He was never
+quick. Then (a sin to which he was not prone) he used oaths. The
+treacherous, besotted woman! She was still craving for her shabby lover,
+then. She offered a fair face to her too generous, too faithful Mr.
+Waverton, only to obtain his confidence and betray him again. Egad, she
+was too base. Rotten at the very heart of her. Why, some women must lust
+after a low, common fellow, as dogs after dirt. So she would have saved
+her Boyce from his master's punishment? Mr. Waverton laughed. She would
+have had him back in her arms again? Mr. Waverton continued to laugh.
+
+But faith, she went too far when she tried to trick Mr. Waverton a second
+time. Much she had gained by her treachery. Her fine husband was out of
+her reach now. It would be a pleasure to advise her of his death. Nay,
+faith, a duty. The miserable creature had been saved from herself. She
+must be shown that--oh delicately, with something of a cold grandeur, a
+touch of irony maybe, but always in a lofty manner as became one who
+moved upon heights far above her grovelling soul. Mr. Waverton, for all
+his high irony, rode back home through the dregs of the storm very
+furiously.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+CAPTAIN McBEAN TAKES HORSE
+
+
+Captain McBean, healthily red and brown, showed no sign of having been
+out of bed all night. From cold water and a razor in his own lodgings he
+came back at a round pace to St. Martin's Lane. He found his aide, Mr.
+Mackenzie, taking the air on the doorstep of the Blue House, and rebuked
+him. "I bade ye bide with the lad, Donald."
+
+"The surgeon has him in hand, sir."
+
+"_Tiens_. He's a brisk fellow, that Rolfe."
+
+"I'm thinking Mr. Boyce will need him."
+
+"Eh, is there anything new?"
+
+"I would not say so. But he's sore hurt. And I'm thinking he takes it
+hard."
+
+"Aye, you're the devil of a thinker, Donald." Captain McBean grinned.
+"And the Colonel, has he made a noise?"
+
+"He's in the way of calling for liquors, but he's peaceable, the
+women say."
+
+"You'll go get your breakfast and be back again. And bring O'Connor with
+you. I'll hope to need the two of you." Captain McBean relieved guard on
+the doorstep till the surgeon came down. "I'm obliged to you, Mr. Rolfe.
+What do you make of him?"
+
+"Egad, Captain, you're devoted. Why, the old gentleman has put in for
+some fever, but I doubt he will do well enough."
+
+"Be sure of it. What of the young one?"
+
+Mr. Rolfe pursed his lip. "Faith, there's no more amiss. But--but--why,
+he was hard hit, I grant you--but you might take the young one for the
+old one. D'ye follow me? The lad hath no vigour in him."
+
+McBean nodded. "I'll be talking to him, by your leave."
+
+"Od's life, I would not talk long. I don't like it, Captain, and there's
+the truth. Go easy with him. I will be here again to-day."
+
+Captain McBean went up to the room where Harry lay as white as his
+pillows. A woman was feeding him out of a cup. "You made it damned salt,
+your broth," says Harry, in a feeble disgust.
+
+"'Tis what you lack, look you." Captain McBean sat himself on the bed and
+took the cup and waved the woman off. "'Tis the natural, hale salinity
+and the sanguineous part which you lose by a wound, and for lack of it
+you are thus faint. Therefore we do ever administer great possets of salt
+to the wounded, and--"
+
+"And pickle me before I be dead," says Harry. "Be hanged to your jargon."
+
+"You'll take another sup, my lad, if I hold your long nose to it. And you
+may suck your orange after."
+
+Harry made a wry face, swallowed a mouthful and lay back out of breath.
+After a while, "You were here all night, weren't you?" he said.
+
+"I am body physician to the family of Boyce, _mon brave_."
+
+"My father?"
+
+"Has a hole in his shoulder, praise God, and a damned paternal temper. He
+will do well enough."
+
+"How do you come into it?" McBean grinned. "Who were they?"
+
+"I am here to talk to you, _mon cher_. You will not talk to me, for it is
+disintegrating to your tissues. _Allons_, compose yourself and attend.
+Now I come into it, if you please, out of gratitude. Mr. Boyce--I have it
+in command from His Majesty to present you with his thanks for very
+gallant and faithful service."
+
+"Oh, the boy got off then?"
+
+"King James is returned to France, sir," says McBean with dignity.
+"Look 'e, tie up your tongue. His Majesty charged me to put this in
+your hands and to advise you that he would ever have in memory your
+resource and spirit and your loyalty. Which I do with a great
+satisfaction, Mr. Boyce."
+
+Harry fingered a pretty toy of a watch circled with diamonds, and wrought
+with a monogram in diamonds and sapphires. "Poor lad," says he.
+
+"It's his own piece and was his father's, I believe. _Pardieu_, sir,
+there's many will envy you."
+
+Harry's head went back on its pillows. "It's a queer taste."
+
+"Mr. Boyce, you may count upon it that when His Majesty is established in
+power, he--"
+
+"He will have as bad a memory as the rest of his family. Bah, what does
+it matter? You are talking of the millennium."
+
+"You will talk, will you?" says McBean. "I'll gag you, _mordieu_, if you
+answer me back again. Come, sirrah, you know the King better. It's a
+noble, generous lad. So leave the Whiggish sneers to your father. So much
+for that. Now, _mon ami_, you have put me under a great obligation. It
+was a rare piece of work, and to be frank, I did not think you had it in
+you. But I did count upon you as a gentleman of high honour, and,
+_pardieu_, I count myself very fortunate I applied to you. I speak for my
+party, Mr. Boyce, when I thank you and promise you any service of mine."
+
+Harry mumbled something like, "Damn your eloquence."
+
+But McBean was not to be put off. "You will like to know that the King
+when he was quit of Marlborough--egad, the old villain hath been a
+gentleman in this business--made straight for me and was instant that I
+should concern myself for you. I held it my first duty to get His Majesty
+out of the country. Between ourselves, I was never in love with this plan
+of palace trickery and Madame Anne. But the thing was offered us, and we
+could not show the white feather. _Bien_, His Majesty took assurance from
+Marlborough of your safety, so I had no great alarm for you. I could not
+be aware of your private feuds. But now, _mordieu_, I make them my own. I
+promise you, it touches me nearly that you should be hacked down, and
+egad, before my eyes."
+
+Harry tried to raise himself and said eagerly, "Who was in it? Who
+were they?"
+
+Captain McBean responded with some more of the salt broth. "Now I'll
+confess that I had some doubts of your father. As soon as I was back in
+London I made haste to find you. I was waiting at that tavern of yours
+when I heard the scuffle. You were down before I could reach you, and
+there was your father fighting across you most heroical. Faith, I did not
+know the old gentleman had it in him. He had pinked one, I believe, but
+he is slow, and they were too many for him. He took it badly in the
+shoulder as I came. But they were not workmen. I put one out at the first
+thrust, and the rogues would not stand. I tickled one in the ham as he
+ran, but missed the sinew in his fat. So it ended. Now I'll confess I did
+the old gentleman a wrong. I guessed the business might be one of his
+damned superfine plots. It would be like him to have you finished while
+he made a brag of fighting for you. But I was wrong. _Mordieu_, I believe
+he has a kindness for you, Harry."
+
+"What?" says Harry, startled by the name.
+
+"Oh, _mon ami_, you must let me be kindly too. Egad, you command my
+emotions, sir. No, the old gentleman hath his humanity. He would have
+died for you, Harry, and faith he is so rheumatic he nearly did. No, it
+was not he played this damned game. Who d'ye think it was that I put on
+his back? That rascal Ben--you remember Ben of the North Road? I put the
+villain to the question who set him on you. _Bien_ he was hired to it by
+that fine fellow Waverton."
+
+"Geoffrey!" Harry gasped.
+
+"Even so. Now, Harry, what has Master Geoffrey Waverton against you? If
+he wanted to murder your father I could understand it. That affair at
+Pontoise is matter enough for a life or two. Though he should take it
+gentlemanly. But why must he murder you?"
+
+"I am not dead yet," said Harry, and his mouth set.
+
+Captain McBean laughed. "Not by fifty year:" and he contemplated Harry's
+pale drawn face with benign approval. "But why does Mr. Waverton want you
+dead now?"
+
+"That's my affair," said Harry.
+
+"_Enfin_." Captain McBean shrugged, with a twist of the lip and a cock
+of the eye.
+
+"Is there more of that broth?" says Harry.
+
+Captain McBean administered it. "I go get another cup, Harry." He nodded
+and went out.
+
+His two aides, Mackenzie and O'Connor, were waiting below. "Donald, go
+up. The same orders. None but Rolfe is to come to him without you
+stand by. And shorten your damned long face, if you can. Patrick, we
+take horse."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+PERPLEXITIES OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+
+Captain McBean and Mr. O'Connor halted steaming horses before the door of
+Tetherdown. The butler announced that Mr. Waverton had gone out, and then
+impressed by the evidence of haste and the martial elegance of McBean,
+suggested that my lady might receive the gentleman.
+
+"How? The animal has a mother?" says McBean in French, and shrugged and
+beckoned the butler closer. "Now, my friend, could you make a guess where
+I should look for Mr. Waverton?" and money passed.
+
+"Sir, Mr. Waverton rides over sometimes to the Hall at Highgate. Miss
+Lam--Mrs. Boyce's house;" the butler looked knowing.
+
+"Mrs. Boyce? Eh, is that Colonel Boyce's lady?"
+
+The butler smiled discreetly. "No, sir, to be sure. Young Boyce--young
+Mr. Boyce, sir."
+
+Captain McBean wheeled round in such a hurry that the butler was almost
+overthrown. They clattered off.
+
+It was not till they were riding through the wood that McBean spoke:
+"Patrick, my man, would you say that Harry Boyce is the man to marry
+wisely and well?"
+
+"Faith, I believe he would not be doing anything wisely. That same is
+his charm."
+
+"_Tiens_, it begins now to be ugly. Why must the boy be married at all,
+_mordieu_?"
+
+"It will be in his nature," says O'Connor. "And likely to a shrew."
+
+"If that were all! Ah, bah, they shall have no satisfaction in it. But no
+more will I..."
+
+There were at the Hall two women who had almost become calm by mingling
+their distress and their tears. It's believed that they slept in each
+other's arms, and slept well enough. In the morning another messenger was
+sent off to the Long Acre tavern. If he came back with no news it was
+agreed they should move into town. They said no more of their fears. Each
+had some fancy that she was putting on a brave face for the other's sake.
+There is no doubt that they found the stress easier to bear for
+consciousness of each other's endurance.
+
+So Mr. Hadley and his Susan were received by an atmosphere of gentle
+peace. Much to Mr. Hadley's surprise, who would complain that venture
+into Alison's house was much like a post over against the Irish Brigade;
+for a man never knew how she would break out upon him, but could count
+upon it that she would be harassing.
+
+"We are so glad," says Susan.
+
+"She loves to march her prisoner through the town. It's a simple,
+brutish taste."
+
+"Oh. I am so, I believe," says Susan, and contemplated Mr. Hadley with
+placid satisfaction.
+
+"She is too honest for you, Mr. Hadley," Alison said.
+
+"Oh Lud, yes, ma'am. The mass of her overwhelms me, and it's all plain
+virtue--a heavy, solemn thing. Look you, Susan, you embarrass madame with
+your revelations."
+
+"It is curious. He is always ill at ease when I am with him."
+
+"Because you make me tedious, child."
+
+"That's your vanity, Mr. Hadley." Alison tried to keep in tune with them.
+
+"Look you, Susan, I am cashiered by marriage. Once I was Charles. Now I
+am without honour."
+
+"Mr. Geoffrey Waverton," quoth the butler.
+
+Alison's hand went to her breast and she was white.
+
+"Dear Geoffrey!" Mr. Hadley murmured. "I do not know when last I saw dear
+Geoffrey," and he turned a sardonic face to the door.
+
+Susan leaned forward. "Alison, dear--if you choose--" she began in
+a whisper.
+
+"Sit still," Alison muttered. "Stay, stay."
+
+Mr. Waverton came in with measured pomp, stopped short and surveyed the
+company and at last made his bow. "Madame, your most obedient. I fear
+that I come untimely."
+
+Alison could not find her voice, so it was Mr. Hadley who answered, "Lud,
+Geoffrey dear, you're never out of season: like mutton."
+
+"I give Mrs. Hadley joy," says Geoffrey. "Such wit must be rare company."
+
+Alison was staring at him. "You have something to say to me? You may
+speak out. There are no secrets here."
+
+"Is it so, faith? Egad, what friendship! But you have always been
+fortunate. And in fact I bring you news of more fortune. You are free
+of your Mr. Boyce, ma'am. You are done with him. He has been picked up
+dead." He smiled at Alison, Alison white and still and dumb. Mrs.
+Weston gave a cry and fell back in her chair and her fingers plucked at
+her dress.
+
+Mr. Hadley strode across and stood very close to Geoffrey. "Take care,"
+says he in a low voice.
+
+"Well. Tell all your story," Alison said.
+
+"They found him lying in the kennel in Long Acre," Geoffrey smiled. "Oh,
+there was some brawl, it seems. He was set upon by his tavern cronies in
+a quarrel about a wench he had. A very proper end."
+
+"Geoffrey, you are a cur," says Mr. Hadley in his ear.
+
+"You are lying," Alison cried.
+
+Mr. Waverton laughed and waved his hand. "Oh, ma'am, you are a chameleon.
+The other day you desired nothing better than monsieur's demise. Now at
+the news of it you grow venomous. I vow I cannot keep pace with your
+changes. I must withdraw from your intimacy. 'Tis too exacting for my
+poor vigour. Madame, your most humble."
+
+"Not yet," Alison cried.
+
+"Let him go, ma'am," Mr. Hadley broke in sharply. "Go home, sirrah.
+You'll not wait long before you hear from me."
+
+"From which hand?" Geoffrey flicked at the empty sleeve. "Nay, faith, it
+suits madame well, the left-handed champion."
+
+Mr. Hadley turned on his heel. "Pray, ma'am, leave us. This is become
+my affair."
+
+"I have not done with him yet," Alison said.
+
+But the door was opened for the servant to say: "Captain Hector McBean,
+Mr. Patrick O'Connor," and with a clank of spurs and something of a
+military swagger the little man and the long man marched in.
+
+Captain McBean swept a glance round the room.
+
+"So," says he with satisfaction and made a right guess at Alison. "Mrs.
+Boyce, I am necessitated to present myself. Captain McBean."
+
+"What, more champions!" Geoffrey laughed. "Oh, ma'am, you have too
+general a charity. My sympathy is in your way," and he made his bow and
+was going off.
+
+"_Mordieu_, you relieve me marvellously," says McBean, and O'Connor put
+his back against the door.
+
+Mr. Waverton waved O'Connor aside.
+
+"You'll be Mr. Waverton?" said O'Connor.
+
+"Od's life, sir, stand out of my way." But O'Connor laughed and McBean
+tapped the magnificent shoulder. Mr. Waverton swung round.
+
+"Hark in your ear," says McBean. "You're a lewd, cowardly scoundrel, Mr.
+Waverton."
+
+Mr. Waverton glared at him, stepped back and turned on Alison. "Pray,
+ma'am, control your bullies. I desire to leave your house!"
+
+"Let him be, sir," Alison stood up. "Leave us, if you please, I have to
+speak with him."
+
+"You have not," McBean frowned. "The affair is out of your hands. Come,
+sir, march. There's a pretty piece of turf beyond the gates. Your friend
+there may serve you."
+
+"Not I, sir," Mr. Hadley put in. "I have myself a meeting to require of
+Mr. Waverton."
+
+"So? I like the air here better and better, _pardieu_. Well, Mr.
+Waverton, we'll e'en walk out alone."
+
+"Your bluster won't serve you, sirrah. If you be a gentleman, which you
+make incredible, you may proceed in order and I'll consider if I may do
+you the honour to meet you."
+
+"Gentleman? Bah, I am Hector McBean, Captain in Bouffiers' regiment.
+Come, sir, now are you warmer?" He struck Mr. Waverton across the eyes.
+
+Mr. Waverton, drawing back, turned again upon Alison: "My God, did you
+bring your bullies here to murder me?"
+
+"I did not bid you here," Alison said.
+
+"_Lâche_," says Mr. O'Connor with a shrug.
+
+"_En effet_," says McBean and sat down. "Observe, Waverton: I have given
+you the chance to take a clean death. You have not the courage for it.
+_Tant mieux_. You may now hang."
+
+Mr. Waverton again made a move for the door, but Mr. O'Connor stood
+solidly in the way. "Attention, Waverton. You have bungled your business,
+as usual. Your fellow Ned Boon hath been taken and lies in Newgate. He
+has confessed that he and his gang were hired for this murder by a
+certain Geoffrey Waverton."
+
+"It is a lie!"
+
+"Waverton--I have a whip as well as a sword."
+
+"I do not concern myself with you, sir," says Mr. Waverton with
+dignity. "You are repeating a lesson, I see. But I advise you, I shall
+not permit myself to be slandered. This fellow Ned Bone--Boon--what is
+his vulgar name? I know nothing of him. If he pretends to any knowledge
+of me, he lies."
+
+"You told me that you had hired men to spy upon Mr. Boyce," Alison said.
+
+Mr. Waverton laughed. "Oh, ma'am, I thank you for a flash of honesty.
+Here's the truth then. In madame's interest, I had arranged with her that
+a party of fellows should watch her scurvy husband. She suspected him of
+various villainies, infidelity, what you will. And, egad, I dare to say
+she was right. But I have no more concern in it. So you may his back to
+your employers, Captain Mac what's your name, and advise them that I am
+not to be bullied. I shall know how to defend myself."
+
+Alison came nearer Captain McBean. "Sir, this is a confection of lies. It
+is true the man told me he was planning a watch on Mr. Boyce. But not of
+my will. And when I knew I did instantly give Mr. Boyce warning."
+
+"I shall deal with you in good time," McBean frowned. "_Dieu de dieu!_ I
+do not excuse you. Attention, Waverton! You lie stupidly. Your bullies,
+_mordieu_, blunder in your own style. It would not content them to murder
+Mr. Boyce. They must have his father too. They could not do their
+business quietly nor finish it. The rogue Ben was caught and the Colonel
+has only a hole in his shoulder. You may know that he is not the man to
+forgive you for it. So, Waverton. You have suborned murder and furnished
+evidence to hang you for it. You must meddle with Colonel Boyce to make
+sure that his Whiggish party who hold the government shall not spare you.
+You set every Jacobite against you when you struck at Harry. However
+things go now there'll be those in power urgent to hang you. Go home and
+wait till the runners take you off to Newgate. March!"
+
+Mr. O'Connor opened the door with alacrity.
+
+"I am not afraid of you," Waverton cried. "And you, madame, you, the
+widow--be sure if I am attacked, your loose treachery shall not win you
+off. What I have done--you know well it was done for you and in commerce
+with you." Mr. O'Connor took him by the arm. "Don't presume to touch me!"
+he called out, trembling with rage. Mr. O'Connor propelled him out.
+
+"I believe Patrick will cut the coat off his back," said McBean pensively
+and then laughed a little. He brushed his hand over his face and stood up
+and marched on Alison. "Now for you," he said. "I beg leave of the
+company." He made them a bow and waved them out of the room.
+
+"Sir, Mr. Boyce?" Mrs. Weston said faintly.
+
+"Madame, Mr. Boyce is not dead. He lies wounded. I make no apology,
+_pardieu_! It is imperative to frighten the Waverton out of the
+country--since he would not stand up to be killed. You, madame," he
+turned frowning upon Alison, "you must have him no more in your
+neighbourhood."
+
+Alison bent her head. Mr. Hadley came forward. "Captain McBean, you take
+too much upon yourself."
+
+"I'll answer for it at my leisure, sir."
+
+"Pray go, Charles," Alison said gently. So they went out, Mrs.
+Weston upon Susan's arm, and Captain McBean and Alison were left
+alone, the fierce little lean man stretching every inch of him
+against her rich beauty.
+
+"You do me some wrong, sir," Alison said.
+
+"Is it possible?" McBean's chest swelled to the sneer.
+
+"Pray, sir, don't scold. It passes me by. Nay, I cannot answer you. I
+have no defence, I believe. Be sure that you can say nothing to make my
+hurt worse."
+
+"How long shall we go on talking about you, madame?"
+
+Alison flushed dark, and turned away and muttered something.
+
+"What now?" McBean said. In another moment he saw that she was crying.
+Some satisfaction perhaps, no pity, softened his stare....
+
+She turned, making no pretence to hide her tears. "I beg of you--take me
+to Mr. Boyce."
+
+"I said, madame, Mr. Boyce is not yet dead." The sharp, precise voice
+spared her nothing. "I do not know whether he will live." Alison gave a
+choking cry. "I do not now know whether he would desire to live."
+
+"What do you mean?" A madness of fear, of love perhaps, distorted her
+face.
+
+"You well know. When I rode out this morning, I had it in mind to kill
+the Waverton and conduct you to Mr. Boyce. But I did not guess that
+Waverton would refuse to be killed like a gentleman or that I should find
+you engaged in the rogue's infamy."
+
+"But that is his lie! Ah, you must know that it is a lie. You heard how
+he turned on me, and his vileness."
+
+"_Bien_, you have played fast and loose with him. I allow that. It does
+not commend you to me, madame."
+
+"I'll not bear it," Alison cried wildly. "Oh, sir, you have no right. Mr.
+Boyce would never endure you should treat me so."
+
+"_Dieu de dieu_! Would you trade upon Harry's gentleness now? Aye,
+madame, he would not treat you so, _mordieu_. He would see nothing, know
+nothing, believe nothing. And let you make a mock of him again. But if
+you please, I stand between him and you."
+
+"You have no right," Alison muttered.
+
+"It is you who have put me there. You, madame, when you played him false
+with this Waverton."
+
+"That is a lie--a lie," she cried.
+
+"Oh, content you. You are all chastity. I do not doubt it. But you drove
+Harry away from you. You admitted your Waverton to intimacy--you let him
+hope--believe--bah, what does it matter? You were in his secrets. You
+knew he put bullies upon Harry. Now he has failed and you are in a fright
+and want your Harry again. Permit me, madame, not to admire you."
+
+"What do you want of me?" Alison said miserably.
+
+"I cannot tell. I want to know what I am to do with Harry. And you--you
+are another wound."
+
+Alison shuddered. "For God's sake take me to him. I will content him."
+
+"Yes. For how long?"
+
+"Oh, I deserve it all. I cannot answer you. And yet you are wrong. I am
+not such as you think me. I have never had anything but contempt for Mr.
+Waverton. If he were not what he is, he must have known that. He came to
+me after I left Harry. He told me that he was having Harry spied upon.
+The moment he was gone I wrote to Harry and gave him warning and begged
+him come back to me. He has never answered me. And I--oh--am I to speak
+of Harry and me?"
+
+"If you could I should not much believe you. From the first, madame, I
+have believed you."
+
+"It was I who drove him away from me. I have been miserable for it ever
+since. I humbled myself."
+
+Captain McBean held up his hand. "I still believe you. Pray, order
+your coach."
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"He lies at his father's lodging. Observe, madame: I have said--he is
+not yet dead. Whether he lives rests, I believe to God, upon what you
+may be to him."
+
+"Then he will be well enough," she sobbed as she laughed.
+
+"Oh! I believe in your power," says McBean with a twist of a smile.
+
+She stayed a moment by the door and flung her arms wide. "What I am--it
+is all for him."
+
+Captain McBean left alone, took snuff. "A splendid wild cat--and that
+mouse of a Harry," says he.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+REMORSE OF COLONEL BOYCE
+
+
+Captain McBean was strutting to and fro for the benefit of his impatience
+when Mr. O'Connor returned to him. "Patrick, you look morose. Had he the
+legs of you?"
+
+"He had not," says O'Connor, nursing his hand. "But he had a
+beautiful nose. Sure, it was harder than you would think. And I have
+sprained my thumb."
+
+"What, did he fight?"
+
+"He did not--saving the tongue of him. But I had broke my whip upon him,
+so I broke his nose to be even. Egad, he was beautiful before and behind.
+He cannot show this long while. Neither behind nor before, faith. What
+will he do, d'ye think?"
+
+"Oh Lud, he'll not face it out. He would dream of hangmen. He'll take the
+waters. He'll go the grand tour. D'ye know, Patrick, there's a masterly
+touch in old Boyce. To choose that oaf for his decoy at Pontoise! Who
+could guess at danger in him? No wonder Charles Middleton saw no guile!
+Yet, you observe, the creature's full of venom."
+
+"He bleeds like a pig," says Mr. O'Connor. "What will we be waiting
+for, sir?"
+
+"The lady."
+
+"She goes to Harry? Oh, he's the lucky one. What a Venus it is!"
+
+"Aye, aye. She should have married you, Patrick. You would have
+ridden her."
+
+"Ah now, don't destroy me with envy and desires," says Mr. O'Connor.
+"But, sure, there was another, a noble fat girl. Will she be bespoke?"
+
+"She belongs to the one-armed hero."
+
+"Maybe she could do with another. There's enough of her for two. Oh, come
+away, sir, before I danger my soul."
+
+They heard the wheels of the coach and marched out. Alison was coming
+downstairs with Mrs. Weston. "What now?" says McBean glowering. "Do you
+need a duenna to watch you with your husband?"
+
+"Madame is Harry's mother, sir," Alison said.
+
+For once Captain McBean was disconcerted. "A thousand pardons," says he,
+and with much ceremony put Mrs. Weston into the coach.
+
+As they rode after it, "You fight too fast, sir," says O'Connor with a
+grin. "I have remarked it before."
+
+Captain McBean 'was still something out of countenance. "Who would have
+thought he had a mother here?" he growled.
+
+"Oh, faith, you did not suppose the old Colonel brought him forth--like
+Jove plucking Minerva out of his swollen head."
+
+"I did not, Patrick, you loon. But I did not guess his mother would be
+here with this gorgeous madame wife."
+
+"Fie now, is it the Lord God don't advise you of everything? 'Tis an
+indignity, faith."
+
+Captain McBean swore at him in a friendly way, and they jogged on
+through the Islington lanes....
+
+So after a while it happened that Colonel Boyce, raising a hot and angry
+head at the creature who dared open his bedroom door, found himself
+looking at Mrs. Weston. "Ods my life! Kate! What a pox do you want
+here?" says he.
+
+"You are hurt. I thought you would want nursing."
+
+"I do not want nursing, damme. How did you hear of the business?"
+
+"That Scotch captain rode out to tell us."
+
+"Od burn the fellow! Humph. No. Maybe he is no fool, neither. Us? Who is
+us, Kate? Mrs. Alison?"
+
+"She is gone up to Harry now."
+
+Colonel Boyce whistled. "Come up and we will show you a thing, eh? That
+is Scripture, Kate. You used to have your mouth full of Scripture."
+
+"You put me out of favour with that."
+
+"Let it be, can't you? What, they will make it up, then?"
+
+"Does that hurt you? Indeed, they would never have quarrelled but for
+you."
+
+"Oh, aye, blame it on me. I am the devil, faith. Come, ma'am, what have I
+done to the pretty dears? She's a warm piece and Harry's a milksop, and
+that's the whole of it."
+
+"With your tricks you made her think Harry was such as you are. And that
+wife you married came to Alison and told her that Harry was base-born."
+
+"Rot the shrew! She must meddle must she? Egad, she was always a blunder,
+Madame Rachel." He swore at her fully. "Bah, what though? Why should
+jolly Alison heed her?"
+
+"Alison knows everything now. I told her."
+
+"Egad, you go beyond me, Kate. You that made me swear none should ever
+know the boy was yours. You go and blab it out! Damn you for a woman."
+
+The woman looked at him strangely. "You have done that indeed," she said.
+
+"No, that's too bad. I vow it is." For once Colonel Boyce was stung. He
+fell silent and fidgeted, and made a long arm for the herb water by his
+bed. Mrs. Weston gave it him. "Let be, can't you?" he cried, and drank
+all the same. "Eh, Kate that came over my guard.... She has made you
+suffer, the shrew. Egad, I could whip her through the town for it."
+
+"Yes. Whip her."
+
+"Oh, what would you have?" Colonel Boyce shifted under a rueful air,
+strange in him. "I am what I am. I have had no luck in women. She was a
+blunder. And you--you have paid to say of me what you will. Egad, you
+have the chance now."
+
+"Are you in pain?"
+
+"Be hanged to pain! Don't gloat, Kate. That's not like you, at least."
+
+"Oh, I am sorry. I am sorry."
+
+"No, nor that neither. Damme, what should I be with you pitying me? Let
+it be. Come, you want something of me, I suppose. Something for your
+Harry, eh? What is it?"
+
+"I want nothing but that he should live. He has no need of you or me."
+
+"Oh Lud, he will live. But you were always full of fears."
+
+"Yes. You used to say that long ago."
+
+Colonel Boyce winced again. "Eh, you get in your thrusts, Kate, I swear I
+did what I could to save him."
+
+"I could not have borne to come to you else."
+
+"Humph. I see no good in your coming. There's little comfort for you or
+me in seeing each other. I suppose it's your damned duty."
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"Oh Lud, then begone and let's have done with it all."
+
+"I want to stay till you are well."
+
+"Aye, faith, it's comfortable to see me on my back and helpless."
+
+Mrs. Weston did not answer for a moment. She was busy with setting his
+table in order. "I want to have some right somewhere. She is with Harry."
+
+"By God, Kate, you're a good soul," Colonel Boyce cried.
+
+"I am not. I am jealous of her," Mrs. Weston said with a sob.
+
+"Does Harry know of you?"
+
+"What does it matter? He'll not care now."
+
+"Kate--come here, child."
+
+"No. No. I am not crying," Mrs. Weston said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+HARRY WAKES UP
+
+
+Harry lay asleep when Alison came into his room.
+
+She made sure of that and sat herself beside him to wait. It was not, you
+know, a thing which she did well. She looked down at him gravely.
+Afterwards Harry would accuse her that what first she felt was how little
+and miserable a man she had taken to herself.
+
+He lay there very still and his breath hardly stirred him. Indeed, the
+surgery of Mr. Rolfe had bound him up so tightly that he was in armour
+from waist to neck. After a moment, she started and trembled and bent
+over him and put her cheek close to his lips. She felt his breath and
+rose again slowly almost as pale as he. That cheating fear had stabbed
+cruelly, and still it would not let her be. His face was so thin, so
+white and utterly tired. The life was drained out of him....
+
+She sat beside him, still but for the beat of her bosom, and it seemed
+that the consciousness in her was falling from a height or galloping
+against the wind. She seemed to try to stop and could not.
+
+She tried to change the fashion of her thought and had no power in that
+either. It was a strange, half-angry, half-contemptuous pity that moved
+in her, and a fever of impatience. He was wicked to be struck down so,
+rent, impotent. Why must the wretch go plunging out into the world and
+measure himself against these swashbuckling conspirators? He had no
+equipment for it. He was fated to end it with disaster. Faith, it was a
+cruel folly to throw himself away and drag up her life by the roots as he
+fell. She needed him--needed him quick and eager, and there he lay, a
+shrunken thing that could use only gentleness, help, a tedious, trivial
+service like a child.
+
+He was humiliated, a condition not to be borne in her man. As she watched
+him, she saw Geoffrey Waverton rise between them, blusterous and
+menacing, and his lustiness mocked at the still, helpless body. But on
+that all other feeling was lost in a fever of hate of Mr. Waverton. He
+was branded with every contemptible sin that she knew, she ached to have
+him suffer, and (unaware of the contusions and extravasations
+administered by Mr. O'Connor) tried to console herself by recalling the
+ignominious condition of Geoffrey in the hands of the truculent gentlemen
+at Highgate. Bah, the coward was dishonoured for ever, at least. He would
+never dare show his face in town or country. How could he? Mr. Hadley
+would spit him like a joint. The good Charles! She found some consolation
+in the memory of Mr. Hadley's sardonic contempt. Nay, but the others,
+that fire-eating little Scotsman and his lank friend, they were of the
+same scornful mind about Mr. Waverton. His blusterous bullying went for
+nothing with them but to call for more disdain. They had no doubt that he
+cut a miserable figure, that it was he who was humiliated in the affair.
+And so all men would think, indeed. It was only a fool of a woman who
+could be imposed upon by his brag, only a mean, detestable woman who
+could suppose Harry defeated.
+
+Why, Harry must needs have done nobly to enlist these men on his side. He
+was nothing to Captain McBean, nothing but what he had done, and yet
+McBean took up his cause with a perfect devotion, cared for nothing but
+to punish his enemies, and to assure his safety. Faith, the little man
+would be as glad to thrash her as to overthrow Master Geoffrey. He had
+come near it, indeed. She smiled a little. The absurd imagination was not
+unpleasant. Monsieur was welcome to beat her if it would bring Harry any
+comfort. Aye, it would be very good for her. She would be glad to show
+Harry the stripes. Nay, but it was Harry who should beat her--only he
+never would. And these fantastics were swept away in a wave of
+tenderness.
+
+Mr. Harry was not good at making others suffer. He left it to his wife,
+poor lad, and she--she had done it greedily. Well. There was to be an end
+of that. Pray God he might ever be strong enough to hurt her. She bent
+over him in this queer mood, and her eyes were dim, and she kissed him,
+and whispered to herself--to him. Yes. She must make him hurt her. She
+must have pain of him to bear....
+
+Harry slept on. She began to caress his pillow, and crooned over him like
+a mother with her child, and found herself blushing and was still and
+silent again. Indeed, she was detestable. To make a show of fondling
+after having driven him to the edge of death! To chatter and flutter
+about him when he had no more than strength enough for sleep! Why, this
+was the very way for a light o' love. And, indeed, she was no better,
+wanting him only for her pleasure, for what he would give, watching
+greedily till he should be fit to serve her turn again. Yes, that was the
+only way of love Mrs. Alison understood.
+
+It was some satisfaction to scold herself, to make herself believe that
+she was vile. For she wanted to suffer, she wanted to be humbled. Not so
+much for the comfort of penance, not even for the luxury of sensation
+which makes self-torture pleasure, but that she might be sure of
+realizing her sins against the love which was now in command of all her
+being, and go on to serve it with a clean devotion. One thing only was
+worth doing, in one thing only could there be honour and joy, to make him
+welcome her and have delight in her... And so she fell among dreams....
+
+She saw something glitter on the table by the bed, and idly put out her
+hand for it. She found herself looking at the diamonds of the Pretender's
+watch. How did Harry come to such a gorgeous toy? J.R., the diamonds
+wrote. Who was J.R.?
+
+"Alison," Harry said.
+
+She started, stared at him, and stood up. His eyes were open, and he
+frowned a little.
+
+"Alison? It is you?" he said, and rubbed at his eyes.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Why have you come?"
+
+She fell on her knees by the bed. "Oh, Harry, Harry," she murmured, and
+hid her face.
+
+"Is it true?"
+
+"I will be true," she sobbed.
+
+"I want to see you."
+
+She showed him her face pale and wet with tears....
+
+After a while, "Why have you come?" he said again.
+
+"Harry, I knew about Geoffrey. He told me."
+
+"You--knew?"
+
+I wrote you warning. I begged you come back to me. Oh, Harry, Harry, you
+are proud."
+
+"I had no warning. Proud? Oh, yes, I am proud. What were you with
+Geoffrey?"
+
+"Harry! Oh, Harry! No, it's fair. Well. I tried to trick him for your
+sake to save you."
+
+"I am obliged for your care of me."
+
+She cried out "Ah, God," and hid her face again. Harry lay still and
+white as death.... "Oh, Harry, you torture me," she murmured. "You have
+the right. No man but you has ever had a thought of me. Harry--I want to
+pray you--oh, I want to lie at your feet. Only believe in me--use
+me--take me again."
+
+"I am a fool," Harry said, and she looked up and saw that he, too, was
+crying. "Oh, curse the wound," he said hoarsely. "Egad, I am damned
+feeble, child."
+
+"I love you, I love you," she sobbed, and pressed her face to his....
+"Oh, Harry, I am wicked."
+
+She raised herself. "You are hurt, and I wear you out."
+
+"That's a brag." Harry smiled faintly, "It takes more than you can give
+to kill me, ma'am."
+
+"Ah, don't."
+
+"Stand up and let me look at you." Which she did, and made parade of her
+beauty, smiling through tears. "Aye, you're a splendid woman," and his
+eyes brightened.
+
+She made him a curtsy. "It's at your will, sir." "Yes, and why? Why? What
+made you come back?"
+
+"My dear!" She held out her arms to him. "I have wanted you ever since I
+lost you. And now--now I am nothing unless you want me."
+
+"Oh, be easy. There is plenty of you, and I want it all."
+
+"Can you say so? Ah, Harry, you have known enough bad that's me, cruel
+and greedy and hard and cheating. I have always taken, and given
+nothing back."
+
+"Damn your humilities," Harry said.
+
+"Oh, sir, but I want them, my new humilities. I have nothing else to
+cover my nakedness."
+
+"You look better without them, ma'am."
+
+"Fie, I will stop your mouth." But it was a cup of herb water that she
+offered him instead of a kiss.
+
+"You are a cheat," Harry spluttered. "You presume on my infirmities."
+
+"No. No. I have made you talk too much. You must be still and rest
+again."
+
+"Burn your maternal care! I have hardly seen you yet a minute."
+
+"A minute! Oh!" She looked at the jewelled watch. "Aye, sir, an hour.
+And what's this pretty toy?"
+
+Harry laughed. "Why, now I have you. Sure, ma'am, it's a love token."
+
+"I shall go away, sir."
+
+"Not till you come by the secret. I know you."
+
+His ear was pinched. "J.R. Who is J.R., sir?"
+
+"Jemima Regina. A queen of beauty, ma'am. She fell in love with my nose.
+And offered me a thousand pound for it."
+
+"Harry! I am going to say good night."
+
+"Hear the truth, Alison. Do you remember--you told me I was born to be a
+highwayman--my stand-and-deliver stare--my--"
+
+"Oh! Don't play so. I was a fiend when I taunted you so."
+
+"Why, child, it's nothing. Come then--J.R., it's Jacobus Rex, the poor
+lad, Prince James, who will never be a king, God help him. He gave me
+that for the memory of some little service I did him. McBean brought the
+toy to-day."
+
+Alison nodded. "I will have that story from Captain McBean, sir. You tell
+stories mighty ill, do you know--highwayman. Yes, Harry, you are that.
+You pillage us all. Love, honour, you win it from all. And I--I am the
+last to know you."
+
+"Bah, you will never be a wife," Harry said. "You have too much
+imagination. But you make a mighty fine lover, my dear."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Highwayman, by H. C. Bailey
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Highwayman, by H. C. Bailey
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: The Highwayman
+
+Author: H. C. Bailey
+
+Posting Date: November 23, 2011 [EBook #9749]
+Release Date: January, 2006
+First Posted: October 15, 2003
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HIGHWAYMAN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan and PG
+Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ THE HIGHWAYMAN
+
+ BY
+
+ H. C. BAILEY
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. THE COMPLETE HERO
+
+ II. THE HOUSE OF WAVERTON
+
+ III. A MAN OF MANY WORLDS
+
+ IV. A GENTLEMAN'S PURSE
+
+ V. THE WORLD'S A MIRACLE
+
+ VI. HARRY IS NOT GRATEFUL
+
+ VII. GENEROSITY OF A FATHER
+
+ VIII. MISS LAMBOURNE LOOKS SIDEWAYS
+
+ IX. ANGER OF AN UNCLE
+
+ X. YOUNG BLOOD
+
+ XI. ABSENCE OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+ XII. IN HASTE
+
+ XIII. DISTRESS OF A MOTHER
+
+ XIV. SPECTATORS OF PARADISE
+
+ XV. MRS. BOYCE
+
+ XVI. THE AFFAIR OF SIR GEORGE
+
+ XVII. RETURN OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+ XVIII. HARRY IS DISMISSED
+
+ XIX. ALISON FINDS FRIENDS
+
+ XX. RETURN OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+ XXI. CONSOLATIONS BY A FATHER
+
+ XXII. TWO'S COMPANY
+
+ XXIII. THE HOUSE IN KENSINGTON
+
+ XXIV. QUEEN ANNE IS DEAD
+
+ XXV. SAUVE QUI PEUT
+
+ XXVI. REVELATIONS
+
+ XXVII. VIRTUE IS ITS OWN REWARD
+
+ XXVIII. IN THE TAP
+
+ XXIX. ALISON KNEELS
+
+ XXX. EMOTIONS BY MR. WAVERTON
+
+ XXXI. CAPTAIN McBEAN TAKES HORSE
+
+ XXXII. PERPLEXITIES OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+ XXXIII. REMORSE OF COLONEL BOYCE
+
+ XXXIV. HARRY WAKES UP
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE COMPLETE HERO
+
+
+Harry Boyce addressed Queen Anne in glittering verse. She was not
+present. She had, however, no cause to regret that, for he was tramping
+the Great North Road at four miles by the hour--a pace far beyond the
+capacity of Her Majesty's legs; and his verses were Latin--a language not
+within the capacity of Her Majesty's mind. Her absence gave him no grief.
+In all his twenty-four years he could not remember being grieved by
+anyone's absence. His general content was never diminished at finding
+himself alone. He chose the Queen as the subject of his verses merely
+because he did not admire her. She appeared to him then, as to later
+generations, a woman ineffectual and without interest; a dull woman
+physically, mentally, and perhaps morally; just the woman upon whom it
+would be hardest to make an encomium of any splendour. So he was heartily
+ingenious over his alcaics, and relished them.
+
+From this you may divine much that you have to know about the soul of
+Harry Boyce. It was more given to mockery than enthusiasms, apter to
+criticisms than devotion, not very gentle nor very kind, and so quite
+satisfied with itself and by itself. To be sure, it was yet only
+twenty-four.
+
+You discover also other things less fundamental. He was something of a
+scholar, as scholarship was reckoned in those placid days. He had even
+some Greek--more than Mr. Pope and quite as much as Mr. Addison. His
+Latin verses would have brought him a fellowship at Merton if he had
+been willing to take Holy Orders, "I may take them indeed; but how
+believe they have been given me?" quoth he to the Warden with a tilt of
+one eyebrow. Whereat the Warden, aghast, wrote him off as a youth
+unreasonable, impracticable, and impish. Many others had the same
+opinion of Harry Boyce before the world was done with him. Few of them
+saw in his antics the uncertain spasms of too tender a conscience. But
+you must judge.
+
+Of course he was poor. He could only boast a bob wig, a base thing,
+which, for all the show it made, might have been a man's own hair. He
+wore no sword. His hat lacked feather and lace. His coat and breeches
+were but black drugget, shiny at each corner of him and rusty everywhere.
+His stockings were worsted, and darned even on his excellent calves. His
+shoes had strings where buckles should have been, and mere black
+heels--and low heels at that. As you know, he could walk at a round pace
+with them--a preposterous, vulgar thing. There was nothing in him to give
+this poverty a romantical air. To be sure, he had admirable legs, but the
+rest was neither good nor bad. He was of the middle size and a wholesome
+complexion. You would look at him long and see nothing rare enough to be
+worth looking at. If you looked longer yet you might begin to be
+surprised: his so ordinary face was extraordinary in its lack of
+expression.
+
+The man who owned it must be either very dull of heart and mind, or
+self-contained and of self-control beyond the common. But whatever the
+heart might be, no one ever took the eyes for the eyes of a fool. They
+were keen, alert, perpetually on guard. There is a letter extant--it was
+indeed a dear friend who wrote it--which mocks at Harry for his "curst
+stand-and-deliver stare." But it is a queer thing that most men had to
+know Harry Boyce a long time before they remarked that his eyes were not
+quite of the same colour. The common English grey-green-blue was in both
+of them, but one had a bluer glint than the other. The oddity, when it
+was discovered, seemed to make the challenge of the eyes more defiant and
+more baffling, as though they gleamed from the shadow of a mask.
+
+Not that anyone cared yet whether he wore a mask or his soul in that
+placid, ordinary face. Who should care a pinch of snuff for "a scholar
+just from his college broke loose" with a penny farthing in his pocket,
+who had to pioneer young gentlemen through their Horace and their Tully
+for his bed and board? When you meet him, Harry Boyce was happy in having
+caught for his pupil a young fellow who had not merely money but brains,
+and so sublime a condescension that Harry was not sent away from table
+with the parson when the puddings came. Mr. Geoffrey Waverton was pleased
+to have a value for him, and defended him from his natural duty of being
+gentleman usher to Lady Waverton. So, Mr. Waverton having taken horse,
+Harry was free to go walking.
+
+It was late in a wet autumn, and all the clay of Middlesex slippery as
+butter and, withal, affectionate as warm glue. Harry kept to the highway.
+Though its miles of mud and water were, on the surface, even worse than
+the too green meadows or the gleaming brown furrows of plough land, a
+careful man could count upon its letting him go no further than knee
+deep. When he came to Whetstone, Harry's feet were brown, shapeless,
+weighty masses, but he had not lost either shoe, and he was still in
+hopes of reaching Barnet and a pint of small beer before it was time to
+struggle back. At the worst a dry throat and wet legs were a cheap price
+for escaping the voice of Lady Waverton, who, in the afternoons, read the
+romances of Mlle. de Scudery aloud.
+
+He could see the tufts of smoke above Barnet and its church on the
+hill-top. He was winding down to the bottom of the valley from which that
+hill rises, when eloquence arrested him. He may at other times have heard
+profanity as copious, but never profanity so vehement or at such speed.
+The orator was a woman.
+
+Harry stood to listen with critical admiration. Madame mixed the ugly and
+the pleasant rarely; she made a charming grotesque. Her mind was very far
+from nice and provided her with amazing images; but she had a pretty,
+womanly voice, and hard though she drove it, it would not break to one
+ugly note. Disgusting epithets, mean threats, poured out in mellow
+music. Harry splashed on round the corner. He was eager to see her.
+
+In the morass at the cross-lanes by the green, a coach was stuck--a coach
+of splendour. It was a huge thing as big as a room, half glass, half gold
+and garter blue, and it swayed luxuriously on its great springs. Six
+horses heaved at it in vain with great splashing and squelching, and a
+whole company of servants, some mounted, some afoot, struggled with them.
+
+The profane woman had half her body and two gesticulating arms out of the
+coach window. She was plainly neither a drab nor in liquor. Harry halted
+out of range of the splashes to examine and enjoy her. She had been
+comely, and still could hold a man's eye with her curves of neck and
+bosom. The piquant features must have been adorable before they sharpened
+and her cheeks faded and the lines came. Her abundant hair must once have
+been gold, and was not yet altogether grey.
+
+"You filthy slug," said she. "Samuel! Stand to it, I say. Damme, I'll
+have a whip about that loose belly of yours! Now pull, you swine, pull.
+Odso, flog the black horse. You, devil broil your bones, lay on to him.
+What now? Od rot you, Antony, you'll see no money this month, you--" She
+became unprintable. As she took breath again, she saw Harry Boyce calmly
+contemplative. "You dog, who bade you stand and gape? Go, give a hand
+there, I say."
+
+Harry touched his hat. "By your leave, ma'am, I am too busy admiring
+you."
+
+"William, put that rogue into the ditch," said she.
+
+All this while a man in the coach had been writing, calmly intent upon
+his tablets as though there was not a sound or a rage within a mile. He
+now stood up, and, while his lady was still execrating through one door
+of the coach, he opened the other and came out. Two of the servants,
+obedient to the lady's oaths, were approaching Harry, who waited them
+with calm and a swinging stick. The man waved his hand at them and they
+turned tail. But he had no further interest in Harry. He stood to watch
+the struggles of his horses and his men. He was of some height, and,
+though past middle age, bore himself with singular grace and vigour. He
+had still a rarely handsome face--too handsome, by far, for Harry's
+taste. The features were of an impossible, absurd perfection. There was
+something superhuman or fatuous, at least something vastly irritating, in
+his assured calm, his air of blandly confident supremacy.
+
+He walked on to the leaders and, with a gesture and a word, set the whole
+team pulling at an angle. Meanwhile the lady had earnestly continued her
+abusive orders, but none of the servants now professed to heed her.
+Dragging the horses on, or labouring hand and shoulder at the wheels,
+they were now effective, and they watched the man's eye as though it were
+an inspiration. Wondering why he did, Harry, too, put his weight on a
+wheel. The horses found a footing in the mire, the coach was dragged on
+to the higher, firmer ground beyond.
+
+My lady subsided. The man came back to the coach and touched his hat to
+Harry. "I'm obliged for your help, sir," he said, and climbed in. They
+drove away towards London.
+
+As the servants swung to their saddles, "Who's your obscene lady?"
+said Harry.
+
+"What, don't you know him, bumpkin?"
+
+"She will never be him. Her shape is all provocative she."
+
+This humble wit was not remarked. His ignorance occupied them, "Oh Lud,
+not to know the Old Corporal!"
+
+One of Harry's eyebrows went up. "That the Old Corporal? Faith, I am
+sorry for him."
+
+He received a handful of mud in his face. With a cry of "Rot your
+impudence," they splashed off.
+
+While he wiped the mud out of his eyes, Harry felt a very comfortable
+self-satisfaction. It was agreeable to pity His Grace of Marlborough. For
+the Duke of Marlborough was still the greatest man in Europe, the
+greatest man in the world--credibly the greatest man that ever lived. A
+pleasant fool, to marry such a wife and to keep her.
+
+Harry Boyce at no time in his life had much admiration for human
+eminence. In this, his hungry youth, he was set upon despising rank and
+power, great fame and pure virtue, as no more than the luck of fools. He
+would always atone by finding sympathy and excuses for any rogue's
+roguery. Highly fortified in this faith by the exhibition of
+Marlborough's matrimonial happiness, he trudged back.
+
+The delay over the coach had left him no time for small ale at Barnet.
+Mr. Waverton, though amiably pleased to deliver Harry from attendance on
+his mother, required constant attendance on himself. He would be, in his
+superb way, disagreeable if Harry were not in waiting when he was wanted
+to take a hand at ombre. Harry liked Mr. Waverton well enough, as well as
+he liked anybody, but found him in the part of offended majesty
+intolerable. So there was some hard walking back to Whetstone. On the way
+his temper was not sweetened by two horsemen at the gallop who gave him a
+shower-bath of mud.
+
+As he came through the village, behold another coach labouring up to the
+high road from Totteridge lane. This had but four horses, no array of
+outriders, no gilt splendours. It was a sober, old-fashioned thing, and
+it rumbled on at a sober gait. "Some city ma'am," Harry sneered at it,
+"much the same shape as her horses."
+
+But half an hour after he saw it again. Where the road was dark through a
+thicket it had come to a stand. "Oh Lud," said Harry, "here's more fair
+madames in the mud. They may sit on it till they hatch it for me." But he
+wondered a little. It was indeed nothing very strange in such an autumn
+to find a coach stuck upon the highway. But two for one afternoon, two so
+near was a generous provision. And hereabouts, where the road ran level
+and high, was a strange place for a coach to choose to stick. "Madame
+seems to be a gross girl," quoth Harry.
+
+And then he saw what made him step out. There were two men on horseback
+by the halted coach--two men with black upon their faces which must be
+masks, and that in their hands which must be pistols.
+
+"Egad, the road's joyful to-night," said Harry. "And two and one make
+three," and he began to run, and arrived.
+
+Of the two highwaymen one was dismounted. The other, holding his friend's
+horse, held also a pistol at the coachman's head, muttering lurid threats
+of what he would do if the coachman drove on. The dismounted man was half
+inside the coach where two women shrank from him, and thence his
+blusterous voice proceeded, "Now, my blowens, hand over, or I'll rummage
+you. A skinny purse? Come, now, you've more than that. What's under your
+legs, fatty? Stand up, I say. Ay, hand out the jewel-box. Now, my tackle,
+what ha' you got aboard? What's under that pretty tucker?" He threw the
+jewel-case out into the mud and, leaning across one woman, reached with a
+fat, foul hand to the younger bosom beyond.
+
+He was prevented by a whistle and a cry, "Behind you, Ben." His companion
+announced the arrival of Harry.
+
+Ben came out of the coach with an oath and thrust his pistol into Harry's
+face. "Good e'en to you, bully. Now cut and run or I'll drill you. Via,
+my poppet."
+
+Harry looked along the pistol and stood fast. The highwayman was no
+bigger than he, and bloated. "I am studying arithmetic, Benjamin," said
+he.
+
+"Burn your eyes, be off with you; run while you may."
+
+Harry laughed and swung his stick at the mud. "But, I wonder, is it
+addition or subtraction? Is it two and one makes three, or--"
+
+"Kick the bumpkin into the ditch, Ben," the man on horseback advised.
+
+"Off with you," Benjamin thrust him back, and in the act the pistol
+wavered. Harry slashed with his stick at the pistol hand. A yell, an
+oath, and the shot came together--a shot which went into the mud and sent
+it spattering about them. Harry sprang away from Benjamin's rush and
+brought his stick down on the hindquarters of the horses. They plunged
+forward, and the man in the saddle, wrestling with them, let off another
+aimless shot. Harry dodged round them and lashed them again, and they
+bolted down the road. He returned to fling himself upon Benjamin, who was
+ramming another charge into his pistol. "It seems to be subtraction,
+Benjamin," said he, embracing the man fervently. "One from two leaves
+one," and they swayed together, and he found Benjamin's body soft.
+
+Benjamin, panting, cursed him. "Od rot you, why must you meddle, bully?
+What's your will, burn you? Ha' done now, and--" Benjamin went down on
+his back in the mud with Harry on top of him. "Ugh! What's the game,
+bully?"
+
+"I think you call it the high toby," said Harry delicately and began to
+sing to the tune of a catch:
+
+"Oh, three merry men, three merry men, three highwaymen were we.
+You in a quag and he on a nag and I on top of the three."
+
+"Lord love you, are you on the road?" Benjamin cried. "Why, rot you,
+did you want a share then? You should ha' said so, bully. Come on now, my
+dear, let's up. We do be gentlemen and share fair enough."
+
+"I warrant you I am having my share," Harry laughed; "and I like it very
+well. But oh, Benjamin, there would have been nought to share if I had
+not come up. No fun at all, Benjamin." He wrenched the pistol away. "'Tis
+I have made the business joyous. You are a dull fellow by yourself."
+
+"Rot you," said Benjamin frankly. "When Ned comes back he'll shoot you
+like vermin."
+
+On which they both heard horses, and both, according to their
+abilities--Benjamin in the mud, and Harry keeping a sure hold of
+him--wriggled to look for them.
+
+Harry laughed. It was certainly not a returning Ned. These horses came
+from the other way, and there were four of them and each had a rider. "I
+fear your Ned will come too late, Benjamin--if, by the grace of God, he
+comes at all." So said Harry, chuckling, and to his amazement Benjamin
+also laughed. Why should Benjamin find consolation in the coming of this
+_posse_? It was not credible that they could be allies of his. Highwaymen
+did not work in gangs of half a dozen.
+
+The four horsemen, urged by the shots or by what they saw, came at a
+gallop and reined up almost on top of Harry and Benjamin. One of them, a
+little man with a lean, brown face, called out, "By your leave, sir!
+What's this?"
+
+"It's a rude fellow, sir," Harry said. "I fear a lewd fellow. By trade a
+highwayman. The highway, indeed, is his life's love, his adored mistress.
+Observe how he cleaves to it." He compressed Benjamin, who squelched,
+into the mud, and rose, standing on Benjamin's chest and stomach.
+
+Benjamin groaned, and the eyes behind his mask rolled towards the little
+man.
+
+"Filthy dog," that little man said with sincere disgust. "Can I serve
+you, sir?" he touched his hat to the women in the coach.
+
+"Why, Benjamin has a friend, one Ned. Ned hath a pistol or so and two
+horses which have bolted with him. But he may yet persuade them to bring
+back his pistols and him. Now, if you would be so good, it would be
+convenient in you to ride on and destroy Ned."
+
+"It's a pleasure, sir," the little man showed his teeth. "And the fat
+rogue there, can I help you with him? Shall we take him on to the
+constables?"
+
+"Oh, I thank you, but my Benjamin is docile. I'll e'en tie him up with
+his garters, and all will be well."
+
+The little man scowled at Benjamin. "I shall hope to be at his hanging,"
+he said incisively. "Sir, your most obedient! Ladies!" he bobbed at them
+and rode off, his three companions close about him in eager talk.
+
+As they went, Benjamin let out a cry of anguish: "Captain!"
+
+The little man and his company used their spurs.
+
+Harry looked at their hurry and then down at Benjamin.
+
+"Now why did you call him that, my Benjamin?" said he. "Indeed, why did
+you call on him at all?"
+
+From behind the mask Benjamin's prominent eyes stared sullenly. He
+said nothing.
+
+Harry shook his head. "I feel that I do not know you, Benjamin. I must
+see more of you," With which he fell upon the man again and twitched
+off the mask. The wig came with it. Benjamin was revealed the owner of
+a big, bald, shiny head with a face which was puffed and purple. "You
+were right, Benjamin," said Harry sadly, "You were kind. To wear a mask
+was charity, nay, decency--what breeches are to other men. That obese
+and flaccid nose--pah, let us talk of something else." He lay upon
+Benjamin and tugged at his sword-belt. Benjamin writhed and groaned.
+His sword was caught underneath him, the hilt deep in the small of his
+back. Harry hauled the sword-belt off at last and gripped at Benjamin's
+wrists. He began to struggle again. "Do not be troublesome or I'll tap
+the beer on your brain. So." He hauled the belt taut about the fighting
+arms and made all fast. Then he sat himself on Benjamin's legs, which
+thus ceased to be turbulent, and, taking off the garters, therewith
+tied the ankles together.
+
+Sighing satisfaction, Harry picked up the pistol and sword, spoils of
+victory, and rose at his leisure. He contemplated the hapless highwayman
+with benign interest for a moment, and turned to the coach. "You are
+still there, ladies? Benjamin is flattered and so am I. But the play is
+over. He will not be amusing for some time, and at any moment he may be
+profane. I see him bursting with it. Pray drive on and remove your chaste
+ears." He restored to them the jewel-case.
+
+"Put him up on the box, sir," the younger woman cried.
+
+"I beg your pardon, madame?"
+
+"We will take him to the constables at Finchley."
+
+"But why? He is beautiful there, my Benjamin, and I doubt he was never
+beautiful before. And I have planted him so firmly. I think if we leave
+him there he may grow and blossom. Do not dig him up again yet. Imagine
+Benjamin in flower! A thing to dream of."
+
+"You are pleased to be witty, sir. Come, we have lost time enough. Put
+the rogue up, and do you mount with us."
+
+Harry became aware that this young woman had a brow of pride. It was
+ample and broad and, after the Greek manner, it rose almost in a line
+with her admirable nose. A noble head, to be sure, but alarming to a mere
+human man. So Harry thought, and he touched his hat and said: "Madame,
+your most humble. Pray what do you want with my Benjamin? Your gentle
+heart would never have him hanged."
+
+Her eyes made Harry feel that he was impudent, which, unhappily, amused
+him. "I desire the fellow should be given up to the law, sir," she said
+coldly. "Have you anything against it?"
+
+"Oh, ma'am, a thousand things, with which I'll not weary you. For I see
+that you would not understand. You are very young (as I hope). Perhaps
+you may soon grow older (which I pray for you). Let this suffice then.
+My Benjamin may deserve a hanging. Who knows? We are not God, ma'am,
+neither you nor I. Therefore I have no mind to be a hangman. And
+you--why, you are young enough to wait another occasion. And so I give
+you good-night. Home, coachman, home."
+
+The young woman stared at him as though he were grovelling stupidity, and
+then lay back on her cushions with a "You will drive on, Samuel."
+
+Harry made his bow, and then, as the coach began to move, there was a
+cry: "Alison! Alison! It is not right!" The older woman leaned forward,
+and for the first time he remarked a gentle, motherly face, much lined
+and worn. "Sure, sir, you will ride with us," she said, and he liked the
+voice. "We may carry you home."
+
+Harry smiled at her. "Nay, ma'am. I am too dirty for such fine company."
+
+"Drive on," said Mistress Alison. And the coach rolled away.
+
+Harry looked down at the wretched Benjamin, whose eyes answered with
+apprehension and anxiety. "What's the game?" said Benjamin hoarsely. "I
+say, master--what d'ye want with me?"
+
+Harry did not answer. He was finding that motherly face, that pleasant
+voice, curiously vivid still. This annoyed him, and he forced himself
+back with a jerk to the oddity of events. "A queer business, my
+Benjamin," he said. "Who was your captain, I wonder?"
+
+Benjamin scowled. "I know nought o' no captain."
+
+"Ah, I thought you did. But I fear you have annoyed the captain,
+Benjamin. Now what had you done--or what had you not done?"
+
+"It's not fair, master," Benjamin whined. "You do be making game of me,
+and me beat."
+
+"I am rebuked, Benjamin. Good-night."
+
+"Oons, ye won't leave me so?" Benjamin howled. "I ha' done you no harm,
+master. Come now, play fair. What d'ye want of me?"
+
+"Nothing, Benjamin, nothing. I like you very well. You are a beautiful
+mystery. Pleasant dreams."
+
+The hapless Benjamin howled after him long and loud. Thereby Harry, who
+had a musical ear, was spurred to his best pace. "It's a vile voice," he
+reflected; "like Lady Waverton's. The marmoreal Alison was right. He
+would be better hanged. But so also would Lady Waverton. She will
+acridly want to know why I am late. Well! It will be a melancholy
+satisfaction not to tell her. That will also annoy Geoffrey, who'll
+magnificently indicate that I owe him an apology. The poor Geoffrey! He
+is so fond of himself!"
+
+His evening was as pleasant as he had anticipated. He won two shillings
+from Lady Waverton at ombre, which made her angry; and lost them to
+Geoffrey, which made him melancholy. For Mr. Waverton loved (in small
+things) to be a martyr.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE HOUSE OF WAVERTON
+
+
+Mr. Waverton had an idea in his head. That was not the least unusual. It
+was, unhappily, a wrong one. That was not unusual either. We must have a
+trifle of Latin. Mr. Waverton, studying Horace, desired to translate,
+_Civium ardor prava jubentium_ "the wicked ardour of the overbearing
+citizens." In vain Harry urged that he was outraging grammar. Mr.
+Waverton did not believe him, did not want to believe him--the same
+thing. Mr. Waverton was convinced that he had an insight into the soul of
+Horace which Harry's pedantic eyes could not share. He explained, as one
+explains to a dull child, the rare poetic beauty of the sentiment which
+he had produced. The hero whom Horace was celebrating, you know, was the
+man superior to the common herd. Now common men (as even Harry might be
+aware) are all overbearing. It is this quality in the vulgar which most
+distresses fine souls (like Mr. Waverton) who desire nothing but their
+just rights.
+
+"I dare say it is," Harry yawned. "If Horace had wanted to mean that, he
+would have said so."
+
+"I often think, Harry, you dry scholars have no sense for the thought of
+a poet," said Mr. Waverton elegantly, and lay back in his chair and
+surveyed Harry.
+
+He was a handsome lad and knew how to set it off. He had height and
+bulk--almost too much of that indeed, and so made light of it by a
+careless, lounging ease. At this time he was only twenty-two, but of a
+precocious maturity. He had the self-possession--as well as the
+full-bottomed wig--of experience and worldly wisdom, and would have liked
+to hear you say so. In its dark aquiline style his face was finely
+moulded and imposing, and already it had a massive gravity. "A mighty
+grand fellow indeed," said Lady Dorchester once, "if only his mouth had
+grown since he was a baby." It has to be admitted that Mr. Waverton's
+mouth, a small, pretty feature, was oddly assorted with the haughty
+manner in which the rest of him was constructed. The ladies who lamented
+that were, for the most part, consoled by his eyes--large, dark eyes of a
+liquid melancholy. But my Lord Wharton complained that they looked at him
+like a hound's.
+
+Mr. Waverton was an only son, and fatherless. He had also great
+possessions. From his house of Tetherdown all the fields that he could
+see stretching away to the Essex border were of his inheritance. His
+mother was no wiser than she should have been. She consisted spiritually
+of admiration for herself, for the family into which she had married, and
+the son whom she had borne. "After all," said Harry Boyce in moments of
+geniality, "it's wonderful the boy has come out of it so well."
+
+Mr. Waverton, thanks to vacillation of himself and his mother, doubt as
+to what career, what manner of education, what university, could be
+worthy his talents, went up to Oxford at last and (for those days) very
+late. After doing nothing for another year or two, he decided (which was
+also unusual for a gentleman of means in those days) that he had a genius
+in pure literature. Therefore Harry was hired to decorate him with all
+the elegances of Greek and Latin.
+
+The appointment was considered a great prize for a lad so awkward as
+Harry Boyce. It might well end in a luxurious competence--a stewardship,
+for example, and marriage with my lady's maid. "That is, if you play your
+cards well, sirrah," the Sub-Warden felt it his duty to warn Harry's
+difficult temper.
+
+"Oh, sir, I could never play cards," said Harry, for the Sub-Warden was a
+master at picquet. "I am too honest."
+
+Yet he had not fallen out with Mr. Waverton. It is probable that he was
+careful to keep on good terms with his bread and butter. But he had
+always, I believe, a kindness for Geoffrey Waverton, and bore no ill will
+for his parade of supremacy. Tyranny in small things, indeed, Mr.
+Waverton did not affect. He had a desire to be magnificent. Those who did
+not cross him, those who were content to be his inferiors, found him
+amiable enough and, on occasion, generous....
+
+"Shall we try another line, Mr. Waverton?" said Harry wearily.
+
+"I have a mind to make an epigram," Mr. Waverton announced. "The
+arrogance of the vulgar, the--the uninstructed--perhaps I lack the _mot
+juste_, but _quand meme_--the mansuetude of the loftier mind. A fine
+antithesis that, I think." He stood up, walked to the window, and looked
+out. Away down the hill the fields lay in a mellow mist, the kindly
+autumn sun made the copses glow golden; it was a benign scene, apt to
+encourage wit. Mr. Waverton lisped in numbers, but the numbers did not
+come. He turned to seek stimulus from Harry. "You relish the thought?"
+
+"It is a perfect subject for your style," said Harry.
+
+Mr. Waverton smiled, and turned again to the window for productive
+meditation.
+
+A third man came lounging in, unheard by Mr. Waverton's rapt mind. He
+opened his eyes at the back which Mr. Waverton turned upon Harry and the
+space between them. "Why, Geoffrey, have you been very stupid this
+morning? And has schoolmaster stood you in the corner? Well done, Mr.
+Boyce. I always told you, spare the rod and spoil the child. Shall I go
+cut a birch for you?"
+
+"I wonder you are not tired of that old jest, Charles," said Waverton
+with a dignity which did not permit him to turn round.
+
+"Never while it annoys you, child."
+
+"Mr. Waverton is in labour with a poem," Harry explained.
+
+"And it's indecent in me to be present at the ceremony? Well, Geoffrey,
+postpone the birth." He sat himself down at his ease in Geoffrey's chair.
+He was a compact man with only one arm. He looked ten years older than
+Geoffrey and was, in fact, five. The campaign in Flanders which had
+destroyed his right arm had set and hardened a frame and face by nature
+solid enough. That face was long and angular, with a heavy chin and an
+expression of sardonic complacency oddly increased by the jauntiness of
+its shabby brown wig.
+
+Waverton turned round wearily upon the unwelcome guest. "Well, Charles,
+what is it?"
+
+"It is nothing. My dear Geoffrey, if I had anything to do or anything to
+say why should I come to you?"
+
+"_Merci_, monsieur," Waverton smiled gracious indulgence.
+
+Mr. Hadley chuckled, and in French replied: "Yes, let's talk French; it
+embellishes our simple wit and elevates our souls above the vulgar."
+
+There is reason to believe that Waverton liked his French better in
+fragments than continuously. He still smiled condescension, but risked no
+other answer.
+
+"Come, Geoffrey, what's the news?" Mr. Hadley reverted to English.
+"Could you say your lessons this morning? And did you wear a new coat
+last night?"
+
+"You may go if you will, Harry. Mr. Hadley will be talking for some
+time," Waverton said. "Indeed, he may, perhaps, have something to say."
+
+Harry was used to being turned out for any reason or none. He well
+understood that Waverton was not fond of an audience when he was being
+laughed at. "If you please," he said, and made his bow to Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Why, what's the matter? I don't bite. You are too meek for this life,
+Mr. Boyce." He looked at Harry with some contempt in his grey eyes.
+"Oons, you're a man and a brother, ain't you? Sit down and be hearty.
+Lud, Geoffrey, why do you never have a pipe in the room?"
+
+"It's death to a clean taste, your tobacco smoking, and I value my wine."
+
+"Value it, quotha! Ay, by the spoonful. You ha' never known how to drink
+since they weaned you. And you, Mr. Boyce, d'ye never smoke a pipe over
+your Latin?"
+
+"I hope I know my place, Mr. Hadley," Harry said solemnly.
+
+Charles Hadley stared at him. "Hear the Scripture, Mr. Boyce: 'What shall
+it profit a man though he gain a pretty patron and lose his own soul?'"
+
+"You are very polite, sir," said Harry.
+
+"Upon my honour, Charles, this is too much," Mr. Waverton cried in noble
+indignation. "Mr. Boyce is my friend, and you'll be good enough to take
+him as yours if you come to my house."
+
+Charles Hadley was not out of countenance. He eyed them both, and his
+sardonic expression was more marked. "You make a pretty pair," said he.
+"When two men ride a horse, one must ride behind. Eh, Mr. Boyce? I
+wonder. Well, Geoffrey, it's a wicked world. Had you heard of that?"
+
+"The world is what you make it, I think," said Mr. Waverton with
+dignity.
+
+"Oons, I could sometimes believe you did make it. A simple, pompous
+place, Geoffrey, that is kind to you if you'll not laugh at it. And full
+of petty, pompous mysteries. Maybe you make the mysteries too, Geoffrey.
+Damme, it is so. It's perfectly in your manner," he chuckled abundantly.
+"Come, child, what were you doing on the highway yesterday?"
+
+Harry stared at him. "When you have finished laughing at your joke,
+perhaps you will make it," said Waverton. "Pray let us have it over
+before dinner."
+
+"My dear child, why be so touchy? Were you bitten? Well, you know, this
+morning one of my fellows brings in a miserable wretch he had found on
+the road by Black Horse Spinney. The thing was half-dead with wet and
+cold. He had been lying there all night--so he said, and it's the one
+thing I believe of him. He was found trussed as tight as a chicken in his
+own sword-belt and his own garters. Damme, it was a fellow of some humour
+had the handling of him. He had not been robbed, for there was a bag of
+money at his middle. He professed that he could tell nothing of who had
+trussed him or why he was set upon. He would have nought of law or hue
+and cry. Egad, empty and shivering as he was, he wanted nothing but to be
+let go. A perfect Christian, as you remark, Geoffrey. Now, you or I, if
+we had been tied up in the mud through one of these damned raw nights,
+would take some pains to catch the fellow who did the trussing. But my
+wretch was as meek as the Gospels. So here is a silly, teasing mystery.
+Who is the footpad that is at the pains of tying up a fellow and never
+looks for his purse? Odds fish, I did not know we had a gentleman of such
+humour in these parts. I suspect you, Geoffrey, I protest. There's a
+misty fatuousness about it which--"
+
+"By your leave, sir," a servant appeared, "my lady waits dinner."
+
+"Then I fear we shall pay for it," said Hadley, and stood up.
+
+"You dine with us, Charles?" Mr. Waverton was not hearty about it.
+
+"I'll give you that pleasure, child. Well, Mr. Boyce, what do you make of
+my mystery?"
+
+Harry had to say something. "Perhaps your friend was carrying more than
+guineas," he said.
+
+"What then? Papers and plots and the high political? I don't think it. If
+you saw him--a mere tub of beer--and a leaky tub this morning, for he had
+a vile cold in the head and dribbled damnably."
+
+"I give it up then. Have you let him go?" They were moving out in the
+corridor and Hadley did not answer. "Is he gone?" Harry said again.
+
+Hadley turned round upon him. "Why, yes. Does it signify?"
+
+"I wonder who he was," said Harry.
+
+Upon that they entered the drawing-room of Lady Waverton. It was
+congested and dim. The two oriel windows were so draped with curtains of
+pink and yellow that only a faint light as of the last of a sunset
+filtered through. The wide spaces were beset with screens in lacquer,
+odd chairs, Dutch tables, and very many cabinets,--cabinets inlaid with
+flowers and birds of many colours; cabinets full of shells, agates,
+corals, and any gaudy stone; cabinets and yet again more cabinets full of
+Eastern china. In the midst Lady Waverton reclined.
+
+She had been handsome in a large, bold style, and might still have been
+but for excessive decoration. Her dress was voluminous white satin
+embroidered in a big pattern of gold and set off with black. It was low
+at her opulent bosom, to the curves of which the eye was directed by
+black patches craftily fixed. There were many more patches on her face
+which, still only a little too full and too loose, had its colours laid
+on in sharp and vivid contrasts. Her black hair was erected in
+symmetrical waves high above her brow, and one ringlet was brought by
+glossy, frozen curls to caress her bosom. She held out the whitest of
+hands drooping from a large but still fine arm for Mr. Hadley to kiss.
+
+"You are a bad fellow, Charles Hadley," she pouted. "You make me
+feel old."
+
+"There's a common childish fancy, ma'am."
+
+"You never come to see me now. And when you do come, 'tis not to see me."
+
+"A thousand pardons. Mr. Boyce delayed me awhile with the beauties of his
+conversation."
+
+"Mr. Boyce?" she looked at Harry as if wondering that he dared exist. "Go
+and see why they do not bring in dinner."
+
+Having thus diminished Harry, she proceeded, without waiting for him to
+be gone, to criticize him. "You know, I would never have a chaplain in
+the house. This tutor fellow is of the same breed, Charles. They tease
+me, these men which are neither gentlemen nor servants. Faith, life's
+hard for the poor wretches. They are torn 'twixt their conceit and their
+poverty. They know not from minute to minute whether they will fawn or be
+insolent. So they do both indifferent ill."
+
+Harry, who chose not to hear, was opening the door. There came in upon
+him a woman--the young woman of the coach. Even as he recoiled, bowing,
+even as he collected his startled wits, he was aware of the singular
+beauty of her complexion. Its delicacy, its life, were nonpareil. The
+first clear process of his mind was to wonder how he had contrived not to
+remark that complexion when first he saw her.
+
+Lady Waverton lifted up her voice. "Alison! Dear child! And are you home
+at last? It's delicious in you. You seek us out first, do you not? My
+sweet girl!" Alison was engulfed. Conceive apple blossom in the embraces
+of a peony.
+
+The apple blossom emerged with a calm, "Dear Lady Waverton."
+
+"You are a sad bad thing. I writ you five letters, I think, and not one
+from you."
+
+"You are so much cleverer than I am. I had nothing to say." Alison's
+voice was sweet and low, but too sublimely calm for perfect comfort in
+her hearers. "So here I am to say it and make my excuses," she dropped
+a small curtsey, "my lady. Why, Geoffrey, I thought you had been back
+at Oxford!"
+
+Mr. Waverton came forward, smiling magnificence. "I am delighted to
+disappoint you, Alison."
+
+"Nay, never believe her, Geoffrey," Lady Waverton lifted up her voice
+and was arch. "I vow she counted on finding you here. Why else had she
+come? I know when I was a toast I wasted none of my time going to see old
+women," she languished affectionately at the girl.
+
+"Dear Lady Waverton,"--if it was possible, Alison's voice became calmer
+than ever--"how well you know me. And how cruel to expose me. If Geoffrey
+had his mother's wit, faith, I should never dare come here at all."
+
+"It is not my wit which you need ever fear, Alison," Geoffrey's eyes were
+ardent upon her.
+
+"Why, you are merciful. Or is it modest?"
+
+"I can be neither, Alison. I am a man."
+
+"My dear Geoffrey, I am sorry for all your misfortunes." She turned from
+him to Mr. Hadley, who was content in a corner. "Have we quarrelled?"
+
+"We never loved each other well enough."
+
+"Is that why I am always very glad to see Mr. Hadley?"
+
+"It is why he can tell Miss Lambourne that she looks divinely beautiful."
+
+"That means inhuman, sir."
+
+"Which is not my fault, ma'am."
+
+Geoffrey was visibly restive at his exclusion, "Charles never could pay a
+compliment without a sting in it."
+
+"That is why they are agreeable, sir," said she.
+
+"That is why they are true," said Hadley in the same breath, and they
+laughed together.
+
+Lady Waverton interfered imperiously. "Alison, dear, come sit by me and
+tell me all about yourself."
+
+"Faith, not with the gentlemen to listen," said she, and was saved by
+Harry and the butler, who came in together announcing dinner.
+
+Lady Waverton rose elaborately. "Give me your arm, Charles. My
+dear Alison--"
+
+"But who is this?" Alison said, and she stared with placid, candid
+interest at Harry. With equal composure Harry stared back. But there was
+no candour in his expressionless face. For he had become keenly aware of
+her beauty. It was waking in him desire and already something deeper and
+stronger, and he vehemently resented the disturbance. He had no wish to
+be troubled by any woman, and for this woman, judging her on her
+behaviour, he felt even a little more contempt than the store which he
+had for all her sex. It was cursedly impertinent in her to be such a joy
+to the blood. She stood there, her eyes level with his eyes, and dared to
+look as strong as he--slighter to be sure, but not too slight for a
+woman, and delectably deep bosomed. There was life and laughter in that
+calm Greek face, and the vivid, delicate colour of it maddened him. The
+great crown of black hair was just what her brow needed for its royalty.
+He could find no fault in the irksome wench. Even her dress, dark grey as
+her eyes, perfectly became her, perfectly pleased in its generous
+modesty. And she knew of her power too. There was a mocking confidence in
+every line of her.
+
+"But who is this, Lady Waverton?" she was saying again.
+
+Lady Waverton tried to draw her on. "'Tis but Geoffrey's new factotum."
+
+"My good friend, Harry Boyce, Alison," said Geoffrey with a patronly hand
+on Harry's shoulder.
+
+Harry made his bow.
+
+"Faith, sir, we have met before," she smiled.
+
+"No, ma'am," Harry bowed again. "I have never had an honour, which, sure,
+I could not forget."
+
+Her brow wrinkled. Lady Waverton swept her on, and Harry in the rear had
+the pleasure of hearing Lady Waverton say: "A poor, vulgar wretch, my
+dear. An out-at-elbows scholar which Geoffrey met at Oxford and keeps out
+of charity. He is too soft of heart, dear boy, and such creatures stick
+to him like burrs."
+
+The dinner-table was a blaze of silver, but otherwise not bountifully
+provided. Lady Waverton looked down it with pride. "I am of Mr. Addison's
+mind, my dear," she announced. "Do you remember? 'Two plain dishes with
+two good-natured, cheerful, ingenious friends make me more pleased and
+vain than all your luxury.'"
+
+"Why, then, you must now be sore out of countenance," Alison protested.
+"For I am not good-natured and I vow Mr. Hadley is not cheerful." Mr.
+Hadley's face, set in contemplation of the food, shed gloom and
+apprehension. "But perhaps Mr. Boyce is ingenious."
+
+"I hope so," said Hadley.
+
+It was Harry's task to carve, which dispensed him from answering the
+girl or even looking at her. One not abundant fowl and a calf's head
+smoked before him. Under a heavy fire of directions from Lady Waverton
+he did his duty.
+
+Miss Lambourne may have suddenly grown weary of Lady Waverton's eloquence
+upon the daintiest bits of these unexciting foods. She may have been
+waiting for the moment when Harry would have no occupation to prevent him
+listening to her. While my lady was still explaining the superiority of
+her calf, as bred and born in the house of Waverton, to all other calves,
+just when Harry had finished his work, Miss Lambourne broke out: "Faith,
+I was almost forgetting my splendid story. I wonder, now, have any of you
+met any ventures on the North Road?"
+
+Harry began to eat. Charles Hadley ceased an anxious examination of his
+plate and looked at her. Lady Waverton cried out: "Dear Alison! Don't
+tell me you have been stopped. Too terrible! I vow I could never bear it.
+I should die of shame. They tell me these rogues are vilely impudent to a
+fine woman."
+
+Geoffrey exhibited a tender agitation. "Why, Alison, what is it? Zounds,
+I cannot have you go travelling alone! You must give me news when you
+make a journey, and I'll ride with you."
+
+"Thank you for your agonies. But the virgin in distress found her
+knight-errant duly provided. He rose out of the mud romantically apropos.
+To be sure, I think he was mad. But that is all in the part. The complete
+hero. Geoffrey, could you be a little mad?"
+
+"More than a little," said he with proper ardour. "Pray don't torture us,
+Alison. Let us hear."
+
+"It's on my mind that I am going to hear news of my funny friend," said
+Hadley solemnly. "Don't you think so, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+Harry, who had been eating with the humble zeal appropriate to a poor
+scholar, looked up for a moment: "Why, sir, I can't tell at all. If you
+say so, indeed--" and he went on eating.
+
+"Come, are you in it too, Mr. Hadley?" Alison cried.
+
+"In it, odds life, I am bewilderingly out of it," quoth Hadley, and again
+told his tale of the mysterious man found tied up in the mud who knew
+nothing of his assailants and wanted no vengeance on them.
+
+"That's our Benjamin," Alison laughed. "Oh, but you did not let him go?"
+
+"Not let him go, quotha! For what I know, he was a poor, suffering
+martyr, though to look at his nose, I doubt it. And yet he was fool
+enough. Nay, how could I stay him?"
+
+"Why, send him to gaol for a rogue and a vagabond. Should he not?" she
+invited the suffrages of the table.
+
+"Dear Alison, to be sure, yes," Lady Waverton murmured. "These fellows
+must be put down."
+
+"You owed it to yourself to look deeper into the matter, Charles," said
+Geoffrey gravely.
+
+"Come, Mr. Boyce, your sentence too," Alison cried, wicked eyes
+intent upon him.
+
+He met them with bland meekness. "Indeed, ma'am, I can't tell. It's Mr.
+Hadley's affair."
+
+"From a virtuous woman, good Lord deliver us," Hadley groaned. "You would
+make a rare hanging judge, Alison. Now, i' God's name, let's have your
+tale. What's the rogue to you?"
+
+"Oh, sir, a great joy. Why, he gave me the only knight-errant ever I had.
+A vile muddy one, to be sure, but poor maids must not be choosers. We
+were driving home, Mrs. Weston and I, and by Black Horse Spinney we were
+stopped by two highwaymen. They had just begun to be rude, when out of
+the mud comes my knight-errant, bold as Don Quixote and as shabby withal,
+and with a pretty wit too--which is not much in the way of
+knight-errants, I think. He scared the highwaymen's horses and set them
+bolting with the one fellow which held them, then he knocked the other
+down, took his pistol, and tied the rogue up in his own garters. Oh, the
+neatest knight-errant ever you saw. Then we bade him put the fellow on
+the box and drive on with us. But monsieur was haughty, if you please. He
+wanted none of our company. Off he packed us, for me to cry my eyes out
+for love of him. Which I do heartily, I warrant you."
+
+"Alison!" Geoffrey cried, and laid his hand on hers.
+
+"Faith, yes, give me sympathy. I have loved and lost--in the mud. To be
+sure, I can ne'er be my own woman again till I find him and give him--a
+brush, I think, and maybe a pair of breeches too, for his own can never
+recover their youth. Dear Geoffrey, help me to find him."
+
+Geoffrey had taken his hand away in a hurry. He contemplated her with
+cold reproof. It did not trouble her. She was giving all her attention to
+Harry; gay, malicious eyes challenged him to declare himself, mocked him
+for his modesty, vaunted what she had to give.
+
+"Damme, this is madder and madder yet," Hadley broke in. "Who is your
+Orlando Furioso that's a champion of dames and too haughty to ride in
+their carriage; that ties up highwaymen and forgets to tell the constable
+where he left 'em? Odso, I thought I knew most of the fools in these
+parts, but there's one bigger than I know."
+
+"Dear Alison--I could never have survived it--but you are so strong--and
+what a person! My dear, I could not bear to think of him. A rude, low
+fellow, to be sure," Thus Lady Waverton coherently.
+
+Alison laughed. "I doubt I'm not so delicate," Then she leaned towards
+Harry. "Well, and you? Come, Mr. Boyce, why leave yourself out?"
+
+"I beg pardon, ma'am?"
+
+She made an impatient sound. "And what do you think of my hero?"
+
+"I wonder who the gentleman was, ma'am," Harry said.
+
+Her eyes fought a moment more with his bland, meaningless face. "Faith, I
+think he's a fool for his pains," said she.
+
+"Grateful woman," Hadley grunted. "Humph. _Spretae injuria formae_, ain't
+it, Mr. Boyce? Give miss a construe."
+
+Harry gave a deprecating cough instead.
+
+"Oh, be brave, sir," she jeered.
+
+"I am afraid it means 'the insult of slighting your beauty,' ma'am," said
+Harry meekly.
+
+Lady Waverton straightened her back and looked ice at him. But the
+butler was at her elbow, whispering. "Colonel Boyce?" she repeated. "What
+Colonel Boyce? Who is Colonel Boyce?
+
+"It might be my father," Harry suggested.
+
+"Why, Harry, I never knew you had a father," Waverton sneered amiably.
+
+"Is your father a colonel?" Lady Waverton was torn between incredulity of
+such presumption and rage at it.
+
+"Not that I know of, my lady. But he has always surprised me."
+
+"Shall we have him in, Geoffrey?" said Lady Waverton.
+
+"My dear mother!" Geoffrey waved his hand to the butler. "Ask the
+gentleman to be so good as to join us."
+
+Mr. Hadley turned in his chair, and over the remnants of the fowl and the
+calf's head directed a grim smile at Harry. "Thank you for a very
+pleasant dinner," said he.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A MAN OF MANY WORLDS
+
+
+There came in a man of many colours. Dazzled eyes, recovering from their
+first dismay, might admit that his splendours were harmonious. A red coat
+with gold buttons, a waistcoat of gold satin embroidered in blue,
+breeches of blue velvet with golden garters were topped by a face burnt
+brown and a great jet-black periwig. He carried off all this with airy
+ease. "My lady, your most humble and devoted," he bowed to Lady Waverton.
+"Harry, dear lad," he held out his hands, and Harry, rising, found
+himself embraced and kissed on both cheeks.
+
+"Colonel Boyce is it?" said Lady Waverton with some emphasis on
+the title.
+
+"In the service of your ladyship," he laughed, and bowed to her again,
+and turned upon the company. "Pray present me, dear lady." She made
+some stumbling about it, but Colonel Boyce appeared to enjoy himself
+with an "I account myself fortunate, ma'am," for Miss Lambourne; with a
+"My boy's friends are mine, sir--and his debts too," for Geoffrey; and
+to Mr. Hadley, "You have served, sir?" with a look of respect at the
+empty sleeve.
+
+Hadley nodded. "Ay, ay. The red field of honour. Well, there's no
+life like it."
+
+"That's why I left it," Hadley grunted.
+
+"Come, sir, draw up a chair and join us," Geoffrey said. "Be sure you are
+very welcome."
+
+"Ten thousand thanks." Without enthusiasm Colonel Boyce looked at the
+calf's head. "But--egad, I am sorry for it now--but I have dined."
+
+"At least you'll drink a glass of wine with us?"
+
+"Oh, I can't deny myself the pleasure, sir." He drew up a chair, Geoffrey
+reached at a decanter, and so Lady Waverton rose and Alison after her.
+
+Colonel Boyce started up. "But no--not at that price. Damme, that would
+poison the Prince's own Tokay. Nay, you are too cruel, my lady. I come,
+and you desolate the table to receive me. Gad's life, ma'am, our friends
+here will be calling me out for my daring to exist."
+
+Lady Waverton was very well pleased. "Sir, you will let me give you a
+dish of tea. I warrant the men were already sighing to be rid of us."
+
+"Then I vow they be blind," quoth Colonel Boyce, and opened the door,
+from which he came back with a laugh to his glass of port. Over drinking
+it he went through all the tricks of the connoisseur and ended with a
+cultured ecstasy.
+
+"I see you are a man of the world, Colonel," Hadley sneered.
+
+"A man of many worlds, sir," the Colonel laughed easily.
+
+"I wonder which this is?"
+
+"Why, this is the world of good company and good fellowship--" he smiled
+and bowed to Geoffrey--"of sound wine and sound learning."
+
+"Sir, you are very good. But I hope my wine is better than my
+scholarship. This is our man of learning," he slapped Harry on the
+shoulder. "And Harry counts me a mere trifler, a literary exquisite, an
+amateur of elegances."
+
+"If your scholarship has the elegance of your wine, Mr. Waverton, you do
+very well. I doubt my Harry is no judge of the graces. He has always been
+something of a plodder."
+
+"Have I?" Harry found his tongue. "How did you know?"
+
+The Colonel laughed. "He has me there, the rogue. The truth is,
+gentlemen, I have not seen him in these six years. Damme, Harry, you are
+grown no fatter."
+
+"Servitors don't make flesh," said Harry.
+
+"And soldiers don't make money. Still; there's enough for two now, boy."
+
+"I am glad you have been fortunate," the tone suggested that though
+the father had quite enough for two; there would be none to spare
+for the son.
+
+"Why, sir," Waverton was grandly genial, "I hope you don't mean to rob me
+of Harry. He's the most useful fellow, and, I promise you; I value him."
+
+"Thank you very much," said Harry.
+
+"I'll take you into my confidence, Mr. Waverton," the Colonel leaned
+across the table.
+
+"Then I'll take my leave," said Hadley.
+
+"No need, sir. At this time, we all know, there are higher claims on a
+man than a friend's or a father's."
+
+"I feel like a pawn," Harry complained.
+
+"Egad, sir, a pawn may save a queen or check a king."
+
+"But do you suppose it enjoys it?"
+
+"Are you away to the war, sir?" Geoffrey smiled. "I doubt our Harry has
+no turn for soldiering."
+
+"You are always right, Mr. Waverton," Harry nodded at him.
+
+"It is not only soldiers who fight our battles, Mr. Waverton," said the
+Colonel with dignity. "There's danger enough for a quick wit and a cool
+judgment far behind the lines. And you need not go to Flanders to find
+the war. It's flaming all over England, all over--France," he dropped the
+last word in a lower tone, as if his heat had carried him away and it was
+a blunder. He flung himself back and emptied his glass, and looked
+gloomily at the empty decanter. "Why, Mr. Waverton, you have made me into
+a babbler. It's time you delivered me to the ladies."
+
+"Aye, aye," Hadley yawned. "Let's try another of the worlds."
+
+They marched out, but the Colonel and Waverton, waiting on each other,
+were some distance behind the other pair.
+
+"You must know I have often had some desire for the life of action," said
+Mr. Waverton.
+
+To which the Colonel earnestly, "I have never known a man more fit for
+it," and upon that they entered my lady's drawing-room.
+
+Miss Lambourne was singing Carey's song of the nightingale:
+
+"While in a Bow'r with beauty blest
+ The lov'd Amintor lies,
+While sinking on Lucinda's breast
+ He fondly kiss'd her Eyes.
+A wakeful nightingale who long
+ Had mourn'd within, the Shade
+Sweetly renewed her plaintive song
+ And warbled through the Glade."
+
+On the coming of the men the wakeful nightingale broke off her plaintive
+song abruptly.
+
+Lady Waverton, who was again at full length on her couch, then opened
+her eyes. "Delicious, delicately delicious," she sighed. "Why did you
+stop, dear?" she controlled a yawn. "Oh, the men! Odious creatures!" she
+rose on her elbow and looked at them, and looked down at her dress and
+patted it.
+
+Colonel Boyce accepted the challenge briskly, and marched upon her.
+"Egad, my lady, your name is cruelty."
+
+"Who--I, sir? I vow I never had the heart to see any creature suffer."
+
+"Nay, your very nature is cruelty. You exist but to torture us."
+
+"Good lack, sir," says my lady, well pleased, "and must I die to serve
+your pleasure?"
+
+"Why, there it is. We can neither bear to be with you nor to be without
+you. I protest, ma'am, your sex was made for our torture. 'Tis why you
+parade it and delight in it."
+
+"Lud, sir, you are mighty rude," my lady simpered. "I parade my sex?
+Alack, my modesty!"
+
+"Modesty--that's but another weapon to madden us. Fie, ma'am, why do you
+clothe yourself in such beauty but to flaunt upon our senses that sex of
+yours?" My lady was duly shocked and hid behind her fan. "Aye, there it
+is! We catch a whiff of paradise and straightway it is denied us. Our
+nightingale there is silent when we draw near. Our Venus here hides
+herself when our eyes would enjoy her. As His Grace said to me, you women
+are like heaven to a damned soul."
+
+"You are a wicked fellow," said Lady Waverton with relish.
+
+Geoffrey at his elbow put in, "'His Grace,' Colonel?"
+
+"The Old Corporal, Mr. Waverton. The Duke of Marlborough."
+
+"You have served with him, sir?"
+
+Colonel Boyce gave a laugh of genial condescension. "Why, yes, Mr.
+Waverton, I stand as close to His Grace as most men."
+
+After a moment of impressive silence, the Wavertons vigorously directed
+the conversation to the Duke of Marlborough. Colonel Boyce made no
+objection. In the most obliging manner he admitted them to a piquant
+intimacy with His Grace's manners and customs. He mingled things personal
+and high politics with a fascinating air of letting out secrets at every
+word; and, throughout, he maintained a tantalizing discretion about his
+own position. My lady and Mr. Waverton were more and more fascinated.
+
+So that Miss Lambourne had good opportunity to try her maiden steel upon
+Harry. As soon as he came in, he withdrew himself to a cabinet of medals
+in a remote corner. Mr. Hadley approached the harpsichord and reached it
+just before it fell silent. Miss Lambourne looked up into his face.
+
+"Yes, shall we lay our heads together?" said he.
+
+"But I doubt mine would turn yours."
+
+"If you'll risk it, ma'am, I will."
+
+"La, sir, is this an offer? I protest I am all one blush."
+
+"Then your imagination is bolder than mine, ma'am. I mean--"
+
+"Oh, fie for shame! To disgrace a poor maid so! To betray her weakness!
+It is unmanly, Mr. Hadley. Sure, my father (in the general resurrection)
+will have your blood. I leave you to your conscience, sir," which she
+did, making for Harry.
+
+Mr. Hadley, remaining by the harpsichord, contemplated them, and with his
+one hand caressed his chin. "It's a fascinating family, the family of
+Boyce," said he to himself.
+
+Miss Lambourne sat herself down beside Harry before he chose to be aware
+of her coming. He started up and obsequiously drew away.
+
+"You are very coy, Mr. Boyce," said the lady.
+
+Harry replied, with the servile laughter of a dependent, "Oh, ma'am, you
+are mocking me."
+
+"Tit for tat"--Alison's eyes had some fire in them.
+
+"Tat, ma'am?"
+
+"Lud, now, don't be tedious. Sir, the house of Waverton is entranced by
+your splendid father: and Charles Hadley (as usual) is entranced by
+himself. You have no audience Mr. Boyce. Stop acting, and tell me--what
+is wrong with me?"
+
+Harry considered her with calm criticism. "It's not for me to tell Miss
+Lambourne that she is too beautiful."
+
+"Indeed, I thought you had more sense."
+
+"Too beautiful," Harry persisted deliberately; "too beautiful to be
+good company."
+
+"That will not serve, sir. You are not so inflammable. Being more in the
+nature of a tortoise."
+
+"If you had a flaw or so: if your nose had a twist; if your cheeks had
+felt the weather; if--I fear, ma'am, I grow intimate. In fine, if you
+were less fine, you would be a comfort to a man. But as it is--permit the
+tortoise to keep in his shell."
+
+"I advise you, Mr. Boyce--I resent this."
+
+Harry bowed. "I dare to remind you, ma'am--I did not demand the
+conversation."
+
+"The conversation!" Her eyes flashed. "What do I care if a lad's
+impudent? Perhaps I like it well enough, Mr. Boyce. There is more than
+that between you and me. You have done me something of a service, and
+you'll not let me avow it nor pay you. Well?"
+
+"Well, ma'am, you're telling the truth," said Harry placidly.
+
+The lady made an exclamation. "I shall bear you a grudge for this, sir."
+
+"I am vastly obliged, ma'am."
+
+The lady drew back a little and looked at him full, which he bore
+calmly. "I suppose I am beneath Mr. Boyce's concernment."
+
+"Not beneath, ma'am. Above. Above. Do you admire the Italian medals?
+They are of a delicate restraint," He turned to the cabinet and began
+to lecture.
+
+Miss Lambourne was not repulsed. He maintained a steady flow of
+instruction. She waited, watching him.
+
+By this time Colonel Boyce was growing tired of his Duke of Marlborough
+and his State secrets, and seeking diversion. "Odds fish, it's a hard
+road that leads to fortune. You are happy, Mr. Waverton. You were born
+with yours."
+
+"I conceive, sir, that every man of high spirit must needs take the
+road to fame."
+
+"A dream of a shadow, Mr. Waverton," said the Colonel, with melancholy
+grandeur. "'Take the goods the gods provide you,'" he waved his hand at
+the crowded opulence of the room and then, smiling paternally, at Miss
+Lambourne.
+
+Lady Waverton simpered at her son. He chose to ignore the hint.
+"Why, Colonel, if a man is happily placed above vulgar needs, the
+more reason--"
+
+"Vulgar needs! Oh, fie, Mr. Waverton. A divine creature." Colonel
+Boyce looked wicked, and his easy hand designed in the air Miss
+Lambourne's shape.
+
+Lady Waverton tittered. Geoffrey blushed, and "You do me too much honour
+sir, indeed," he stammered.
+
+Colonel Boyce turned smiling upon Lady Waverton. "I vow, ma'am, a man
+hath twice the modesty of a maid."
+
+"You are a bad fellow," said Lady Waverton, very well pleased.
+
+"You go too fast, sir;" with so much mirth about him Geoffrey feared for
+his dignity. "There is nothing between me and Miss Lambourne."
+
+The Colonel shook his head. "I confess I thought better of you, sir.
+What, is miss her own mistress?"
+
+"Miss Lambourne has no father or mother, sir."
+
+"And her face is her fortune? Egad, 'tis the prettiest romance!"
+
+Geoffrey and his mother laughed together. "Not quite all her fortune,
+sir. She is the only child of Sir Thomas Lambourne."
+
+"What! old Tom Lambourne of the India House?" Colonel Boyce whistled. He
+looked with a new interest at her as she stood by Harry, absorbing the
+lecture on medals, and as he looked his face put on a queer air of
+mockery. This he presented to Geoffrey. "Something of a plum, sirrah.
+Well, well, some folks have but to open their mouths."
+
+Mr. Waverton, not quite certain whether the Colonel ought to be so
+familiar, concluded to be pleased, and laughed fatuously. During which
+music the butler announced "Mrs. Weston."
+
+Lady Waverton and Geoffrey exchanged a glance of disgust. Lady Waverton
+murmured, "What a person!" It escaped their notice that Colonel Boyce had
+stiffened at the name. His full face lost all its geniality, all
+expression. He was for the first time singularly like his son.
+
+Mrs. Weston was Alison's companion of the coach, a woman of middle age,
+inclining to be stout; but her face was thin and lined, belying her
+comfortable aspect,--a wistful face which had known much sorrow, and had
+still much tenderness to give.
+
+Lady Waverton put out a languid and supercilious hand. "I hope you
+are better."
+
+"Thank you. I have not been ill."
+
+"Oh, I always forget."
+
+"Your servant, ma'am." Geoffrey bowed.
+
+"Oh,"--Lady Waverton turned on her elbow. "Colonel Boyce--Mrs. Weston,
+Alison's companion. Faith, duenna, I think."
+
+"Your most obedient, ma'am." Colonel Boyce bowed low.
+
+Mrs. Weston stared at him, seemed to try to speak, said nothing, and
+hurried across the room.
+
+"Alison, dear, are you ready?" her voice sounded hoarse.
+
+"Am I ever ready?" Alison laughed. "Weston, dear, we are finding friends
+here;" she pointed to Harry.
+
+Colonel Boyce had followed. He laid his hand on Harry's shoulder: "My
+son, ma'am," said he.
+
+Mrs. Weston's eyes grew wide, and her face was white and drawn, and she
+swayed. As Harry bowed to her, a lacquered box was swept off the table
+with a great clatter, and Colonel Boyce cried, "Odds life, Harry, you are
+a clumsy fellow. Here, man, here," and made a great commotion over
+picking it up.
+
+Alison had her arm about Mrs. Weston: "Why, Weston, dear, what is it? Are
+you seeing a ghost?" She laughed. "Pray, Mr. Boyce, come to life."
+
+"I ask pardon, ma'am." Harry rose with the box.
+
+"'Bid me to live and I will live,'" said the Colonel, with a grand air.
+
+"Come away, dear, come," Mrs. Weston gasped, in much agitation.
+
+"Why, Weston, he is not our highwayman, you know," Alison was still
+laughing, and then seeing her distress real, took it in earnest. "You are
+shaken, poor thing. Come!" She mothered the woman away and, turning,
+called over her shoulder--
+
+"_Revanche_, Mr. Boyce." There was an explanation to Lady Waverton: poor
+Weston had been so alarmed by the highwaymen that she was not fit to be
+out of her bed, and anything alarmed her; even Mr. Boyce; so dear Lady
+Waverton must forgive them. And Geoffrey took them to their carriage.
+
+"What a person!" said Lady Waverton.
+
+Mr. Hadley came out of his corner and looked Harry up and down with
+dislike. "Let me know when you play the next act, Mr. Boyce," he
+said, and turned to Lady Waverton. "My lady, I beg leave to go with
+my friends."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+A GENTLEMAN'S PURSE
+
+
+In a small, bare room Colonel Boyce sat himself down on a pallet bed and
+made a wry face at his son. "My poor, dear boy," he said, and shifted
+uneasily, and looked round at the stained walls and shivered. "It's damp,
+I vow it's damp," he complained.
+
+"Oh yes. It's damp after rain, and it's hot after sun, and it's icy after
+frost. It's a very sympathetic room," said Harry.
+
+"They are barbarians, these Wavertons. I vow they give their horses
+better lodging."
+
+"Oh yes. I am not worth so much as a horse," said Harry.
+
+"Lud, Harry, don't whine,"--his father was irritated. "Have some spirit.
+I hate to hear a lad meek."
+
+"I thought you did," said Harry.
+
+The Colonel laughed. "Oh, I am bit, am I? _Tant mieux_. But why the devil
+do you stay here?"
+
+"Now why the devil do you want to know?" said Harry.
+
+"No, that is not kind, boy."
+
+"Oh, Oh, are we kind?"
+
+"My dear Harry, I have not seen you for six years, and I have not come
+now to quarrel."
+
+"Then why have you come?" said the affectionate son.
+
+"You are a gracious cub." Colonel Boyce would not be ruffled. "When I saw
+you last, Harry--"
+
+"You borrowed a shilling of me. I remember I was glad that I had
+not another."
+
+"You can have it back with interest now. There is plenty in the purse,
+Harry, and half of all mine is yours."
+
+"You have changed," Harry said. "Odds life, Harry, bear no grudges. I
+dare say I was hard in what you remember of me. Well, things were hard
+upon me and I lived hard. You shall find me mellow enough now."
+
+"Hard? I don't know that you were hard. I thought you were as cold as
+ice. I believe, sir, I am still frozen."
+
+"Egad, Harry, you must have had a curst childhood."
+
+"Oh, must we be sympathetic?" said Harry.
+
+"You're right, boy. The past is past. 'Tis your future which is the
+matter. So again--why do you stay here?"
+
+Harry laughed. "They give me bed and board, and a shilling or two by
+the month."
+
+"Bed?" His father shifted upon it. "A bag of stones, I think. And for the
+board--bread of affliction and water of affliction by what I saw of the
+remains. Egad, Harry, they are savages, these Wavertons."
+
+"I did not hear you say so to madame. And Geoffrey is not a bad fellow
+as far as he has understanding."
+
+"A dolt, eh? He might take a woman's eye, though. These big dreamy
+fellows, the women hanker after them queerly. Take care, Harry." He
+looked knowing. "Bed and board--bah, you can do better than that. Now
+what do you think I have been doing?"
+
+"Something profitable, to judge by your genial splendours. Have you
+turned highwayman?"
+
+"You all talk about highwaymen in this house," said the Colonel with a
+frown and a keen glance.
+
+"Damme, no."
+
+"Why, are you really a colonel?"
+
+"Faith, you may come see my commission,"--Colonel Boyce was not
+annoyed,--"and, egad, share my pay." He pulled out a fat purse and thrust
+some guineas upon Harry. "Don't deny me now, boy," he said, with some
+tenderness.
+
+"I never meant to," said Harry, and counted them. "But how long have you
+been a soldier? I never knew you were anything."
+
+"I have been with his Grace of Marlborough in every campaign since
+Blenheim. Do you think it's a good service, Harry?" he smiled at his
+own opulence.
+
+"For a versatile man," said Harry, and looked at his father curiously.
+
+"Why, I can take the field as well as another. Egad, when Vendome fell
+back from Oudenarde I was commanding a battalion. But it is not in the
+field that my best work is done."
+
+"Faith, I had guessed that," Harry said.
+
+"You have a sharp tongue, Harry. It's a dangerous weakness. Be careful
+to grow out of it. Then I think you may do well enough."
+
+"In your profession, sir? To be sure, you flatter me."
+
+"In my profession--" His father looked at him keenly. "I am not sure.
+Maybe you can do better, which will be well enough. Now, what can you do?
+You can use a sword, I suppose, though you wear none?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "I know the rigmarole, the salutes; I could begin a duel,
+_par exemple_. It's the other man who would end it."
+
+"Duels--bah, only dolts are troubled with them. You must learn to hold
+your own in a flurry. You can ride, I suppose?"
+
+"If the beast has a mane."
+
+"Humph. You speak French?"
+
+"As we speak it in England."
+
+"Yes." His father nodded. "When a man is no fool, he finds his profit in
+not doing things too well. Well, Harry, are you Whig or Tory--Jacobite or
+Hanoverian?"
+
+"Whichever you like, sir."
+
+"By the Lord, you take after me mightily. Now look 'e, thus it is. The
+Queen grows old. She eats too well and drinks too well, and she has the
+gout. It's common among all who know her ways that she cannot last long.
+The poor soul will not be wise at dinner. But even if she should last, we
+are in an odd case. For Anne hath a conscience as well as a stomach, and
+it seems they grow together. As the old lady gets fatter, she feels
+remorse. When she's tearful after dinner now she asks her women what
+right she has to be queen and keep a good cellar while her poor
+half-brother Prince James lives in exile on _vin ordinaire_."
+
+Harry shrugged his shoulders. "'Poor, dear lad,' says she, 'and to
+be sure I am a sad, bad woman. But I think I'll die a queen.' What
+then, sir?"
+
+"I don't say you are wrong, Harry. She's more like to drown the lad in
+tears than right him. And meanwhile our rightful king, James the
+Pretender, is left to his _vin ordinaire_. Faith, it's a proper liquor,
+for rightful heirs which can't right themselves. And yet there is a
+chance. The Queen has always been religious, and when a woman hath
+religion she may play the devil with your reason any minute. But here is
+what's more likely. You know when an old fellow hath played the knave
+with some wardship or some matter of trust, often he holds fast to it all
+his life and then seeks to commend himself to the day of judgment by
+bequeathing his spoils to those from whom he stole them. Well, it's
+whispered among them that know her that Madame Anne will do her possible
+to make Prince James King when she is gone."
+
+"A dead Queen is but a corpse," said Harry. "When she is gone 'twill not
+be for her to say who shall reign."
+
+"That's half a truth. You know the law is so that Prince George of
+Hanover should be the King. About him no man knows anything save that he
+hath a vile taste in women. I do suspect Marlborough is in the right--he
+has a nose for men--when he saith there is nought to know. Well, we
+tried a Dutchman once for our King and liked him ill enough. Who is to
+say that we shall like a German better? Now Prince James--he is half an
+Englishman at least, though they say he has his father's weakness for
+priests. I'll not hide from you, Harry, that I am in the confidence of
+some great men. It's laid upon me to go to France with an errand to
+Prince James."
+
+"I suppose that is high treason, sir."
+
+Colonel Boyce smiled queerly. "You see how I trust you, Harry. Bah, you
+are not frightened of words. Who is the worse for it, if I find out
+what's Monsieur's temper and how he would bear himself if he were King?"
+
+"And what he would pay any kind gentlemen who chose to turn
+Jacobites apropos."
+
+"If you like." Colonel Boyce laughed. I promise you, Harry, there are
+great men in this. Now I need a trusty fellow to my right hand: a fellow
+who can talk and say nothing: a fellow who is in no service but mine: and
+all the better if he hath some learning to play the secretary. So I
+thought of you. And since it may carry you to something of note, I chose
+you with right good will."
+
+"Do you wonder that you surprise me?"
+
+"I profess you're not generous, Harry. It's true enough, I have done
+little for you yet. But the truth is I could do nothing. As soon as I
+have it in my power, I come to you--"
+
+"And offer me--a game at hazard."
+
+"Why, Harry, you're not a coward?"
+
+"Faith, I can't tell. Perhaps I will go with you. But I have no
+expectation in it."
+
+"I suppose you have some here," his father sneered. "What do they call
+you? You seem to be something better than Master Geoffrey's valet and a
+good deal worse than my lady's footman."
+
+"Why, I believe you have lost your temper." Harry laughed. "Oh, admirable
+sight! Pray let me enjoy it! The father rages at his son's ingratitude!"
+
+But Colonel Boyce had quickly recovered his equanimity. "They used to
+tell me that I was a cold fellow. But I vow you are a very fish. So you
+have half a mind to stay here, have you? Well, I bear no malice."
+
+"It is only half a mind," Harry said. "Are you in a hurry?"
+
+"Oh, you may sleep on it. Damme, I suppose there is little to do here but
+sleep. What does Master Geoffrey want with you? He is old to keep a tame
+schoolmaster."
+
+"I listen to his poetry."
+
+"Oh Lud!" said Colonel Boyce, with sincere sympathy. "I suppose they are
+wealthy folk, your Wavertons. Do they keep much company?" Harry shrugged.
+"Who is this Mrs. Weston?"
+
+"I never saw her before." Harry paused, and then with a laugh
+added--"before yesterday."
+
+"That's a fine woman, her mistress. Do you do anything in that
+quarter, sirrah?"
+
+"Why should you think so?"
+
+"She was willing enough that you should try."
+
+"She is meat for my betters," said Harry meekly.
+
+"For Master Geoffrey?" The Colonel looked knowing. "Do you know, Harry, I
+think Master Geoffrey is a pigeon made to be plucked. Well. What was the
+pretty lady's talk about highwaymen?"
+
+Harry looked at his father for some time. "The truth is, I don't
+understand Benjamin," he said at last. "I wonder if you will. Faith, sir,
+here is a pretty piece of family life. The good son confides in his
+father alone of all the world."
+
+"Go on, sir," Colonel Boyce chuckled. "I play fair."
+
+So Harry told his tale of Benjamin and Benjamin's companion and their
+disaster. It was that appearance in the crisis of the fight of other
+gentlemen on horseback which most interested Colonel Boyce. "So they went
+in pursuit of the fellow who had fled and they never came back again." He
+looked quizzically at his son. "These be very honest gentlemen."
+
+"Why, sir, I thought nothing of that. They were plainly travelling at
+speed. I suppose they missed him, and had no time to waste in searching."
+
+"Then why o' God's name did he not come back to help his fellow? He was
+mounted, he was armed, and only you and your cudgel against him. Bah,
+Harry, do not be an innocent. Consider: these fellows went after him at
+speed. He cannot have been far away. It is any odds that he had his
+bolting horses in hand before he had gone two furlongs. Then--allow him
+some sense--then he must have turned and come back for his friend. And
+then these other honest gentlemen swept down on him. Well. Why have you
+heard no more of them or him?"
+
+"Faith, sir, you are right," Harry conceived for the first time some
+admiration for his father. "I had missed that: and, egad, it is the chief
+question of the puzzle. But--"
+
+"Puzzle! Oh Lud, there's no puzzle. They were all one gang, these
+fellows."
+
+Harry laughed. "Then there was not much honour among the thieves. They
+abandoned their Benjamin to me with delight."
+
+"Ah, bah, you do not suppose they were out for such small game as your
+pretty miss. They would not work in a gang to stop a simple, common
+coach, be it never so rich. Come, Harry, use your wits. Did you hear of
+any great folks on the road yesterday?"
+
+Harry made an exclamation. "Odds life, sir, you would make a great
+thief-catcher. You have hit it. There was your friend, the Duke of
+Marl-borough, stuck in the mud below Barnet Hill." And he told that part
+of the story.
+
+"Humph. So they came too late," his father said. "You see how it is. This
+gang was charged to stop his Grace, and was something slow about it. The
+two first, your Benjamin and his friend, I suppose they should have held
+the Duke's fellows in play till the others came up. They missed him, or
+they shirked it, and instead, tried to stay their stomachs with some
+common game. The rest of the gang would be well enough pleased that you
+should baste Benjamin while they hurried on after the Duke. Did you mark
+any of them, what like they were?"
+
+"Not I. I was too busy with Benjamin."
+
+"And your pretty miss, eh? A pity. But it's well enough for your
+first affair."
+
+"First? Why, am I to spend my life tumbling with gentlemen of the road?"
+
+"And a profitable, pleasant life too, if you use your wits."
+
+Harry opened his eyes. "Do you know it well, sir? Now, what I don't
+understand is why a gang of highwaymen should appoint to set upon the
+Duke of Marlborough. It's dangerous, to be sure--"
+
+"You will understand why, if you come to France," said Colonel Boyce,
+with a queer smile. "There be many would pay high for a sight of his
+Grace's private papers," and he laughed to himself over some joke. "Nay,
+but you have done very well, Harry," he condescended. "I like this
+business of leaving Benjamin tied up on the road. 'Tis damned nonsense,
+to be sure, but it has an air, a distinction. Your pretty miss will like
+that. And I judge you have not told the Wavertons you were the hero, nor
+let miss tell them. 'Tis your little secret for yourselves. A good touch,
+Harry. Odds life, I begin to be proud of you. I suppose you will soon go
+pay your respects--to Mrs. Weston." He laughed heartily.
+
+Harry was not amused. "Do you know, I think I like you much less than you
+like me," he said.
+
+Colonel Boyce seemed very well content.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE WORLD'S A MIRACLE
+
+
+Colonel Boyce was established in the house, a guest of high honour.
+
+Harry, dazed at the mere fact, could not be very sure how it had happened
+or why. The Wavertons, mother and son, had assaulted the Colonel with
+hospitality--for a night--for another--for longer and longer--and he,
+appearing at first honestly dubious, remained with a benign
+condescension.
+
+There is no doubt that, in an honourable way, Lady Waverton was
+fascinated by Colonel Boyce. She saw nothing coarse in his
+highly-coloured manners, suspected no guile in his flattery or his parade
+of importance. Harry, who had never supposed her a wise woman, was
+surprised by her complete surrender. He had credited her with too much
+pride to succumb to flattery, which was to his taste impudently gross.
+But he was not yet old enough to allow that other folks might have tastes
+wholly unlike his own, and he had himself--it is perhaps the only trait
+of much delicacy in him--a shrinking discomfort under praise.
+
+Colonel Boyce took his victory with a complacency which Harry thought
+oddly fatuous in a man so acute.
+
+"Egad, the old lady would go to church with me to-morrow if I asked her;"
+he laughed, and seemed to think that in that at least my lady showed
+sense.
+
+"You had better take her, sir," said Harry, with a sneer. "I know she has
+a good dower. And a fool and her money are soon parted."
+
+"Damme, Harry, you are venomous!" For the first time in their
+acquaintance Colonel Boyce showed some signs of smarting. "What harm have
+I done you? No, sir, you have a nasty tongue. I intend the old lady no
+harm, neither. What if she has a tenderness for me? I suppose that does
+not make me a fool."
+
+"To be sure, sir, I did not know your affection was serious." Harry
+laughed disagreeably.
+
+"I believe you would not miss a chance to say a bitter thing though it
+ruined you, Lud, Harry, if you can't be grateful, don't be a fool too.
+What a pox are your Wavertons to me? I don't value them a pinch of snuff.
+What I am doing, I am doing for you. You know what you were when I found
+you--no better than a footman out of livery. Now, they treat you like a
+gentleman."
+
+"And all for the _beaux yeux_ of my father. Well, it's true, sir. But I
+don't know that I like any of us much the better for it."
+
+To his great surprise his father looked at him with affectionate
+admiration. "Egad, you take that tone very well," said he. "It's a good
+card. Maybe it's the best with the women."
+
+Harry had to laugh. "I think you have the easiest temper in the
+world, sir."
+
+"Aye, aye. It has been the ruin of me."
+
+And so they parted the best of friends. Indeed Harry had never liked his
+father so well or felt so much his superior. Thus from age to age is
+filial affection confirmed.
+
+But he had to allow some adroitness in his father. Not only Lady
+Waverton, but Geoffrey too, succumbed to the paternal charms. That was
+the more surprising. Geoffrey, behind his vanity and his affectation, was
+no fool. He had also a temper apt to dislike any man who made a show of
+position or achievement beyond his own. Yet he hung upon the lips of
+Colonel Boyce. What they gave him was indeed a pleasing mixture--secrets
+about great affairs flavoured with deference to his ingenious criticisms.
+There was something solid about it, too. The Colonel, displaying himself
+as a man of much importance, perpetually hinted that only the occasion
+was needed for Mr. Waverton to surpass him by far, and to that occasion
+he could point the way. It appeared to Harry that his father had in mind
+to enlist Geoffrey for the proposed mission to France, or some other
+scheme unrevealed. And being unable to see any reason for wanting
+Geoffrey as a man, he suspected that his father wanted money.
+
+He saw clearly that nobody wanted him, and was therewith very well
+content. At this time in his life he asked nothing better than to be left
+alone with his whims and the open air. He covered many a mile of sticky
+clay in these autumn days, placidly vacant of mind, and afterwards
+accounted them the most comfortable of his life.
+
+Mr. Waverton's house was set upon a hill, at one end of a line of hills
+which now look over the wilderness of London, falling steeply thereto,
+and upon the other side, to northward and the open country, more gently.
+In the epoch of Harry Boyce those hills were all woodland--pleasant
+patches still remain,--and if the need of great walking was not upon him
+he was often pleased to loiter through their thickets. It was on a wild
+south-westerly day when the naked trees were at a loud chorus that Alison
+came to him.
+
+The dainty colours of her face laughed from a russet hood, russet cloak
+and green skirt wind-borne against her gave him the delight of her shape.
+
+"'Stand, sir, and throw us that you have about you,'" she cried.
+
+"You're poetical, ma'am."
+
+"I vow not I. I say what I mean. There's an unmaidenly trick. And, faith,
+I am here to rifle you, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Wish you joy, ma'am. What of?"
+
+"Of your conceit, to be sure. Have you anything else?"
+
+"I have nothing which could be of any use to Miss Lambourne. So God knows
+why she runs after me."
+
+"Oh, brave!" Miss Lambourne was not out of countenance. "'Tis a shameless
+maid indeed which runs after a man"--she made him a curtsy. "But what is
+the man who runs away from a maid?"
+
+Harry Boyce cursed her in his heart. She was by far too desirable. The
+rain-fraught wind had made the dawn tints of her clearer, lucent and yet
+more delicate. Her grey eyes danced like the sunlight ripples of deep
+water. Her lips were purely, brilliantly red. She fronted him and the
+wind, flaunting the richness of her bosom, poised and strong. She seemed
+the very body of life. For the first time he felt unsure of himself. "Did
+you come to call names, ma'am?" he growled.
+
+"I allow you the privileges of a gentleman, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Gentleman? Oh Lud, no, ma'am. I am an upper servant. Rather better than
+the butler. Not so good as the steward."
+
+"It won't serve you, sir. You have insulted me, and I demand
+satisfaction." She drew off her gauntleted glove and flicked him in the
+face with it. "Now will you fight?"
+
+"Oh, must we slap and scratch then?" Harry flushed darker than the mark
+of the glove. "I thought we had been fighting."
+
+Miss Lambourne laughed. "You can lose your temper then? It's something,
+in fact. Yes, we have been fighting, sir, and you don't fight fair."
+
+"Who does with a woman?" Harry sneered. "I cry you mercy, ma'am. You are
+vastly too strong for me. Let me alone and I ask no more of you."
+
+To which Miss Lambourne said, very innocently, "Why?" Harry looked up and
+saw her beautiful face meek and appealing, with something of a demure
+smile in the eyes. "Come, sir, what have I asked of you? You have done
+me something of a great service. There was a man handling me--do you know
+what that means? "--she made a wry face and gave herself a shaking
+shudder--"You rid me of him, and with some risk to your precious skin.
+Well, sir, I am grateful, and I want to show it. Odds life, I should be a
+beast did I not. I want to thank you and to sing your praises--to
+yourself also perhaps. And you are pleased to be a churl and a boor."
+
+"In effect," said Harry coolly. "Egad, ma'am, let me have the luxury of
+hating you. For I am the Wavertons' gentleman usher and you are the
+nonpareil Miss Lambourne, vastly rich and--" he ended with a shrug and
+a rueful grin.
+
+"And--?" Miss Lambourne softly insisted.
+
+"And damnably lovely. Lord, you know that."
+
+"I thank God," said Miss Lambourne devoutly.
+
+"Is it true, Mr. Boyce--do the meek inherit the earth?" She held out her
+hands to him, one bare, one gloved, she swayed a little towards him, and
+her face was gentle and wistful. "Nay, sir, I ask your pardon. Call
+friends if you please and will please me."
+
+Harry lost hold of himself at last. The blood surged in him, and he
+caught at her and kissed her fiercely.
+
+It was he who was embarrassed. As he stood away from her, eyeing her with
+a queer defiant shame, she smiled through a small matter of a blush, and
+breathing quickly said: "What does it feel like, sir?"
+
+"The world's a miracle," Harry said unsteadily and would have caught
+her again.
+
+She turned, she was away light of foot, and in a moment through the wind
+he heard her singing to a tune of her own the child's rhyme:
+
+"Fly away, Jack,
+ Fly away, Jill,
+Come again, Jack,
+ Come again, Jill."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HARRY IS NOT GRATEFUL
+
+
+Where the lane from Fortis Green crosses the high road there stood an
+ale-house. On the wettest days, and some others, the place was Harry's
+resort. Not that he had a liking for ale-house company--or indeed any
+company. But within the precincts of the Wavertons' house tobacco was
+forbidden and--all the more for that--tobacco he loved with a solid
+devotion. The alehouse of the cross roads offered a clean floor, a clean
+fire, air not too foul, a tolerable chair, a landlord who did not talk,
+and until evening, sufficient solitude. There Harry smoked many pipes in
+tranquillity until the day when on his entry he found Mr. Hadley's
+sardonic face waiting for him. He liked Charles Hadley less than many men
+whom he more despised. Nobody in a position just better than menial can
+be expected to like the condescending mockery which was Mr. Hadley's
+_metier_. But Harry--it is one of his most noble qualities--bore being
+laughed at well enough. What most annoyed him was Mr. Hadley's parade of
+a surly, austere virtue. He did not doubt that it was sincere. He could
+more easily have forgiven it if it had been hypocritical. A man had no
+business to be so mighty honest.
+
+Mr. Hadley nodded at Harry, who said it was a dirty day, and called for
+his pot of small ale and his pennyworth of Spanish tobacco. Mr. Hadley
+was civil enough to pass him a pipe from the box. Both gentlemen smoked
+in grave silence.
+
+"So you are still with us," said Mr. Hadley.
+
+"By your good leave, sir."
+
+"I had an apprehension the Colonel was going to ravish you away."
+
+"I hope I am still of some use to Mr. Waverton."
+
+"Damme, you might be the old family retainer. 'Faithful service of the
+antique world,' egad. I suppose you will end your days with Geoffrey, and
+be buried at his feet like a trusty hound."
+
+"If you please, sir."
+
+They looked at each other. "Well, Mr. Boyce, I beg your pardon," Hadley
+said. "But you'll allow you are irritating to a plain man."
+
+"I do not desire it, sir."
+
+"I may hold my tongue and mind my own business, eh? Why not take me
+friendly?"
+
+"I intend you no harm, Mr. Hadley."
+
+"That's devilish good of you, Mr. Boyce. To be plain with you, what do
+you want here?"
+
+"Here? Oh Lord, sir, I come to smoke my pipe!"
+
+"And what if I come to smoke you? Odds life, I know you are no fool. Do
+me the honour to take me for none. And tell me, if you please, why do you
+choose to be Master Geoffrey's gentleman in waiting? You are good for
+better than that, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"No doubt, sir. But it brings me bread and butter."
+
+"You could earn that fighting in Flanders."
+
+Harry shrugged. "I am not very brave, Mr. Hadley."
+
+"You count upon staying here, do you?"
+
+"If I can satisfy Mr. Waverton," said Harry meekly.
+
+Hadley's face grew harder. "I vow I do my best to wish you well,
+Mr. Boyce. I should be glad to hear that you'll give up walking in
+the woods."
+
+There was a moment of silence. "I did not know that I had asked for your
+advice, sir." Harry said. "I am not grateful for it."
+
+"Damme, that's the first honest answer you have made," Hadley cried.
+"Look 'e, Mr. Boyce, I am as much your friend as I may be. I have an
+uncle which was the lady's guardian. If I said a word to him he would
+carry it to Lady Waverton in a gouty rage. There would be a swift end of
+Mr. Boyce the tutor. Well, I would not desire that. For all your airs,
+I'll believe you a man of honour. And I ask you what's to become of Mr.
+Boyce the tutor seeking private meetings with the Lambourne heiress?
+Egad, sir, you were made for better things than such a mean business."
+
+"Honour!" Harry sneered. "Were you talking of men of honour? I suppose
+there is good cover in the woods, Mr. Hadley."
+
+Hadley stared at him. "It was not good enough, you see, sir." He knocked
+out his pipe and stood up. "Bah, this is childish. You don't think me a
+knave, nor I you. I have said my say, and I mean you well."
+
+"I believe that, Mr. Hadley"--Harry met him with level eyes--"and I am
+not grateful."
+
+"You know who she is meant for."
+
+"I know that the lady might call us both impudent."
+
+"Would that break your bones? Come, sir, the lady hath been destined for
+Master Geoffrey since she had hair and never has rebelled."
+
+"Lord, Mr. Hadley, are you destiny?"
+
+Mr. Hadley let that by with an impatient shrug. "So if you be fool enough
+to have ambitions after her, you would wear a better face in eating no
+more of Master Geoffrey's bread."
+
+"It's a good day for walking, Mr. Hadley. Which way do you go? For I go
+the other."
+
+"I hope so," Mr. Hadley agreed, and on that the two gentlemen parted,
+both something warm.
+
+We should flatter him in supposing Harry Boyce of a chivalrous delicacy.
+Whether the lady's fair fame might be the worse for him was a question of
+which he never thought. It is certain that he did not blame himself for
+using his place as Geoffrey's paid servant to damage Geoffrey in his
+affections. And indeed you will agree that he was innocent of any
+designed attack upon the lady. Yet Mr. Hadley succeeded in making him
+very uncomfortable.
+
+What most troubled him, I conceive, was the fear of being ridiculous. The
+position of a poor tutor aspiring to the favours of the heiress destined
+for his master invites the unkind gibe. And Harry could not be sure that
+Alison herself was free from the desire to make him a figure of scorn.
+Such a suspicion might disconcert the most ardent of lovers. Harry
+Boyce, whatever his abilities in the profession, was not that yet. But
+the very fact that he had come to feel an ache of longing for Alison made
+him for once dread laughter. If he had been manoeuvring for what he could
+get by her, or if he had been merely taken by her good looks, he might
+have met jeering with a brazen face. But she had engaged his most private
+emotions, and to have them made ludicrous would be of all possible
+punishments most intolerable. The precise truth of what he felt for her
+then was, I suppose, that he wanted to make her his own--wanted to have
+all of her in his power; and a gentleman whom the world--and the
+lady--are laughing at for an aspiring menial cannot comfortably think
+about his right to possess her.
+
+There was something else. He was not meticulously delicate, but he had a
+complete practical sanity. He saw very well that even if Alison, by the
+chance of circumstance, had some infatuation for him, she might soon
+repent: he saw that even if the affair went with romantic success--a
+thing hardly possible--his position and hers might be awkward enough.
+Her friends would be long in forgiving either of them, and find ways
+enough to hurt them both. Mr. Hadley, confound him, spoke the common
+sense of mankind.
+
+There was one solution--that estimable father. By the time he came back
+to the house on Tether-down, Harry was resolved to enlist under the
+ambiguous banner of Colonel Boyce.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+GENEROSITY OF A FATHER
+
+
+With grim irony Harry congratulated himself on his decision. When first
+he came into the house he heard Alison singing. There was indeed (as he
+told himself clearly) nothing wonderful about her voice--it resembled
+the divine only in being still and small. Yet he could not (he called
+himself still more clearly a fool) keep away from it, and so he slunk
+into Lady Waverton's drawing-room. Only duty and stated hours were wont
+to drag him there. Lady Waverton showed her appreciation of his unusual
+attendance by staring at him across the massed trifles of the room with
+sleepy and insolent amazement. But it was not the glassy eyes of Lady
+Waverton which convinced Harry that flight was the true wisdom. Over
+Alison at the harpsichord, Geoffrey hung tenderly: their shoulders
+touched, eyes answered eyes, and miss was radiant. She sang at him with a
+naughty archness that song of Mr. Congreve's:
+
+"Thus to a ripe consenting maid,
+Poor old repenting Delia said,
+Would you long preserve your lover?
+ Would you still his goddess reign?
+Never let him all discover,
+ Never let him much obtain.
+
+Men will admire, adore and die
+While wishing at your feet they lie;
+But admitting their embraces
+ Wakes 'em from the golden dream:
+Nothing's new besides our faces,
+ Every woman is the same."
+
+She contorted her own face into smug folly by way of illustration. Then
+she and Geoffrey laughed together. "I vow you're the most deliciously
+wicked creature that ever was born a maid."
+
+"D'ye regret it, sir? Faith, I could not well be born a wife."
+
+"No, ma'am, that's an honour to be won by care and pains."
+
+"Pains! Lud, yes, I believe that. But, dear sir, I reckon it the
+punishment for folly. Why,"--she chose to see Harry--"why, here is our
+knight of the rueful countenance!"
+
+Mr. Waverton laughed. "It is related of the Egyptians--"
+
+"God help us," Alison murmured.
+
+He went on, giggling. "It is related of the Ancient Egyptians that they
+ever had a corpse among the guests at their feasts."
+
+"Were their cooks so bad?" said Alison.
+
+"To remind them that all men are mortal. Now you see why we keep Harry."
+
+"I wonder if he looked as happy when he was alive," said Alison,
+surveying his wooden face.
+
+"_De mortuis nil nisi bonum_," Geoffrey laughed. "No jests about the
+dead, Alison. But to tell you a secret, he never was alive. He doesn't
+like it known."
+
+Colonel Boyce, who had listened to the song and the first
+coruscations of wit with the condescending smile of a connoisseur,
+now exhibited some impatience. "Egad, Harry, why will you dress like
+a parson out at elbows?"
+
+"His customary suit of solemn black," said Geoffrey.
+
+"He is in mourning for himself, of course," Alison laughed.
+
+"I have two suits of clothes, ma'am," said Harry meekly. "This is
+the better."
+
+"Poor Harry!" Geoffrey granted him a look of protective affection. "I vow
+we are too hard on him, Alison." And then in a lower voice for her
+private ear. "A dear, worthy fellow, but--well, what would you have?--of
+no spirit." Alison bit her lip.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Waverton," Harry protested, "indeed, I am proud to be the cause
+of such wit."
+
+Colonel Boyce stared at his son with an enigmatic frown. Alison's eyes
+brightened. But Geoffrey suspected no guile. "Not witty thyself, dear
+lad, but the cause of wit in others, eh? Odds life, Harry, you are
+invaluable."
+
+"'Tis your kindness for me makes you think so, Mr. Waverton. And, to be
+sure, I could ask no more than to amuse your lady."
+
+Alison said tartly, "Oh, it takes little to amuse me, sir."
+
+"I am sure, ma'am," Harry agreed meekly.
+
+"It's a happy nature." and he bowed to Geoffrey, humbly congratulating
+him on a lady of such simple tastes.
+
+Geoffrey, who had now had enough of his good tutor, eliminated him by a
+compliment or so on Alison's voice and the demand that she should sing
+again. He found her in an awkward temper. She would not sing this, she
+would not sing that, she found faults in every song known to Mr.
+Waverton. Yet in a fashion she was encouraging. For this new method of
+keeping him off was governed by a queer adulation of him: no song in the
+world could be worth his distinguished attention; her little voice must
+be to his accomplished ear vain and ludicrous; the kind things he was so
+good as to say were vastly gratifying, to be sure, but they were merely
+his kind condescension. And, oh Lud, it was time she was gone, or poor,
+dear Weston would be imagining her slaughtered on the highway.
+
+Geoffrey could not make much of this, but was pleased to take it as
+flattering feminine homage to his magnificence. By way of reward, he
+announced an intention of riding home with her carriage. "Faith, you are
+too good"--her eyes were modestly hidden--"but then you are too good to
+everybody. Is he not, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+"Oh, ma'am, we all practise on his kindness," Harry said.
+
+"A good night to your mourning," she said sharply, "dear Lady Waverton."
+They kissed. "Colonel Boyce, I hold you to your promise."
+
+"With all my heart, ma'am. Your devoted."
+
+She was gone, and Harry, with a look of significance at his father, went
+off too....
+
+In that shabby upper chamber of his, Harry again offered the Colonel a
+choice between the bed and the one chair. Colonel Boyce made a gesture
+and an exclamation of impatience, and remained standing. "Now, what the
+devil do you want with me?" he complained.
+
+"I want to be very grateful. I want to enlist with you. When shall
+we start?"
+
+His father frowned, and in a little while made a crooked answer, "Do you
+know, Harry, you are too mighty subtle. I was so at your years. It's very
+pretty sport, but--well, it won't butter your parsnips. The women can't
+tell what to make of it. Having, in general, no humour, pretty
+creatures."
+
+"I am obliged for the sermon, sir. Shall we leave to-morrow?"
+
+"Egad, you are in a fluster," his father smiled. "Well, to be sure, he is
+a teasing fellow, the beautiful Geoffrey."
+
+Harry made an exclamation. "You'll forgive me, sir, if I say you are
+talking nonsense."
+
+"Oh Lud, yes," his father chuckled.
+
+"Whether I am agreeable to women, whether Mr. Waverton is agreeable to
+me--odds life, sir, I don't trouble my head about such things. Pray,
+why should you? As well sit down and cry because my eyes are not the
+same colour."
+
+"No. No. There is something taking about that, Harry," his father
+remonstrated placidly.
+
+"When you please to be in earnest, sir," Harry cried, "if this affair of
+yours is in earnest--" "Oh, you may count on that." Colonel Boyce was
+still enjoying himself.
+
+"Then I am ready for it. And the sooner the better."
+
+"Hurry is a bad horse. The truth is, something more hangs on this affair
+than Mr. Harry's whims. Oh, damme, I don't blame you, though. He is
+tiresome, our Geoffrey."
+
+"Why, sir, if we have to waste time, we might waste it more comfortably
+than with the Waverton family. Shall we say to-morrow?"
+
+Colonel Boyce tapped his still excellent teeth. "Patience, patience," he
+said, and considered his son gravely. "As for to-morrow, I have friends
+to see, and so have you. Your pretty miss engaged me to ride over with
+you to her house. And behind the brave Geoffrey's back, if you please.
+She is a sly puss, Harry." He expected so obviously an angry answer that
+Harry chose to disappoint him.
+
+"I shall be happy to take leave of Miss Lambourne. And shall I ride
+pillion with you, sir? For I have no horse of my own."
+
+"Bah, dear Geoffrey will lend me the best in the stable."
+
+"I give you joy of the progress in his affections."
+
+Colonel Boyce laughed. "You are pledged for the forenoon then," he
+paused. "And as to that little affair of mine--you shall know your part
+soon enough."
+
+"It cannot be too soon, sir."
+
+"No." Colonel Boyce nodded. "I think it's full time."
+
+He took leave of his son with what the son thought superfluous
+affection.
+
+Half an hour afterwards he was in Mr. Waverton's room--a place very
+precious. Everything in it--and there were many things--had an air of
+being strange. Mr. Waverton slept behind curtains of black and silver.
+His floor was covered with some stuff like scarlet velvet. There was a
+skull in the place of honour on the walls, flanked by two Venetian
+pictures of the Virgin, and faced by a blowsy Bacchus and Ariadne from
+Flanders. The chairs were of the newest Italian mode, designed rather to
+carry as much gilding as possible than to comfort the human form. Colonel
+Boyce, regarding them with some apprehension, stood himself before the
+fire and waved off Geoffrey's effusive courtesy.
+
+"I hope you have good news for me, Mr. Waverton?" So he opened the
+attack.
+
+"Why, sir, I have considered my engagements," Geoffrey said
+magnificently. "I believe I could hold myself free for some months--if
+the enterprise were of weight."
+
+"You relieve me vastly. I'll not disguise from you, Mr. Waverton, that I
+am something anxious to secure you. I could not find a gentleman so well
+equipped for this delicate business. You'll observe, 'tis of the first
+importance that we should have presence, an air, the _je ne sais quoi_ of
+dignity and family."
+
+"Sir, you are very obliging." Geoffrey swallowed it whole.
+
+"When I came here I confess I was at my wit's end. Indeed, I had a mind
+to go alone. The gentlemen of my acquaintance--either they could not be
+trusted with an affair of such value, or they had too much of our English
+coarseness to be at ease with it. Faith, when I came to see my poor, dear
+Harry, little I thought that in his neighbourhood I should find the very
+man for my embassy." The two gentlemen laughed together over the
+incompatibility of Harry with gentlemanly diplomacy.
+
+"Not but what Harry is a faithful, trusty fellow," said Mr. Waverton,
+with magnificent condescension.
+
+"You are very good to say so. A dolt, sir, a dolt; so much the worse for
+me. Now, Mr. Waverton, to you I have no need of a word more on the
+secrecy of the affair. Though, to be sure, this very morning I had
+another note from Cadogan--Marlborough's _ame damnee_ you know--pressing
+it on me that nothing should get abroad. So when we go, we'll be off
+without a good-bye, and if you must leave a word behind for the anxieties
+of my lady, let her know that you are off with me to see the army in
+Flanders."
+
+"I profess, Colonel, you are mighty cautious."
+
+"Dear sir, we cannot be too cautious in this affair. There's many a
+handsome scheme gone awry for the sake of some affectionate farewell.
+Mothers, wives, lady-loves--sweet luxuries, Mr. Waverton, but damned
+dangerous. Now here's my plan. We'll go riding on an afternoon and not
+come back again. Trust my servant to get away quietly with your baggage
+and mine. We must travel light, to be sure. We'll go round London. I have
+too many friends there, and I want none of them asking where old Noll
+Boyce is off to now. Newhaven is the port for us. There is a trusty
+fellow there has his orders already. I look to land at Le Havre. Now, the
+Prince, by our latest news, is back at St. Germain. As you can guess, Mr.
+Waverton, to be seen in Paris would suit my health even less than to be
+seen in London. Too many honest Frenchmen have met me in the wars, and,
+what's worse, too many of them know me deep in Marlborough's business. I
+could not show my face without all King Louis's court talking of some
+great matter afoot. What I have in mind is to halt on the road--at
+Pontoise maybe--while you ride on with letters to Prince James. I warrant
+you they are such, and with such names to them, as will assure you a
+noble welcome. It's intended that he should quit St. Germain privately
+with you to conduct him to me. Then I warrant you we shall know how to
+deal with the lad." He paused and stared at Geoffrey intently, and
+gradually a grim humour stole into his eyes. He began to laugh. "Egad, I
+envy you, Mr. Waverton. To be in such an affair at your years--bah, I
+should have been crazy with pride."
+
+"You need not doubt that I value the occasion, sir," Geoffrey said
+grandly. "Pray, believe that I shall do honour to your confidence."
+
+"To be sure you will. Odds life, to chaffer with a king's son about
+kingdoms, to offer a realm to a prince in exile (if only he will be a
+good boy)--it's a fine, stately affair, sir, and you are the very man to
+take it in the right vein."
+
+"Sir, you are most obliging. I profess I vaunt myself very happy in your
+kindness. Be sure that I shall know how to justify you."
+
+"Egad, you do already," Colonel Boyce smiled, still with some touch of
+cruelty in his eyes.
+
+"Pray, sir, when must we start?"
+
+"When I know, maybe I shall need to start in an hour."
+
+"I shall not fail you. I shall want, I suppose, some funds in hand?"
+
+Colonel Boyce shrugged. "Oh Lud, yes, we'll want some money. A matter of
+five hundred pounds should serve."
+
+"I will arrange for it in the morning," said Mr. Waverton, too
+magnificent to be startled. "Pray, what clothes shall we be able
+to carry?"
+
+"Damme, that's a grave matter," said Colonel Boyce, and with becoming
+gravity discussed it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+MISS LAMBOURNE LOOKS SIDEWAYS
+
+
+Thus Colonel Boyce blandly arranged the lives of his young friends. It is
+believed that he had a peculiar pleasure in manoeuvring his
+fellow-creatures from behind a veil of secrecy. For in this he sought not
+merely his private profit (though it was never out of his calculations);
+he enjoyed his operations for their own sake; he liked his trickery as
+trickery; to push and pull people to the place in which he wanted them
+without their knowing how or why or to what end they were impelled was to
+him a pleasure second to none in life. And on a survey of his whole
+career he is to be accounted successful. Though I cannot find that he
+ever achieved anything of signal importance even for himself, at one time
+or another he brought a great number of people, some of them powerful,
+and some of them honourable, under his direction, he had his complete
+will of many of them, and was rewarded by the bitter hostility of the
+majority. He contrived, in fact, to live just such a life as he liked
+best. What more can any man have?
+
+So he told Harry nothing of his engagement of Mr. Waverton, and Harry,
+you have seen, was not likely to guess that anyone would enlist his
+Geoffrey for a serious enterprise. On the next morning, indeed, Harry did
+remark that Geoffrey was more portentous than usual, but thought nothing
+of it. He was embarrassed by thinking about himself.
+
+There was, as Colonel Boyce predicted, no difficulty about a horse for
+Harry. When the Colonel suggested it, Geoffrey showed some satirical
+surprise at Harry's daring, but (advising one of the older carriage
+horses) bade him take what he would. Colonel Boyce spoke only of riding
+with his son. He said nothing of where they were going. Harry wondered
+whether Geoffrey would have been so gracious if he had known that Alison
+was their destination, and, a new experience for him, felt some qualms of
+conscience. It was uncomfortable to use a favour from Geoffrey, even a
+trifling favour granted with a sneer, for meeting his lady; still more
+uncomfortable to go seek the lady out secretly. But if he announced what
+he was doing, there would be instantly something ridiculous about it, and
+he would have to swallow much of Geoffrey's humour. Geoffrey might even
+come with them, and Alison and he be humorous together--a fate
+intolerable. There was indeed an easy way of escape. He had but to stay
+away from the lady. But, though he despised himself for it, he desired
+infinitely to see her again. She compelled him, as he had never believed
+anything outside his own will could compel. After all, it was no such
+matter, for he would soon be gone with his father to France. He might
+well hope never to see her again.
+
+So on that ride through the steep wooded lanes to Highgate, his father
+found him morose, and complained of it. "Damme, for a young fellow that's
+off to his lady-love you are a mighty poor thing, Harry."
+
+"My lady-love! I have no taste for rich food. I thought it was your lady
+we were going to see."
+
+"What the devil do you mean by that?" Colonel Boyce stared.
+
+"Oh, fie, sir! Why be ashamed of her?"
+
+"God knows what you are talking about." Colonel Boyce was extraordinarily
+irritated. "Ashamed of whom?"
+
+"Of the peerless Miss Lambourne, to be sure. Oh, sir, why be so innocent?
+How could she resist your charms? And indeed--"
+
+"Miss Lambourne! What damned nonsense you talk, Harry."
+
+"I followed your lead, sir," said Harry meekly. "But if we are to talk
+sense--when shall we start for France?"
+
+"You shall know when I know."
+
+And on that they came to the top of the hill and the gates of the Hall.
+The wet weather had yielded to St. Martin's summer. It was a day of
+gentle silver-gold sunlight and benign air. With her companion, Mrs.
+Weston, Miss Lambourne was walking in the garden. She met the gentlemen
+at a turn of the drive by rampant sweetbriers. "Here's our knight of the
+rueful countenance, and faith, on Rosinante, poor jade," she patted
+Harry's aged carriage horse. "Oh, and he has brought with him Solomon in
+all his glory," she made a wonderful curtsy to the splendours of Colonel
+Boyce. "Now, who would have dreamt Don Quixote's father was Solomon?"
+
+"I suppose I take after my mother, ma'am," Harry said meekly. "It's a
+hope which often consoles me."
+
+"Why, they say Solomon had something of a variety in wives, and
+among them--"
+
+Colonel Boyce dismounted with so much noise that the jest was hardly
+heard and the end of it altogether lost.
+
+"You did not tell me"--Mrs. Weston was speaking and seemed to find it
+difficult--"Alison, you did not tell me the gentlemen were coming." It
+occurred to Harry that she looked very pale and ill.
+
+"Why, Weston; dear, I could not tell if they would keep troth." She
+began to hum:
+
+"Men were deceivers ever,
+ One foot on sea, and one on shore,
+To one thing constant never."
+
+"Nay, ma'am, sigh no more for here are we," Colonel Boyce said brusquely.
+
+"Oh Lud, he overwhelms us with the honour." She laughed. "How can we
+entertain him worthily? Sir, will you walk? My poor house and I await
+your pleasure."
+
+"I am vastly honoured, ma'am. I have never had a lady-in-waiting."
+
+"Oh, celibate virtue!" quoth Miss Lambourne. And so to the house Colonel
+Boyce led her and his horse, and a little way behind Harry followed with
+his and Mrs. Weston.
+
+She had nothing to say for herself. She looked so wan, she walked so
+slowly, and with such an air of pain that Harry had to say something
+about fearing she was not well. Then he felt a fool for his pains; as she
+turned in answer and shook her head he saw such a sad, wistful dignity in
+her eyes that the small coin of courtesy seemed an absurd offering. A
+fancy, to be sure, in itself absurd. Yet he could not make the woman out.
+There was something odd and baffling in the way she looked at him.
+
+She led off with an odd question, "Pray, have you lived much with
+Colonel Boyce?"
+
+"Not I, ma'am." Harry laughed. "If I were not a very wise child I should
+hardly know my own father. Lived with him? Not much more than with my
+mother, whom I never saw."
+
+"Oh, did you not?" Her eyes dwelt upon him. After a little while, "Who
+brought you up then?"
+
+"Schools. Half a dozen schools between Taunton and London, and
+Westminster at last."
+
+"Were you happy?"
+
+"When I had sixpence."
+
+"But Colonel Boyce is rich!" she cried.
+
+"I have no evidence of it, ma'am."
+
+"I cannot understand. You hardly know him. But he comes to you at Lady
+Waverton's; he stays with you; he brings you here. I believe you are
+closer with him than you say."
+
+"Why, ma'am, it's mighty kind in you to concern yourself so with my
+affairs. And if you can't understand them, faith, no more can I."
+
+She showed no shame at this rebuke of impertinence. In a minute Harry was
+sorry he had amused himself by giving it. There was something strangely
+affecting in the woman. Middle-aged, stout, faded, bound in manner and
+speech by a shy clumsiness, she refused to be insignificant, she made an
+appeal to him which he puzzled over in vain. Her simplicity was with
+power, as of a nature which had cared only for the greater things. He
+felt himself meeting one who had more than he of human quality, richer in
+suffering, richer in all emotion, and (what was vastly surprising) under
+her dullness, her feebleness, of fuller and deeper life.
+
+From vague, intriguing, bewildering fancies, her voice brought him back
+with a start. "He brought you here?" she was asking.
+
+To be sure, she was wonderfully maladroit. This buzzing, futile curiosity
+irritated him again into a sneer. "He is no doubt captivated by the
+beautiful eyes of Miss Lambourne."
+
+"He! Mr. Boyce?"--she corrected herself with a stammer and a
+blush--"Colonel Boyce? Oh no. Indeed, he is old enough to be her father."
+
+"I think we ought to tell him so." Harry chuckled. "It would do
+him good."
+
+"I think this is not very delicate, sir." Mrs. Weston was still blushing.
+
+"Egad, ma'am, if you ask questions, you must expect answers," Harry
+snapped at her.
+
+"Why do you sneer at her? Why should you speak coarsely of her? I suppose
+you come to the house of your own choice? Or does he make you come?"
+
+Harry saw no occasion for such excitement. "Why, you take away my breath
+with your pronouns. He and she--she and he--pray, let's leave him and
+her out of the question. Here's a very pretty garden."
+
+"Indeed, we need not quarrel, I think." She laughed nervously, and gave
+him an odd, shy look. "Pray, do you stay with the Wavertons?"
+
+"Alas, ma'am, I make your acquaintance and bid you farewell all in one
+day."
+
+"Make my acquaintance!" Again came a nervous laugh, and it was a moment
+before she went on. "We have met before to-day."
+
+"Oh Lud, ma'am, I would desire you forget it."
+
+"I am to forget it!" she echoed. "Oh ... Oh, you are very proud."
+
+"Not I, indeed. The truth is, ma'am, that silly affair with our
+highwayman, it embarrasses me mightily. I want to live it down. Pray,
+help me, and think no more about it."
+
+"I suppose that is what you say to Alison?" For the first time there was
+a touch of fun in her eyes.
+
+"Word for word, ma'am."
+
+"Why do you come here then?"
+
+"As I have the honour to tell you--to say good-bye."
+
+She checked and stared at him. She was very pale. But now they were at
+the steps of the house, and Colonel Boyce, who had resigned his horse to
+a groom, turned with Alison to meet them.
+
+"I am hot with the Colonel's compliments, Weston, dear," she announced.
+"I must take a turn with Mr. Boyce to cool me. 'Tis his role. A
+convenient family, faith. One makes you uncomfortably hot and t'other
+freezes you. You go get warm, my Weston. Though I vow 'tis dangerous to
+trust you to the Colonel. He has made very shameless love to me, and you
+have a tender heart."
+
+It occurred to Harry that Mrs. Weston and his father, thus forced to look
+at each other, wore each an air of defiance. They amused him.
+
+"I am not afraid," Mrs. Weston said.
+
+"I profess I am abashed," said Colonel Boyce. "Pray, ma'am, be gentle to
+my disgrace," and he offered his arm. She bowed and moved away, and he
+followed her.
+
+Harry and Alison, face to face, and sufficiently close, eyed each other
+with some amusement.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Boyce," said she, and shook her head.
+
+"Oh, Miss Lambourne," Harry exhorted in his turn.
+
+"You have fallen. You have walked into my parlour."
+
+"I am the best of sons, ma'am. I endure all things at my father's
+orders--even spiders."
+
+She still eyed him steadily, searching him, and was still amused. She
+moved a little so that the admirable flowing lines of her shape were more
+marked. Then she said, "Why are you afraid of me?"
+
+Harry shook his head, smiling. "Vainly is the net spread in the sight of
+the bird, ma'am. But, faith, it was a pretty question, and I make you my
+compliments."
+
+"So. Will you walk, sir?" She turned into a narrow path in the shadow of
+arches, clothed by a great Austrian brier, on which here and there a
+yellow flame still glowed. "Mr. Boyce--when I meet you in company you
+shrink and cower detestably; when I meet you alone, you fence with me
+impudently enough and shrewdly; and always you avoid me while you can. I
+suppose there's in all this something more than the freaks of a fool.
+Then it's fear. Prithee, sir, why in God's name are you afraid of me?"
+
+"Miss Lambourne got out of bed very earnest this morning," Harry grinned.
+"But oh, let's be grave and honest with all my heart. Why, then, ma'am,
+I've to say that a penniless fellow has the right to be afraid of Miss
+Lambourne's money bags."
+
+"Fie, you are no such fool. If one is good company to t'other, which is
+rich and which is poor is no more matter than which fair and which dark."
+
+"In a better world, ma'am, I would believe you."
+
+"And here you believe kind folks would sneer at Harry Boyce for scenting
+an heiress. So you tuck your tail between your legs and go to ground. I
+suppose that is called honour, sir."
+
+"Oh no, ma'am. Taste."
+
+"La, I offend monsieur's fine taste, do I?"
+
+"Not often, ma'am. But by all means let us be earnest. I believe I mind
+being sneered at no more than my betters. _Par exemple_, ma'am, when you
+laugh at me for being shabby, I am not much disturbed."
+
+She blushed furiously. "I never did."
+
+"Oh, I must have read your thoughts then," Harry laughed. "Well, what
+matters to me is not that folks laugh at me but why they laugh. That they
+mock me for being out at elbows I swallow well enough. That they should
+sneer at me for making love to a woman's purse would give me a nausea."
+
+Miss Lambourne was pleased to look modest. "Indeed, sir, I did not know
+that you had made love to me."
+
+"I am obliged by your honesty, ma'am."
+
+Miss Lambourne looked up and spoke with some vehemence. "It comes
+to this, then, you would be beaten by what folks may say about you.
+Oh, brave!"
+
+"Lud, we are all beaten by what folks might say. Would you ride into
+London in your shift?"
+
+"I don't want to ride in my shift," she cried fiercely.
+
+"Perhaps not, ma'am. But perhaps I don't want to make love to your
+purse."
+
+"Od burn it, sir, am I nothing but a purse?"
+
+"I leave it to your husband to find out, ma'am, and beg leave to take my
+leave. My kind father offers me occupation at a distance, and I embrace
+it ardently. Who knows? It may provide me with a coat."
+
+"You are going away?"
+
+"I have had the honour to say so."
+
+"And why, if you please?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "Because, ma'am, without my assistance, Mr. Waverton can
+very well translate Horace into his own sublime verse and Miss Lambourne
+into his own proud wife."
+
+He intended her to rage. What she did was to say softly: "You do not want
+to see me that?"
+
+"I have no ambition to amuse you, ma'am." Miss Lambourne looked
+sideways. "What if I don't want you to go away?"
+
+"Egad, ma'am, I know you don't." Harry laughed. "You amuse yourself
+vastly (God knows why) with baiting me."
+
+"Why, it amuses me." Alison still looked at him sideways. "Don't you
+know why?"
+
+He did not choose to answer.
+
+"Indeed, then, if I am nought to you why do you care what folks say of
+you and me?"
+
+Harry made a step towards her. "You mean to have it again, do you?"
+he muttered.
+
+"Pray, sir, what?" and still she looked sideways.
+
+"What you dragged out of me in the wood."
+
+"Dragged out of--oh!" She blushed, she drew back, and so had occasion to
+do something with her cloak which let a glimpse of white neck and bosom
+come into the light. "You flatter us both indeed."
+
+"I'll tell you the truth of us both"--he, too, was flushed: "you are a
+curst coquette and I am a curst fool."
+
+Now she met his eyes fairly, and in hers there was no more laughter,
+but she smiled with her lips: "I think you know yourself better than
+you know me."
+
+Harry gripped her hands. "You go about to make me mad with desire for
+you, you--"
+
+"I want you so," she breathed, and leaned back, away from him, her eyes
+half veiled.
+
+He had his arms about her body, held her close. The red lips curved in a
+riddle of a smile. He saw dark depths in the shadowed eyes.
+
+"_Malbrouck s'en va t'en guerre_" she murmured.
+
+Harry exclaimed something, felt her against him, was aware of all her
+form--and heard footsteps.
+
+Alison was out of his grasp, her back to him, plucking a rose. "You will
+see me again--you shall see me again. I ride in the wood to-morrow
+morning," she muttered.
+
+"You'll pay for it," Harry growled.
+
+His father arrived, Mrs. Weston, a servant at their heels.
+
+Alison came round with a swirl of skirts. "Dear sir, I doubt you have
+burnt up dinner by your long passages with my Weston. Come in, come in,"
+and she led the way.
+
+For once Colonel Boyce was without an answer. Harry, who was dreading
+witticisms, looked at him in surprise, and with more surprise saw that he
+looked angry. Mrs. Weston hurried on before them all. Her eyes were red.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+ANGER OF AN UNCLE
+
+
+It seems certain that on this day Alison wore a dress of a blue like
+peacock's feathers. That colour--as you may see, she wears it in both the
+Kneller and the Thornhill portraits--was much a favourite of hers, and
+indeed it set off well the rare beauty of her own hues. The clarity, the
+delicacy, of her cheeks were such as you may see on one of those roses
+which, white in full flower, have a rosy flush on the outer petals of the
+bud, and the same rose open may serve for the likeness of a neck and
+bosom which she guarded no more prudishly than her day's fashion
+demanded. For all the daintiness, her lips, a proud pair, were richly red
+(stained of raspberries, in Charles Hadley's sneer), and with the black
+masses of her hair and grey eyes almost as dark, gave her an aspect of,
+what neither man nor woman ever denied her, eager and passionate life.
+All this was flowering out of her peacock blue velvet, and Harry, I
+infer, went mad.
+
+She never expanded into the larger extravagances of the hoop, preferring
+to trust to her own shape. Her waist made no pretence of fine-ladyship,
+but the bodice was close laced _a la mode_ to parade the riches of her
+bosom. Strong and gloriously alive, and abundantly a woman--so she smiled
+at the world.
+
+It was a delirious hour for Harry, that dinner. He knew that Alison was
+pleased to be in the gayest spirits, and his father, in his father's own
+flamboyant style, seconded her heartily. He joined in, too, and seemed to
+himself loud and vapid, yet had no power of restraint. It was as though
+his usual placid, critical mind were detached and watched himself in the
+happy exuberance of drunkenness--which was a state unknown to him, for
+excess of liquor could only move him with drowsy gloom. And in the midst
+of the noise Mrs. Weston sat, pale and silent, a ghost at the feast.
+
+He was glad when his father spoke of going, though he found himself
+talking some folly against it, on Alison's side, who jovially mocked the
+Colonel for shyness. But Colonel Boyce, it appeared, had made up his
+mind, and Harry was surprised at the masterful ease with which, keeping
+the empty fun still loud, he extricated himself and his unwilling son.
+
+They were all at the door, a noisy, laughing company, and the
+horses waited.
+
+"It's no use, ma'am," Harry cried, "he knows how to get his way,
+_monsieur mon pere_."
+
+"Pray heaven he hath not taught his son the art!"
+
+"Oh Lud, no, I am the very humble servant of any petticoat."
+
+"Fie, that's far worse, sir. I see you would still be forgetting which
+covered your wife."
+
+"Never believe him, Madame Alison." quoth the Colonel. "It's a strong
+rogue and a masterless man,"
+
+"Why, that's better again. And yet it's not so well if he'll be
+mistressless too."
+
+"Fight it out, child," the Colonel cried. "'Lay on, Macduff, and curst be
+she that first cries hold, enough!' Come, Harry, to horse."
+
+"See, Weston, he deserts me, and merrily!"
+
+There came upon the scene two other horsemen--Mr. Hadley's gaunt,
+one-armed frame and a big, lumbering elder with a rosy face.
+
+Harry bowed over Alison's hand. It was she who put it to his lips, and
+nodding a roguish smile at the other gentlemen, "So you run away,
+sir?" she said.
+
+Harry looked at her and "Give me back my head," he said in a low voice.
+"I have lost it somewhere here."
+
+"Oh, your head!" She laughed. "Well, maybe it's the best part of you."
+
+He mounted, and Colonel Boyce, already in the saddle, kissed his hand to
+her. They rode off, compelled to single file by the plump old gentleman
+who held the middle of the road and glowered at them. Mr. Hadley made an
+elaborate bow.
+
+The old gentleman watched them out of sight round the curve of the drive,
+then sent his horse on with an oath and, dismounting heavily at Alison's
+toes, roared out: "What the devil's this folly, miss?" He made angry
+puffing noises. "I vow I heard you laughing at Finchley. Might have heard
+him kissing too."
+
+"Kissing? Oh la, sir, my hand, and so may you." She held it out and made
+an impudent little curtsy. "I protest the gentleman is all maidenly. That
+is why he and I make so good a match."
+
+The old gentleman spluttered and was still redder. "Match, miss? What,
+the devil!"
+
+"Oh no, sir. Pray come in, sir. I see you are in a heat, and I fear for a
+chill on your gout."
+
+"You are mighty civil, miss. You are too civil by half," the old
+gentleman puffed, and stalked past her.
+
+Alison stood in the way of Charles Hadley as he made to follow. There was
+some pugnacity on her fair face. "It's mighty kind of Mr. Hadley to
+concern himself with me."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, if I come untimely it's pure happy chance."
+
+She whirled round on that and they went in. "Will you please to drink a
+dish of tea, Sir John?"
+
+"You know I won't, miss." The old gentleman let himself down with a grunt
+into the largest chair in her drawing-room. "Now who the plague is this
+kissing fellow?"
+
+"Sure, sir, it's the gentleman Mr. Hadley told you of," said Alison
+meekly. She hit both her birds. Mr. Hadley and his uncle looked at each
+other. Sir John snorted. Mr. Hadley shrugged and gave an acid laugh.
+
+"What, what, that fellow of Waverton's? Od burn it, miss, he's a
+starveling usher."
+
+"Oh, sir, don't be hasty. I dare say he'll be fat when he's old."
+
+"Don't be pert, miss. D'ye know all the county's talking of you and
+this fellow?"
+
+Alison paled a little. She spoke in a still small voice. "I did not know
+how much I was in Mr. Hadley's debt. I advise you, Sir John, don't be one
+of those who talk."
+
+"You advise me, miss! Damme, ain't I your guardian?"
+
+"I am trying to remember that you once were, sir. But you make it
+very hard."
+
+"What the devil do you mean?"
+
+"I mean--"
+
+"I vow neither of you knows what you mean," Mr. Hadley drowned her in a
+drawl. "I never saw such fire-eaters. Look 'e, Alison, we come riding
+over in a civil way and--"
+
+"Tell me you have been planning a scandal about me. Oh, I vow I am
+obliged to you."
+
+Mr. Hadley laughed. "Lud, child, you ha' known me long enough. Do I deal
+in tattle? And if we have seen what we should not ha' seen, if you're hot
+at being caught, prithee, whose fault is it? Egad, you know well enough
+there's things beneath Miss Lambourne's dignity."
+
+"Yes, indeed, and I see Mr. Hadley is one of them."
+
+"You're a fool for your pains, Charles," John shouted. "What's sense to a
+wench? Now, miss, I'll have an end of this. You're old Tom Lambourne's
+daughter for all your folly, and I'll not have his flesh and blood the
+sport of any greedy rogue from the kennel."
+
+There was a moment of silence. Then Alison, whose colour was grown high,
+said quietly, "Pray, Sir John, will you go or shall I? I do not desire to
+see you again in my house."
+
+"Go?" The old gentleman struggled to his feet. "Damme, Charles, the
+girl's mad. Yes, miss, I'll go--and go straight to my Lady Waverton. Od
+burn it, we'll have your fellow out of the county in an hour. Egad, miss,
+you're besotted. Why, what is he?--a trickster, a knight of the road.
+'Stand and deliver,' that's my gentleman's trade. He's for your father's
+money, you fool."
+
+"Good-bye, Sir John," Alison said, and turned away.
+
+With unwonted agility, Mr. Hadley came between her and the door. "You are
+not fair to us, Alison," he said. "Prithee, be fair to yourself." She
+passed him without a word. Mr. Hadley turned and showed Sir John a rueful
+face. "We have made a bad business of it, sir."
+
+Sir John swore. "Brazen impudence, damme, brazen, I say."
+
+"Oh Lord! Don't make bad worse."
+
+Sir John swore again. Upon his rage came Alison's voice singing:
+
+"When daffodils begin to peer
+ With heigh! the doxy, over the dale,
+Why, then comes in the sweet o' the year,
+ For the red blood reigns in the winter's pale."
+
+Sir John spluttered, and went out roaring for his horse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+YOUNG BLOOD
+
+
+There is reason to believe that from the first Mr. Hadley suspected he
+was making a fool of himself. This sensation, the common accompaniment of
+an attempt to do your duty, was just of the right strength to ensure that
+all his actions should be disastrous. It was, as you see, not strong
+enough to restrain him from exciting the dull and choleric mind of Sir
+John Burford; it did not avail to direct the ensuing storm. And then,
+having first failed to be sufficient check, it developed into a very
+paralysis.
+
+Startled by the furies he had roused in Alison, Mr. Hadley found that
+suspicion of his own folly develop into a gruesome conviction. It
+compelled him to labour with Sir John vehemently until that blundering
+knight consented to wait before exploding his alarms upon Lady Waverton.
+Even as the first blundering remonstrances had irritated Alison's wanton
+will into passionate resolution, so this ensuing vacillation and delay
+gave it opportunity.
+
+If the tale had been told to Lady Waverton, no doubt but Harry would have
+been banished from Tetherdown that night. It is likely, indeed, that the
+ultimate fates of Alison and Harry would have been the same. But many
+antecedent adventures must have been different or superfluous.
+
+Mr. Hadley was now full of common sense. Mr. Hadley sagely argued with
+his uncle that they would do more harm than good by carrying their tale
+to Lady Waverton. The woman was a fool in grain, and whatever she did
+would surely do it in the silliest way. Tell her a word, and she would
+swiftly give birth to a scandal which the world would not willingly let
+die, in which Mr. Harry Boyce, if he were indeed the knave of their
+hypothesis, might easily find a means to strengthen his grip of Alison.
+It was better to wait and (so Mr. Hadley with a sour smile) "see which
+way the cat jumped."
+
+Perhaps Madame Alison, who was no kitten, might not be altogether
+infatuated. The shock of the afternoon, for all her heroics, might have
+waked in her some doubt of the charms of Mr. Boyce. The girl was shrewd
+enough. She had dealt with fortune-hunters before--remember the Scottish
+lord's son--and shown a humorous appreciation of the tribe. She was not a
+chit with the green sickness; she was neither so young nor so old that
+she must needs fall into the arms of any man who made eyes at her. After
+all, likely enough she was but amusing herself with Mr. Boyce. Not a very
+delicate business, but they were full-blooded folk, the Lambournes.
+Remember old Tom, her father: there was a jolly bluff rogue. Well, if
+miss was but having her fling, it would do no good to tease her.
+
+Thus Mr. Hadley, cautiously recoiling, doubting or hoping he was making
+the best of things, brought Sir John, in spite of some boilings over,
+safe back to his home and his jovial daughter.
+
+When Harry and his father rode away from Alison, for once in a while
+Harry found his father's mood in tune with his own. Colonel Boyce
+suddenly relapsed from hilarity into a perfect silence. He soon reined
+his horse to a walk, and his wonted alert, soldierly bearing suffered
+eclipse. He gave at the back, he was thoughtful, he was melancholy--a
+very comfortable companion.
+
+"Pray, sir, when do we start for France?" said Harry at length.
+
+"What's that? Egad, you're in a hurry, ain't you? Not to-night nor yet
+to-morrow. Time enough, time enough. Make the best of it, Harry." It
+occurred to Harry that his father was preoccupied.
+
+But with that he did not concern himself. He was in too much tumult. It
+appeared that he would be able to meet Alison in the morning. He did
+not know whether he was glad. He had been telling himself that he would
+have snatched at the excuse to fail her, and yet was not sure that if
+his father had announced instant departure he would not have bidden his
+father to the devil. But still in a fashion he was angry, in a degree
+he was frightened. He knew that he would go meet the girl now; he could
+not help himself--an exasperating state. And when he was with her--her
+presence now set all his nature rioting--with other folk by, it was
+hard enough to be sane; when he was alone with her in the wood, what
+would the wild wench be to him before they parted? There was no love in
+him. He had no tenderness for her, he did not want to cherish her,
+serve her, glorify her. Only she made him mad with passion. But,
+according to his private lights, he was honest, and wished to be, and
+was therefore commanded to try to save the girl from his wicked will
+and hers. He despised himself for the gleam of cautious duty. What in
+the world was worth so much as the rose petals of her face, the round
+swell of her breast?
+
+"Damme, Harry, a man's a fool to be ambitious," so his father broke in
+upon this tumult. "Why do we fret and trick after a place, or a purse, or
+a trifle of power?"
+
+Harry stared at him. "Lord, sir, why are you so moral?"
+
+And then Colonel Boyce began to laugh. "I grow old, I think. Oh, the
+devil, I never had regrets worse than the morning's headache for last
+night's wine. I suppose if you live long enough, life's a procession of
+morning headaches. Well, I vow I've not lived long enough yet, Harry."
+
+"I dare say you are the best judge," Harry admitted.
+
+"There's a higher court, eh? Who knows? Maybe we are all the toys of
+chance." He shrugged. "Why then, damme, I have never been afraid to take
+what I chose and wait for the bill. Dodge it, or pay it. Odso, there is
+no other way for a hungry man."
+
+"Lord, sir, now you are philosophical! What's the matter?"
+
+"Humph, I suppose my stomach is weakening," said Colonel Boyce. "I don't
+digest things as I did."
+
+In this pensive temper they came back to Tetherdown. The Colonel's
+servant was waiting for him with letters, and he was seen no more that
+night. Harry did not know till afterwards that Mr. Waverton, as well as
+letters, was taken to the Colonel's room.
+
+Madame Alison was left by the exhortations of her anxious friends feeling
+defiant of all the world. It is a comfortable condition, but, for a
+passionate girl of twenty-two, fruitful of delusions.
+
+Alison was so far happier than Harry in that she knew what she wanted.
+You may wonder if you will how Harry Boyce, with nothing handsome about
+him but his legs, could rouse in the girl just such a wild longing as her
+beauty set ablaze in him. These problems, comforting to the conceit of
+man, are numerous. And, as usual, madame had dreamed her gentleman into a
+wonderful fellow. The overthrow of the highwayman became from the first a
+splendid achievement. Sure, Mr. Boyce must be of rare courage and
+strength, even as he was deliciously adroit, and that insolent air with
+which he did his devoir gave one a sweet thrill.
+
+Afterwards, he progressed in her imagination from victory to victory.
+What served him best was his capacity for puzzling her. That its hero
+should want to keep such a gallant affair secret proved him of amazing
+modesty or amazing pride--perhaps both--a titillating combination. It
+surprised her more that he should dare rebuff the advances of Miss
+Lambourne. Madame knew very well the power of her beauty over men. If she
+gave one half an inch she expected that he should be instantly mad to get
+an ell of her. But here was Mr. Boyce, though she gave him a good many
+inches, as supercilious about her as if he were a woman. It was
+incredible that the creature had no warm blood in him. Indeed, she had
+proof--she could still make herself feel the ache of his grasp in the
+wood--that he was on occasion as fierce as any woman need want a man.
+Why, then, monsieur must be defying her out of wanton pride. A marvellous
+fellow, who dared think himself too good for her.
+
+She made no account of all his wise, honest talk about being poor while
+she was rich. To her temper it was impossible that a man who wanted her
+in his arms should stop to weigh his purse and hers, or to consider what
+the world would say of him for wooing her. All that must be mere fencing,
+mere mockery.
+
+To be sure, he fenced mighty cleverly. The smug meekness which he put on
+when she attacked him before others was bewildering. If she had never
+seen him in action she must have been deceived. And, faith, it seemed
+certain that he wanted to deceive her, to put her off, to put her aside.
+The haughty gentleman dared believe that he could be very comfortable
+without Miss Lambourne. It must not be allowed. He was by far too fine a
+fellow to be let go his way. Faith, it was mighty noble, this
+self-sufficient power of his, capable of anything, caring for nothing,
+hiding itself behind an impenetrable mask, and living a secret life of
+its own. She was on fire to enter into him and take possession, and use
+him for herself.
+
+So she was driven by a double need, knew it, and was not the least
+ashamed. She longed to have Harry Boyce in her arms and his grip cruel
+upon her. But also she wanted to conquer him and hold his mind at her
+order. She imagined him under her direction winning all manner of fame.
+And she believed herself mightily in love....
+
+There is a moss on the birch trunks which makes a colour of singular
+charm, a soft, delicate, grey green. A hood of that colour embraced
+Alison's black hair and the glow of the dark eyes and her raspberry lips.
+The cloak of the same colour she drew close about her with one gauntleted
+hand, so that it confessed her shape.
+
+The birches could still show a few golden leaves, though each moment
+another went whirling away as the crests bowed and tossed before the
+wind. In the brown bracken beneath Harry Boyce stood waiting. His graces
+were set off with his customary rusty black. His hat was well down upon
+his bobwig, and he hunched his shoulders against the wind, making a
+picture of melancholy discomfort. He rocked to and fro a little,
+according to a habit of his when he was excited.
+
+Alison was very close to him before she stopped.
+
+"What have you come for?" he growled.
+
+She drew a breath, and then, very quietly, "For you," she said.
+
+"You have had enough fun with me, ma'am."
+
+Her breast was touching him, and he did not draw back.
+
+"Then why did you come?" She laughed.
+
+"Because I'm a fool."
+
+"A fool to want me?"
+
+"By God, yes. You know that, you slut."
+
+"No. You would be a fool if you didn't, you--man."
+
+"Be careful." Harry flushed.
+
+"Oh Lud, was I made to be careful?"
+
+He gripped her hand, and, after a moment, "Take off your hood," he
+muttered.
+
+"Is that all?" She laughed, and let it fall from hair and neck, and
+looked as though sunlight had flashed out at her. "Honest gentleman, you
+are lightly satisfied."
+
+"So are not you, I vow."
+
+She was pleased to answer that with a scrap of a song:
+
+"Jog on, jog on the footpath way,
+ And merrily hent the stile-a!
+A merry heart goes all the way,
+ A sad one tires in a mile-a."
+
+"Faith, yours is a mighty sad one, Harry. Pray, what are you the better
+for stripping me of this?" She flirted the hood.
+
+"I can see those wicked colours of yours. Lord, what a fool is a man to
+go mad for a show of pink and white!"
+
+"And is that all I am?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "Item--a pair of eyes that look sideways; item--a woman's
+body with arms and sufficient legs."
+
+"Lud, it's an inventory! I'm for sale, then. Well, what's your bid?"
+
+"I've a shilling in my pocket ma'am and want it to buy tobacco."
+
+"Oh, silly, what does a man pay for a woman?"
+
+Harry laughed. "Why, nothing, if she's worth buying."
+
+Then Alison said softly, "Going--going--gone," and clapped her hands
+and laughed.
+
+"You go beyond me at least," Harry said in a moment.
+
+She put her hands behind her and leaned forward till her bosom pressed
+upon him lightly, and then, with her head tilted back so that he saw the
+white curve from under her chin, and the line of the blue vein in it,
+"You want me, Harry," she said.
+
+"You know that too well, by God."
+
+"Too well for what, sir?"
+
+"Too well for my peace, ma'am." He flushed.
+
+"His peace!" She laughed. "Oh Lud, the dear man wants peace!"
+
+He flung himself upon her, holding her to him as she staggered back, and
+kissed her till she was gasping for breath, gripped her head to hold it
+against his kisses, buried his face in the fragrance of her neck. She
+gave herself, her arms still behind her, offering the swell of her
+breasts to him, her eyes gay....
+
+"You are mine, now. You're mine, do you hear?" he said unsteadily.
+
+"I want you," she smiled, and was crushed again.
+
+When he let her go, it was to step back and look at her, wondering and
+intent. She stood something less than her full height, her bosom beating
+fast. She was all flushed and smiling, but now her eyes were dim and they
+met his shyly.
+
+"Egad, you're exalting," he said with a wry smile.
+
+"I feel all power when you grasp at me so--power--just power."
+
+"No, faith, you are not. When I hold you to me, when you yield for me, I
+am all the power there is. Damme, the very life of the world."
+
+"So then," she looked at him through her eyelashes, "and have it so. For
+it's I who give you all."
+
+"In effect," Harry said: and then, "go to, you make us both mad."
+
+"I am content."
+
+"Yes, and for how long?"
+
+She made an exclamation. "Have I worn out the poor gentleman already?"
+
+"Would you keep yourself for me? Will you wait?"
+
+"Why, what have we to wait for now?"
+
+"Till I am something more than this shabby usher."
+
+"I despise you when you talk so." Her face flamed. "Fie, what's a word
+and a coat? You have lived with me in your arms. You are what I make of
+you then. Is it enough, Harry, is it not enough?"
+
+"I'll come to your arms something better before I come again. I am off
+to France."
+
+"Ah!" Then she studied him for a little while. "You meant to run away,
+then. Oh, brave Harry! Oh, wise! Pray, are you not ashamed?"
+
+"Yes, shame's the only wear."
+
+"I'll not spare you, I vow."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, mercy never was a virtue of yours."
+
+"Is it mercy you want in a woman?"
+
+"I'll take what I want, not ask for it."
+
+"Why, now you brag! And if there is not in me what monsieur wants?"
+
+"So much the worse for us both. But you should have thought of
+that before."
+
+"Faith, Harry, you take it sombrely." She made a wry mouth at him. "Pluck
+up heart. I vow I'll satisfy you."
+
+"You'll not deny me anything you have."
+
+She paused a moment. "Amen, so be it. And must we never smile again?"
+
+"I wonder"--he took her hands; "I wonder, will you be smiling to-morrow
+when I am away to France."
+
+"Oh, are you still set on that fancy?" She gave a contemptuous laugh.
+"Prithee, Harry, shall I like you the better for waiting till you have
+French lace at your neck and a frenchified air?"
+
+"You'll please to wait till I bring Miss Lambourne a fellow who has done
+something more than snuffle over a servitor's books. I want to prove
+myself, Alison."
+
+"You have proved yourself on me, sir. What, am I a lean wench in despair
+to hunger for a snuffling servitor? If you were that, I were not for you.
+But I know you better, God help me, my Lord Lucifer. Why then, take the
+goods the gods provide you and say grace over me." Harry shook his head,
+smiling. "Lord, it's a mule! Pray what do you look to do in France?"
+
+"I am pledged to my father and his policies--to go poking behind the
+curtains of the war and deal with the go-betweens of princes."
+
+"So. You talk big. Well, I like to hear it. What is the business?"
+
+"My father, if you believe him, has Marlborough's secrets in his pocket
+and is sent to chaffer for him. You may guess where and why. Queen Anne
+hath a brother."
+
+Her eyes sparkled. "You like the adventure, Harry?"
+
+"Egad, I begin to think so."
+
+"I love you for that!" she cried, and it was the first time she spoke the
+word. "Why then, first go with me to church and call me wife!"
+
+He drew in his breath. "By God, do you mean that?"
+
+"Why, don't you mean me honourably?" She gave an unsteady laugh, her eyes
+mistily kind.
+
+He sprang at her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+ABSENCE OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+
+It was always in after life alleged by Mr. Hadley that his steady
+interest in the family of his uncle was nothing but a desire to keep the
+old gentleman out of mischief. Sir John Burford was indeed of a temper
+too irascible to be safe with his bucolically English mind: a man who in
+throwing tankards at his servants and challenges at his friends was a
+source of continuous anxiety to his reasonable kinsfolk. But he had also
+a daughter.
+
+She received the benevolent Mr. Hadley when on the morning after the
+explosions in Alison's house he came to see whether Sir John was still
+dangerous or his daughter any thinner. It was the latter purpose which he
+professed to Susan Burford. She was not annoyed. In her cradle she had
+been instructed that she was a jolly, fat girl, and through life she
+accepted the status, like every other which was given her, with great
+good humour. She was, in fact, no fatter than serves to give a tall woman
+an air of genial well-being. It was conjectured by her friends that her
+father, needing all his irascibility for himself, had allowed her to
+inherit only his physical qualities. She had indeed the largeness of Sir
+John and his open countenance. Her supreme equanimity perhaps came from
+her mother. She was by a dozen years at least younger than Mr. Hadley,
+and always thought him a very clever boy.
+
+"Sir John is gone out to the pigs, Mr. Hadley. Perhaps you'll go too,"
+she said, and looked innocent.
+
+"Well, they are peaceful company, Susan. And you're so surly."
+
+"I thought you would find some joke in that," said Susan, with kindly
+satisfaction.
+
+"Damme, don't be so maternal. It's cloying to the male. Be discreet,
+Susan. You will talk as though you had weaned me but a year or two, and
+still wanted me at the breast."
+
+Susan was not disconcerted. "Will you drink a tankard?" said she. "Or Sir
+John has some Spanish wine which he makes much of."
+
+"Susan, you despise men. It is a vile infidel habit." He paused, and
+Susan dutifully smiled. "Why now, what are you laughing at? You! You
+don't know what I mean."
+
+"To be sure, no," said Susan. "Does it matter?"
+
+"Oh Lud, your repartees! Bludgeons and broadswords! I mean, ma'am, you
+think men are nought but casks--things to fill with drink and victuals.
+Is it not true?" Susan considered this, her head a little on one side and
+smiling. She wore a dress of dark blue velvet cut low about the neck, and
+so, nature having made her sumptuous, was very well suited. "Egad, now I
+know what you're like," Mr. Hadley cried. "You're one of Rubens' women,
+Susan; just one of those plump, spacious dames as healthy as milk and
+peaches, and blandly jolly about it."
+
+Susan looked down at herself with her usual amiable satisfaction and
+patted the heavy coils of her yellow hair and said: "Sir John often
+talks of having me painted. But that's after dinner. Will you stay
+dinner, Mr. Hadley?"
+
+"Damme, Susan, what should I say after dinner, if I say so much now?"
+
+Susan smiled upon him with perfect calm. "Why, I never can tell what you
+will say. Can you?"
+
+"You're a hypocrite, Susan. You look as simple as a baby, and the truth
+is you're deep, devilish deep. Here!" He fumbled in his pocket. "Here's a
+guinea for your thoughts if you tell them true. Now what are you
+thinking, ma'am?"
+
+"Why, I am thinking that you came to see my father, and yet you stay here
+talking to me;" she gurgled pleasant laughter and held out her hand for
+the guinea.
+
+Mr. Hadley still retained it. "That pleases you, does it?"
+
+"Yes, indeed. You're so comical."
+
+Mr. Hadley surrendered the guinea, looked at his empty left sleeve and
+made a wry face. "Lord, yes, I am comical enough. A lop-sided grotesque."
+
+"That's not fair!" He had at last made her blush. "You know well I did
+not mean that. I think it makes you look--noble."
+
+"It makes me feel a fool," said Mr. Hadley. "Lord, Susan, one arm's not
+enough to go round you."
+
+"So we'll kill the Elstree hog for Christmas;" that apposite
+interruption came in her father's robust voice. Sir John strode rolling
+in. "What, Charles! In very good time, egad. You can come with me."
+
+"What, sir, back to the swine? I profess Susan makes as pretty company."
+
+Sir John was pleased to laugh. "Ay, the wench pays for her victuals, too.
+Damme, Sue, you look good enough to eat." He chucked her chin paternally.
+"Well, my lad, I ha' thought over that business and I'm taking horse to
+ride over to Tetherdown."
+
+"Oh Lord," said Mr. Hadley. "And what then, sir?"
+
+"I'll talk to Master Geoffrey."
+
+"Oh Lord," said Mr. Hadley again. "Do it delicately."
+
+"Delicate be damned," said Sir John.
+
+"I had better ride with you," said Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Good boy. Here, Roger--Mr. Hadley's horse."
+
+Susan stood up. "Lud, sir, you will not be here to dinner then?"
+
+Sir John shook his head. Mr. Hadley scratched his chin. "I am not so sure
+that Geoffrey will give us a dinner," said he.
+
+"Why, sir," Susan was interested, "what's your business with Mr.
+Waverton?"
+
+"To tell him he's a fool, wench," quoth Sir John.
+
+"Oh. And will Mr. Waverton like that?"
+
+"Like it! Odso, he'll like it well enough if he has sense."
+
+Mr. Hadley grinned. "That's logic, faith. Well, sir, have with you."
+
+So off they rode. On the way Sir John was pleased to expound to Mr.
+Hadley the profound sagacity of his new plan. He would rally Geoffrey on
+his flaccidity; accuse him of being an oaf; and, describing all the while
+in an inflammatory manner the charms of Alison, hint that Geoffrey's
+tutor had ambitions after them. "And if that don't wake up my gentleman,
+he may go to the devil for me and deserve it."
+
+It crossed Mr. Hadley's lucid mind that a gentleman who required so much
+waking up did not deserve Miss Lambourne. But she was quite capable of
+discovering that for herself, if indeed she had not already. And
+certainly it would do Geoffrey no harm to be made uncomfortable. So Mr.
+Hadley rode on with right good will.
+
+But when they came to Tetherdown it was announced that Mr. Waverton had
+gone riding. "Why, then we'll wait for him." Sir John strode in. The
+butler looked dubious. Mr. Waverton had said nothing of when he would
+come back.
+
+"Why the devil should he?" Sir John stretched his legs before the fire.
+"He'll dine, won't he?"
+
+The butler bowed.
+
+"Prithee, William," says Mr. Hadley, "is Mr. Boyce in the house?"
+
+"Mr. Boyce, sir, is gone walking."
+
+Mr. Hadley shrugged. "Odso, away with you," Sir John waved the man off.
+"Let my lady know we are here."
+
+The butler coughed. "My lady is in bed, Sir John."
+
+"What, still?" quoth Sir John, for it was close upon noon.
+
+"Hath been afoot, Sir John. But took to her bed half an hour since."
+
+"What, what? Is she ailing?"
+
+The butler could not say, but looked a volume of secrets, so that Sir
+John swore him out of the room.
+
+"Vaporous old wench, Charles," Sir John snorted. And a second time Mr.
+Hadley shrugged.
+
+In a little while the butler came back even more puffed up. Her ladyship
+hoped to receive the gentlemen in half an hour.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+IN HASTE
+
+
+Oh, Harry, Harry, I give in. I am the weaker vessel. At least, I have the
+shorter legs."
+
+"What, you're asking me to spare you already? Lord, how will you bear me
+as a husband?"
+
+They were under the great beeches in Hampstead Lane, breasting the rise
+to the heath, on their march for that kindly chapel, where, if you dined
+in the tavern annexed, the incumbent would marry you for nothing, charge
+but the five shillings, cost price of the Queen's licence, and ask no
+questions.
+
+Harry shortened his stride, and looked down with grim amusement at
+Alison's breathless bosom.
+
+"I believe you mean to make an end of me before you have begun with me,"
+she panted. "Lord, sir, what a figure you'll cut if you bring me to
+church too faint to say, 'I will.'"
+
+"Why, the Levite would but take it for maiden modesty. Not knowing you."
+
+"You are trying to play the brute. It won't save you, Harry. I shan't be
+frightened."
+
+"You! No, faith, it's I. I am beside myself with terror."
+
+"I do believe that's true!" She laughed at him. "But, oh, dear
+sir, why?"
+
+"Lest I should not fulfil the heroical expectations of Miss Lambourne.
+Confess it, ma'am; you count on me to exalt you into heavens of ecstasy,
+to bewilder the world with my glories, and be shaved by breakfast-time."
+
+"To be sure, I'll always expect the impossible of you."
+
+"There it is. I suppose you expect me to begin by creating a
+wedding-ring."
+
+"Why, you have created me."
+
+"Oh, no, no, no. You're a splendid iniquity, but not mine, I vow."
+
+"This woman of yours never lived till you made her. I profess Miss
+Lambourne was ever known for a dull cold thing born 'to suckle fools and
+chronicle small beer.'"
+
+"So she wrote me down her property. Egad, ma'am, it was very natural."
+
+"You know what you have made of me," Alison said.
+
+"God knows what you'll make of me. And now in the matter of the ring--"
+
+"Oh Lud, what a trivial thing is a man!" She drew off her glove and held
+out a hand with two rings on it. "Marry me with which you will." One was
+a plain piece of gold, paler than the common, carved into an odd device
+of a snake biting its tail.
+
+"With thine own ring I thee wed," Harry said, and took it off. "I
+take you to witness, Mrs. Alison, the snake was in your paradise
+before I came."
+
+They were across the heath now and going down the steep, narrow lane
+beyond. The chapel of the Hampstead marriages stood raw red beside a
+garden with lawns and arbours shaggy in winter's untidiness. Even the
+tavern at the gate, a spreading one-story place of timber, looked dead
+and desolate.
+
+Harry forced open the sticking door and strode in, Madame Alison
+loitering behind. He was met by a dirty lad whose gaping clothes were
+half hidden by a leather apron, and whose shoes protruded straw--a lad
+who smelt of the stable and small beer.
+
+"Where's the priest?" said Harry.
+
+"In the tap," said the boy, and shuffled off.
+
+There came out into the passage, wheezing and wiping his chops, a little
+bloated man in a cassock, with his bands under his right ear. He leered
+at Harry and tried to look round him at Alison.
+
+"You're out of season, my lord," said he. "These chill rains, they play
+the mischief with lusty blood. Go to, you'll not be denied, won't you? Do
+you dine here?"
+
+"We have no time for it."
+
+"What, you're hasty, ain't you?" He gave a hoarse laugh. "There's my fee
+to pay then."
+
+"Here's a guinea to pay for all," said Harry.
+
+The dirty fist took it, the little red eyes peered at it closely, the
+dirty mouth bit it and was satisfied. "Go you round to the chapel door
+and wait. Lord, but man and wench never had to wait for me." He
+waddled off.
+
+Harry turned upon Alison. "So with all my worldly goods I thee endow," he
+said, with a crooked smile. "God give you joy of them. I vow I was never
+so frightened of spending a guinea."
+
+"Why, d'ye doubt if I'm worth it? Nay, sir, I'm honest stuff and
+challenge any trial."
+
+Harry looked down at her and was met by eyes as bold as his own.
+
+The chapel door opened, and the little priest beckoned them in. A pair of
+witnesses were already posted by the altar, the dirty lad of the tavern
+and a shock-headed wench.
+
+"Licence first, licence first." The parson bustled off to a table in a
+corner. "I warrant you we do things decently in Sion. Aye, and tightly,
+my pretty. Never a lawyer can undo my knots, never fear."
+
+He scratched laboriously over their names, while the dank smell of the
+place sank into them.
+
+They were marched to the altar. A hoarse muttering poured from the
+priest. He made no pretence of solemnity or even of meaning. He was
+concerned only to make an end and have done with them. Of all the service
+they heard nothing clearly but what they said themselves, and while they
+were deliberate over that the little priest grunted and puffed at them.
+
+He ended with a leer and drove them before him back to the table. There
+was more scratching in his register. The two uncouth witnesses scrawled
+something for their names and shambled off.
+
+"Let's breathe some free air," said Harry, and laid hold of his wife.
+
+The parson chuckled. "Free? You'll never be free again, my lord. I can
+see that in madame's eye. What, you ha' sold your birthright for a mess
+of pottage, ain't you? And mighty savoury pottage, too, says you." He
+rolled his eyes and smacked his lips. "Softly now, softly, madame wants
+her certificate. Madame wants to warrant herself a lawful married wife,
+if you don't ... There, my lady. And happy to marry you again any day at
+the same price."
+
+They were away from him at last and in clean air stretching their legs up
+the hill again.
+
+"Poor Harry!" Alison laughed. "Before you looked like a man fighting
+for his life. Now you look like a man going to be hanged. Dear lad!
+Pray how much would you give to escape me now?" She put her arm into
+his. He let her shorten his stride a little, but made no other
+confession of her existence. "Fie, Harry, it's over early to repent. In
+all reason you should first be sure of your sin. Who knows? I may not
+be deadly after all. 'Alack,' says he, 'I will not be comforted. Egad,
+the world's a cheat. A fool and his folly are soon parted they told me,
+and here am I tied to her till death us do part. So, a halter, gratis,
+for God's sake.'"
+
+"You're full of other folks' nonsense, Mrs. Boyce," said Harry with a
+grim look at her.
+
+"Oh, noble name!" She bobbed a curtsy. "Full? I am full of nothing but
+fasting, aye," she sighed, and turned up her eyes--"fasting from all but
+our sacrament."
+
+They were upon the ridge of the heath and Harry checked her, and stood
+looking away over the wide prospect of mist-veiled meadow and dim blue
+woods. She was beginning her mocking chatter again when he broke in
+with, "Ods life, ha' done!" and turned to look deep into her eyes.
+"There's mystery in this, and I think you see nothing of it."
+
+"Why, yes, faith. If you were no mystery, should I want you? If you had
+discovered all of me, would you want me?"
+
+"Bah, what do we know of living, you and I, or--or of love?"
+
+She laughed, with a scrap of twisted song:
+
+"Most living is feigning.
+Most loving mere folly,
+Then heigho the holly,
+This life is most jolly."
+
+He shrugged and marched her on again.
+
+"Pray, sir, will you dine at home?" she said demurely.
+
+Harry flushed. "I must go tell my father and all," he growled. "I'll be
+with you soon enough, madame wife."
+
+"Oh brave! Dear sir, have with you. I must see Geoffrey's face."
+
+"Egad, let's be decent!" Harry cried.
+
+"Decent! For shame, sir! What's more decent than man and wife?"
+
+"Man and wife!" Harry echoed it with a sour laugh. "Do you feel a wife? I
+never felt less of a man."
+
+"You shall be satisfied," she said, and looked at him gravely. "And I--I
+am not afraid, Harry."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+DISTRESS OF A MOTHER
+
+
+Mr. Hadley and Sir John Burford in the hall at Tetherdown looked at each
+other across the fire. "Would you call for a pipe now, Charles?" says Sir
+John, fidgeting.
+
+"There'll be none in the house, sir. Geoffrey has no stomach for
+tobacco."
+
+"Damme, if I know what he hath a stomach for," Sir John grumbled, and
+kicked at the burning logs. "He don't eat no more than an old woman, nor
+drink so much as a young miss. Ain't the half-hour gone, Charles?"
+
+"That's a poetic phrase, sir. It means a year or so--while she's tiring
+her hair."
+
+"What and painting her face, too? Same as Jezebel."
+
+My lady's waiting-woman, Arabella, came in. She minced in the manner of
+her mistress, but, being a foot shorter, with different effect. She stood
+before Sir John, who had the largest chair, and stared at him, with
+languid insolence. "Ods my life, don't ogle me, woman," says he.
+
+"At your leisure, sir, if you please." She tossed her head.
+
+"Leisure! Oh Lord, I'm at leisure, thank 'e."
+
+Arabella sniffed.
+
+"I think you are in madame's chair, sir," Mr. Hadley explained.
+
+"What, then? She ain't here, nor I don't carry the plague."
+
+"The lady-in-waiting wants to compose it for madame."
+
+"Compose!" Sir John exploded an oath, and jumped up. "I ha'n't
+decomposed it."
+
+Arabella dusted the chair, wheeled it a little this way and that, put two
+footstools before it, and three cushions into it, contemplated them for
+some time, and then shifted them a little. After which she minced out
+with a great sigh.
+
+"Good God!" says Sir John.
+
+"I wonder," says Mr. Hadley--"I wonder if we've come to take the breeks
+off a Highlander?"
+
+"What's your will?" Sir John gasped.
+
+"I wonder if my lady knows all we can tell her. It might have made her
+hypochondriac."
+
+"Hip who? Odso, I am hipped myself."
+
+My lady came. She had so much flowing drapery about her that she seemed
+all robes. She moved very slowly, she was bowed, and she leaned upon the
+shoulder of Arabella. With care she deposited herself in the big chair.
+Arabella arranged her draperies, arranged the cushion, and stood aside.
+My lady lay back, put back the lace about her head, and showed them her
+large pale face and sighed. "You are welcome, gentlemen," said she. "You
+are vastly kind."
+
+"Odso, ma'am, what's the matter?" Sir John cried.
+
+"Why, have you not heard? Arabella, he has not heard!" My lady was
+convulsed, and clutched at the maid, who comforted her with a
+scent-bottle. "He has gone!" she sighed. "He has gone."
+
+"What the devil! Who the devil?"
+
+My lady recovered herself. From somewhere in her voluminous folds she
+produced a letter. "If it would please you, be patient with me. My
+unhappy eyes." She dabbed at them with a handful of lace, and read:
+
+"My lady, my mother,--I have but time for these few unkempt lines,
+wherein to bid you for a while farewell. My good friend, Colonel Boyce,
+has favoured me with an occasion to go see something of the warring world
+beyond the sea. And I, since the inglorious leisure of the hearth irks my
+blood, heartily company with him. It needs not that you indulge in tears,
+save such as must fall for my absence. I seek honour. So, with a son's
+kiss, I leave you, my mother. G.W."
+
+On which his mother's voice broke, and she wept.
+
+"Lord, what a fop!" said Sir John. My lady swelled in her draperies. "So
+he's gone to the war, has he? Odso, I didn't think he had it in him."
+
+"Sir, if you jeer at my bereavement!" my lady sobbed.
+
+"And where's Harry Boyce?" says Mr. Hadley.
+
+Sir John stared at him. "Why, seeking honour too, ain't he? What's in
+your head, Charles?"
+
+"This is rude," my lady sobbed; "this is brutal. The tutor! Oh, heaven,
+what is the tutor to me? I would to God I had never seen him--him nor his
+wicked father."
+
+Sir John tugged at Mr. Hadley's empty sleeve and drew him aside. "What
+are you pointing at, Charles? D'ye mean the two rogues have took Geoffrey
+off to make away with him between 'em?"
+
+"Lord, sir, you've a villainous imagination." Mr. Hadley grinned. "I mean
+no such matter. Nay, I'll lay a guinea, Harry Boyce is not gone at all."
+
+"Sir John"--my lady raised herself and was shrill--"what are you
+whispering there?"
+
+"What, what? You mean the old fellow took Geoffrey off to leave the young
+fellow a clear field with Ally Lambourne? Odso, that's devilish deep,
+ain't it? But we can set the young fellow packing, my lad. We--"
+
+"Sir John!" my lady's voice rose higher yet.
+
+"Coming, ma'am, coming. Od burn my heart and soul!" That last invocation
+was not directed at her but an invading tumult.
+
+The butler entered backwards, protesting, between two men who did not
+take off their hats. They were in riding-boots and cloaks, and splashed
+from the road. They had pistol butts ostentatious in their side pockets,
+and one carried some papers in his hand.
+
+"Stand back, my bully, stand back, or you'll smell Newgate," says he to
+the butler.
+
+"Burn your impudence," Sir John roared, and strode forward.
+
+"In the Queen's name. Messengers of the Secretary of State, with his
+warrant." The man waved his papers under Sir John's nose. "Master of the
+house, are you?"
+
+"I am Sir John Burford of Finchley, and be hanged to you."
+
+"There is the mistress of the house, sirrah," says Mr. Hadley
+
+"Thank'e. In the Queen's name, ma'am. Warrants to take Oliver Boyce,
+Colonel, and Geoffrey Waverton, Esquire."
+
+My lady shrieked, fell back, and was understood to be fainting.
+
+"You come too late, sirrah," says Mr. Hadley. "Your foxes be gone away."
+
+The man tapped his nose and grinned. "That won't do, sir. Set about it,
+Joe," and he nudged his fellow.
+
+"What's the charge against them?" says Mr. Hadley.
+
+The man laughed. "Come, sir, you know better than that. I ain't here to
+answer questions." Mr. Hadley put his hand in his pocket. The man grinned
+and shook his head, and went out pushing his comrade in front of him. Mr.
+Hadley followed them. As soon as they were out in the corridor and the
+door was shut behind them, the man turned and held out his hand to Mr.
+Hadley, who dropped into it a couple of guineas. "Lord, now, what did you
+think it was?" says the messenger genially. "Treasonable
+correspondence--Pretender--Lewis le Grand and so forth. Quite
+gentleman-like, d'ye smoke me?"
+
+"Prithee, who set you on?" says Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Now you go too far, ecod, you do. I don't mind obliging a gentleman,
+but you want to lose me my place. We'll be searching the house, by
+your leave."
+
+Off they went, and Mr. Hadley went back to my lady. She had been revived,
+and the air was heavy with scent. She fluttered her hands at the
+ministering Arabella and said faintly, "What is it, Charles?"
+
+"It seems there's some talk of their having dealings with the Pretender."
+
+"Lord bless my soul," Sir John puffed.
+
+"The Pretender?" Lady Waverton smiled through her powder. "La, now,
+Geoffrey's father always had a kindness for the young Prince."
+
+"I vow, ma'am, you take it with a fine spirit," says Mr. Hadley in
+some surprise.
+
+"You'll find, Mr. Hadley, that such families as ours, the older families,
+know how to bear themselves in this cause."
+
+Sir John stared at her and puffed the louder, and muttered very audibly,
+"Here's a turnabout!"
+
+"Oh, ma'am, to be sure it's a well-born party," Mr. Hadley shrugged.
+"D'ye give us leave to remain and see that these fellows show no
+impudence?"
+
+"Oh, sir, you are very obliging," says my lady superciliously.
+
+Mr. Hadley bowed, and withdrew to the recess of a window with Sir John
+following. "Here's a queer thing, Charles. Did ever you know Master
+Geoffrey was a Jacobite?" Mr. Hadley shook his head. "Nor this Colonel
+Boyce neither?"
+
+"I never saw a Jacobite in so good a coat, and I never thought Geoffrey
+would risk his coat for any king. And thirdly and lastly, I never knew
+Whitehall put itself out in these days whether a man was Jacobite or no.
+Why, damme, they be all half Jacobites themselves, from the Queen down."
+
+"Aye, aye," says Sir John sagely. "A devilish queer thing indeed."
+
+And on that came Alison and Harry--Alison rosy and smiling, Harry a
+pale and deliberate appendage. "Dear Lady Waverton, let me present
+my husband."
+
+Lady Waverton sat up straight. Lady Waverton embraced the pair of them
+with a bewildered glare.
+
+"I married him this morning," Alison laughed.
+
+"Alison, this is unmaidenly jesting," said my lady feebly.
+
+"Why, if it were, so it might be. But the truth is, it's unmaidenly
+truth. For I am Mrs. Harry Boyce. Give me joy."
+
+"Joy!" my lady gasped. "It's unworthy! It's cruel! Oh, Geoffrey,
+Geoffrey! How dare you?" She was again understood to faint.
+
+Through the rustle of Arabella and the odours of scent came the
+explosions of Sir John, swearing.
+
+Mr. Hadley moved forward, and, ignoring Alison, addressed himself to
+Harry. "Pray, sir, did you know that Mr. Waverton this morning left
+Tetherdown in your father's company, your father taking him, as he says
+in a letter, to the wars?"
+
+"Knew?" Lady Waverton chose to speak out of her swoon. "To be sure they
+knew. They would not have dared else. Dear Geoffrey! A villain! And you,
+miss--you whom he trusted! Oh!" She again took scent.
+
+"La, ma'am, he trusted me no more than I him. You are not well, I think."
+
+"You give me news, Mr. Hadley," Harry said. "I knew that my father meant
+to go abroad, and understood that I was to go with him."
+
+"Perhaps you'll go after him." Mr. Hadley shrugged and turned away.
+
+"Why, what's all this, Harry?" Alison laughed. "Your wise father hath
+chosen to take Geoffrey instead of you?"
+
+"In spite of my modesty, I'm surprised, ma'am," says Harry.
+
+"Burn your impudent face," quoth Sir John from the background.
+
+"Well, sir, if you were in your father's plans, maybe you'll pay your
+father's debts," quoth Mr. Hadley.
+
+"What do I owe you, Mr. Hadley?" says Harry, bristling.
+
+The two messengers came back again. "Right enough, sir, gone away." The
+spokesman nodded at Mr. Hadley. "We'll be riding. Trust no offence?" He
+looked hopeful.
+
+"Here's Colonel Boyce's son, wishing to answer for his father."
+
+The man looked Harry up and down and chuckled.
+
+"Lord, and mighty like. Servant, sir," he winked at Harry. "Tell the
+Colonel, sorry we missed him," He winked again and laughed.
+
+"What's this comedy of yours, Mr. Hadley?" says Harry.
+
+"Your friends have warrants to arrest your father and Mr. Waverton for
+treasonable correspondence with the Pretender. But none for you, I fear,
+Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Devil a one," the man laughed. "Come, Ned, we'll be jogging," Out
+they swung.
+
+A bewildered company, full of suspicions, stared at one another.
+
+"Come, Harry, let us go home," Alison said.
+
+"Home!" Lady Waverton gasped with an hysterical laugh. "Hear her!"
+
+"My lady"--Alison made her a curtsy--"gentlemen--all the friends of Mr.
+Boyce will be very welcome to me."
+
+Sir John swore. "You for a fool and he for a knave, damme, you're
+well matched."
+
+"When you were younger, sir, I suppose you were less of a boor," says
+Harry. "Mr. Hadley--my lady--" he made two stiff bows and gave his arm
+to Alison.
+
+"Humph, they go off with the honours." Mr. Hadley shrugged, and held out
+his arm in front of Sir John, who was plunging after them.
+
+"Be hanged to you. What did the rogue mean, telling me I was old?"
+
+"Why, he meant that a man who is too old to fight should be civil."
+
+"Too old?" Sir John fumed. "Burn him for a coward."
+
+"I think not," says Mr. Hadley. "But for the rest--God be with you. My
+lady--sincerely your servant."
+
+My lady was now weeping. "You never loved him," she complained. "You were
+never his friend," and she became speechless.
+
+The two men looked at each other. "Well, Charles, we'll to horse," Sir
+John concluded. "Servant, ma'am." They left her in the scented embraces
+of Arabella.
+
+To Harry as he went out came the butler, who, with something of a furtive
+manner, produced and gave him a letter. Harry looked at the writing and
+thrust it into his coat. Alison saw and took no notice.
+
+They walked on for some way before silence was broken. Then Harry said:
+"Well, madame wife, so you feel you've been bit."
+
+"Who--I? What do you know of what I feel?"
+
+"Oh, I can tell hot from cold. I know when you are thinking you ought to
+have thought twice. Egad, I agree with you. You've been badly bit. Here
+you were told that I was just off out of the country; that you must catch
+me at once if you wanted to catch me; that if you took me you would soon
+have me off your hands. And now we're tied up, you find I'm not going at
+all. I vow it's disheartening. But if you'll believe me, I did honestly
+believe my old rogue of a father. I did think he meant to take me."
+
+"And now you can't be comforted because you have to stay with me. Oh,
+Harry, you're a gloomy fellow to own a new wife. But why did the good man
+take Geoffrey when he might have had you? I should have thought he knew a
+goose when he saw one."
+
+"I can't tell. I never saw much meaning in the old gentleman."
+
+"You might as well look at his letter."
+
+Harry stared. "How did you know that was his?"
+
+"You like doing things mysteriously, the family of Boyce."
+
+The letter said this:
+
+"MR. HARRY,--I flatter myself that you will be offended. But 'tis all for
+your good. When I came after you I did not know that you were so clever a
+fellow. No more did I expect that I should have to like you. But since I
+do, I prefer that I should do without you. And since you have some of my
+wits, you may very well do without me. But I believe you will do the
+better without friend Geoffrey. Therefore I take him, who will indeed do
+my business much more sincerely than your worthy self. With the dear
+fellow safe out of the way, I count upon you to push on bravely with Mrs.
+Alison. You'll not find two such chances in one life. If you were master
+of her you could promise yourself anything in decent reason you please to
+want. For all your wits you are not the man to make his own way out of
+nothing. So don't be haughty. Why should you? It's a mighty pretty thing,
+Harry, and (trust an old fellow who hath made some use of the sex in his
+day) as tender as you may hope for in an heiress. She has looked your way
+already, and in her pique at the good Geoffrey deserting her, you'll find
+her warmer for you. If you don't make her warm enough for wiving, you're
+an oaf, which is not in my blood--nor your mother's, to be honest. Nor if
+I was young again and played your hand, I wouldn't let her grow cold when
+I had her safe.... So be a man, and I give you my blessing.
+
+"O. BOYCE"
+
+Harry held it out to Alison. "We're a noble family--the family of
+Boyce," said he.
+
+But Alison read it without a blush or a sneer, and when she gave it back
+she was laughing. "Oh, he's more cunning than any beast of the field! Oh,
+he knows the world! Poor, dear fellow."
+
+"Oh Lud, yes, he's a fool for his wisdom. But he's my father."
+
+"Well, sir?" Harry scowled at the ground. "Oh, what does he matter?
+Harry, what does anything matter to-day--or to-morrow, or to-morrow's
+to-morrow?"
+
+"I had no guess of all this." Harry crushed the paper. "You
+believe that?"
+
+"Oh, silly, silly."
+
+"You're still content?"
+
+"Not yet," Alison said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+SPECTATORS OF PARADISE
+
+
+In the old house on the hill Mrs. Weston sat alone. She was looking out
+of the oriel window at a garden of wintry emptiness and wind swept. The
+westerly gale roared and moaned, the heavy earth was sodden and beaten
+into hollows and pools through which broke tiny pale points of snowdrops.
+Away beyond the first terrace of lawn the roses bowed and tossed wild
+arms. A silvery gleam of sunlight fell on the turf, glistened, and was
+gone. Mrs. Weston sat with her hands in her lap and her needle at rest in
+a half-worked piece of linen. A veil of languor had fallen upon the
+wistfulness of her face. Her bosom hardly stirred. The sound of the
+opening door broke her dream, and she picked up her work and began to sew
+eagerly. It was Susan Burford who came in, royally neat in her
+riding-habit, for all the storm. She walked in her leisurely, spacious
+fashion to Mrs. Weston, who started and stood up, laughing nervously.
+"Indeed Alison will be pleased. You are kind. I know she has been longing
+to see you."
+
+Susan laughed and, a large young goddess of health, stooped to kiss the
+worn face. "You always talk about somebody else. Are you pleased?"
+
+"My dear!" Mrs. Weston protested. "You know I am."
+
+"We match very well. You never want to talk, and I never have anything to
+say." Susan sat down, and for some time the only sound was from Mrs.
+Weston's needle. At last, "You are still here, then," Susan said.
+
+"My dear! Why not, indeed?"
+
+"Oh. But you would always stay by Alison if she needed you."
+
+"Why, she never has needed me. And now less than ever."
+
+"Oh." Susan considered that. "And is he kind to you?"
+
+Mrs. Weston flushed. "Indeed he has been very good to me."
+
+"That is all I wanted to ask you," said Susan, and again there was
+silence.
+
+After a little while Mrs. Weston dropped her sewing and looked anxiously
+at Susan. "Have you ever seen him?"
+
+"Only his back. He used to keep in the corners at Tetherdown."
+
+"I suppose people--talk about him."
+
+"I don't listen," said Susan, "People are always in such a hurry. I
+can't keep up."
+
+"I suppose you think Alison was in a great hurry."
+
+"Only Alison knows about that."
+
+"Yes." Mrs. Weston looked at her with affectionate admiration, as though
+she had been endowed with rare understanding of the human heart. "Do you
+know you are the only one of the people Alison liked who has come
+here--since?"
+
+"Oh." (Susan's favourite eloquent reply.) "I don't mind about people."
+
+"He doesn't mind at all. She doesn't mind yet."
+
+"What is that you are working?" said Susan.
+
+"But indeed they are most perfectly happy," said Mrs. Weston, in a hurry.
+
+"Is it for a tucker?" said Susan.
+
+In a greater hurry, Mrs. Weston began to explain. She was still at it
+when Alison and Harry came back.
+
+They too had been riding. The storm had granted Alison none of Susan's
+majestic neatness. She looked a wild creature of the hills, her wet habit
+clinging about her, black ringlets broken loose curling about her, brown
+eyes fierce with life, and all the dainty colours of her face very clear
+and bright. She saw Susan and cried out, "Oh, my child, I love you."
+
+Susan rose leisurely to her majestic height and smiled down upon her. "I
+think you are the loveliest thing that ever was made," said she. Alison
+laughed, and they kissed.
+
+"I am quite of your mind, ma'am," said Harry. "Or I was," he made Susan a
+bow, "till this moment."
+
+"I was going to ask her if she was happy, sir," Susan said. "I shan't ask
+her." She held out her hand.
+
+"But I want you to ask me a thousand things." Alison put an arm round
+her, "Come away, come. At least I am going to tell you"--she shot a
+wicked glance at Harry--"everything." Off they went.
+
+"What's this mean, ma'am?" Harry stood over Mrs. Weston. "Is our wise
+Sir John sending to spy out the land?"
+
+"I wish you would not talk so." Mrs. Weston shivered. "It is like your
+father. Oh, sure, you have no need to be suspicious of every one."
+
+"Suspicious? Faith, I don't trouble myself." Harry laughed. "All the
+world may go hang for me. But you'll not expect me to believe in it."
+
+"I think you need fear no one's ill will. You are fortunate enough now."
+
+"Miraculously beyond my deserts, ma'am. As you say. But there's the
+wisdom of twenty years' shabbiness in me. And I wonder if the good Sir
+John wants to be meddling."
+
+"You need not be shabby now."
+
+"Lord, I bear him no malice. For he can do nought. Only I would not have
+him plague Alison."
+
+At last Mrs. Weston smiled upon him. "Aye, you are very careful of her."
+
+"I vow I would not so insult her." Harry laughed.
+
+"But you need not be afraid. Susan is here for herself. She is like that.
+She is the most independent woman ever I knew. She has come because she
+loves Alison."
+
+"Why, then, I love her. And egad it will be easy. She's a splendid
+piece."
+
+Mrs. Weston gave him an anxious glance. "She is very loyal," said she,
+with some emphasis.
+
+"It's a virtue. To be sure it's a virtue of the stupid." Harry cocked a
+teasing eye at her. "And I--well, ma'am, you wouldn't call me stupid."
+
+"I don't think it clever to jeer at what's good--and true--and noble."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, you are very parental!" Harry grinned. "You will be talking
+to me like a mother--and a stern mother, I protest."
+
+"Am I stern?" Mrs. Weston looked at him with eyes penitent and tender.
+
+"Only to yourself, I think. Lud, ma'am, why take me to heart?"
+
+"What now, Harry?" Alison and Susan close linked came back again. "Whose
+heart are you taking?"
+
+"Why, madame's," said Harry, with a flourish. "You see, ma'am," he turned
+to Susan, "I've a gift for making folks cry."
+
+"Oh. Like an onion," says she, in her slow, grave fashion.
+
+"Susan dear! How perfect," Alison laughed. "Now I know why I am growing
+tired of him. A little, you know, was piquant. But a whole onion to
+myself--God help us!"
+
+"Yet your onion goes well with a goose," Harry said.
+
+"Alack, Harry, but there's nothing sage about you and me."
+
+"Oh, fie! See there she sits, our domestic sage"--he waved at Mrs.
+Weston.
+
+"To be sure we couldn't do without her." Alison caressed the grey hair.
+
+"I must be riding, Alison," Susan said.
+
+Alison began to protest affectionate hospitality. Harry shook his head.
+"I have warned you of this, Alison. We are too conjugal. It embarasses
+the polite."
+
+"I am not embarassed," said Susan, with her placid gravity. "I want to
+come again."
+
+"By the fifth or sixth time, ma'am, I may feel that I am forgiven."
+
+"I have nothing to forgive you, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Then you can do it the more heartily." Harry smiled and held out his
+hand.
+
+"Oh." There was a faint shadow of a blush. "I did not think I should like
+you." She turned. "I beg your pardon, Alison."
+
+"I beg, ma'am, you'll come teach my wife to be kind. She also is frank.
+But for kindness--well, we are all sinners."
+
+"There it is, Mr. Boyce," said Susan, holding out her hand.
+
+And when she was gone. "Now, why did I not marry her first?" said Harry
+pensively.
+
+"Because she would never have married you, child. Being of those who like
+the man to ask."
+
+As Susan rode down the north slope of the hill, she was met by Mr.
+Hadley, gaunt upon a white horse, like death in the Revelation. The
+comparison did not occur to Susan, who had a fresh mind, but she did
+think white unbecoming to Mr. Hadley, and said, gurgling, "Where did you
+find that horse? Or why did you find it?"
+
+"He was a bad debt. But he has a great soul. And don't prevaricate,
+Susan. Where have you been?" Mr. Hadley bent his sardonic brows.
+
+"To gossip with Alison."
+
+"Odso, I guessed you would turn traitor."
+
+"No. I haven't turned at all, Mr. Hadley."
+
+"She has declared war on us. Your dear father fizzes and fumes like a
+grenade all day. And you go gossip with her. It's flat treason, miss.
+Come, did you tell Sir John you were going?"
+
+"No. But he would guess. He is so clever about me. Like you."
+
+"Humph. If he guesses you're a woman, it's all he does. And, damme, I
+suppose it's enough. So your curious sex bade you go and pry. Well, and
+what did you see in Mr. Harry Boyce?"
+
+"I suppose you are scolding me," said Susan placidly.
+
+"With all my heart."
+
+"Oh. Why do you ride that horse?"
+
+"Damme, miss, don't wriggle. You had no business at Highgate!"
+
+"He looks as if he had the gout."
+
+Mr. Hadley grinned. "But as you went, let's hear what you saw."
+
+"I always loved Alison."
+
+"Your business is to love your father, Susan--till some other man
+asks you."
+
+"I love her better now. She is so happy."
+
+"Damn her impudence," said Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Why did you lose your temper with her?"
+
+"I never lose my temper with any one but you."
+
+"Well. You made my father lose his."
+
+"Ods life, Susan, don't you know it's a man's right to tell women how
+they ought to live? Dear Alison wouldn't listen."
+
+Susan laughed. "She has made you look very foolish."
+
+"If she has I'll forgive her."
+
+"Oh. You do then," said Susan.
+
+"On your honour, miss, what did you think of Mr. Harry Boyce?"
+
+"I wondered Alison should love him."
+
+"Ods life, yes. But what's this you're saying?"
+
+"He is so quiet and simple."
+
+"Simple! Damme, the fellow's an incarnate mask."
+
+"Oh. I think I know all about him. I never thought I knew all about
+Alison. She wants so much."
+
+"And she hasn't got all she wants, eh?"
+
+"Yes, I believe," said Susan, after a moment.
+
+"Pray God you're right."
+
+"Oh. I like to hear you say that. You have been so"--for once her placid
+words stumbled--"so sordid about this."
+
+"Damme, Susan, don't be a saint." Mr. Hadley grinned. "They die virgins."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+MRS. BOYCE
+
+
+It was a time of wild plots. The long war of Marlborough had left England
+impregnably triumphant, and France ambitious of nothing but peace. No
+fear remained that foreign arms would carry James, the Pretender by right
+divine, to his sister's throne. Who should reign when Anne's growing
+weakness ended in death was for England alone to decide, and English law
+gave the succession to Prince George of Hanover. But there was a party,
+or at least the leaders of a party, who saw more profit to themselves in
+importing the Pretender.
+
+Harley and Bolingbroke, they had thrust out of the Queen's confidence and
+the government the friends of Hanover. They had undermined the authority
+of Marlborough at home and abroad, and were now ready, honourably or
+dishonourably, to put an end to the war which made him necessary. If he
+were dispatched into ignominy or exile, there could be no one strong
+enough, they believed, to prevent them driving England the way they
+chose. What that way would be no one clearly knew, themselves, perhaps,
+least of all. But together and singly they set going many strange secret
+schemes which were to make a new king, a new England, and new
+magnificence for themselves, singly or together. All which the mass of
+England watched with shrewd, incurious eyes. It could not long be a
+secret that plots were afoot. To shoulder out of power all who were
+committed friends of the lawful order was a confession of designs against
+it. As if that were not enough, Bolingbroke and Harley so managed their
+business that everything they did was wrapped in a mist of trickery and
+intrigue. And yet, though they were vastly mysterious over what could
+have borne the light without much shame, they contrived to let the agents
+of their deeper treachery blunder into notice and fill the air with
+rumours of untimely truth. Still England gave no sign.
+
+"Under which King"--Hanoverian or Pretender--perhaps there were few in
+England who cared. If the Pretender was bred French and a Papist, Prince
+George was a German born. Some of those who had joined heartily in
+driving out his father began to put it about that the son would be a
+better king for that lesson. George of Hanover had the right of law, but
+the Parliament of to-morrow might undo what the Parliament of yesterday
+had done. Who could be ardent for the right of an unknown foreigner over
+England? And few were ardent, but there were many who, caring nothing for
+Pretender or Hanoverian, had a solid resolution that England should not
+be torn in the cause of either. Whatever was done, must be done quietly
+and in good order. Since it seemed that the Hanoverian had no need to
+change anything in law or State or Church, best that he should be king.
+As for the devious politics, the tricks, and the mystery of Harley and
+Bolingbroke, they were of no account to plain men.
+
+There was yet another party not content to watch and wait till the
+plotters lost themselves in their own mysteries. The men whom Harley and
+Bolingbroke had driven from power had no mind to submit to impotence.
+They well knew what they wanted: the Hanoverian, the lawful, limited king
+upon the throne and themselves as his ministers. They were not delicate
+about the means they used. Since there were treason and plots, they too
+turned their hands to plotting and with a vigour and ruthless resolution
+of which the other camp was innocent.
+
+So the wise and eminent were busy while Harry Boyce and his Alison made
+trial of their marriage. Harry lived in a dream of bewildered happiness.
+He had counted on nothing but the need of his passion, hoped for nothing
+but its ecstasy in her beauty, and at its wildest the strain of gloom in
+him had bade him dread what lay beyond. She gave him a miracle of mad
+delight. A new force of life was born in him while he enjoyed her joy. It
+was a discovery of intoxicating power that he could wake that rare,
+consummate creature to such eager exultation as his own. In those
+wonderful hours it seemed that they passed out of themselves into a world
+where every part of their being was one and in the happiness of unbounded
+strength. So passion and she kept faith with him and something more. But
+the miracle of passion in her arms had less enchantment than the joy of
+the quiet hours. It was with this that she bewildered him. Before she
+yielded to him, he would have jeered at the hope that she might bring the
+gift of peace in her bosom. As the first days of marriage passed he
+learnt that all his placid loneliness had been the mere endurance of
+hunger. He had stayed himself with the husk of life. She satisfied him
+with the fruit. For she too could be calm, delighting in the little daily
+things, utterly happy with nonsense. To share all that with her was to
+find in it a strange, lulling enchantment of content.
+
+His fortune seemed too good to be real. For he possessed all that ever
+fancy had pretended was worth coveting: his life was a perfect happiness.
+No doubts from within, no troubles from without, had power to assail him.
+All the old, reasonable, practical fears were become ludicrous cowardice,
+only remembered for Alison to tease with. As for other people, and what
+they said and thought and did, some folks were kind and were welcome, no
+folks were of account. He and she deliciously sufficed themselves. And
+there was no dread of change, save in age and death, infinitely distant
+and insignificant--no matter but to glorify the power of life. Sometimes
+he was aware that the wonder of passion must grow faint and fail, but he
+saw nothing which could take from him the quiet, exquisite, daily joys.
+Was it real, or a charmed dream, this perfect fortune of content? Indeed,
+nothing was real in those days but the delight in being with her.
+
+Alison had her share. He did not deceive himself. She had her ecstasies
+and her exultations, she thought herself even madder than he was. And in
+these days, perhaps, her passion was deeper and stronger than his. She
+was satisfied, she felt herself accomplished, and gloried in her new
+power with a more profound, a more secret delight than his. She had given
+him eagerly all that she had, and in the giving found herself more than
+ever her own. For all the union, the deepest, truest self in her stood
+aloof in a mystery. It was not of her will, for she desired to deny him
+nothing. She did not reckon him weak in failing to take all of her. This
+must needs be the way of life. No man's passion could be stronger than
+his. Doubtless he too had his secret soul apart. And indeed it was
+glorious not to lose self in love, to stay always, through the ecstasies,
+aloof, to give always anew of will and choice--never to merge helpless in
+some unknown double being and become only half a body, half a soul,
+capitulating always to the rest, to the other.
+
+This self-glorious pride of hers gave her for a while that zest in all
+the trivial common things which made her a companion so delightful to
+Harry's temper. But she enjoyed them in a spirit different from his. All
+the bread-and-butter business of living was to him delightful in itself
+and for itself. He was born to want no better bread than is made of
+wheat. She played with it, made a dainty mock of it, amused herself with
+it, and at the back of her mind despised it.
+
+So they lived, and you imagine Mrs. Weston's dim, wistful eyes watching
+them with a great tenderness. For she understood them no better than
+they themselves.
+
+It was Alison who first grew tired. Not of love or passion, but of the
+trivialities and the quiet life at Highgate. She had ambitions, or
+thought she had. It had been just rediscovered that women could be
+leaders in the world--at least in politics and the tricks of statecraft.
+Women were the fiercest partisans and their voices powerful in the
+warring parties. It was a woman, his termagant duchess, who had given
+Marlborough his ascendancy in England, made him dominate all Europe. It
+was a clever woman who had contrived Marlborough's downfall and given his
+enemies the government of England. It was a woman--another duchess--who
+beat Swift. You need not suspect Alison, who had some humour, of
+imagining Harry Boyce a Marlborough. But he did believe him able to make
+a noise in the world, and coveted much the sensation of owning him while
+the world listened. She did not see herself controlling queens and kings
+and parties, but she was well aware of her beauty and its power, and had
+a mind to use it widely. She was hungry for excitement.
+
+So Mrs. Alison determined to set her man upon a larger, busier stage. The
+decree went forth that old Tom Lambourne's house in the Lincoln's Inn
+Fields was again to be inhabited. Harry was asked for his advice
+afterwards. Perhaps he would have been wiser if he had begun their first
+quarrel then. But he was enjoying her too much to deny her her ways or
+her whims, and he only laughed at her. He was not pleased, to be sure. He
+had a taste, which cannot have come from his father, for copse and
+field. He never found anything in the town which was worth the living in
+other folk's smoke. He disliked crowds and in particular crowds of fine
+ladies and gentlemen. So with some horror he saw before him a vista of
+polite splendours, and said so.
+
+"Oh Lud, sir," says she, "if I had wanted to sleep my life away I should
+not have married you. And if you wanted to sleep out yours you should not
+have married me."
+
+"I was born for innocence and green fields. You'll make me a bull in a
+china shop."
+
+"I'll love you the better, child. Faith, Harry, I would be very glad to
+have you break something."
+
+"Madame's heart, _par exemple_?"
+
+"That would be an adventure."
+
+So you find them arrived in the Lincoln's Inn Fields as the first step
+to the conquest of the world. The world was not as excited as Alison
+thought fit. Her father, old Tom Lambourne, had commanded reverence in
+the City and some respect even as far west as St. James's by sheer
+weight of wealth. A rare capacity for living hard had won him an army of
+diverse friends. But neither his business nor his pleasures provided him
+with many who could be bequeathed to his daughter. Her mother, born a
+baker's daughter in Shoe Lane, having died in giving Alison birth, had
+left her nothing besides her admirable body but some grumbling objects
+of charity. It remained for Alison to make her own way in the world of
+fine ladies and gentlemen. Since she was by certain fame an heiress of
+great possessions, her way might have been easy if she had not found
+herself a husband. The taint of the city, if she had borne herself
+humbly, need not have made her quite intolerable to people of birth. But
+since her money was already married she could only be reckoned as a city
+goodwife; pretty enough, indeed, to be game for fine gentlemen, but to
+fine ladies a nobody.
+
+Folks were slow in coming to the grand house in Lincoln's Inn Fields;
+slower still, if they had houses of elegance, to ask Mrs. Alison back. It
+suited Harry very well. He would, as his wife complained, go mooning
+across the fields to Islington almost as happily as through the woods at
+Highgate. His books had almost as good a savour in town as in the
+country. When she dragged him to hear Nicolini or Wilks or the
+Bracegirdle, he could console himself by gentle jeering over the fact
+that in a playhouse where everybody knew everybody not a creature had a
+bow for him or her. Of course she smarted. Day by day he chose to affect
+astonishment over her failures, believing with infatuated content that he
+was slowly driving her back to the country and sanity, though he was but
+driving her away from him. And she, choosing to feel humiliated, blamed
+him for the shame of it.
+
+"Why, child," says he in his supercilious way, "'tis not failing to be in
+the _beau monde_ that's ridiculous, but wanting to be."
+
+To such monitions she began not to answer back--a symptom very dangerous.
+
+She set up a basset table. That, if anything could, must proclaim her a
+woman of fashion--a woman, indeed, who had a fancy to be a trifle
+daring. There's no doubt that Alison about this time and afterwards did
+want to dabble in danger. She was not her father's daughter for nothing.
+She encouraged high play. For herself, she enjoyed the excitement of it,
+having no need to care if she lost. She wanted to have about her people
+who affected heavy stakes, believing in the innocence of her heart that
+they were exhilarating company. So she made for herself a queer society,
+which Harry to her angry disgust defined as a mixture of sheep and
+wolves. There were good wives and lads from the city anxious to make a
+jingling show with the funds of the family counting-house, there were
+hungry beaux and madames from the other end of the town seeking their
+fortune impudently wherever it might be found.
+
+To one of these happy parties there was introduced a Mrs. Boyce. She
+was a faded, handsome creature much jewelled about lean shoulders.
+Alison, who hardly heard her name in the rout, took no account of it
+and little of her. But on the next day this Mrs. Boyce came early and
+caught Alison alone.
+
+She began with such a fuss about apologizing for her earliness that
+Alison set her down for an ill-bred, tiresome creature. She had a high
+voice which, like the rest of her, was a trifle faded. "I protest, ma'am,
+I have long desired to know you better." Alison languidly muttered
+something civil. "Let me make myself known first, I beg. I am the niece
+of Sir Gilbert Heathcote."
+
+Alison, of course, had heard of Sir Gilly--one of the chiefs of high
+finance--but cared nothing about him. "I am vastly honoured, ma'am. I was
+only born Thomas Lambourne's daughter."
+
+"There is no need; ma'am." A long, lean hand was waved. "I wonder if we
+are in some fashion connected. We are both called Mrs. Boyce. The Boyces
+of Oxfordshire, ma'am?"
+
+Alison's laugh had something of a sneer in it, "Of nowhere that I know,
+ma'am. My husband is Mr. Harry Boyce, son of Colonel Oliver Boyce."
+
+The lady fluttered her fan, settled herself afresh in her chair,
+rearranged her close-fitting lips. Alison was reminded of a hen preening
+itself. "I had heard so, ma'am. And my husband is Colonel Oliver Boyce."
+
+"La, ma'am, do you mean the same?" Alison cried.
+
+Mrs. Oliver Boyce gave a lifeless smile. "That is why I did myself the
+honour of giving you my confidence, ma'am. I think there are not two
+Colonel Oliver Boyces. The younger son of one of the Oxfordshire family."
+
+"Oh Lud, how should I know? I never looked into the grandfathers."
+
+"No, ma'am?" The tone was patronizing contempt. "You might have been the
+wiser of it. Colonel Oliver Boyce--he has taken the title lately--when I
+knew him he was something in the service of the Duke of Marlborough. Oh,
+a fine man to the eye, ma'am, and very splendid in his talk."
+
+"Why, that's his likeness," Alison laughed. "And what then, ma'am? Have
+you come seeking the Colonel? He is the Lord knows where. Or is
+it--faith, you don't tell me Harry is your son?"
+
+"No, ma'am. At least I was spared bearing children."
+
+"Oh--why, give you joy if you would have it so. But how can I serve you?
+Maybe your Colonel is not my Colonel after all. At least he and Harry are
+father and son heartily enough."
+
+"It may be so, ma'am," said the lady heavily, and here Harry came in.
+
+Alison looked up laughing and then frowned. Harry would not ever dress
+fine. His wig was still unfashionably small, he wore some sombre stuff,
+and to her eye (as she said) looked like a mole. "Here's Mr. Boyce,
+ma'am. Harry, Mrs. Oliver Boyce, who is come to say that you never had
+father nor mother."
+
+"Your obliged servant, ma'am." Harry opened his eyes. "Pray, has my
+father married again?"
+
+"You'll find, sir, that Colonel Boyce has only been married once."
+
+"If you please, ma'am," said Harry blandly. "Pray, are you blaming him?
+Or--" a gesture expressed his complete ignorance of what she was doing.
+
+The lady seemed to force herself to laugh. "Oh, fie, sir. Sure it is not
+for me to blame him."
+
+"No, ma'am?" Harry was first interrogative then acquiescent. "No, ma'am.
+I wonder if you could give me the Colonel's direction."
+
+"I, sir? You are pleased to amuse yourself."
+
+"I vow, ma'am, I was never less amused."
+
+"Colonel Boyce was pleased to leave me five years ago. I have not
+forgotten it, if you have."
+
+"Faith, this is very distressing," Harry protested in bewilderment. "But
+you do me injustice, ma'am. I have forgotten nothing about my father. For
+I never knew anything."
+
+"As you please, sir," the lady drawled. "I was talking, by your leave, to
+Mrs. Boyce."
+
+"Oh, ma'am, a hundred pardons," Harry took himself off in a hurry. His
+chief emotion over the lady seems to have been satisfaction that she
+wanted nothing to do with him. As for her story of being his father's
+deserted wife, he had long supposed his father capable of anything. As
+for the lady herself, he wrote her down a tiresome busybody and perhaps
+he was not far wrong.
+
+Alison too was much of the same opinion, but it was unfortunately
+hampered by a natural curiosity to hear what the lady could tell
+about the mystery of Harry and his father. "You had something to say
+to me, ma'am?"
+
+"I count it my duty, ma'am, to give you warning of Colonel Boyce."
+
+Alison stood up. "Duty? I know nothing of your duty, ma'am. But I think
+it is mine not to listen to you."
+
+"I protest, I should have said the same," the lady drawled. "I too had
+spirit once, child. That was before I suffered. I would I had known you
+earlier. And yet perhaps I may do something to save you even now."
+
+"I cannot tell how, ma'am."
+
+"Listen, if you please!" the lady said dramatically. "I was something of
+an heiress as you are and maybe something of a toast too. The worse for
+me. I choose to believe it was not only my money which brought Oliver
+Boyce upon me. He took all I could give him and very soon gave me
+nothing, not even common courtesy. When I began to be careful he began to
+be brutal. But for my family--I told you that Sir Gilbert Heathcote was
+my uncle--he would have stripped me of every penny. When they stepped in
+to save me some rag of my fortune, my good Mr. Boyce left me. I have
+never had a word from him since. Pray, child, take warning."
+
+"If it is so, I am sorry for it," said Alison coldly, "I believe I hear
+company." She began to walk to the outer room.
+
+Behind her, "As for your Harry Boyce," said the lady, "oh, I make no
+doubt he's Oliver's son, though certainly he is none of mine."
+
+Alison made as if she did not hear, and she was spared more by the coming
+of some of her guests. The card tables filled. There was no more danger
+of being private with Mrs. Oliver Boyce. Indeed, the lady, as if she had
+done all she wanted, took her leave early. She was affectionate about it,
+for which Alison liked her none the better. Through most of that evening,
+amid the flutter of cards and the clatter--"Spadillio, on my life! What,
+it's Basto, is it? Did you hear of Mrs. Prue? She'll not show for a
+month. We win the Codille, ma'am. They say the Duchess and she pulled
+caps"--Alison was telling herself over and over that the creature was a
+detestable low thing who only wanted to make mischief. It should, you
+think, have needed no effort to believe that. But the obvious malice had
+power to annoy a mind already discontented. Alison could not stop
+wondering what the mystery was about Harry's birth and his father.
+Perhaps Harry knew more than the little he professed. Perhaps he was not
+the careless, indolent fellow he chose to seem, but something more
+cunning and less lofty. What if he were just such another as the woman
+painted his father--a fellow on the hunt for an heiress, who, once he had
+her and her money, cared no more about her? To be sure there was some
+evidence for that. Since they had come to town, he was always off by
+himself. If she wanted him with her, she had to plead and plague him. A
+proud office! Why, that very night monsieur did not please to appear at
+the card tables. He was too fine for her and her company. So she fretted
+and rubbed the poison in. And naturally, she fared ill at the card table.
+Her cards were bad and she made the worst of them. She was not a good
+loser and it was a wife much inflamed who, when her guests were gone,
+sought out her husband.
+
+Harry sat with Mrs. Weston, who was at needlework and, if Alison had been
+able to see, looked very benign. But it was he who demanded all the
+wife's angry eyes. His wig was on the table beside him. He had a pipe in
+his mouth. He was lolling in the deeps of a chair and smiling to himself
+over a book. "You might be in an ale-house, you look so slovenly."
+
+Harry grinned up at her. "Oh, madame wife hasn't been winning to-night.
+Tell me all about it."
+
+"Faugh! Your pipe," Alison coughed. "For God's sake keep it to the
+tavern. It's enough that you reek of it without making my house
+reek too."
+
+Harry gave a great sigh and put the pipe down. "We were so comfortable
+till you came. I am glad to see you, dear."
+
+"I was comfortable till you came." Alison snapped.
+
+"Pray, mother Weston," says Harry, "forgive our public caresses. We have
+not long been married."
+
+Alison looked ice at him. "Weston dear, would you leave us? I have
+something to say to Harry." Harry opened his eyes. Mrs. Weston looked at
+her anxiously, bade them a nervous good-night, and hurried out.
+
+"Harry--who was your mother?" Alison stood stern over the lolling
+husband.
+
+"Egad, what's this? Have you been brooding over your bony friend?
+Who is she?"
+
+"She says she is your father's wife; and says he left her."
+
+"Well, if she is his wife, I wager he did leave her. Faith, she was made
+to be deserted."
+
+"What do you know of her?"
+
+"Nothing, by the grace of God. Why should I? If my father got drunk and
+married her, he would not want to talk about it when he was sober."
+
+"I despise you when you talk so," Alison cried.
+
+"And yet you listened to her, child."
+
+"She says that he took all her money before he left her."
+
+"Oh! Pray, why has she so much to say, and to you?"
+
+"She wanted to warn me against Colonel Boyce."
+
+"And against his son, I think. And you were so kind as to listen. Egad,
+ma'am, I am obliged to you. Well, now you know what to do. You have the
+money and I have none. Pray, lock up your purse to-night."
+
+"You are childish," said Alison with lofty scorn. "Harry--who was
+your mother?"
+
+"Oh, I thought your kind friend told you I had none. I dare say it's as
+true as the rest."
+
+"You don't know?"
+
+"I never saw her."
+
+"She said--" Alison hesitated.
+
+"Oh Lud, don't be squeamish now."
+
+"She said your father had never been married except to her."
+
+"Odso! That is what you had to tell me. I am a bastard, am I?" He laughed
+and turned in his chair. "Give you good-night, madame wife."
+
+"Harry--"
+
+"Oh, God save you!" He took up his pipe. "I am no company for you. And,
+by God, you are no company for me."
+
+She looked at him a moment, hesitated, went slowly out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE AFFAIR OF SIR GEORGE
+
+
+The irruption of Mrs. Oliver Boyce could not easily have been foretold.
+That the past life of Colonel Boyce was likely to throw shadows over his
+son Harry might have considered, but the nature of the lady and her care
+and the successful opportunity of her malice were hardly to be
+calculated. There is less excuse for him in the affair of Sir George
+Anville. Given the conditions of that hasty marriage and the state into
+which it had brought them and the society about them, some Sir George or
+other was a natural consequence.
+
+The ugly quarrel which Mrs. Oliver Boyce had made for them was never
+composed. When they met again in the morning they were coldly and
+haughtily civil, and so they chose to remain. Mrs. Weston, not being
+blind, saw that something was amiss and tried with blundering motherly
+affection to push them back into one another's arms. She hardened, as is
+usual, their hostility. Each was mortally afraid of weakening, each
+suspected the other at once of softness and of guile and so held aloof
+and fed upon scorn. They had both enough of that pride of sex which gives
+one pleasure in the sufferings of the other. And of course the quarrel
+was poisoned with a sordid taint. The colder, the haughtier Harry was,
+the more Alison inclined to believe that he had wanted nothing of her but
+her money. The haughtier, the colder Alison was, the more Harry raged
+against her for a mean creature who desired to make him feel his
+dependence upon her money bags.
+
+In himself Sir George Anville was of no importance. If Harry had been
+comfortable he could never have taken the trouble to be angry over the
+man. It is certain that Alison never thought him worth any thought of
+hers, still less worth one finger's surrender. And yet Sir George
+contrived to be disastrous to the pair of them.
+
+That was not, as Lady Mary Wortley Montagu said of him in another matter,
+altogether his fault. "The fool has excuses," quoth she, "which others
+have not. He is so great a fool that you hardly believe his folly is but
+folly." Sir George was a man born without impulse or capacity for
+anything. Lady Mary, who was fond of using him for her wit, made a
+grammarian's jest on him, "The creature's an anomaly: active in form,
+passive in meaning." He was bred in a society which made it a fashion to
+be vicious. He affected to follow the fashion. If vice must needs be
+something active, or at least, something of the will, Sir George Anville
+must escape punishment. But he was to a wholesome taste more offensive
+than sinners who did more damage. It was Harry's worst blunder in the
+affair that he treated Alison as if she did not feel that.
+
+Sir George knew no other way of passing his life than in dangling about
+women. He was generally tolerated as a butt, and being impervious to
+contempt, supposed that his fascinations procured him immunity. He
+did--it must be reckoned the first of his two accomplishments--he did
+know a pretty woman from a plain one, and therefore as soon as he knew
+Alison much resorted to her. His other accomplishment was to dress well.
+He was lean and had an air of languor which was not affected, but a
+natural lack of vigour. It may be believed that Alison tolerated him
+because he made a not disagreeable decoration to her rooms. But at this
+era she was cynical, and perhaps told herself that Sir George was as good
+a man as another.
+
+He began to come at hours when she could be found alone and was sometimes
+admitted. So Harry caught him once or twice, was ironically obsequious to
+him (which Sir George took for solemn earnest), and afterwards amused
+himself by congratulating Mrs. Alison on the power of her charms. "Odds
+fish, I can't tell where you'll stop, ma'am. You'll have a corpse on his
+knees to you yet. Maybe the corpse of a lord. I vow I'm proud of you."
+Which was not likely to get the door shut on Sir George.
+
+So that dangling gentleman became convinced that Alison was yielding to
+his embraces. He was, in a limp way, gratified. A devilish fine woman to
+be sure. She might be a trifle exhausting to a man of _ton_. But what
+would you? Women were greedy and must be satisfied with what one could
+spare them. And it was pleasant to see the pretty creatures pining. He
+would lure madame on with a few tit-bits. In this kindly mood he went to
+her on a wet April day when Alison was fretting for a wild walk or a
+wilder ride in wind and rain. But even to herself she would not confess
+that she was tired of the town. It would have assimilated her to Harry.
+
+Sir George sat himself down by Alison's side, simpered at her, sniffed,
+put his thin hands on his thin knees and ogled them. Alison held out to
+him a cup of tea. He arranged his rings before he took it and then again
+simpered at her. After some humming and hawing, "D'ye go to the play
+to-night, ma'am?" he drawled.
+
+"What play is it?"
+
+"Ah--some curst play or other," said Sir George; and exhausted by that
+effort relapsed for a while into silence.
+
+Alison did not help him out. It is possible that she was wondering how a
+creature so vapid could go on existing. She looked Sir George over with
+an odd, close inspection. Sir George, who had some perceptions, became
+aware of it and according to his nature misunderstood it. He sniffed
+again, and "Pray, ma'am, what perfume do you use?" Alison stared at him.
+"I am delicate in such things," said he, and smelt his own handkerchief.
+
+Alison hesitated between disgust and amusement. To be sure the creature
+was such a fool that it was not fair to think of him save as a buffoon.
+So unfortunately she chose amusement. "Oh, I vow, Sir George, your
+delicacy is rare," she laughed.
+
+The poor creature took it for a compliment. He leered at her: "But you
+are exquisite, my Indamora."
+
+"Who?"
+
+"It's an amorous lady in a play," Sir George explained. "Pretty
+creature," he patted Alison's arm, and leaned upon her to kiss her neck.
+
+She was so surprised that his lips had almost time to reach her. "Lord,
+sir, are you mad?" she cried, as she thrust him off.
+
+"Pretty creature," Sir George giggled, and clung to her.
+
+"Your carriage is at the door, Sir George." Harry stood over them. His
+face was as much a mask as ever, his voice placid.
+
+Alison started up and stood to face him with a lowering brow. He did not
+appear to see her. Sir George shook down his ruffles. "Carriage? What
+d'ye mean?" says he. "I ha' had no carriage this year. I came in a
+hackney coach."
+
+Harry turned away from him and opened the door.
+
+"Eh? Oh, stap me!" Sir George giggled and got on to his feet, "Madame,
+your eternally devoted." He went out with a strut, waving his scented
+handkerchief in the direction of Harry.
+
+Then Alison spoke. Her eyes were furious. "You--oh, you boor! How
+dare you?"
+
+"Egad, that's very good!" Harry laughed.
+
+She beat her foot on the floor. "Oh, you are not to be borne! To make a
+noise of it! To make a scandal of me and that--that creature!"
+
+"To be sure, I came untimely. Well, ma'am, if you wanted to be quiet
+about it, I had rather it made a noise."
+
+"My God!" she was white. "You dare say that to me! Be careful, Harry."
+
+"Pray, ma'am, no heroics."
+
+"I warn you, there are things I'll not bear."
+
+"Is it possible?" Harry sneered.
+
+She swept past him and away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+RETURN OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+
+It seems that, years afterwards, Harry and Alison were afflicted with a
+dreary and remorseful wonder at these wars. Both, as they grew older, had
+something of a turn for moralising, and in their copious letters to their
+several children is evidence of much penitence and puzzling over the
+disasters of their youth. Each plainly took all the blame. Each is
+eloquent about the sins of pride and hardness. Harry preaches the duty of
+trust; Alison the folly of easy intimacies. Both of them, in those latter
+days when they could calmly estimate what they had lost, still wondered
+with a gloomy scorn how they had come to let the ugly, ridiculous affair
+of Sir George set them against each other. You find them both trying to
+recall (or guess) what exactly it was that, in the time of crisis, they
+felt and believed.
+
+When it was all part of their history, Harry could hardly persuade
+himself that ever he had fancied Alison untrue, even disloyal; or Alison
+believe that she had stormed against him for driving out of the house a
+man who had been impudent to her. Yet it is not to be doubted that Harry
+did let suspicions of her honesty poison him. He could not, at the worst
+of his anger, believe that she would play false with such a husk of a
+fop; but he told himself that she wanted to make the fellow into a
+waiting gentleman, a servant, and a toy at once--a thing more nauseous
+than a lover. And Alison, though at the back of her brain she was aware
+that Harry had excuse for what he had done, raged the more against him
+for the intolerable things he had said. His suspicions made her despise
+him. For his assumption of authority she hated him.
+
+There were almost from the first the usual sage and kindly friends to
+tell them that it was all a misunderstanding, that they had only to be
+frank with each other and commonly reasonable and there would be no
+quarrel left. But it is doubtful whether this sagacious advice could
+have done them much good if they had taken it. "Talk things over like
+rational creatures," was (as usual) the prescription. But if they had
+really been rational, they would only have come to the conclusion that
+they ought not to be married. The force of their passion, to be sure,
+was real enough and still moved in them. To hold them together they had
+nothing else. There was no consciousness of other need, no longing for a
+common life, no desire to help or give. If they had been most calmly
+wise and wisely calm in a dozen conversations, they would but have made
+this all the clearer.
+
+Still it is true, as the sagacious friends guessed, that they did not
+try to compose the quarrel. Each was by far too proud. Harry was
+pleased to consider that he had done his duty by a flighty wife, and
+would take no more account of her unless she were penitent--or provoked
+him again. Alison, reckoning herself meanly insulted, was resolved that
+he could never again be more than an unwelcome guest in her house. They
+were, to be sure, ridiculous. In private they avoided each other. In
+public they continued to meet, for each was too proud to confess to the
+world the failure of their marriage. You imagine how poor Mrs. Weston
+enjoyed life in an icy atmosphere, the temperature of which she was not
+permitted to notice.
+
+Such were their relations when the final blow fell upon them. They dined
+late in the Lincoln Inn Fields. It was as much as six o'clock and they
+were still at table--as jovial as usual. The butler came to Alison with
+an elaborate whispering. "Pray him come up," she said aloud, and looked
+defiance down the table at Harry. "It is Mr. Waverton."
+
+"Lord, Lord, is he still alive?" Harry grinned. "That's heroic."
+
+"Back from France? Is Colonel Boyce come back?" Mrs. Weston cried.
+
+"I know nothing of Colonel Boyce," said Alison coldly.
+
+"You couldn't please him better," Harry laughed. "Dear Geoffrey! I wonder
+if he knows anything? Well I It would be a new experience."
+
+Mr. Waverton came. He was more stately than ever--browner also, but not
+changed otherwise. His large and handsome face affected all the old
+melancholy.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Waverton!" Harry grinned. "You do honour me. Pray let me present
+you to my poor wife."
+
+Geoffrey took no notice of him. "Madame, your obedient," he bowed to
+Alison. "I beg leave to have some speech with you."
+
+"There's still some dinner. Draw up a chair," said Harry.
+
+"I did not come to dine, sir."
+
+"Oh, that's a sad stomach of yours. A glass of wine, then?"
+
+"I do not take wine with you, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"I wonder if you have made a mistake. For you have come into my house."
+
+"I will answer for all my mistakes, sir, with hearty goodwill."
+
+"Egad, you'll be busy."
+
+"Oh, be silent!" Alison cried. "You are welcome, Mr. Waverton. How can I
+serve you?"
+
+"I understand the gentleman's desire to hurry me into a quarrel, ma'am.
+Be sure that I shall not permit it." Harry laughed disagreeably. "It's
+very well, sir. But I choose first that you should listen to what I
+have to say."
+
+"Listen I Oh Lud, is it a poem?"
+
+Mr. Waverton flushed. "You are impertinent, sir. It shall not serve
+you. I intend that madame shall know the truth of your father's
+treachery and yours."
+
+Harry stood up. "Are we to stay for more of this, ma'am?"
+
+"I shall stay," Alison said.
+
+"You remark the gentleman's impatience to silence me, ma'am. I promise
+you that I shall tell you nothing which he or any man can deny."
+
+"It's a dull tale, then," Harry muttered.
+
+"I think it will excite you enough, ma'am. You are advised that I went to
+France with Colonel Boyce. The office which he offered me was to
+negotiate with Prince James. This I undertook readily, for to his party
+my family hath ever had an inclination, nay, an affection, and I saw in
+the affair duties of honour and moment."
+
+"To the greater glory of Geoffrey, first Duke of Waverton, whom God
+preserve," quoth Harry.
+
+"I did not, I will avow, foresee that the thing was but a trick to take
+me away from my house and out of the country. Though I may regret,
+ma'am"--he bowed magnificently to Alison--"I do not even now blame myself
+for my blindness, for I have ever accounted it unworthy of a man of
+honour to fear treachery in his servants"--he glared at Harry--"or
+weakness--ah--weakness in those to whom he gives his devotion"--he made
+melancholy eyes at Alison. "No more of that. In fine, I did not suspect
+that a fellow who was taking wages from my hand had plotted to rob me of
+what was my dearest hope, or that another--another--would surrender
+herself a prey to his crafty greed."
+
+"Damme, it is a poem after all," Harry groaned.
+
+"You said you had something to tell me, sir," said Alison coldly.
+
+"Nay, ma'am, be patient. I give you no reproaches. But what is, is. If it
+irks you that I remind you of it, do not give the blame to me."
+
+"I shall blame you for being tedious, by your leave." Alison yawned.
+
+"Wait till all's told. Well, ma'am, I left Tetherdown with Colonel
+Boyce, and we rode posthaste to Newhaven. He was there joined by some
+half-dozen fellows, low fellows to my eye. This much surprised me, and I
+took occasion to tell him so, for he had given out that his was a very
+secret errand of Marlborough's privy policy, into which he would admit
+none but me. He made out that these fellows were but messengers and
+escort, and I permitted myself to be satisfied, though I remarked that
+he was on familiar terms with them. But that gave me little concern, for
+I had from the first remarked in Colonel Boyce a coarse habit of
+intimacy with the vulgar."
+
+"Aye, aye, you and he took to each other famously," says Harry.
+
+"Lud, sir, must you be so wordy?" Alison cried.
+
+"You will find that every word has its import, ma'am. From some of these
+fellows Colonel Boyce learnt that there was a warrant out against him for
+treasonable practices with the Pretender. This affected him to great
+indignation, in which, as I frankly told him, I found matter for
+bewilderment. Since he was, as he professed, about to deal with the
+Pretender, it was but fair that the Government should arraign him on that
+charge. Over which he was pleased to laugh at me, and then, to explain
+his mirth, averred that the Government, and in particular Mr. Secretary
+St. John, was much more Jacobite than he, and so had no title to meddle
+with him. Then he said that what irked him was that they should have
+heard of his dealings with France, which must be done secretly or fail.
+So we went in a hurry aboard the schooner which was ready for him, and
+crossed to Dieppe, landing by night beyond the town. I make no doubt from
+his adroitness that Colonel Boyce hath done business in France before,
+but of what kind I leave you to guess when you have heard all. We were
+well furnished with horses and upon the road to Paris before noon. He
+gave out to some officers which questioned him that we were of Prince
+James's service upon our way to St. Germain. We rode to Pontoise, and
+there, as it had been planned from the first, Colonel Boyce stayed while
+I rode on to the Prince. He dared not, as he said, go himself to Paris,
+for fear that some of the French officers should recognize him as
+Marlborough's man and denounce him for a spy. Therefore was I to go with
+letters to the Prince, and messages which should persuade him to ride out
+to Pontoise and come to business with Colonel Boyce. I went on then
+alone, save that Colonel Boyce gave me one of his fellows to be my guide
+and servant, and he stayed with the rest at Pontoise. Thus far, I beg you
+remark, I had no cause to apprehend treachery. Upon the face, the scheme
+was fair enough, and all had been done even as Colonel Boyce proposed to
+me in England. I will maintain myself honourably free of any blame in the
+affair against any man whomsoever."
+
+"God bless you," said Harry heartily.
+
+Mr. Waverton visibly laboured with a repartee.
+
+"Oh, sir, a prayer from you is a rare honour," he said at length.
+"You're to understand, ma'am, that I was furnished with letters of
+credence from certain of the Jacobite agents in England--John Rogers and
+Mrs. White, I remember. How they were come by, I cannot now tell, though
+I may guess, for it is plain that there was no stint of money in the
+affair. So I came easily to speech with the Prince and his secretary, my
+Lord Middleton. And I will ever maintain that His Royal Highness is
+altogether such as a prince should be. Being of a dark complexion and a
+melancholy dignity, there is in him no lightness of thought or word. To
+me he was, I profess, very flattering, showing me courtesies beyond my
+rights or expectations. He received me, in a word, most favourably, and
+being influenced, as I regret I cannot doubt, by my person and address,
+was easily inclined to ride out to Pontoise. Only my Lord Middleton made
+difficulties. He is of a sardonic turn, and permits his wit to outrun his
+civility. He set me questions in a fashion which my honour could not
+brook. Yet I can relate that in the end I prevailed over my Lord
+Middleton's jealousy. For he said to the Prince: '_Enfin_, sir, I can
+tell no reason why you should not go see this Colonel if you choose. If
+there were any guile in the business, faith, they would never have
+trusted it to this fellow!'
+
+"So the thing was agreed. In the morning we rode for Pontoise, the
+Prince, my Lord Middleton, myself. His Royal Highness was pleased to
+limit himself to one servant. The man with whom Colonel Boyce had
+provided me went on to carry advice of our coming. We came to Pontoise
+towards evening. Colonel Boyce had put up at the Lion d'Or. He was
+waiting for us in the courtyard and received us, as I thought, something
+shortly, hurrying us into the house. But once inside, he made ceremony
+enough, with endless speeches about the condescension of His Royal
+Highness. All this too obsequious, in a boorish taste, so that the Prince
+bade him have done and come to business. Therewith Colonel Boyce was as
+full of apologies as he had been of servilities. I vow I never heard him
+so copious as that night.
+
+"He took us, you are to understand, to an upper room. And what first
+moved my suspicion was that he bade me be gone. Then my Lord Middleton
+countered him with, 'I believe, sir, the gentleman had best stay.'
+Immediately Colonel Boyce was all smiles over his blunder, and we sat
+down about the table in that upper room and came to the substance of his
+negotiation. He kept, I'll allow, to the purposes which, from the first,
+he had pretended to me: whether Prince James, if assured of support from
+Marlborough and his friends, would choose to avow himself Protestant; but
+he made so many conditions over it, he was so vague and wary that 'twas
+hard to tell what he would be at. When my Lord Middleton tried to pin him
+to something plain and certain he would ever evade, till it began to grow
+late and the Prince talked of supper and bed. This Colonel Boyce took up
+very heartily, and was indeed giving his orders when there came a noise
+in the courtyard and he ran to the window and looked out.
+
+"My Lord Middleton was behind him, with a 'What's your anxiety, sir?'
+
+"'Why, my lord, I would not have these roysterers break upon the Prince's
+incognito. Pray, sir, this way and you'll be secure'; he points to an
+inner door.
+
+"'I believe we are as safe here, sir,' says my Lord Middleton.
+
+"'Egad, sir, come away,' says Colonel Boyce; and he was in fact dragging
+the Prince across the room when the door bursts open and in comes a
+stranger, a little man. He flung himself across the room upon Colonel
+Boyce, making some play with a pistol. There was some grappling and
+wrestling. I recall that they gasped and breathed hard. But it's odd, I
+believe, that there was no word spoken. Then Colonel Boyce freed himself
+and bolted through that inner door. The stranger fired a shot after him,
+and while we were all deaf and sneezing with it and utterly amazed he
+turns on us. 'That's a miss,' says he. 'Please God they'll bag him below.
+Eh, Charles,' he wags his head at my Lord Middleton, 'I thought you had
+more sense,'
+
+"'Damme,' says my lord, 'it's Hector McBean. And prithee what's all this
+ruffling, Mac?'
+
+"'Why, you have let His Majesty walk into a stinking trap. That fellow
+Boyce, he hath been Marlborough's spy, Sunderland's spy, the devil's spy
+this twenty year.'
+
+"'Why, I thought he had something the smack of it,' says my lord.
+'And yet--'
+
+"'Who's this now?' Captain McBean turned on me. 'Yours or his?'
+
+"'His ambassador in fact,' My lord looked me over and took snuff. 'You
+won't tell me that hath any guile in it. Prithee, what is it you have
+against the man Boyce?'
+
+"'Eh, did ye see him run?' says Captain McBean. 'A man's not in that
+hurry if he hath a good conscience. If ye'll please to have him up, maybe
+we'll hear a tale.'
+
+"But as he spoke there came into the room a French officer of dragoons,
+who, saluting the Prince, asked Captain McBean if he had found his rogue.
+On which 'Have I found him?' Captain McBean cries out, 'Eh, sir, did he
+not run into your arms?' But it appeared that Colonel Boyce had not been
+caught, and they determined at last that he must have made his way out by
+a door at the back of the inn and won clear away. But I am sorry to tell
+you, ma'am, that he hath not yet been found. For if they catch him in
+France, he may count on a hanging."
+
+"Pray, sir, how did you dodge the rope?" Harry said. "Did you talk them
+to death, your Pretender and his tail?"
+
+"You're too eloquent for me, Mr. Waverton," Alison yawned. "I can't tell
+what you want to say. What is this mighty crime which you and Colonel
+Boyce were compassing?"
+
+"Sneers become you ill, ma'am," says Mr. Waverton magnificently. "I
+repudiate any charge whatsoever; and tell my story my own way. Some hot
+words passed between Captain McBean and the Frenchman, each blaming the
+other for Colonel Boyce's escape. Then Captain McBean says 'The fellows
+that were drinking in the tap, I suppose you've let them dodge you too?
+No? Well, that's a wonder. Tie this rogue up with them and have them in
+guard.' So he mocked at me, but the Prince brought him up roundly.
+
+"'You go too fast for me, my good captain,' quoth he. 'What's your charge
+against the gentleman?--who is to my mind a very simple gentleman.' So
+His Royal Highness was pleased to honour me."
+
+"Egad, he was right, Waverton," Harry laughed.
+
+"I think I know how to value your fair words now, sir," says Mr. Waverton
+grandly. "Be pleased to spare them. Upon that, as I was saying, Captain
+McBean lost command of himself and was grossly violent. Roaring that I
+was none the less a knave because I was so natural a fool, and the like
+empty insolence. Accusing me of being art and part in a vile plot with
+Colonel Boyce to kidnap and murder His Royal Highness."
+
+"Now we have it," Alison murmured and looked at Harry strangely.
+
+"Aye, ma'am. Now, perhaps (though late enough) your eyes are opened,"
+said Mr. Waverton with relish. "Well, I let the man run on. He was indeed
+not to be stopped. A rude, vehement fellow. When he was exhausted, I
+addressed His Royal Highness."
+
+"Lack a day, I believe you," says Harry.
+
+"I made it clear to him, sir, that my birth and position must warrant me
+innocent of any treachery, and though I might well disdain to answer
+these reckless charges I owed it to myself to remark to His Royal
+Highness that, but for my desire to serve him, I had never meddled in the
+affair. So that when I had done, my Lord Middleton says, laughing, 'Egad,
+sir, it seems you owe this fine gentleman thanks for his kindly
+condescension to you'; and the Prince was pleased to answer, 'We are too
+small for his notice, faith. But is he finished yet?' Then I bowed to His
+Royal Highness and sat down, well enough pleased, as you may believe.
+
+"But this Captain McBean called out in his rude fashion, 'Eh, sir, he may
+e'en be the booby he pretends. The better decoy, I allow. But by your
+leave, we'll look into it more narrowly. Would Your Majesty please to
+permit me have up the other rogues?'
+
+"This, in a word, they did, and Captain McBean and my Lord Middleton (who
+is to my mind something more of the attorney than becomes a man of rank)
+questioning the fellows shrewdly, it was made put--I crave your
+attention, madam--it was made out that Colonel Boyce had undertaken for
+the service of the Hanoverian junto here to kidnap or kill Prince James.
+And the plan was to bring the Prince out to Pontoise and so drag out
+affairs that he passed the night there. Then in the night they were to
+invade his room and command him to follow them. They pretended indeed
+that they meant only to carry him off. But 'tis not to be doubted that
+they looked for resistance and a bloody issue to the affair. So, ma'am,
+here is the trade of the family of Boyce--to procure murder, and the
+murder of a prince of the blood royal, of our lawful king. I give you joy
+of the name you bear."
+
+Alison bent her head. "You may well be proud of your part, Mr.
+Waverton."
+
+"They let you go, did they?" says Harry; "your captain and your lord and
+your prince?"
+
+"Let me go, sir? There is nothing against me. I defy your impudence. Nay,
+I thank you, I thank you. You lead me gracefully to the end of my story."
+
+"Good God! It has an end!"
+
+"When these rogues were questioned about me, not a man of them could
+pretend to have anything against me. They openly confessed that Colonel
+Boyce had warned them that I must be kept in innocence of the affair lest
+I should thwart it. For he said that he had brought me into it to show a
+good face to the Prince as one beyond suspicion of treachery. Nay and
+moreover--and here's my last word to you, ma'am--he avowed that he chose
+me because he wanted me out of England where I stood between his own son
+and a pretty heiress. At which, as I remember, my Lord Middleton chose to
+be amused."
+
+"Damme, I like that man," says Harry.
+
+"So, ma'am," Mr. Waverton tossed his head. "Here you have it. I am drawn
+into a murderous, vile, base treason that I may be kept out of the way
+while Mr. Boyce prosecutes his designs upon you. I give you joy of the
+loyal fidelity which yielded to him. I leave you to enjoy him with what
+appetite you may."
+
+He made a majestic bow, he turned and was gone.
+
+Harry and Alison were left staring at each other.
+
+From behind came a small strained voice: "Colonel Boyce--he--he is safe,
+then?" It was Mrs. Weston.
+
+The two turned with a start, surprised by her existence.
+
+Harry laughed. "Oh aye, he is safe. He would be."
+
+Mrs. Weston rose slowly and then made a rush for the door.
+
+The husband and wife were left alone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+HARRY IS DISMISSED
+
+
+Alison turned and stared into the fire. Harry filled himself a glass of
+port and drank it and laughed. She looked round at him. "Faith, Mr.
+Waverton is mighty good entertainment," he explained.
+
+"Is that all you want to say?"
+
+Harry would not be awed by that ominous voice. "Oh Lud, how could I dare
+talk after him? Our poetic orator!" He made flourishes in the air after
+Mr. Waverton's manner. "Nay, but I would give my new wig to have been in
+that upper chamber at Pontoise. Dear Geoffrey on his defence booming
+noble periods--and the Prince, poor gentleman, with his fingers in his
+ears! If dear Geoffrey was telling the truth. I wonder."
+
+"Oh, is that what you'll pretend?"
+
+"Pretend? I pretend nothing, ma'am. Why, to be sure, our Geoffrey always
+means to tell the truth--having, God bless him, no imagination. But
+you'll remark what when he tells a tale, it's Mr. Waverton has always the
+_beau role_. He sees the world like that, dear lad. So I should be glad
+to hear the Caledonian gentleman's notion of what happened."
+
+"I see. You'll make that your defence. Geoffrey imagined it all."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, you may lower your tone. I have nothing to defend, nor are
+you set in judgment."
+
+Alison started up. "Do you suppose all this is to make no change?"
+she cried.
+
+"You're a splendid creature, by heaven," says Harry, tilting his chair
+back and watching her with a little epicurean smile, the proud vigour of
+her, the blood in her cheeks, the flash of her eyes, and the sweep of the
+white arm.
+
+"I could hate you for that," she said, and her lips set.
+
+"Yes. I think you're in a fair way to it," says Harry. "I wonder if you
+know why."
+
+"Because I have come to despise you," she cried sharply.
+
+"You will be solemn, will you?" says Harry. "Much good may it do you. And
+so, egad, have at you heartily. For you have said things which both of us
+will find it hard to forget."
+
+"Oh, you can feel that?"
+
+"Look 'e, ma'am, if we are to be in earnest, we had best not snap at each
+other like a pair of puppies. Now, what's happened?"
+
+"You have to ask that? My God, if you have to ask, there's no use in
+words between you and me."
+
+"Oh Lud, don't be mystical. Mr. Waverton comes here to do his poor
+possible to make mischief between us. I suppose you saw that. He tells us
+that he went blundering with my father into a muddle of a plot."
+
+"He tells us that your father planned a vile base murder and sought to
+make him, a man of honour, part in it. Pray, sir, is that not infamous?"
+
+"Egad, if you haven't caught his style! You believe all that, do you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"We shall go far to-night, I think," Harry shrugged. "And shall I tell
+you why you believe it, ma'am? It's because you are looking about to find
+matter for blackening me."
+
+Alison hesitated a moment. "You cannot deny it. It is proved. Your father
+would not stay to face them."
+
+"Face a pistol and a furious Scot? Well, I never said he was a hero."
+
+"Do you pretend it was only a fight he feared? Do you dare tell me it was
+an honest, honourable plan? Nay, come, let me see if there's anything you
+think shameful."
+
+Harry shrugged. "I know my father not much better than you do, ma'am. I
+never thought him a Bayard. Some plot there was, I think, and these
+political plots are all dirty enough. But, Lord, who is clean of them?
+And I'm not ready to write my father off a murderer because Mr. Waverton
+went blundering into a business which, on his own confession, he does not
+understand."
+
+"He went in your place. You should have gone with your father."
+
+"Should have gone? D'ye wish I had, ma'am?"
+
+"Perhaps."
+
+Harry started up. "Oh, say it out. I knew we should go far to-night."
+
+They stood close, fronting each other fiercely. "My God, is it strange
+if I wish you had gone? Your father is a base wretch who should be on the
+gallows, and I am to be his son's wife and bear the name, and the while
+he goes bragging that he took Geoffrey Waverton off so that you should be
+free to come at me."
+
+"Aye, that. To be sure, that rankles. But you have known it long. I
+showed you the letter he left me which said he had taken Geoffrey out of
+my way and bade me snatch my chance of you. And you made light of that,
+ma'am. Oh, it was a base thing, if you will, but you know well enough it
+went for nought. We had done our work before. By God, Alison, Geoffrey
+there or Geoffrey here, you would have come to me."
+
+"Ah!" It was like a cry of pain. "You brag of it. I forced myself on you,
+I suppose." Harry exclaimed something, made a gesture. "Oh yes, you were
+all cold virtue and chastity and honour, and I--what was I?" She
+shuddered and drew back from him. "Yes, you would turn on me. You would
+taunt me with that."
+
+"Egad, you're in a frenzy," says Harry. "You cry aloud and cut yourself
+with knives. You will be hurting yourself."
+
+"I loathe you for that calm way of yours," she cried. "You mock me till
+I am mad, and then you please to be grave and lofty. You--I took you out
+of the gutter."
+
+"What now, ma'am?" Harry stiffened.
+
+"It's all a mask!" she cried. "Nothing of you shows in your voice or your
+face--your face, bah, it's always the same, when you kiss and when you
+strike. A mask! You're always in a mask. That's how you took me. I was a
+fool, and thought there must be something fine behind it." She laughed.
+"You were clever enough. You knew the trick and the mystery of it would
+take a woman. A mask! Yes, faith, that is the wear for a highwayman. I
+remember how Charles Hadley used to laugh at your 'Curst
+stand-and-deliver stare.' I liked it, I liked the challenge of it. But he
+knew you better. That's your trade, the highwayman, faith, the
+highwayman! You trick us all and prey upon us, as you dare. So you marked
+me down, who was rich and a girl, and you have caught me, and you have
+rifled me, and, for what you care I may now go hang. I ask you for my
+pride again, my honour, and you mock at me. Oh, I am ashamed for a fool
+and worse, and you know it, God help me, but you--you--"
+
+Harry shrugged. "I suppose we have come to the end now," he said coolly.
+"Well, ma'am, to be sure we married in haste, and it seems we have both
+come to repentance. As for wrong that I have done you--why, I can't make
+you a maid again, and, if you please, more's the pity. My apologies and
+regrets. For the rest, all of your money that hath been spent on me will
+go in a small purse, and, I promise you, you shall spend no more. So you
+may sleep sound, and I wish you good night."
+
+She watched him cross the room, and, as he was opening the door, cried
+out, "What do you mean?"
+
+He turned. "Why, would you still be talking?" Their eyes met in
+defiance. "You can go," she said.
+
+"I have had the honour to tell you so," he said, and was gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+ALISON FINDS FRIENDS
+
+
+It was on the second day after that Susan Burford and Mr. Hadley rode in
+to the Lincoln's Inn Fields. They found Alison and Mrs. Weston together,
+and both sewing--a fact which failed to interest Mr. Hadley, but
+surprised Susan, who knew Alison, without a taste for needlework.
+
+"My dear," says Susan, embracing Alison physically and spiritually in her
+large, buxom, genial way.
+
+"You have been a long time finding me," says Alison and put her off. "I
+suppose I know why you kindly come to me now."
+
+"B-r-r-r-r!" Mr. Hadley made the sound of one who comes into a cold
+draught. "The truth is, Susan has been so busy improving herself that she
+has had no time for her friends. In fine, she has been trying to make
+herself worthy the honour of my affections and large enough to support
+the burden of my dignity. I don't say she satisfies me, but she does her
+best." He propelled Susan forward with his one hand. "'A poor thing,
+ma'am, but mine own.'"
+
+"Oh, he is amusing himself, you see," says Susan, in her leisurely
+fashion.
+
+"Damme, Susan, you're so mighty innocent that sometimes I believe you
+are innocent."
+
+"But you have known me so long," Susan protested.
+
+Alison stood up with an air of ceremony. Her pale face constrained itself
+at last to smile at them. "My dear, I wish you may be very happy," says
+she, and gave Susan a matronly kiss. "Mr. Hadley, you're a fortunate
+man." She put out a stately hand.
+
+Having bowed over it. "B-r-r-r," says Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Damn these east winds. Susan, you're a plague with your affections. You
+will have me talk about you, and I can't make you interesting, I hope,
+ma'am, we find Mr. Boyce well?"
+
+Alison drew back. "Why do you ask that? You have seen Mr. Waverton,
+of course."
+
+Mrs. Weston put down her work and folded her hands upon it.
+
+"Why, yes, I have seen Geoffrey; and what's worse, heard him. I hope he
+did not plague you too long."
+
+"Pray, Mr. Hadley, don't be ironical. You can spare me that. Mr. Waverton
+told us his story the night before last. Thereupon Mr. Boyce and I parted
+company. He left my house immediately and I do not know where he is."
+
+Mr. Hadley distinguished himself by containing an oath. Susan said, "Oh,
+my dear," in that slow, calm way which might mean anything.
+
+It was Mrs. Weston who cried out, "Alison, you never told me."
+
+"You asked once or twice where he was, and I told you I did not know.
+What does it matter?"
+
+"You quarrelled with him?"
+
+"Quarrelled!"
+
+"Because of what this Mr. Waverton said?"
+
+"Do you think it could make no difference?"
+
+Mrs. Weston clasped her hands and swayed in her chair.
+
+"Alison; we had no guess of this. I am sorry. I am so sorry," Susan said.
+
+"There is no need." Alison held her head high.
+
+"If we have, in some sort, forced your confidence, I beg you believe,
+ma'am, it was not meant," So Mr. Hadley in the grand style. "For I
+protest it never came into my head that Geoffrey would make mischief
+between you and Mr. Boyce."
+
+"You say that?" Alison stared at him. "Oh, you mean I was so besotted
+with him."
+
+Mr. Hadley relapsed to his ordinary manner. "Damme, d'ye think we came
+for nothing but to jeer at you? I promise you we have pleasanter matter
+to hand. Neither to jeer at you, nor to meddle with you, Alison, but
+friendly. So take us friendly in God's name. If you will go about to find
+a sneer in every word, why, a sneer you'll find, but not of my making. We
+bring you nothing but goodwill, and want nothing more of you. But if we
+irk you, why, let us go and we'll see you again in good time."
+
+"That's a pretty speech to begin with an oath," Alison said, through the
+flicker of a smile. "And, faith, I should be slow to take offence at you.
+For we quarrelled before, because you were at pains to warn me. Well,
+sir, I humble myself before your wisdom."
+
+There was a pause. "Oh. Now we are all ill at ease," says Susan.
+
+"Odso, ma'am, it's not fair," Mr. Hadley cried. "I am not here to say, 'I
+told you so,' I am not so proud of it. Well, damme, I have no temptation
+to be meddling in your affairs. But I think you will have to know. It is
+with Mr. Waverton I have fallen out now."
+
+"With Mr. Waverton?" Alison repeated. "What is there between you and
+him?"
+
+"I believe he had the impertinence to expect my sympathetic admiration.
+While I was thinking him a low fellow. Which I took occasion to tell him.
+Without result." Mr. Hadley shrugged. "But I believe he did not feel it.
+It's a thick hide."
+
+"And what was your difference?"
+
+"Why, this precious story of his."
+
+There was some little time of silence. "You don't believe it," Alison
+said slowly. "Come, you must say more than that."
+
+"I profess, ma'am, I have no will to say anything. Whatever I say, I'll
+be impertinent."
+
+"Oh. Shall we mark it in you?" Susan said.
+
+"Well, sir, you were not always so shy of scolding me," says Alison, and
+again with a faint smile.
+
+"Scold you! God warn us, I have no commission. I can tell you what I
+thought of Waverton and his tale. Did I believe it? Ods fish, I never
+remember believing Geoffrey. If he had to tell you two and two was four,
+he would pretend that his genius first discovered it. So I don't know
+what happened at Pontoise. Likely the old Colonel did mix him up in some
+plot which some other fellows smoked. Maybe it was even such as Geoffrey
+said, kidnapping and murder to follow. These plots, they grow nastier and
+nastier the longer they are afoot. And Colonel Boyce--well, by your
+leave, I don't think him delicate. But for the rest of it, I'll wager
+that's Geoffrey's sprightly invention. You know very well, ma'am, I have
+no kindness for your Mr. Boyce. But, damme, he never thought of tricking
+Geoffrey out of the way to give himself a free hand with you. And it's a
+low trick in Geoffrey to go about with that tale."
+
+"Oh! But he is stupid," Susan said.
+
+"What if Colonel Boyce thought of the trick?" says Alison.
+
+"Egad, Mr. Boyce is unfortunate in his father. Maybe he knows that as
+well as we. But--damme, ma'am, you will have it--I believe there was not
+much trick in his affair with you."
+
+"I believe you once warned me of his tricks," Alison said coldly. "It's
+no matter now. I tease you with my affairs."
+
+"If I can serve you, I'm heartily at your command."
+
+"Oh, you have worked hard to make the best of a bad business. But I can
+do that for myself, and I like my own way of it."
+
+Mr. Hadley bowed.
+
+"Oh! Let us go home," Susan said.
+
+Alison looked at her in some surprise, and, as she stood up, came quickly
+to kiss her. "Have I been rude?" she whispered.
+
+"That would be no matter," Susan said, "You choose to be angry with me?"
+Alison stiffened.
+
+"Oh! One isn't angry. One is sorry," Susan said.
+
+Alison let her go, and Mr. Hadley, ceremonious but with visible relief,
+went after her.
+
+Then Mrs. Weston said suddenly, quickly, "Where is he?"
+
+"He?" Alison chose to be slow. "Mr. Boyce? I have no notion."
+
+"You drove him out?"
+
+"I could not endure him longer. Or he could endure me no longer. He went
+heartily enough. I think we were both glad it was over."
+
+"You taunted him till he had to go?"
+
+"Weston, dear!" Alison laughed at the sudden fierceness of the meek.
+"What's the matter?"
+
+"I have heard you mocking him."
+
+"Maybe. We both have sharp enough tongues."
+
+"You used to jeer at him for being poor."
+
+"Good lack, are you calling me to account, ma'am?"
+
+"Yes, you may well be ashamed! Where is he?"
+
+"Ashamed? What do you mean, Weston? What is the man to you?"
+
+"I am his mother," Mrs. Weston said.
+
+"You!... You! Oh, but this is mad!"
+
+"I am not mad."
+
+"But, Weston, dear, you knew nothing about him till he came; nor he of
+you. How could he be your son?"
+
+"I had never seen him since he was a baby. I was not married."
+
+"That is why you would not tell me? Oh, Weston, dear!"
+
+"I did not mean to tell you now. I knew it would hurt him with you. But I
+suppose it's no matter now. But these are my affairs, not yours."
+
+"My dear--"
+
+"You need not pity me."
+
+"What am I to say?" Alison held out her arms.
+
+"You have nothing to say now. You are not his wife now. You have never
+been anything but a bad wife." She gathered up her work with unsteady
+hands and turned away.
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+"I am going out of your house. Away from you."
+
+"But, Weston--not now, not to-night. Where can you go? What can you do?"
+
+"I can do well enough without you, as he can.... Why don't you tell me
+that I have been living on your money? You told him so often enough."
+
+"Oh ... you're cruel," Alison said.
+
+"What does it matter? You'll not be hurt. You are too hard." She hurried
+to the door.
+
+"Ah, don't go like this," Alison cried. "Weston, let's part kindly. I
+could not know. I have done nothing against you." Mrs. Weston laughed.
+"Stay a moment at least. I want to know. Harry's father--is Colonel
+Boyce--?"
+
+"Yes, there it is. That is all you want--to pry into all the story. It is
+nothing to you. He is nothing to you now."
+
+The door closed behind her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+RETURN OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+
+Harry was not gone far. In Long Acre stood a tavern calling itself 'The
+Hand of Pork.' This had always tempted Harry, whose tastes were of the
+people. While still a domesticated husband, he had tried its ale with
+satisfaction. When he left Alison it was to 'The Hand of Pork' that he
+brought his small, battered box.
+
+He had a few guineas in his pocket, and made a wry face over them.
+"Ill-gotten gains," says he, for some were the scraped savings of
+Geoffrey Waverton's tutor and some the pocket money of Alison's husband.
+But he was in no case to be delicate. Beef and bread had to be paid for,
+and, in fact, his scruples were little more than a joke. It is not to be
+concealed that in minor things Harry Boyce was not nicely honest. If you
+can imagine him seriously arguing over that money--a thing impossible--he
+would have said that the guineas were of consequence to him and none to
+Geoffrey and Alison, that whether he had dealt honestly by them or not,
+it would not better his case to pay them back a few shillings. You have
+seen that he had qualms of conscience over the rights of Geoffrey's
+service and Alison's arms. But the ugly, awkward details gave him no
+trouble. He may, if you please, have swallowed a camel or so, but he
+never strained at a gnat.
+
+Now that he was done with Geoffrey and Alison, both, his first feeling
+was comfort. It was a huge relief to be his own man again. He told
+himself indeed that he was mighty grateful to Geoffrey for bringing on
+the final explosion. For one thing, it wiped off all Geoffrey's score. If
+Master Geoffrey had been treated shabbily, Master Geoffrey had played a
+shabby trick. They could call quits--a pleasant sensation. It would have
+been awkward if Geoffrey had chosen to be magnanimous nobility. But he
+was never intelligent, the poor Geoffrey.
+
+He had done his best to be damaging, bless him, and in all ways had been
+a benefactor. For, in fact, it was a great relief to be done with Alison.
+What with her fretful discontent, her rages, her industrious hate, she
+had made herself intolerable. I do not suppose that he forgot, even in
+the heat of the divorce, the exquisite pleasure which for a while she had
+given him. I think he was always ready to acknowledge that to himself,
+for it is certain that he bore her no malice, and if he blamed her for
+their catastrophe, blamed himself as much. He might make the most or more
+of all the taunts, of her zeal to find occasions for despising him. He
+forgot nothing and forgave her nothing; he wrote her down a cruel enemy.
+But he did not pay her back with equal hate; he dismissed all the warfare
+and the wounds with a shrug of sagacious cynicism.
+
+She hated him? She had the right, she was his wife. And perhaps she was
+in the right too. He must fairly be reckoned a very poor match for her
+beauty and her wealth and her not insignificant brains. After all, he was
+essentially a nobody--a nobody in every department, body, mind, and soul.
+She might even claim that she had been cheated, for if she ought to have
+known that she was marrying a nobody, she could not guess that he had a
+bar-sinister or a disreputable father. Certainly Madame Alison could
+plead something of a case.
+
+You are not to suppose Harry in an ecstasy of meek devotion. He was quite
+sure that she had behaved to him very badly. He admitted no excuse for
+her eagerness to hurt him as soon as she was tired of him. She might hate
+him; but after all there were obligations of courtesy, of decency, of
+womanhood, and her venomous temper had broken them all. He was well rid
+of her. In fine, she and he could call quits as well as he and Geoffrey.
+There was no occasion to rage against her. She had treated him badly,
+but, first, he had brought her into an awkward mess. Faith, she ought not
+to have hurried into a marriage for passion if passion was so soon to
+sate her. But then, what man would blame a woman for marrying for
+passion? Not the man she married, who might rather humble himself because
+he had not been able to keep her passion alive. Well, it was over, and
+since it was over, nothing for it but to part. God be with her! She had
+given him his hour. And he--why, at least she had lived with him moments
+she would not forget. A glorious woman. It is probable that in these
+first hours of their parting he began to love her.
+
+So much for his emotions. But you will not suppose that Harry Boyce was
+wholly occupied with emotions. He could not indeed afford it. He had to
+make some provision for keeping alive. Perhaps you will be surprised to
+hear that he had a friend or two. There was an usher at Westminster, and
+a hack writer of Lintot's in Little Britain. He did not propose to live
+on them, who had hardly enough to feed themselves. But he looked for them
+to put him in the way of some pittance, and they did. The usher had news
+that, after Ascension-Day, Westminster would be wanting a writing master,
+for the man in possession hoped by then to marry the dean's cook and set
+up an ale-house. The author procured a commission to write two lampoons
+and a pamphlet against French wines. In the intervals of this occupation,
+Harry looked for his father.
+
+It would be hard to guess--Harry himself could not have told--what he
+hoped to gain by that. He wanted, of course, to find out the truth of the
+mission to France. Whether his father was likely to tell it, he could not
+make up his mind. What he would do with the truth if ever he learnt it,
+he did not know in the least. Suppose the best event: suppose his father
+could declare excellent intentions and Geoffrey a liar. Harry imagined
+himself going to Alison with the news and demanding to be taken on again.
+A nightmare joke.
+
+Yet to come at the truth seemed the most important task in life. The
+first step, though you think it impossibly difficult, did not dismay
+him. He had no doubt of discovering his father. That Colonel Boyce should
+have been killed or even caught was incredible. He was not the man so to
+oblige his enemies. It was incredible, too, that he would go long into
+hiding. Away from the importance of bustle and intrigue he could not
+exist. Therefore he would certainly come back to London: therefore sooner
+or later he would be found at one of the coffee-houses favoured by the
+brisk fellows in the underworld of politics--at Tom's, or the British, or
+Diggory's by the Seven Dials. He might be heard of among the fire-eating
+Jacobites of Sam's. There were not so many likely places, but Harry laid
+down more pennies than he could spare at the bars, and all in vain.
+
+He sat in Sam's on an afternoon chopping Greek tags with a jolly,
+fanatical old parson. The days were fast lengthening, and for one reason
+or another--the company at Sam's were not too fond of light--only a
+candle here and there was burning. A little man came in with a party very
+obsequious to him. As he walked up to the bar Harry had a glimpse of a
+lean, brown face. He remembered it and yet no more than faintly, and
+could not tell where he had seen it. It did not much engage him, and he
+went on with his Greek and his parson. The little man made some noise
+with the pretty girl behind the bar, claiming the privileges of an old
+friend and a good deal of liquor, and it was a little while before he was
+established at a table with his party. Harry chose to mouth out something
+Homeric and sounding. The little man stopped in the middle of lighting
+his pipe. "I know that roll, _pardieu_!" he muttered, and in a florid
+fashion declaimed, "Fol de rol de row," and laughed alcoholically. "Who's
+talking Hebrew here?"
+
+One of his party pointed out Harry and the parson. The little man blinked
+through the smoky twilight. He stood up, took his candle and lurched
+across the room to Harry. Down under Harry's nose he put the candle with
+a bang. Harry jerked back and glared at him, and he, rocking a little and
+blinking, said thickly, "It's a filthy likeness, after all, it is."
+
+"No, sir, there's only one of me," said Harry. "If you see two, give God
+the glory and go to bed."
+
+"I'm saying, bully, I'm saying," the little man's accent became more
+Caledonian and he clutched at Harry's shoulder. "I'm saying, my
+laddie--"
+
+"Damme, that's what I complain of."
+
+"I'm saying I do not like your complexion. It's yellow, my jo, it's a
+wee rotten orange, it is so." His company, a faithful tail, shook
+with laughter.
+
+"Sleep it off, sir," says Harry, with a shrug.
+
+"What's your will? Clip it off, do ye say so? Losh, you would have a face
+or two to spare. Eh, but I'm doubting you know too much o' clipping.
+There's clippit ears, and maybe you have a pair." He twitched Harry's bob
+wig awry; and with singular luck reeled out of the reach of Harry's
+answering blow. "Ay, and there's clippit shillings and maybe ye make your
+filthy living by their parings and shavings. Well a well, and there's
+clippit wings; and I'll clip yours, my bonny goose, the night." He
+clutched at the wig again and tossed it into the fire.
+
+Harry sprang up and struck at him. He flung himself backwards into the
+arms of his friends and with a surprising adroitness plucked out his
+sword. "Have at ye, my man;" he giggled and made a pass.
+
+"Easy, Captain," says one of his company. "The boy hath no sword."
+
+"Oh ay, 'tis the Lord that's a man of war. The devil was aye for peace.
+Well, what ails ye not to lend the imp a bodkin?"
+
+The fat old keeper of the coffee-house waddled into the midst. "Sure,
+Captain, you don't mean it. I would need to set my lads upon you. 'Tis
+disorderly homicide, indeed. Ye can't mean it. Not downstairs. I'll not
+deny there's the elegant parlour on the first floor."
+
+"Ye're a canting old devil, Sam," says the little man. "But I'll oblige
+you. Come up, my bully, and I'll show you a thing."
+
+"Here's for you, cully." One of the company thrust upon Harry a sword.
+
+"Oh, by your leave,"--Harry waved it oft--"I don't fight a drunken man."
+
+"Drunk!" the little man screamed. "Ods blades, there's a naughty way to
+mock a gentleman. I'll school you, bully; fou or fasting, I'll school
+you. What, you'll not lug out, like a bonny lad should? I jaloused it.
+I'm thinking you would take a beating like a lamb, laddie. Well a well.
+I'll be blithe to rub you down with an oaken towel. Here, Patrick, give
+us your staff."
+
+"Oh, I see you must be let blood." Harry shrugged. "Well, sir, do I
+fight the whole platoon?"
+
+"You're peevish, do you know, you're peevish. Here, Fraser, give him your
+hanger. Do you second the bairn, Donald? Come, Patrick, I'll have you.
+There's one for you and one for me, my man, and damn all favours."
+
+It seemed to Harry that the little man's company were something surprised
+at this turn, but they took it in a disciplined silence. So the party of
+four marched up the stairs. You will believe that Harry liked the
+business ill enough. He shot glances at the two chosen for seconds. There
+was nothing sottish about them. They were very soberly alert, they had
+the tan and the vigour of open-air life. They looked anything but the fit
+comrades for a swashbuckling tavern hero. They were as stiff as pokers,
+they said not a word, they showed not a sign of interest in the
+affair--rather like two soldiers on guard than ready seconds in a drunken
+brawl. Once in the upper room they made their arrangements with solemn
+care, locking the door, clearing a sufficient space, and setting the
+candles so that the light fell fairly. Harry was taken aside, helped out
+of his coat, asked if he needed anything, gravely advised to risk nothing
+and play close.
+
+"We are at your service, Mr. O'Connor," says Donald.
+
+"At your pleasure, Mr. Mackenzie," says the other.
+
+Harry was set against the little man and the swords crossed. It then
+occurred to him that the little man was very suddenly recovered from his
+liquor. The blustering chatter had been cut off as soon as they started
+up the stairs. Since then the little man had spoken not one word. Of the
+unsteadiness, the blinking, the rocking to and fro, nothing remained. He
+had marched to his place with a formal precision. There was the same
+manner, a correctness exact and staccato, about this sword play.
+
+The knave can never have been drunk, Harry said to himself as he
+sweated and was the more embarrassed by bewilderment. But he dared not
+let himself think. The little man was urgently dangerous, and Harry
+knew enough to know it. Harry had no pretensions to science. All he
+could use was the rudiments. He had kept his head at singlestick, held
+his own with the foil against other lads, and never before faced a
+point. The little man had the speed and certainty of a _maitre
+d'armes_. So Harry fought, breathing hard, every muscle aching, mind
+numb and dazed under the strain, expecting--hoping--every moment the
+thrust that would make an end.
+
+It did not come. The ache and fever of the fight went on and on. Still
+the little man was masterful and precise. Still he demanded all Harry's
+vigour and more than all, kept him struggling desperately, beset by fear
+on the edge of death. Harry felt himself weakening, faltering, and still
+the opposing blade searched his defence sharply, still the little man was
+an exemplar of easy precision. And yet Harry's maladroitness always
+sufficed to save his skin. He was puzzled, and blundered and fumbled the
+more. The play grew slower and slower, and he was the more tortured,
+enduring many times the shame and the pain of defeat.
+
+At last he had hit upon the truth. He was wondering in a dazed fashion
+why that other sword seemed always to wait on him when he made a gross
+mistake. Visibly, palpably, the little man's blade halted to give him
+time for a parry. Harry dropped his point and gasped out, "Damme, sir,
+you are playing with me."
+
+"What's your will? I fight my own way. At your convenience, sir."
+
+"The Captain's within his right, sir," says Harry's solemn second.
+
+"Damn you, for a pack of mountebanks!" Harry cried.
+
+"On guard, sir," says the little man.
+
+Harry gave him an oath and dashed at him. There was a moment's wild
+fighting and then the little man forced it back to order. They were at
+the old game again, precise scientific thrust, pause, and blundering
+parry, when to Harry's amazement the little man's sword wavered and flew
+from his hand.
+
+Through a long minute Harry stood staring at him, and he waiting unarmed
+for Harry's thrust. Again Harry lowered his sword. At once the little
+man stooped and picked up his. "Do you demand to continue, Captain?"
+says his second.
+
+"You're a fool, Patrick," quoth the little man.
+
+The impenetrable second saluted and turned to his fellow. "Another bout,
+if you please, Mr. Mackenzie."
+
+"Would you grant it, sir?" says Harry's solemn Scot.
+
+"Egad, we are all mad here," Harry wiped his brow. "Oh, play it
+out to hell."
+
+The little man saluted formally and again they engaged. And now Harry was
+enveloped in another kind of fighting. Scientific it might be, but
+science far beyond his understanding. The little man's point was
+everywhere upon him and he thrusting blindly at the air. He might have
+been pinked a score times over, he was for all he knew. And then on a
+sudden his own point touched something. Next moment it was struck up to
+the ceiling. Some one called out "A hit." He saw the two seconds standing
+between the swords and a red scratch on the little man's cheek.
+
+"_Touche_," says he with a bow. "My compliments, if you please. It's some
+while since a man marked me. I am glad to know you, sir. Pray, what's
+your name?"
+
+"Harry Boyce, sir."
+
+"Egad, it's wonderful!" says the little man, with a laugh which appealed
+to Harry. "Hector McBean, at your service." Harry stared. "Aye, aye, I'm
+thinking we'll explain ourselves. Will you walk, sir?"
+
+"If you please."
+
+Captain McBean took his arm, said over his shoulder to the two seconds
+"To-morrow," and marched off with him. Once they were out in the
+street, "So you are Colonel Noll Boyce's son," says Captain McBean with
+an odd look.
+
+"He has often told me so."
+
+"If you had not such a look of him I wouldn't believe it. Oh, pardon,
+monsieur, _mille pardons_, _ma foi._ I have been insolent to you in all
+this affair. You'll please to observe that the whole of it, and the
+issue, is to your honour. Will I have to say more?"
+
+"Oh Lud, no. Pray, let's talk sense."
+
+"I take to you marvellously, _mon enfant_. Well now, have you
+heard of me?"
+
+"Enough to want much more."
+
+"What, has father been talking?"
+
+"D'ye know where he is, Captain McBean?"
+
+"I wish I did."
+
+"So do I. It was Mr. Waverton who told the tale. Now you know why I am
+eager to hear what you can say of my father or my father of you."
+
+"Are you a good son, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+"I pay my debts."
+
+"There's a crooked answer. Are you in the Colonel's secrets?"
+
+"I have no reason to think so."
+
+"I guess he did not trust you. I guess he was right. Do you remember
+where you met me first?"
+
+"I remember that I can't remember."
+
+"And me that thought I was a beauty! Well, but you were busy. You were
+making mud pies with Ben."
+
+"I have it. You were his captain on the horse. Pray, sir, what was my
+Benjamin's mystery?"
+
+"I am going to trust you, Mr. Boyce. I shall not require you to trust me
+unless you choose. I tell you frankly I hope for it. And so--come in
+with you."
+
+They turned out of the Strand into Bow Street. Captain McBean let
+himself into a house, and took Harry up to a room very neat and cosy.
+"D'ye drink usquebaugh? A pity. It's the cleanest liquor. Well, draw up."
+He pushed a tobacco-box across the table. "That's right Spanish. Now,
+_mon cher_, are you Jacobite or Hanoverian?"
+
+"I never could tell."
+
+"Oh, look you, I ask no confidences. And I make no doubt of your honour.
+If you had a mind to play tricks you would have tried one on me to-night.
+Well, I have proved you. Your pardon again. But when I saw Noll Boyce's
+son lurking in Sam's, how could I know he was without guile? Now there is
+something I must say to you. But how much I say is a question. I have no
+desire to embarrass you with awkward knowledge. So which is your king,
+_mon enfant_, James or George?"
+
+"I care not a puff of smoke for either."
+
+"So. I suppose there is something you care for. Well--you asked about
+Ben's mystery. It's a good beginning. The rascal should have stopped the
+Duke of Marlborough's coach and held it till I came up with my fellows.
+Instead of which he went about some private thieving. I am your debtor
+for giving the knave his gruel. What's Marlborough to me? It's not his
+dirty guineas I was after, but his papers. He was then pretending to
+negotiate with St. Germain. There were those of us who doubted the old
+villain had some black design in his head again, and it was thought that
+if we could turn over his private papers, we should know where to have
+him. It was certified that he had with him something from his agents
+abroad. Well, we missed him, and how deep he is dipped in this business,
+I know no more than you.
+
+"Now I come to your father, _mon enfant_, and I promise you I will be as
+delicate as I may. Do you know, _par exemple_, how Colonel Boyce is in
+the mouths of gentlemen?"
+
+"Oh, sir, that's another of the matters for which I care nothing."
+
+"_Tenez donc_. You were born old, I think. Well, Colonel Boyce has been
+in some few plots, devices, and manoeuvres. No man ever denied him wit,
+nor will I, _mordieu_. But it's his virtue that neither his friends nor
+his enemies were ever sure of him. I believe, Mr. Boyce, that if he heard
+me he would thank me for a compliment. _Bien_--I come back to my tale.
+
+"It was known to us poor Jacobites in England that Colonel Boyce was
+making salutes to St. Germain. Which much intrigued us, for we would not,
+by your leave, have him of our side. They don't know him there as we do,
+and King James, God save him! is young and honourable and sanguine."
+
+"Poor lad," says Harry with a shrug.
+
+"You may keep your pity, Mr. Boyce," McBean said stiffly. "I would have
+him so, by your leave. Now we heard that letters went to St. Germain from
+Colonel Boyce full of windy promises--_verbosa et grandis epistola_. D'ye
+keep up your humanities?--in the name of my Lord Sunderland and my Lord
+Stair. Black names both. But they were vastly intrigued at St. Germain.
+If Sunderland and Stair were ready to turn honest, then _pardieu_, there
+was hope of the devil himself. Oh, I don't blame the King nor even
+Charles Middleton, though he is old enough to be slow. The times are
+changing, and maybe Stair and Sunderland they see it as well as we, and
+mean to find salvation. I can't tell. But the thing looked ill. Stair and
+Sunderland--there is no treachery too foul for those names. And if they
+meant honestly, why--saving your presence, _mon enfant_--why did they
+choose Colonel Boyce for their agent? It was no good warranty. So we
+adventured a counter. We have friends enough now in the Government, _mon
+cher_, and it was arranged that the Colonel should be arrested as a
+Jacobite. A good stroke, I think. It was mine. Only the old gentleman
+dodged it."
+
+"Pray, what did you know of Mr. Waverton?"
+
+"That sheep's-head!" McBean laughed. "Why, a letter came to hand in which
+the Colonel talked of taking the pretty gentleman to France. So he was
+joined in the warrant. _D'ailleurs_--it made a good appearance. However,
+we missed him; but we found something in his papers which made me queasy.
+So I e'en was off to France after him.
+
+"The Colonel stayed at Pontoise and sent your Waverton off to St. Germain
+with a mighty plausible letter about secret proposals from the chiefs of
+the Whigs, which brought the King out to hear them secretly. _Ma foi_! I
+think Charles Middleton should have smelt a rat. But it was a clever
+trick, and to choose your Waverton to play it was masterly. For who could
+think that peacock would be in anything crafty? At Pontoise I tumbled in
+upon them, and your father, _mon cher_, he ran off on sight of me.
+Observe, I press nothing against him. I allow that the best evidence I
+have against him is just that--he ran away when he saw me. Secondly, he
+had with him some three-four rascals whose faces would hang them. And
+thirdly and lastly, beloved brethren, these fellows, when put to it and
+charged with a plot to murder King James, were frightened for their lives
+and babbled wildly, of which the sum was that they had been brought but
+to kidnap him. I grant ye, they may have lied, and I would not hang a dog
+(who was not a Whig) upon their word. But confess, _mon cher_, the thing
+is black enough. What did the Colonel want with King James alone? Why did
+he need his bullies? Why did he run away? I leave it with you."
+
+Harry knocked out his pipe. "I am obliged for the story, sir. Why did
+you tell it?"
+
+"You have a cold blood in you, _mon enfant_" says Captain MacBean.
+"Observe, I look for nothing wonderful from you. I allow your position is
+very difficult to a man of honour. And with all my heart--"
+
+"Oh Lud, sir, let's have nothing pathetic."
+
+"Aye, aye," McBean bowed. "Mr. Boyce! I do profess I feel the delicacy of
+the affair, and I detest it, _pardieu_. But I dare not absolve ye from
+your duty."
+
+"Oh, sir, you are very sublime."
+
+"Hear me out, Mr. Boyce. I have shown you cause to fear that your
+father has it in mind to compass a vile treachery, perhaps a murder.
+Would you deny it?"
+
+"Damme, sir, I am not the day of judgment."
+
+"_Bien_. I believe that is an answer. I declare to you there is yet a
+chance that he may succeed, aye, here in London."
+
+Harry swore. "If your friends must go walking into traps what is
+it to me?"
+
+"Well, sir, though you will own no loyalty to king or queen or country,
+I'll not be deceived. I call on you for your aid. It's believed your
+father is in London. It is likely he will seek you out, as he did before.
+Maybe at this hour you know where he is."
+
+"If I did, should I betray him to you, sir?"
+
+"I ask no treachery. But I do call on you, discover his purpose if you
+can, and if he intends violence to the King, prevent it. Lord, sir, it's
+to save your father from infamy, and your own name."
+
+"The King? The Pretender is in London?" Harry cried.
+
+"I told you that I should trust you far, Mr. Boyce."
+
+Harry stared at him, and after a moment stood up. "I can do nothing," he
+said. "It is of all things most unlikely that I should do anything. For
+what I know, my father is dead. He has been nothing else to me all my
+life. But I believe I should thank you."
+
+"Well!" quoth McBean. "God help you. I ha' drawn a bow at a venture. I
+think I have hit something, Mr. Boyce."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+CONSOLATIONS BY A FATHER
+
+
+Do you remember how frightened Swift was of the Mohocks? How he came
+home early, and even (that was bitter) spent some pence on being carried
+in a sedan chair to avoid the "race of rakes that play the devil about
+this town every night, slit people's noses," and so forth? He had some
+reason to fear.
+
+"Was there a Watchman took his hourly rounds
+Safe from their blows or new invented wounds"
+
+in these last days of Queen Anne? Their way was to gather and take
+plenty of liquor, "then make a general sally and attack all that are
+so unfortunate as to walk the streets through which they patrol. Some
+are knocked down, others stabbed, others cut and carbonadoed." The
+women would be turned upside down or clapped into barrels and rolled
+over the stones.
+
+It was a dark night with but a glimpse of the new moon when Harry left
+Captain McBean. From Bow Street to the "Hand of Pork" in Long Acre was
+only a few hundred yards, but murky enough, and Harry took Mr. Gay's
+advice for such night walking:
+
+"Let constant Vigilance thy footsteps guide,
+And wary Circumspection guard thy side."
+
+Nevertheless, as he was coming by the corner into Long Acre, he was
+surprised by a sound at his heels. He stepped quickly aside and turned
+upon it, felt a blow upon his head, saw flashes of light and the street,
+whirling round, rose up to meet him, and he knew no more.
+
+When he came to himself he was in a room with fire and lights. He raised
+himself and heard voices. Then some one was standing over him. He looked
+up into his father's face. "Who was that?" he said feebly.
+
+"Don't you see yet, Harry? It will soon pass off."
+
+"Lord, I know you. Who are the others?"
+
+"There is none here but me," said Colonel Boyce.
+
+Harry looked painfully round the room and saw that it had become empty.
+"What was it? A pistol?" said he, and began to feel his head.
+
+"Egad, nothing so gentlemanly. A cudgel, by the look of the bruise. A
+Mohock's club, I suppose. I found you lying in the kennel as I was
+coming home."
+
+"Oh, you're at home are you?" Harry laughed stupidly. "And where is
+home?"
+
+"These are my lodgings in Martin's Lane, Harry, and you are welcome. But
+what have you to do in town? Young husbands should not be night walkers."
+
+Harry stared at him for a moment. "I thought you knew everything," he
+said. Then, beginning to scramble up, he became aware that his clothes
+were all undone--coat, shirt, even breeches. "Odso, why were you
+stripping me?"
+
+"I found you so. They shave you close, the Mohocks."
+
+"They are a queer crew, your Mohocks." Harry looked at his father. "What
+should I carry inside my shirt?" Then he thrust his hands into his
+pockets. "Well, I had not much, but all's gone."
+
+"Damned rogues," said his father with honest indignation. "How much have
+you lost, Harry?"
+
+"Five guineas or so."
+
+"I can make that good at least. But what is it to you? You are a warm
+fellow now. What, you've made no hole in Madame Alison's money bags yet."
+
+"You're offensive, do you know?" Harry said. "I have been itching to
+tell you so."
+
+Colonel Boyce's face set. "What now? Are you against me, sirrah?"
+
+"Ods fish, you're a martyr, ain't you?" Harry laughed. But we are
+beginning at the end, I think. If you remember, sir, you promised to take
+me to France and went off without me."
+
+"D'ye quarrel with that? Why, you had a fatter fish to fry than you could
+catch with me. So I left you at her and you ha' dined upon her. What's
+the matter then?"
+
+"You were not honest with me--"
+
+Colonel Boyce laughed, "Ah, bah, you will be a Puritan. It must be your
+mother in you."
+
+"My mother! Thank you. We'll come to her. But one tale at a time. You let
+me think I was to go with you till you were gone without me. You took
+Waverton and told me nothing of that till you had him safe away."
+
+"Egad, boy, it was all for your good."
+
+"Perhaps you did think so," said Harry after a moment. "In fact it's what
+I complain of. You want to play Providence to me. Pray, sir, go about
+your business."
+
+Colonel Boyce shrugged. "You're a proper grateful son. So be it. You have
+your wealthy wench and want no more of me. Well, go to the devil your own
+way, Harry."
+
+"By your leave, I prefer it. But there's more, sir. Now comes Mr.
+Waverton and declares to my wife and me that you enticed him into a vile
+plot: for your pretence of a mission to the Pretender was nothing but a
+device for murder."
+
+"Mr. Waverton said that to Mrs. Harry Boyce? Egad, it wasn't civil of Mr.
+Waverton. And what did the lady say to him?"
+
+"That's no matter. What do you say to him, sir? Did you intend murder?"
+
+"Lud, Harry, you talk like a ranting parson. It was not your way. Who has
+put this buzz of morality into your head? I suppose your pretty wife
+would have you break with your father. He's a low, coarse fellow, faith,
+who might want some of her money."
+
+"We will leave my wife out, if you please. She will not trouble you. She
+and I have parted."
+
+"God's my life! What's the quarrel?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "Does one ever know? I was not good enough for her, I
+believe. And perhaps she was not good enough for me."
+
+"Damn you for a prig," says his father.
+
+"If you like. But you'll remark that I do not complain of her."
+
+"Bah, you make me sick, sir! Not complain of her! That luscious piece!
+Egad, you should be drunk with her. But you're not a man, Harry, you're
+a parson."
+
+"Oh, command your emotions! She rebelled against being wed to a man whose
+father ran about the world compassing murder, to a man who was withal a
+low fellow, a bastard. So far, it is your affair."
+
+"I see you are no hand with a woman."
+
+"Do I take after you, sir? We came upon a woman who said she was Mrs.
+Oliver Boyce and could not live with him, and boasted vehemently that she
+was no mother of mine."
+
+Colonel Boyce plucked at his mouth. "So dear Rachel has got her finger
+into the pie. Why, Harry, you have had no luck."
+
+"She is your wife, then. Oh, I admire your taste, sir. And pray, who was
+my mother?"
+
+Colonel Boyce began to say something and stopped. "It's no matter. I
+believe she would not wish you to know. Why, Harry, I profess I am sorry.
+If we had been married, better for us all."
+
+"Oh, you will be mysterious still. I suppose you are as tender of her
+honour as of mine or your own. And this matter of murdering the
+Pretender, pray, is that a mystery too?"
+
+Colonel Boyce became restless. "Ods life, sirrah, there is no matter
+of murder. Who told you so? The fool Waverton. And where did he get
+the tale?"
+
+"A gentleman who runs away tells his own tale."
+
+"Now mark, Harry. The plan was but to bring Prince James to England--"
+
+"Dead or alive," Harry laughed.
+
+"Pshaw. I had him at Pontoise and was doing well with him. Then in comes
+a swashbuckling Scots Jacobite which is my private enemy, and a dozen
+bullies at his tail. Well, I had no mind to have him stick me or turn me
+over to the French as a spy of Marlborough's, so I went off. The fool
+Waverton let himself be taken. I make no doubt the Scot filled him to the
+brim with slanders of me. But is that my fault?"
+
+"So you're done with the Pretender?"
+
+Colonel Boyce gave his son a queer look. "Why, there's not much to be
+done with him in Martin's Lane, boy."
+
+"Then what are you doing?"
+
+"Egad, Harry, I should think you want to lay an information against
+me. Waiting for better times is all my business now. My bolt's shot.
+And pray, sirrah, what may be your business now you've cut loose from
+Mrs. Alison?"
+
+Harry laughed. "Living on my means."
+
+"Why, does she settle something on you?"
+
+Harry looked at his father without affection. "Do you know, sir, I am not
+always proud of your name."
+
+"Egad, but you must have money somehow."
+
+"The family motto, I suppose. Well, sir, I write for the Press."
+
+"Good God, not for the newspapers? You have not fallen to that?"
+
+"Oh, sir, the shillings are clean by comparison."
+
+They looked at each other for a minute or two. "You walk abroad late, Mr.
+Author," says Colonel Boyce. "Do you make friends in your profession?"
+
+"I believe I have two in the town--a hack writer for Lintot and an usher
+at Westminster. And what then, pray?"
+
+"You were with them to-night?"
+
+"You are paternal on a sudden, sir. Do you think of putting me out to
+nurse again?"
+
+"So." Colonel Boyce stood up as if he had finished and then forced a
+laugh and slapped his son's shoulder, "Come, Harry, why quarrel? There's
+room enough for you here. I allow I owe you something. Join in with me."
+
+"I have no luck in mysteries, sir. I'll wish you goodnight."
+
+"Now you bear me a grudge," his father protested.
+
+"What, for getting me born? Sometimes, perhaps."
+
+"Egad, Harry, I should like to do something for you."
+
+"Then give me a sword."
+
+"A sword? And what for i' God's name?"
+
+"In case I meet any more of your Mohocks."
+
+Colonel Boyce was taken aback for a moment. Then he cried out heartily:
+"Damme, the rogues took five guineas from you too. Here, fill your purse,
+child." He shot out gold on the table.
+
+"I'll take back my five guineas," said Harry, and counted them, while
+his father watched with a frown.
+
+"There are swords of mine below," said Colonel Boyce.
+
+They went down and from a rack of arms Harry chose a plain black hanger
+with an agate hilt. As he did it on he saw below it some heavy staves
+loaded with lead--just such as the Mohocks used.
+
+"And where do you lodge?" says Colonel Boyce.
+
+"At the 'Hand of Pork' in Long Acre. Goodbye, sir."
+
+Colonel Boyce nodded, and for some time after he had gone stood at the
+door, watching.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+TWO'S COMPANY
+
+
+Alison was gone back to her house at Highgate--and immediately regretted
+it. She took her adventures in a youthful, egoistic fashion: saw herself
+as a lovely woman made the prey of man and robbed of her right to her
+own life, a tender, confiding soul deceived and tortured into despair.
+The Lincoln's Inn Fields became the abomination of desolation, her fine
+society was dust and ashes and mankind in general all mocking villainy.
+So it was natural that she should retire from the world and become a
+recluse of tragic dignity. What other part is there for the deserted
+wife to play?
+
+But she came upon awkward difficulties. The world would not be left
+behind. It was much more closely about her among the woods and meadows of
+Highgate than in her London drawing-room. The would-be fine ladies and
+gentlemen of her routs and her card parties, so the sweetmeats and the
+wines and strong waters were good enough, cared nothing whether she had a
+husband upstairs or somewhere else. Out in the country every one, gentle
+and simple, had a curious eye upon her. The very woods and meadows must
+be jogging her memory and putting her questions. Every one had known Miss
+Lambourne of the Hall and gone whispering about her strange, passionate
+marriage. Each pleasant path and lane had seen something of that first
+wild happiness. All day long she was driven back upon herself and what
+she had lost.
+
+There is no doubt that she suffered. Of course she still told her heart
+wonderful tales about the shame that she had to bear and her torturing
+wrongs, and beyond doubt she believed most of them. For she could still
+profess to herself a miserable degradation in being married to a man of
+no name: she would be gloomily convinced that Harry was by his father's
+villainy a proven knave. But what hurt her most was the growing suspicion
+that she was much to blame for her own plight. Alison Lambourne, who
+acknowledged no law but her own will, who had never dreamed that she
+could be wrong in her desires, driven to confess a ruinous blunder!
+Imagine her distress. At first she chose to pretend that she had been
+overthrown by passion. The more she tried to despise Harry, the more that
+fancy shamed her. But there was in her a strength which refused to be
+content with that. She would still boast to herself that she was not the
+woman to be swept away by a gust of longing for the man who chanced to
+take her eye. And so she brought down on herself the inexorable
+question--if Harry were man enough to wake passion in her and deserve her
+magnificence, why had she driven him off? For all her selfishness and her
+insolent pride, she had a vehement desire, a part perhaps of her very
+pride in her womanhood, to owe him nothing, to play him fair, to give
+him all that a man could ask. Little by little she forced herself to
+believe that she had failed of that. After all, he had offered her
+nothing but himself, poor, friendless, of no repute, indolent, careless
+of all the world--and she had professed content. What his father might do
+was no matter to that. He had offered her what he was and given it
+faithfully. And she had not played fair. When she found herself
+confessing that, she discovered a new power of being wretched. All the
+romantic, egoistic melancholy went down the wind. The finest, proudest of
+her, her own honour, told of a torturing wound.
+
+"I'll satisfy you"--that had been the boast before the wild marriage was
+done. And after all she had chosen to deny him. Nothing else could
+matter. There could be no excuse. It was he that she had taken, not his
+name or what he might be, and he had not changed. It was herself that she
+had promised--what other honour for woman or man than to give like for
+like?--and she had broken faith. She was humiliated--a state of all
+others the most dolorous for Alison.
+
+To it came on a merry spring day Mr. Waverton. She was in two minds
+whether to let him see her, and then--too proud to hide from him or
+greedy of a chance to hurt him--had him in.
+
+Mr. Waverton had decorated himself for a house of mourning. His large
+form was all black and silver and drooped sympathetically. His handsome
+face was set in a chastened melancholy as of one who grieves for
+another's trouble with a modest satisfaction. "Dear lady," says he
+tenderly, and bowed over her hand.
+
+"Dear Geoffrey," says she. "Here's a new song."
+
+"Madame?"
+
+"'Vengeance is mine' was the refrain last time. Now it's weeping over the
+penitent prodigal. How I love you, Geoffrey."
+
+Mr. Waverton made a gesture of emotion, an exclamation. "I wronged you,
+Alison," he said in a deep voice. "Nay, but you must forgive me. I have
+suffered too. Remember! I had lost all."
+
+"Ah, no," says Alison tragically, "you had still yourself, Geoffrey."
+
+His emotion was understood to be too much for Mr. Waverton. In a little
+while, "We have both been the sport of villainy," he said. "Forgive me,
+Alison. I remember that I spoke bitterly. Can you wonder? I had dreamed
+of you in his arms. To see you there in that knave's power--ah, I was
+beside myself. And he laughed, do you remember, he laughed!"
+
+"He never would take you to heart, in fact."
+
+"A treacherous hound!" said Mr. Waverton with startling vehemence.
+
+"Oh, he was honest when he laughed."
+
+Mr. Waverton swept Harry out of the conversation. "Forgive me, Alison, I
+should have known. My heart should have told me."
+
+"Oh Lud, and is your heart to give tongue now?"
+
+"My heart," said Mr. Waverton with dignity, "my heart is always crying to
+you. And now--now that the first agony is past, I know all."
+
+"I wish I did," said Alison and looked in his eyes.
+
+"But even then--ah, Alison, I have blamed myself cruelly--even then I
+should have known that when your eyes were opened, when you knew the
+truth, you would have no more of him."
+
+"You might have known," Alison said slowly. "You might have judged me by
+yourself."
+
+"Aye, that indeed," says Mr. Waverton heartily. "For we are very like,
+Alison, we are of the same spirit, you and I."
+
+"You make me proud."
+
+"It's our tragedy: we so like, so made to answer each other, should be
+betrayed to our ruin by this same vile trickster. Oh, I blame you no more
+than myself."
+
+"This is too generous."
+
+"No," says Mr. Waverton. "No. When I came on that woman of yours, that
+Mrs. Weston--faith, I am glad that you have cut her off too. I never
+liked that woman."
+
+"Yes, she is poor."
+
+"There it is! I doubt she was in Boyce's pay."
+
+Alison opened her eyes at him. "Oh, Geoffrey, you surpass yourself
+to-day. Go on, go on."
+
+"If you please," says Mr. Waverton, something ruffled. "I believe he
+hired her to play his game with you. Had you a suspicion of it when you
+sent her packing?"
+
+"By God, Geoffrey, I could suspect anyone when you talk to me."
+
+"She is bitter against you. When I heard from her that you had driven
+the fellow away from you, I was on fire to come to you."
+
+"To forgive the prodigal! Oh, your nobility, Geoffrey. And pray where did
+you meet Mrs. Weston?"
+
+"Why, in the High Street here. She lodges in one of those wretched
+cottages behind the street."
+
+"She is here?" Alison shivered a little.
+
+"Perhaps she has some game to play yet. She may be his spy. Be warned
+against her."
+
+Alison leant forward in her chair. Her face was hidden from him. "You are
+giving me a lesson, Geoffrey. I'll profit by it, I promise you!"
+
+"Alison!" Mr. Waverton gave a laugh of triumph. "I fight for us both. And
+I promise you I am eager enough. As soon as I learnt that you had left
+him, why, he was delivered into my hand. By heaven, he shall find no
+mercy now. Already I have him watched. I went to an attorney much
+practised in these treasonous cheating plots, and of him I have hired
+trusty fellows who know all the rogues in London and their hiding-holes.
+You said something?"
+
+But Alison was laughing.
+
+"I believe there is some humour in it," Mr. Waverton conceded grandly.
+"Well, they have tracked him down. Our gentleman lies at a filthy tavern
+in the Long Acre. The 'Leg of Pork,' or some such lewd name. He haunts
+Jacobite coffeehouses and the like low places. They believe that he makes
+some dirty money by scribbling for the Press. A writer in the newspapers!
+He is sunk almost to his right depth. They make no doubt that before
+long we shall catch him dabbling in some new treasonous matter. And
+then--" he made gestures of doom.
+
+"Well? And then?"
+
+"The law may revenge us on the treacherous rogue," said Mr. Waverton
+with majesty.
+
+Alison stood up. Mr. Waverton, always polite, started up too. "I give you
+joy, Geoffrey," she said very quietly.
+
+"Not yet! Not yet!" Mr. Waverton put up a modest hand.
+
+"I believe there is nothing you could feel." Mr. Waverton recoiled
+and stared his bewilderment. "You carry a sword, Geoffrey. Oh, that I
+were a man!"
+
+"To use it upon him! Bah, such rogues are not worth the honour of steel."
+
+"Oh! Honour! Honour!" she cried and flung out her arms, trembling. "The
+honour of you and me!"
+
+What was Mr. Waverton to make of that? "I believe I have excited
+you," says he.
+
+"By God, it is the first time," Alison cried and turned on him so
+fiercely that he started back.
+
+There was a servant at the door saying something which went unheard. Then
+Susan Burford came into the room, an odd contrast in her placid
+simplicity to the amazed magnificence of Mr. Waverton or Alison's
+tremulous, furious beauty. Alison was turned away from her and too much
+engaged to hear or be aware of her.
+
+"Here is Miss Burford," said Waverton in a hurry.
+
+Alison whirled upon her. "You! You have nothing to do here."
+
+"My dear Alison!" Waverton protested. "Miss Burford, your very obedient."
+
+Susan made him a small leisurely curtsy and sat down. "Oh, please give me
+a dish of tea," she said.
+
+"We have not seen you at Tetherdown in this long while," Mr. Waverton
+complained genially.
+
+"I believe not," says Susan.
+
+Alison stared at her. "Why do you come here? You know you despise me."
+
+"I do not come to people I despise," says Susan placidly.
+
+"Well. I am private with dear Geoffrey, if you please."
+
+"My dear Alison! I must be riding. We have finished our business, I
+think. I'll not fail to be with you again soon. I hope to have news for
+you. Miss Burford, your most obedient." Susan bent her head. "Alison--"
+he held out his hand and smiled at her protective affection.
+
+"Geoffrey," said Alison, and looked in his eyes. She did not take the
+hand. She was very pale.
+
+Mr. Waverton's smile was withered. He took himself out with a jauntiness
+that sat upon him awkwardly.
+
+Then Alison turned again upon Susan. "You want to know what I have to do
+with him?" she said fiercely.
+
+"No," says Susan.
+
+Alison stared at the fair, placid face and cried out: "You are a fool."
+
+"Oh, my dear," says Susan.
+
+"I hate that cold, flabby way of yours. You think it is all good and
+wise and kind. It's like a silly mother with a spoilt child. You've not
+spirit enough to scold, and all the while you are thinking me vile and
+base and mean."
+
+"But that is ridiculous. Nobody could think you mean," Susan said.
+
+"There it is again. You believe it is kind to talk so, and it drives me
+mad. I am shameful--do you hear? I am shameful and perhaps I want to be,
+and I loathe myself. Now, go. I shall not stay with you. Go."
+
+Susan stood up. "Alison, oh, Alison," she said. Alison flung out
+of the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+THE HOUSE IN KENSINGTON
+
+
+Late in that evening one of Alison's servants rode up to the "Hand of
+Pork" and inquired for Mr. Boyce. After some parley, he was told that Mr.
+Boyce had not been in the tavern that day. So he left a letter in the tap
+and rode back to Highgate.
+
+That letter, which was not heard of till long afterwards, ran thus:
+
+"Mr. Boyce,--I desire that you would come to me at Highgate. I have
+to-day heard from Geoffrey Waverton what you must instantly know. And the
+truth is, I cannot be content till I speak with you. But I would not have
+you come for this my asking. Pray believe it is urgent for us both that
+we meet, and I do require it of you, not desiring of you what you may
+have no mind to, but to be honest with you, and lest that should befall
+which I hope you would not have me bear.--A."
+
+An ungainly, confused composition, as you see, but it set forth very
+clearly the state of Alison's unhappy mind. She was revolted, of course,
+by Geoffrey's scheme of spying and trapping, loathed him for
+propounding it to her, and was eager to warn Harry against it and clear
+herself of any part in the vile business. But she would not have Harry
+suppose that she was praying him to come back to her. This time, at
+least, there should be no wooing on her side. If she wanted him
+hungrily, shamefully, he should not know till he chose to take her. But
+he must come to her and be told all the tale, and hold her free of any
+part in Geoffrey's baseness.
+
+So she fought with herself and wrote of her strife, and, as things
+went, it mattered nothing to Harry, for he never knew of it till much
+else had happened.
+
+When he woke on the morning after his affairs with Captain McBean and the
+Mohocks and his father--woke with a sore head and a very stiff shoulder,
+he was a prey to puzzled excitement. There is no doubt that McBean had
+engaged his affections. He was not, indeed, very grateful for the
+fantastic duel. Of all men, Harry Boyce was the least likely to be
+pleased by oddity or an extravagance of chivalry. He always thought, I
+believe, that Captain McBean was a little mad, and liked him none the
+better for it. But he confessed that with the madness there was allied a
+most persuasive mind, a very reasonable reason. The combination may not
+be so surprising to you as to Harry Boyce. He thought that McBean's
+exposition of the affair of his father, and his consequent duty, was
+exactly and delicately true--which means, of course, that it agreed with
+his own temper. He had no more doubt than McBean that his father had
+planned, was planning, treachery which, win or lose, would disgrace him.
+He admitted that it was his own wretched duty to do what he might to make
+an end of these plans.
+
+You smile, perhaps, at Harry Boyce claiming for himself the commands of
+duty. He was eminently not a saint. He was not delicate. And yet, thrust
+upon an awkward choice, it is certain that he chose what must be
+difficult, hazardous, and distressing, rather than stand aloof and let
+his father's villainy go its way.
+
+I make no pretence of exalting him into a tragic fellow. He had no
+affection for his father, no respect. Merely to work against his father's
+will, to smash his father's schemes, would certainly not have cost him
+one twinge. He had no hate for his father either, not the least ambition
+to ruin him or make him suffer. But he would heartily have liked to bring
+these murderous plots to nothing and yet save his father from vengeance.
+Harry had his share of the common human instinct to keep one's family out
+of mischief--or at least out of the newspapers.
+
+And it is not to be denied that there was also active in him a simple
+human animosity. He bore his father a grudge for being publicly a knave:
+a man who had received nothing from his parents but the gift of birth
+might fairly demand that they should not bother him with their rogueries.
+He did not extenuate his father's share in the catastrophe of the
+marriage. Perhaps it was in itself fated to miscarry, but if Colonel
+Boyce had not mixed up his affairs with it, the end need not have been
+ignominious. Harry vigorously condemned the old gentleman's meddling. It
+was an impertinence at the best to manipulate other folks, and a father
+who did it so stupidly as Colonel Boyce was a pestilent nuisance. But all
+this, I believe, rankled less than the behaviour of Colonel Boyce on the
+night before. If the old gentleman had acknowledged his offences, if he
+had even been content to talk of them frankly, man to man, he might have
+been forgiven. But his affectation of profound wisdom, his patronage, and
+above all, his parade of mystery infuriated Harry's lucid mind.
+
+It sought further causes of offence and had no difficulty in finding
+them. Everything about that conversation was suspicious. For how did it
+begin? With a broken head, with every button of his clothes torn open as
+though he had just been searched to the skin, he woke up in his father's
+presence. The father might pose as a good Samaritan who had come upon a
+sufferer by the wayside, but he should not have shown so nervous an
+anxiety to know what the sufferer had been about. The father talked of
+Mohocks; but what Mohocks were these who knocked a man down before making
+sport of him and, not content with taking his money, went through all his
+clothes? Why was a Mohock's club lying there beneath the father's swords?
+Harry made a ready guess at the riddle. His father must have fellows
+watching McBean's house. They had knocked him down to search him for
+papers. Then the father must have known that he had been with McBean, and
+those anxious questions were to discover how much he was McBean's friend.
+Colonel Boyce must have a lively interest in the affairs of McBean--and
+yet he professed that he had now nothing in hand. What if he knew of the
+secret of the Pretender's coming to London? What if he was still seeking
+a chance to accomplish his plot of murder?
+
+Well, Captain McBean expected no less of him. Captain McBean was in the
+right of it. It became a good son's duty to confound his father's
+politics. There's no denying that Harry went into the business with zest.
+
+While he ate his breakfast in the taproom, he caught sight of a fellow
+lurking about outside. Whose spy this was is, in fact, not certain.
+Afterwards Colonel Boyce vehemently denied that he had commissioned any
+man against Harry. Though you may not believe him, it is possible that
+the fellow was one of those in Waverton's pay. Harry made no doubt that
+his father was the offender.
+
+He went upstairs again and put a book in his pocket. (He had been
+commissioned for a translation of Ovid, which, let us be thankful, never
+came into print.) Thus characteristically provided, he went out to
+baffle the spy and the father. In the courts between Drury Lane and Bow
+Street he did some ingenious marching and counter-marching whereby--he
+was always confident and we cannot be quite sure--the spy was shaken
+off. He then came into St. Martin's Lane by the north end, and dodging
+in and out of it more than once, made for a tavern close to his father's
+lodging. He planted himself inside by a window, called for a tankard and
+a pipe, and divided his attention between the Tristia and his father's
+door across the lane.
+
+It soon appeared that Colonel Boyce was to have a busy morning. By ones
+and twos a dozen men went into his house. They were not, even to Harry's
+hostile eye, brazenly ruffians. Something of the bully they might have
+about them, for they ran to brawn and swagger, but they were trim enough
+and brisk, and had no smack of debauch--a company of old soldiers, by the
+look of them, and still not past their prime. They were with Colonel
+Boyce a long time, and Harry grew very sick of the Tristia, and had to
+drink more beer over it than was his habit of a morning.
+
+They came out at last singly, and yet with very short intervals between
+them. They all turned the same way--across Leicester Fields. There seemed
+to Harry something so uncommon in this that he was moved to follow. He
+made his way out by the back door and the tavern yard. As he came into
+Leicester Fields, he saw that the units had already amalgamated into
+three companies. They were all steadily marching westward. Keeping behind
+a cart he followed them, and after a while bought for twopence a lift in
+an empty hay wagon. I record all this because he seems to have been very
+proud of it, which is characteristic of his simple nature. The hay wagon
+rumbled him past two companies of them halted and coalescing at an inn.
+The first still headed him at a good round pace all the way to
+Kensington.
+
+The wagon was going through Kensington village when he saw that this
+vanguard too had found an inn. A little farther on he abandoned his
+wagon and, buying bread and cheese at a farm, made his dinner under
+the hedge. It was a long while before he saw anything more of the
+gentlemen of the inn, and lying among primroses and cowslips he nearly
+forgot all about them and his excitement and his wonderful tactics. He
+was, in fact, becoming sentimental, and had made three neat
+hendecasyllabics to the cowslips when the gentlemen came out again.
+They split into pairs and marched on briskly. Harry went through the
+hedge, and from behind it he watched them pass. Then, as now, the road
+ran straight, and it was not safe to come out and follow them till they
+were far ahead. While he waited he heard more tramping, and in a little
+while the rest of the company went by. He peeped out after them and saw
+an odd thing: though the road ran straight for a mile or more, the
+first party had vanished already.
+
+Harry climbed a tree. It was some little time before he discovered the
+lost party. They had scattered, they had taken to the fields and, under
+hedges, they were making southward. The rest of the company did likewise.
+Soon he saw what they were after. There was a lane running from the high
+road towards Fulham. A little way back from it, in a good garden, stood a
+house of modest comfort, doubtless the place to which some gentleman
+about town came for his pleasures or a breath of fresh air. About its
+grounds the company went into hiding.
+
+Harry came down from his tree in a hurry and, like an honest man, took to
+the high road. It was, you know, his one uncommon capacity to go easily
+at a round pace. He did his best along the road and down the lane and,
+though he caught a glimpse of a coat here and there, unchallenged he came
+up the drive and across the garden to the door of the house. He had
+hardly knocked before he was being inspected through a peep-hole. The
+door was opened and instantly shut behind him. He was in darkness dimly
+lit by one candle. The windows had their shutters closed and barred.
+
+"What's your will, sir?" says the man who let him in.
+
+"The master of the house, if you please," Two other men lounged
+into the hall.
+
+"And your name, sir?"
+
+"You may say that I came from Captain McBean."
+
+The man appeared to think it over. "That's true enough, faith," says
+another, advancing out of the shadow. Harry recognised one of the solemn
+seconds of the duel, Patrick O'Connor. "Will I serve your turn, sir?"
+
+"If you're master here."
+
+"I am not. Come on now." He led the way to a room where a cadaverous man,
+richly dressed, sat huddled over a fire. "'Tis a gentleman from the
+captain, my lord. Mr. Boyce, my Lord Sale."
+
+Harry bowed. My lord yawned. "You've a devil of a name, Mr.
+Boyce," says he.
+
+"I deplore it, and hope to disgrace it."
+
+"Is it possible?" said my lord, and yawned again.
+
+"I had the honour to tell you, my lord, that I answer for the gentleman,"
+says Mr. O'Connor.
+
+"You may endorse the devil, if you please," my lord sneered.
+
+Harry struck in, "I came to tell you, my lord, that your house is
+watched, and by now surrounded."
+
+"Damn them, they have found it out, have they?" says my lord, and spread
+out his lean hands to the fire.
+
+"How many, if you please?" says O'Connor.
+
+"A dozen or so. They marched out this morning, scattered, and met again
+in the village and came here across country. They are well-armed, I
+believe, and look men who would fight."
+
+"Ods fish, that nets this hole," says my lord. "Pray, Mr. Boyce, when
+will they put the ferret in?" Harry shrugged. "Oh, there's a limit to
+your kindness, is there? Do you choose to tell us who sent them?"
+
+Harry was silent a moment and then blurted out: "They came from Colonel
+Boyce's lodging."
+
+My lord laughed.
+
+"Sure, 'tis an honour to know you, sir," says O'Connor, and bowed to
+Harry.
+
+"Damned filial, indeed," my lord chuckled.
+
+O'Connor turned upon him. "They have you beat easily, my lord," he said
+fiercely. "Damned courageous indeed." But my lord only nodded at him.
+"What, we be six--to count Mr. Boyce. Sure, we could hold the house
+against the devil's christening."
+
+There came in briskly a tall fellow crying: "Come, Sale, it's full time,
+I believe."
+
+My Lord Sale got on his feet, "Stap me, sir, I believe not," he drawled.
+"We must stay at home. They have smoked us. Here's a gracious youth come
+to tell us that his Whiggish friends beset the house."
+
+The Pretender frowned and seemed slow to understand. Harry looked him
+over. He was certainly a fine figure of a man, and bore himself gallantly
+enough. His face was darkly handsome in a melancholy fashion, not unlike
+the youth of his uncle, Charles II. He turned upon Harry. "What is all
+this, sir?"
+
+"Oh, sir, it's that old rogue Noll Boyce," my lord put in. "And here's
+his son betraying the father."
+
+"Faith, my lord, I'll remind you of that," O'Connor said. "Sir, the
+gentleman is an honest gentleman."
+
+"Colonel Boyce--he is your father, sir?" the Pretender bent his black
+brows over Harry.
+
+"He begot me, he says." Harry shrugged. "I desire to defend you from him.
+He has surrounded your house here with a dozen sturdy knaves who intend
+you, I believe, the worst."
+
+"I am obliged by your service, sir," says the Pretender coldly. "Pray, my
+lord, is the coach ready?"
+
+My lord shook his head. "I don't advise it, sir. The good Mr. Boyce
+cannot be lying. Or allow the knaves mean but to frighten you. I dare not
+risk your person."
+
+"Dare? You dare too much, my lord, who command neither my person nor my
+honour. I do not thank you for your advice. You will have the coach
+brought instantly."
+
+"I ask your pardon, sir, and beg you to consider. What will the world
+say of me if I let you run into a gang of murderers? We can maintain
+the house against them till our friends come seeking us. In the open
+we are outnumbered desperately. Nay, sir, be advised; what is to lose
+by waiting? If you go, you grasp at a shadow and may throw away your
+life for it."
+
+"I say, my lord, I do not thank you for your care of me, which is
+careless of my honour and your own. I am promised to our friends. Do you
+desire me to go afoot, my lord?"
+
+"I have done, sir." My lord bowed and went out.
+
+"Sir, I believe they will not spare you," says Harry.
+
+"I have heard you," the Pretender said haughtily, and waved him away.
+
+"I'll not be put off so." The Pretender turned upon him. "Sir, I have
+done what I could to save your life from a base plot. If it succeeds, the
+shame of it must fall upon me and my name, for it's my cursed father that
+planned it. And you choose to run upon the danger. I entreat you, do me
+right. Your blood should not be upon my head."
+
+"You have done your duty, Mr. Boyce," the Pretender bowed. "I thank you.
+But I must do mine."
+
+"Why, faith, sir, 'tis the right principle of war to wait the rogues
+here," says O'Connor. "You will not?"
+
+"Go to, man, I say it again and again."
+
+For the first time in their acquaintance, Harry saw Mr. O'Connor smile.
+"I have the honour to take your orders, sir. But sure, we are not at the
+end of our tactics. I'll presume to advise you. Let the coach come to the
+door, and me and the other gentlemen will make some display of mounting
+her and guarding her; she moves off slowly; it's any odds the rogues will
+believe we have you with us and deliver their main attack, while you'll
+be mounting quietly in the yard with my lord and ride off with him to
+Kensington."
+
+"The plan is well enough. Have it so," said the Pretender carelessly.
+
+O'Connor went out in a hurry and Harry followed him. "I'll join you, if
+you please, Mr. O'Connor."
+
+O'Connor laughed. "Oh, your servant, your servant. No offence, Mr.
+Boyce. I profess I have an admiration for you. But, faith, you are not a
+man of war. Do you go round to the stable-yard, now, and watch there to
+see they prepare nothing against us from the back." He bustled off,
+calling up his fellows.
+
+So Harry, with a long face, I suppose, drifted away to the back of the
+house. The coach was already moving out of the yard, and he saw no sign
+of his father's legion. In a moment the groom, with one of O'Connor's
+men to help him, was busy again in the stable. Still the legion did not
+reveal themselves. O'Connor's man ran back into the house, leaving two
+horses saddled in the stable. Then the Pretender and my lord hurried
+out, and the horses were brought to meet them. As they mounted, Harry
+heard the clatter of the coach and then pistols and shouts, and the
+clash of fighting.
+
+The Pretender spurred off, my lord taking the lead of him through the
+gate. As they passed, a shot was fired out of the hedge. My lord swayed,
+fumbling at his holsters, and crying out: "Ride on, sir, ride," fell from
+the saddle. His foot was caught in the stirrup, and the frightened horse
+dragged him along the ground.
+
+Harry ran up and snatched the bridle. "How is it with you, my lord?"
+
+"I have enough, I believe," my lord gasped. "Damme, sir, don't fumble at
+me. Mount and after him."
+
+So Harry went bumping in the saddle after the Pretender.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+QUEEN ANNE IS DEAD
+
+
+The Pretender looked over his shoulder as Harry came up. "Where is he
+hit?"
+
+"He has it in the body and he suffers."
+
+The Pretender muttered something. "I bring ill-luck to my friends, you
+see. Best ride off, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"You can do me no harm, sir. God knows if I can do you any good."
+
+The Pretender looked at him curiously. "I think you are something of my
+own temper. In effect, there is little to hope with me."
+
+"Who knows?" Harry shrugged. "_Par exemple,_ sir, do you know where we
+are going now?"
+
+"This is a parable, _mordieu_! I leave my friends to be shot for me and
+die, perhaps, while I ride off and know not the least of my way."
+
+"Egad, sir, you were in enough of a hurry to go somewhere." Harry reined
+up. "Am I to be trusted in the affair?"
+
+The Pretender amazed Harry by laughing--a laugh so hearty and boyish that
+he seemed another man from the creature of stiff, pedantic melancholy.
+
+"Oh Lud, Mr. Boyce, don't scold. You might be a politician. Tell me,
+where is this damned palace?"
+
+"Kensington, sir? Bear to the left, if you please."
+
+So they swung round, and soon hitting upon a lane saw the village and the
+trees about the palace. In a little while, "Mr. Boyce: how much do you
+know?" the Pretender said; and still he was more the boy than the
+disinherited king.
+
+"Egad, sir, no more than I told you: that my father had bullies
+watching for you."
+
+"And I believe I have not thanked you."
+
+It was Harry's turn to laugh. "Faith, sir, you ought to be grateful to
+the family of Boyce."
+
+"I shall not forget."
+
+"He takes care that you shall remember him, my honourable father."
+
+"I do not desire repartees, Mr. Boyce. Come, sir, you carry yourself too
+proudly. You are not to disdain what you have done, or yourself."
+
+Harry bowed,--permitted himself, I suppose, some inward ironic smile,--he
+was not born with reverence, and the royal airs of this haughty, gloomy
+lad had no authority over him. Then and always the pretensions of the
+Pretender appeared to him pathetically ridiculous. But for the man he
+would sometimes profess a greater liking than he had learnt to feel for
+any other in the world.
+
+Harry was careful to avoid most of the village. As they came into it on
+the eastward side a horseman galloped up to them. "From my Lord Masham,
+sir. Pray you follow me at speed." He led them on to the palace, but not
+by the straight approach, and brought them to a little door in the garden
+wall upon the London side.
+
+There a handsome fellow stood waiting for them, and bowed them in with a
+"Sir, sir, we have been much anxious for you. I trust to God nothing has
+fallen out amiss?"
+
+"There was a watch set for me, my lord, and I fear some of our friends
+are down. But for this gentleman I had hardly been here."
+
+Masham swore and cried out, "They have news of the design! I profess I
+feared it. Pray, sir, come on quickly. The Queen is weaker, and my lady
+much troubled for her. By God, we have left it late. And the ministers
+must still be wrangling, and my Lord Bolingbroke like a man mazed. We
+must be swift and downright with the Council."
+
+Then at last Harry understood. The Pretender was to be brought face to
+face with his sister, the weakening weak Queen, and a Privy Council was
+to be in waiting. Suppose she declared him her heir; suppose she
+presented him to a Council all high Tories and good Jacobites! A good
+plot, a very excellent plot, if there were a man with the courage and the
+will to make it work.
+
+Within the palace it was now twilight. They were hurried up privy
+stairways and along corridors, and Harry fancied behind the gloom a
+hundred watching eyes, and could not be sure they were only fancy. As
+they crossed the head of the grand staircase Masham made an exclamation
+and checked and peered down. The Pretender turned and Harry, but Masham
+plunged after them and wildly waved them on.
+
+"What is it, my lord? Have you seen a ghost?" The Pretender smiled.
+
+"Oh God, sir, go on!" Masham gasped. "We can but challenge the hazard
+now," and he muttered to himself.
+
+"You are inconvenient, my lord," says the Pretender with a shrug. "Go
+before. Conduct me, if you please," Masham brushed by him and hurried on.
+
+Harry understood my lord's alarm. He, too, had seen a little company
+below by the grand entry, and among them one of singular grace, a rare
+nobility of form and feature, a strange placidity. There was no
+forgetting, no mistaking him. It was the gentleman of the bogged coach,
+the Old Corporal, the Duke of Marlborough.. Marlborough, who was in
+disgrace, who should be in exile, back at the palace when the Tories were
+staking their all on a desperate, splendid throw: Marlborough, who had
+betrayed and ruined James II, come back to baffle his son! No wonder
+Lord Masham was uneasy for his head.
+
+They were brought to a small room, blatantly an antechamber, and Masham,
+brusquely bidding them wait, broke through the inner door. He was back in
+a moment as pale as he had been red. "Come in, sir," he muttered. "I
+believe we had best be short." And through the open door Harry heard
+another voice. It was thin and strained, and seemed to make no words,
+like a baby's cry or an animal's.
+
+Across another antechamber, they came into a big room of some prim
+splendour, and as they passed the door Harry made out what that feeble
+voice was saying: "The Council, Abbie: we must go to the Council: we keep
+the Council waiting, Abbie:" that came over and over again, and he knew
+why he had not understood. The words were run together and slurred as if
+they were shaped by a mind drowsy or fuddled.
+
+A great fire was burning though the day was warm enough, and by the fire
+sat a mound of a woman. She could be of no great height, perhaps she was
+not very stout, but she sat heaped together and shapeless, a flaccid
+mass. She had a table by her, and on it some warm drink that steamed.
+Through the drifting vapour Harry saw her face, and seemed to see it
+change and vanish like the vapour. For it was all bloated and loose, and
+it trembled, and it had no colour in it but a pallid grey. And as he
+looked there came to him a sense of death.
+
+Yet she was pompously dressed, in a dress cut very low, a dress of rich
+stuff and colour, and there was an array of jewels sparkling about her
+neck and at her bosom, and her hands lay heavy with rings.
+
+There hung about her a woman buxom and pleasant enough, yet with
+something sly in her plump face. "Fie, ma'am, fie," she was saying, "the
+Council is here but for your pleasure:" she looked up and nodded
+imperiously at Masham.
+
+"The Prince James, ma'am," Masham cried.
+
+The Queen, who had seemed to see nothing of their coming, started and
+shook and blinked towards him. "He is loud, Abbie. Tell him not to be
+loud," she complained.
+
+"Look, ma'am, look," Lady Masham patted at her. "It is your brother, it
+is Prince James."
+
+The Pretender came forward, holding out his hand. "Am I welcome, Anne?"
+he said heavily.
+
+The Queen stared at him with dull eyes. "It is King Charles," she said,
+and stirred in her chair and gave a foolish laugh. "No, but he is like
+King Charles. But King Charles had so many sons. Who is he, Abbie? Why
+does he come? The Council is waiting."
+
+"I am your brother, Anne," the Pretender said.
+
+"What does he say, Abbie?" the Queen turned to Lady Masham and took her
+hand and fondled it feebly. "I am alone. There is none left to me. My boy
+is dead. My babies--I am alone. I am alone."
+
+"I am your brother and your King," the Pretender cried.
+
+She fell back in her chair staring at him. Her mouth opened and a mumble
+came from it. Then there was silence a moment, and then she began to
+shake, and one hand beat upon the table with its rings. So they waited a
+while, watching the tremulous, shapeless mass of her, and the tap, tap,
+tap of her hand beat through the room.
+
+Lady Masham took command. "Nay, sir, leave her. You can do no more now.
+Let her be. I will handle her if I can." She rustled across the room
+and struck a bell. "Masham, bring Dr. Arbuthnot. He irks her less than
+the rest."
+
+Harry followed the Pretender into the outer room, shambling
+awkwardly. The progress from failure to failure dazed him. He recalled
+afterwards, as many petty matters of this time stayed vivid in his
+memory, a preposterous blunder into a chair. The Pretender sat down
+and stretched at his ease. "We are too late, I think," he said coldly.
+"It is the genius of my family." He took snuff. "You may go, if you
+will, Mr. Boyce."
+
+Harry looked up and struggled to collect himself. "Not till you are in
+safety," he said, and was dully aware of some discomfort. The dying
+woman, the sheer ugliness of death, the sordid emotions about her numbed
+the life in him. He felt himself in a world inhuman. Yet, even
+afterwards, he seems not to have discovered anything ignoble in his
+admired Pretender. The blame was fate's that mocked coldly at the hopes
+and affections of men.
+
+"I am obliged, sir," said the Pretender, and so they waited together....
+
+After a little while of gloomy silence in that bare room, Masham broke
+in, beckoning and muttering: "Sir, sir, the Queen is dead."
+
+The Pretender stood up. "_Enfin_" said he, with a shrug.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+SAUVE QUI PEUT
+
+
+"Sir, you must be gone instantly," says Masham.
+
+"You are officious, my lord." The Pretender stared at him. "I have
+nothing to fear."
+
+"I warrant you have," Masham cried. "And so have others."
+
+"I believe that, _pardieu_. Come, my lord, command yourself. Where is
+this Council? I may still show myself to the lords and challenge them."
+
+"Damme, you cannot be so mad! 'Tis packed with Whigs. They must have wind
+of you, curse them. Marlborough is there, and Argyll and Sunderland, burn
+his foxy face. It might have gone amiss though the Queen armed you to her
+chair. Now she is dead, there is no hope for you. Go to the Council! Go
+to the Tower--go to the block."
+
+The Pretender turned to Harry with a smile and a shrug. "He trims his
+sails quickly."
+
+"That's unworthy, by God," Masham cried.
+
+"My lord is in the right, sir," Harry said. "It's true enough,
+Marlborough is here and he makes sure. You'll but extinguish yourself to
+try more now. The need is to bring you safe to your friends."
+
+"You also!" The Pretender shrugged again. "Faith, Mr. Boyce, you
+show yourself vastly anxious for my life. You are not much concerned
+for my honour."
+
+"Egad, sir, I should have thought your honour was to maintain your cause.
+You'll not do that from a prison or coffin."
+
+"Who knows?" the Pretender said. "My grandfather--"
+
+Masham was stamping with impatience. "Oh Lud, sir, must we gossip
+about your grandfather? Stay here, you cannot. It is not decent. The
+Queen's a corpse behind that door. Why, and if they take you in the
+palace, it's ruin for you and for us all. Oh, we shall not be spared
+if you are caught."
+
+"Yes. I am a curse to my friends." The Pretender laughed drearily. "Well,
+my lord, you shall be delivered at least. Lead the way." Masham hurried
+out on the word. As they followed the Pretender took Harry's arm. "I wish
+you may be right, Mr. Boyce," he said. "But my heart bids me stay."
+
+"Oh, sir, a king has no right to a heart," says Harry.
+
+They were suddenly thrown upon Masham as he checked and drew back without
+warning. He had come upon a woman who was leaving the Queen's apartments,
+a woman who had once been handsome, and was still proud of it. She
+stared haughtily at Masham and his companions, and swept on before them.
+He was much agitated.
+
+"What alarms you, my lord?" The Pretender sneered.
+
+"Carrots from Somerset, egad," Masham muttered, gazing after the
+disdainful lady's red head. "It's the Duchess of Somerset, sir, the
+damnedest Whig, and she came from the Queen. Now they will all know the
+Queen is gone. Come on, sir, come on for God's sake."
+
+They hurried after him through the palace. All was quiet enough.
+Afterwards, indeed, Harry could hardly believe that fancy had not played
+tricks with his memory; for the emptiness, the silence of the corridors
+must needs have been a dramatic invention of his own mind and no reality.
+But it is true that as they hurried their retreat he was haunted by the
+quiet of the place--the quiet of death, a quiet ominous of storm.
+
+They were down at the door by which they had entered, and Masham's
+servant-in-waiting there was dispatched for the horses. Masham fumed at
+the minutes of delay, ran out and in again, and then with some
+awkwardness apologized for himself. "Egad, sir, I warrant you we have
+done what we could. It is for you I fear, by God. I promise you, I doubt
+damnably how things may go. Pray, sir, put yourself in safety."
+
+"I am grateful for your emotions, my lord."
+
+Masham stared at him and then cried out, "Ods life, what now?" The horses
+were coming, but before the horses came two of the Guards at the double.
+They halted at the door, panting, and grounded their muskets. "What the
+devil's this, my lad?" says Masham.
+
+"None is to leave the palace, my lord."
+
+"Damme, sirrah, you know me?"
+
+"It won't do, my lord. That's the order. You must go speak with the
+captain at the main gate."
+
+"Come, sir, I have no time. Forget that you were here soon enough to stop
+me. You shall not lose by it."
+
+"It won't do, my lord. Nay, nay, don't force me to it." The corporal
+crossed muskets with his fellow as Masham was thrusting by. "Order is to
+spare none."
+
+"Damme, sir, what do your mean?"
+
+"Sure, my lord, you know better than that." The corporal grinned. "Ask
+the captain, if you please."
+
+Masham recoiled and drew the others back into the palace. They heard the
+corporal shout: "Put the nags up, my bully. My lord won't ride to-day."
+
+"They know you are here, sir," Masham said, with a very white face. "Damn
+the Somerset! She lost no time. What is to do now?"
+
+"It seems my own plan was the best, gentlemen. If I had gone into the
+Council we should at the worst have been in no worse case."
+
+"Oh Lud, sir, must we wrangle that out again?"
+
+"You are impudent, my lord. I will do without your company."
+
+"Good God, sir, it's no time for forms. What would you be at?"
+
+"I shall go to the main gate of your palace and see who will stand
+in my way."
+
+"That's ruin for certain," Masham groaned.
+
+"Be easy, my lord. I shall not boast myself your guest."
+
+"Oh, you are mad."
+
+"By your leave, sir," says Harry. "We need not so soon despair, I think,
+nor you run upon your death. There is something more to be tried. These
+sentries, they'll be on the watch for a gentleman of your distinction and
+in my lord's company or of some noble attendance. But a common fellow may
+pass them. If you would lend me your fine clothes and that great wig, and
+condescend to my subfuse and bob, there's no one would take so shabby a
+fellow for yourself. Maybe I might make a show to break out one way,
+while you slipped past by another."
+
+"And left you to bear the brunt for me? I complain of you again, Mr.
+Boyce--you do not much value my honour."
+
+"And I say again, sir, your honour is to maintain your cause. Nay, but
+what can they do to me? Faith, it's no sin to wear fine clothes. And
+I--well, I think the Whigs will never bring me into court. I know too
+much of my father."
+
+"Oh, you are specious, Mr. Boyce," the Pretender smiled at him. "Nay, if
+all my friends were such as you, I should not be in this queer plight."
+He put his hand on Harry's shoulder. "How am I to thank you, sirrah?"
+
+"Pray, sir, do as I advise."
+
+The hand pressed harder. "Be it so then."
+
+"Egad, I like it very well," says Masham heartily. The two exchanged a
+shrug and a sneer at him. "If Mr. Boyce will risk it, he may make a show
+of marching out by the garden entrance while you slip away by the
+servants' wicket beyond."
+
+"I believe I can trust you to get rid of me, my lord," the Pretender
+shrugged. "Pray, where may we exchange our characters--and our breeches?"
+
+"Oh, sir, follow me; we must be private about that."
+
+Harry burst out laughing. "Aye, faith, he is a gentleman of delicacy, our
+Masham," the Pretender said.
+
+But my lord had no ears or no understanding for irony. He brought them to
+his own quarters and, fervidly entreating them to lose no time, shut them
+in and mounted guard outside the door.
+
+They cut queer figures to their own eyes when they came out, and Masham
+was distressed by their laughter. "What ails you?" he protested
+nervously. "It does well enough, I swear."
+
+"I am flattered by your admiration, _pardieu_," says the Pretender, with
+a rueful grin down at the shabby clothes which were so tight upon him,
+and a clutch at the bob-wig's jauntiness.
+
+"Some are born great," says Harry, "and some have greatness thrust upon
+'em. I believe I can keep inside your periwig, sir, but damme if I am
+sure about your breeches. They disdain me, egad."
+
+"God's life, sir, if you make a jest of it you'll ruin us all," Masham
+cried. "I vow it's not seemly, neither. The Queen's dead but this
+half-hour, and--and, by God, our own heads are loose on our shoulders."
+
+"My lord's in the right, sir. It's no laughing matter," says Harry.
+
+"Aye, he's all noble feeling," the Pretender shrugged.
+
+"Come on, sir, in God's name," Masham groaned.
+
+"Look you, thus it goes. I'll bring you within sight of the garden
+entry. Then you make to go out, Mr. Boyce, with what parade you can. And
+you, sir, I'll take you to the head of the back stairs. You have but to
+go straight down and out, and I wish you God speed with all my heart.
+Come, come!"
+
+They marched along the corridor and must needs pass the end of that which
+led to the Queen's apartments. Masham was a little ahead of the others.
+He passed the corner. Then he checked and he turned sharp about and
+charged back on them, crowding them against the wall, trying to stand in
+front of both of them and hide them.
+
+It was Marlborough who alarmed my lord, Marlborough who came, alone,
+pacing slowly from the room where the Queen lay dead. No dismay, no
+emotion troubled his supreme grace. He disdained his splendours and his
+beauty with the wonted calm.
+
+He saw them, could not but see them, huddled together as they were and
+striving not to be seen. His face betrayed nothing. He paced slowly up to
+them. It seemed to Harry that from the first his placid eyes looked at
+none of them but the Pretender. "We have met before, sir, I think," he
+said gently.
+
+"On the field of battle," says the Pretender in French.
+
+Marlborough bowed. "Give me your company."
+
+"Oh, your family has always been too kind to mine."
+
+Marlborough pointed the way.
+
+The Pretender shrugged, and "_Enfin_," says he with a bitter laugh, and
+marched on with an air.
+
+Masham, leaning against the wall and very white, muttered to himself, "My
+God, my God!"
+
+Harry ran forward to look after them. He saw Marlborough glance over the
+Pretender's shabby clothes and then, making some ostentation of it, put
+on his hat. The Pretender with a stare of disdain put on his--or Harry's.
+They came to the head of the grand staircase and went down. The servants
+in the hall sprang up and ran to open the doors for His Grace. Harry
+heard a din and a clang and saw a flash of steel as the guard outside
+presented arms. The two passed out and out of sight. For a little while
+the servants stood staring after them, and then came back to their chairs
+whispering.
+
+Harry turned round to Masham. "What now?"
+
+"Now?" Masham stared. "Now we may go hang ourselves."
+
+"Like Judas? Damme, I don't feel the obligation. Do you, my lord?"
+
+Masham swore at him and began to walk off.
+
+"Can you lend me a humbler coat, my lord?" Harry cried. "I am no more
+use in this."
+
+"I'll do no more in it," Masham growled. "Look to yourself."
+
+"_Enfin,_ as His Majesty says," quoth Harry with a laugh, and went on to
+look for the garden entry or any other humble door. He found it soon
+enough and was going through it--to be instantly beset by a sergeant's
+party and a joyful shout, "Odso, 'tis himself, 'tis the Chevalier."
+
+"You flatter me," says Harry, and they marched him off.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+REVELATIONS
+
+
+Harry was kept a long time in a guard room. Once or twice an officer came
+in and looked him over, but he was asked no questions, and he asked none.
+He was ill at ease. Not, I believe, from any fear for himself. He knew,
+indeed, that he might hang for his pains. What he had done for the
+Pretender was surely treason, or would be adjudged treason, with the
+Whigs in power and the Hanoverian King. But death seemed no great matter.
+He was not a romantic hero, he had no faith, no cause to die for, and he
+saw the last scene as a mere horror of pain and shame. Only it must be
+some relief to come to the end. For he was beset by a hopeless, reckless
+distrust of himself. Everything that he did must needs go awry. He was
+born for failure and ignominy. Memories of his wild delight in Alison
+came stabbing at his heart, and he fought against them, and again they
+opened the wounds. Yes, for a little while he had been given the full
+zest of life, all the wonder and the glory--that he might know what it
+was to live maimed and starving. It was his own fault, faith. He should
+never have dared venture for her, he, a dull, blundering, graceless fool.
+How should he content her? Oh, forget her, forget all that and have done.
+She would be free of him soon, and so best. Best for himself, too; it was
+a dreary affair, this struggling from failure to failure. Whatever he put
+his hand to must needs go awry. Save the Pretender from the chance of a
+fight and deliver him into the hands of Marlborough! Marlborough, who
+would send him to the scaffold with the noblest air in the world! Why,
+but for that silly meddling at Kensington, the lad might have won free.
+Now he and his cause must die together before a jeering mob. So much for
+the endeavours of Mr. Harry Boyce to be a man of honour! Mr. Harry Boyce
+should have stayed in his garret with his small beer and his rind of
+cheese. He was fit for nothing better, born to be a servitor, an usher.
+And he must needs claim Alison Lambourne for his desires and rifle her
+beauty! Oh, it was good to make an end of life if only he could forget
+her, forget her as she lay in his arms.
+
+The door opened. The guard was beckoning to him. He was marched to a
+room in which one man sat at a table, a small man of a lean, sharp
+face. Unbidden, Harry flung himself into a chair. He must have been a
+ridiculous figure, overwhelmed by the black wig and the rich clothes
+too big for him. The sharp face opposite stared at him in
+contemptuous disgust.
+
+"Your name?"
+
+"La, you now!" Harry laughed. "I don't know you neither. And, egad, I can
+do without."
+
+"I am the Earl of Sunderland."
+
+"Then, damme, I am sorry for you."
+
+"Your name, I say?"
+
+"Why, didn't your fellows tell you? They told me."
+
+"Impudence will not serve you. I warn you, the one chance to save
+yourself is to be honest with me."
+
+Harry began to hum a song, and, between the bars, he said, "You may go to
+the devil. I care not a curse for anything you can do. So think of your
+dignity, my lord. And hold your silly tongue."
+
+Sunderland considered him keenly. A secretary came in and whispered. "I
+will see him," Sunderland said, and lay back in his chair.
+
+It was Colonel Boyce who broke in, Colonel Boyce something flushed and
+out of breath. "Egad, my lord," he began. Sunderland held up his hand.
+Colonel Boyce checked and stood staring at his son.
+
+Harry began to laugh. "Oh, sir, you're infinitely welcome. It only needed
+you to complete my happiness."
+
+"Od's life, sirrah." Colonel Boyce advanced upon him. "Are you crazy?
+What damned folly is this?"
+
+"You know him then?" says Sunderland.
+
+"Oh, my lord, it's a wise father knows his own son. And he is not
+wise, you know. Are you, most reverend? No, faith, or you would never
+have begot me. No, faith, nor enlist me to do murder neither. For I do
+but bungle it, you see. And make a fool of my Lord Sunderland, God
+bless him."
+
+"Is he mad?" says Sunderland.
+
+"I profess I begin to think so." Colonel Boyce frowned. "Lud, Harry,
+stop your ranting. What brought you here?"
+
+"You, sir, you. Your faithful striving to do my Lord Sunderland's murders
+for him. _Imprimis_, that work of grace. But, finally, some good soldiers
+who assured me I was the man my lord wanted to murder."
+
+"You came here with the Pretender?"
+
+Harry laughed and began to sing a catch:
+
+"'Tis nothing to you if I should do so,
+ And if nothing in it you find,
+Then thank me for nothing and that will be moe
+ Than ever I designed."
+
+"What a pox are you doing in his clothes, sirrah?" Colonel Boyce cried.
+
+"Faith, I try to keep them on me. Which is more difficult than you
+suppose. If I were to stand up in a hurry, my lord, we should all
+be shamed."
+
+"The lad is an idiot," said Sunderland, with a shrug.
+
+"Come, Harry, you have fooled it long enough. I had a guess of this mad
+fancy of yours. But the game is up now, lad. King George is king to-day,
+and his friends have all power in their grip. There's no more hope for
+your Jacobites. Tell me now--the Pretender is in your clothes, I
+see--where did you part from him?"
+
+"Why, don't you know?" Harry stared at him. "Oh, faith, that's bitter
+for you. You who always know everything! And your friends 'with all
+power in their grip,' Oh, my dear lord, I wonder if there's those who
+don't trust you?"
+
+Some voices made themselves heard from outside. Sunderland and Colonel
+Boyce looked at each other, and my lord bit his fingers. The Colonel
+muttered something in Sunderland's ear.
+
+Harry laughed. "Do you bite your thumb at me, my lord? No, sir, says he,
+but I bite my thumb. Odso, I bite my thumb."
+
+"Be silent, sirrah," Sunderland cried.
+
+The door opened. "Announce me," says a placid voice, and the secretary
+cried out in a hurry: "His Grace the Duke of Marlborough."
+
+Harry went on laughing. The contrast of Marlborough's assured calm and
+the agitation of the others was too impressive. "Oh, three merry men,
+three merry men, three merry men are ye," he chanted. "No, damme, it's
+more Shakespeare. The three witches, egad. And I suppose Duncan is
+murdered in the next act. When shall you three meet again? In--"
+
+"Oh, damn your tongue, Harry," his father exploded.
+
+Marlborough was not disturbed. His eye had picked out Sunderland. "Is
+this the whole conspiracy, my lord?" said he.
+
+"I beg your Grace's pardon," Sunderland started up. "You see, I am not
+private," and he called out: "Guard, guard."
+
+"No," Marlborough said, and, as the soldiers came in, dismissed them with
+"You are not needed."
+
+Sunderland fell back in his chair. "Oh, if you please," he cried
+peevishly. "At your Grace's command."
+
+"You have no secrets from Mr. Boyce, my lord." He turned to Harry. "Sir,
+we have met before," and he bowed.
+
+"Yes. The first time your wife was stuck in the mud. Now it's you."
+
+"Sir, you have obliged me on both occasions," Marlborough said. "Well, my
+lord? You had Mr. Boyce under examination. Pray go on."
+
+"I don't understand your Grace," Sunderland said sulkily. "I have done
+with the gentleman."
+
+Colonel Boyce thrust forward. "By your Grace's leave, I'll take the lad
+away. Time presses and--"
+
+"You may be silent," said Marlborough. For the first time in their
+acquaintance Harry saw his father look at a loss. It was an ugly,
+ignominious spectacle. Marlborough turned to Harry, smiling, and his
+voice lost its chill: "Well, Mr. Boyce, how far had it gone? Were they
+asking you what you had done with Prince James?"
+
+Harry stared at the bland, handsome condescension and hated it. "Oh,
+you have always had the devil's own luck," he cried. "Devil give you
+joy of it, now."
+
+"You mistake me, I believe. I can forgive you more easily than some
+others." He turned upon Sunderland. "I will tell you where Prince James
+is, my lord. Safe out of your reach. On his way to France."
+
+Sunderland made a petulant exclamation and spread out his hands. "Your
+Grace goes beyond me, I profess. Do you choose to be frank with me?"
+
+"Frank?" Marlborough laughed. "You know the word, then? By all means let
+us be frank. I found Prince James in the palace. He accepted my company.
+We had some conversation, my lord. I present to you the results. You have
+used my name to warrant a silly, knavish plot for murdering Prince James
+in France. You entered upon a silly, knavish plot to murder him on this
+mad visit to London, and while engaging me to aid your motions against
+the Jacobites you gave me no advice of this damning folly. To complete
+your blunders--but for the chance that I came upon him and took him
+through your guards you would have been silly enough to plant him on our
+hands in prison. I do not talk to you about honour, my lord, or your
+obligations. I advise you, I resent my name being confused with these
+imbecilities."
+
+Sunderland, who had been wriggling and become flushed, cried out: "I'll
+not submit to this. I don't choose to answer your Grace. You shall hear
+from me when you are cooler."
+
+"My compliments," Marlborough laughed. "I do not stand by my friends? I
+lose my temper? You will easily convince the world of that, my lord.
+Colonel Boyce!" Before Harry's wondering eyes his father came to
+attention and, with an expression much like a guilty dog's, waited his
+reward. "You have had some of my confidence and I think you have not lost
+by it. You have repaid me with an impudent treachery. I shall arrange
+that you have no more opportunity at home or abroad."
+
+"Pray leave to ask your Grace's pardon," Colonel Boyce muttered. "I
+swear--"
+
+"You may be silent," Marlborough said, and turned away from them. "Pray,
+Mr. Boyce, will you walk?" Something bewildered by this time, Harry stood
+up and they went out together. "I require a carriage for this gentleman,"
+said Marlborough to the sergeant of the guard, and with a smile to Harry,
+"That will be convenient, I think?"
+
+"Egad, sir, you might say, decent," says Harry with a wary hand on
+his breeches.
+
+"Spare me a moment while you wait," Marlborough turned into a recess of
+the corridor. "Prince James expressed himself much in your debt, Mr.
+Boyce. Consider me not less obliged. Thanks to you, I have freed myself
+of suspicions which I profess it had irked me to bear."
+
+"Your Grace owes me nothing. I never thought of you. Or if I did you were
+the villain of the piece."
+
+Marlborough laughed. "And now you are sorry to find I am not so
+distinguished. Why is it a pleasure to despise me, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+Harry had to laugh too. "It's a hit, sir. I suppose your Grace is so
+great a man that we all envy you and are eager for a chance to defame you
+and bring you down to our own level."
+
+"You're above that, Mr. Boyce," Marlborough said. "I make you my
+compliments on your conduct in the affair. And pray remember that I am in
+your debt. I don't know your situation. If I can serve you, do me the
+pleasure of commanding me."
+
+"Oh, your Grace does everything magnificently," says Harry, with a wry
+smile, and liked him none the better.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+VIRTUE IS ITS OWN REWARD
+
+
+There is reason to believe that the Earl of Sunderland and Colonel Boyce
+fell out. Sunderland, never an easy man, suspected that he had been
+ridiculous and was nervously eager to make some one smart for it. Colonel
+Boyce was in a despondent rage that any one should have heard Marlborough
+rate him so. They seem to have had some cat and dog business before they
+parted: each, I infer, blaming the other for their ignominy.
+
+But they took it in very different fashions. Colonel Boyce suffered in
+the more respectable part of his soul. Sunderland merely fumed and felt
+venomous. For it is certain (if absurd) that Colonel Boyce had a sincere
+reverence for Marlborough. He much desired (one of his few simple human
+emotions) that Marlborough should think well of him. If he had tacked
+Marlborough's name to a dirty business about which Marlborough knew
+nothing, he had honestly believed that His Grace would be very well
+content to know nothing of the means, and profit by the end. That his
+hero should retort upon him disgust and contempt wounded him painfully.
+Final proof of his devotion--he never thought of questioning
+Marlborough's judgment. He had no doubt that he had managed the affair
+with miserable stupidity, and bowed a humiliated head.
+
+Unfortunately, he was not ready to bow it before Sunderland. If there was
+to be scolding between him and Sunderland, he had a mind to give as much
+as he took. My lord had been art and part in the whole affair, and could
+have his share, too, in the disaster. But Sunderland had no notion of
+accepting Marlborough's opinion of him. Sunderland had no reverence for
+any of God's creatures, and with Marlborough safe out of the room,
+snarled something about an old fellow in his dotage. This much enlivened
+the quarrel, and they parted in some exhaustion, but still raging.
+
+The night brought counsel. Sunderland might tell himself and believe that
+Marlborough had become only the shadow of a great name. But the great
+name, he knew very well, was valuable to himself and his party, and he
+had no notion of throwing it away for the sake of his injured dignity. In
+his way, Colonel Boyce was quite as necessary to my lord. The fellow knew
+too much to be discarded. Moreover, he would still be valuable. His
+talents for intrigue and even that weakness of his, his fertility in
+multiplying intrigue, much appealed to Sunderland. So before noon on the
+next day, Colonel Boyce was reading a civil letter from my lord. He
+sneered over it, but it was welcome enough. He did not want to be idle,
+and could rely on Sunderland to find him agreeable occupation. He walked
+out to wait on my lord, and they made it up, which was perhaps
+unfortunate for Mr. Waverton.
+
+Later in the day my lord heard that a gentleman was asking to speak with
+him, a gentleman who professed to have information about the Pretender
+which he could give only to my lord's private ear. Thereupon my lord
+received a large and imposing young gentleman, who said: "My Lord
+Sunderland? My lord, I am Geoffrey Waverton of Tetherdown, a gentleman of
+family (as you may know) and sufficient estate. This is to advise you
+that I am in need of no private advantage and desire none, but only to do
+my duty against traitors."
+
+"You are benevolent, sir, but I am busy."
+
+"I believe you will be glad to postpone your business to mine, my lord,"
+says Mr. Waverton haughtily. "Let me tell you at this moment of anxious
+doubt," Mr. Waverton hesitated like one who forgets a bit of his prepared
+eloquence,--"let me tell you the Pretender has come to these shores. He
+has come to England, to London. He was in Kensington yesterday."
+
+"You amaze me, Mr. Waverton."
+
+"My lord, I can take you to the house."
+
+"You are very obliging. Is he there now?"
+
+"I believe not, my lord."
+
+"And I believe not too. Mr. Waverton, the world is full of gentlemen
+who know where the Pretender was the other day. You are tedious. Where
+is he now?"
+
+"My lord, I shall put in your power one who is in all his cunning
+secrets: one who is the treasonous mainspring of the plot."
+
+Sunderland, who was something of a purist, made a grimace: "A treasonous
+mainspring! You may keep it, sir."
+
+"You are pleased to be facetious, my lord. I warn you we have here no
+matter for levity. I shall deliver to your hands one who is deep in the
+most dangerous secrets of the Jacobites, art and part of the design
+which at this moment of peril and dismay brings the Pretender down upon
+our peace."
+
+"Mr. Waverton, you are as dull as a play. Who is he, this bogey of
+yours?"
+
+"He calls himself Boyce," said Mr. Waverton, with an intense sneer.
+"Harry Boyce, a shabby, scrubby trickster to the eye. You would take him
+for a starveling usher, a decayed footman. It's a lurker in holes and
+corners, indeed, a cringing, grovelling fellow. But with a heart full of
+treason and all the cunning of a base, low hypocrisy. Still a youth, but
+sodden in lying craft."
+
+Sunderland picked up a pen and played with it, and through the flutter of
+the feather he began to look keenly at Mr. Waverton. "Pray spare me the
+rhetoric," says he. "What has he done, your friend, Harry Boyce?"
+
+"He has this long time past been hand and glove with the Jacobites of
+Sam's. I have evidence of it. Now mark you what follows. Yesterday
+betimes he slunk out to Kensington, using much cunning secrecy. And there
+he made his way to a certain house--I wonder if you know it, my lord? It
+was close watched yesterday, and a coach that came from it was beset. I
+wonder if you have been asking yourself how the Pretender evaded that
+watch. I can dispel the mystery. This fellow Harry Boyce went in with
+news of the guard about the house. It was in his company that the
+Pretender rode away."
+
+"Why do you stop?" said Sunderland.
+
+"Where they went then I cannot tell you. You will please to observe, my
+lord, that I am precisely honest with you and even to this knave Boyce
+just. But it is certain that in the evening when Harry Boyce came back to
+the low tavern where he lodges--and he came, if you please, in a handsome
+coach--he was wearing the very clothes of the Pretender--aye, even to the
+hat and wig. I believe I have said enough, my lord. It will be plain to
+you that the fellow is very dangerous to the peace of the realm and our
+good and lawful king. If you lay hands on him, which I advise you to do
+swiftly, you will quench a treason which has us all in peril, and well
+deserve the favour of King George. For my own part I seek neither favour
+nor reward, desiring only to do my duty as a gentleman." Mr. Waverton
+concluded with a large bow in the flamboyant style.
+
+"Your name is Waverton?" Sunderland said coldly. Mr. Waverton was
+stupefied. That such eloquence should not raise a man's temperature! That
+he should not have made his name remembered! He remained dumb. "Pray when
+did you turn your coat?"
+
+"Turn my coat?" Mr. Waverton gasped.
+
+"You once professed yourself Jacobite. You went to France with a certain
+Colonel Boyce. You quarrelled with him because he was not Jacobite. Now
+you desire to get his son into trouble. You do not gain upon me, Mr.
+Waverton."
+
+"I can explain, my lord--"
+
+"Pray, spare me," says Sunderland. "You are not obscure. I see that you
+have a private grudge against the family of Boyce. Settle it in private,
+Mr. Waverton. It is more courageous."
+
+Mr. Waverton stared at him and began several repartees which were
+only begun.
+
+"I find you tiresome," Sunderland said. "I advise you, do not make me
+think of you again," and he struck his bell. But when Mr. Waverton was
+gone: "I fear he has not the spirit of a louse," my lord remarked to
+himself with a shrug.
+
+Thus Mr. Waverton's virtue was left to seek its own reward.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+IN THE TAP
+
+
+When Harry came back to his tavern, he was, you'll believe, not anxious
+to be seen. He made one step from the coach to the door, scurried through
+the tap and upstairs. But the coming of a coach, and a coach of some
+splendour, to the humble "Hand of Pork" had brought folks to the windows,
+and at the staircase window Harry bumped into his landlady, who gasped at
+him and began a "Save your lordship--" which ended in "God help us, it's
+Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Cook me a steak, Meg," Harry said, and went up the stairs three
+at a time.
+
+She screamed after him "Ha' you seen your letter? There's a letter for
+you in the tap."
+
+When Harry came down in his natural clothes, his best and one remaining
+suit, and shouted for his supper she was quarrelling with the potman and
+searching the shelves: "Meg, you villain--Meg, where's my steak?"
+
+"Lord love you, it's to the fire. I be looking for your letter. Ain't you
+had it now? Days it's been here, I swear, and I saw it again only this
+morning. By the black jar of usquebaugh it was, George, Od rot you."
+
+"Burn the letter," says Harry. "Go, bring me that steak, you slut."
+
+"Oh, God save you," Mrs. Meg cried in a pet, and so for Alison's letter
+there was no more search. But indeed they would not have found it.
+
+Harry, if he ever thought about it, supposed it one of the grumbling
+screeds of the bookseller for whom he scribbled and was glad to be rid of
+it so easily. But he was in no case to think usefully of anything. The
+amazement of his deliverance left him in a queer state of excited
+lassitude. His nerves were all tremulous, he must needs do everything
+vehemently, and felt the while as if he were being whirled along,
+passive, in the grip of some force outside himself One moment he was
+dreaming himself capable of miracles, the next he was limp with weariness
+and utterly impotent. And naturally, as soon as he had food inside him,
+weariness won and he was overwhelmed with great waves of languor. He
+hardly dragged himself up to his attic before he was asleep.
+
+When he woke, the world was grey. He could survey himself cynically and
+wonder why he had been such a fool as to be in a fluster overnight.
+Faith, it was a grand exploit to dabble in conspiracies and come out with
+your head still (for a while) on your shoulders. And that only by a turn
+of the luck, not any wit of his. Well! Neither winners nor losers would
+want more of the blundering offices of Mr. Harry Boyce. He was back again
+after his conversation with royalty--and royal breeches--a hack writer
+in his garret. And Alison as far away as ever. The wonderful Alison! The
+beauty of her flashed into his squalor. He felt her passionate life. Be
+hanged to Alison! Let the hack writer get to his writing.
+
+All that day he strove with the fluency of Ovid, and to this hour his
+labours, much flaccid verse, survive in a decent obscurity. It was late
+in the afternoon before he yielded to his growing disgust with the
+whinings of the Tristia and sought relief in the open air.
+
+There was not much movement in the air of Long Acre. The day had been
+warm and languorous, with heavy showers steaming up again in the sun.
+Clouds were darkening across the twilight for more rain. Harry turned off
+to stretch his legs and find some freer air across the fields by the
+Oxford road. But he was soon tired of them. The moist heat oppressed him
+still and lowering darkness across the sky threatened a storm. He had no
+desire for a wetting and an evening spent in the Pretender's clothes. He
+made for his tavern again by St. Martin's Lane and there came full upon
+his father.
+
+Colonel Boyce touched his hat. Harry touched his, gave him the wall
+and was going by. Then the Colonel laughed and caught his son's arm.
+"Well met, Harry. I was coming to seek you." (It's not known whether
+that was true.)
+
+"And I, sir--I had no notion of seeking you."
+
+"Fie, don't be haughty. I bear no malice."
+
+"Egad, sir, that's kind in you," Harry sneered and pushed on.
+
+Colonel Boyce linked arms with him. "Why, what's the matter? You
+went off with the honours. Od's heart, you left us like a pair of
+whipped dogs."
+
+"You've to thank yourself for that, sir. Not me."
+
+"No, zounds, you did very well. I profess I was proud of you, Harry."
+
+"Then I have to envy you."
+
+Colonel Boyce laughed. "You play that game well, you know. But sure, you
+need not play it all the time. No, but I never knew you could put on such
+an air, Harry. You carried it off _a merveille_. My lord was a
+whipper-snapper to you. I allow you were a thought too free of your wit.
+It's a young man's fault. But in the main you were admirable."
+
+"You make me uneasy," Harry said. "I hoped that I had quarrelled
+with you."
+
+"Oh Lud, Harry, why be so bitter? You have won, and sure you can afford
+to be civil. You have beat me and broken as pretty a plot as ever I knew.
+Why the devil should you snarl at me?"
+
+They were now turning into Long Acre and the coming storm had already
+brought darkness. Harry stopped and freed himself from his father's arm.
+"If you please, we'll have no more of this. I've no will to make an enemy
+of you. But if you seek to be friends, enemies we must be."
+
+"Why then? Harry, you are not so mad as to declare Jacobite now? It's a
+lost cause, boy. There's not a thing in it but noble hole-and-corner work
+and not a guinea for your pains. You--"
+
+"Aye, now we have it!" Harry laughed. "You want to be in my
+secrets. Sir, I'm obliged to you, and by your leave I'll
+discontinue your company."
+
+"I swear I wish you nothing but well," his father cried.
+
+"Dear sir, it's your good wishes that I dread. Pray cut me off without a
+blessing." He waved his hand to his father and strode off.
+
+For a moment Colonel Boyce looked after him--shrugged--went his way.
+
+So Harry walked alone upon his danger. He was near the tavern, he was
+passing the end of a court. From the blackness there men rushed upon him.
+They managed it well. He was almost borne down by the first onset, but
+hearing something in time, seeing a glimmer of steel, he swung aside and
+staggered back into the kennel slashing at them with his stick. They were
+borne past him by their vehemence, but he carried no sword and their
+swords were all about him. There was no hope. Two blades seared through
+his body and he fell.
+
+Colonel Boyce heard the clatter of ash and steel and turned at his
+leisure to look. It was a moment before he made out Harry in the midst
+of the melee. Then he shouted of help and threats and ran on with
+ready sword.
+
+He came too late. Harry was down and the dripping blades again at his
+body. Colonel Boyce had one fellow pinked before they were aware. The
+others bore upon him furiously and he was hard beset. He made a good
+fight--it's the best thing in his life--he understood the sword, and they
+were but hackers and hewers, they were in a mad hurry to finish him and
+he had a perfect calm. But he was hampered and overborne. He would not
+give ground for fear of more thrusts into the body at his feet, and they
+closed upon him and he could not break them.
+
+But now doors were opening and heads out of windows. From Harry's tavern
+a man came at a run. As Colonel Boyce reeled back with a point caught in
+his shoulder, gripping at the blade and thrusting at empty air, another
+sword shot into the fight. One man went down upon Harry's body. The other
+three broke off and bolted down the court by which they had come.
+
+"_Canaille_," says the deliverer mildly, and plucked at the cloak of the
+man he had overthrown to wipe his sword. "Is that a friend of yours
+underneath, sir?"
+
+"Egad, they have tickled me," quoth Colonel Boyce, feeling at his
+shoulder. "Pray, lend me your hand, sir."
+
+The deliverer looked him over without much sympathy: "And, egad, it's the
+ancient Boyce," he said. "Oh, you'll survive, _mon vieux_. Who is this in
+the mud?" He rolled his own victim, who groaned effusively, off Harry's
+body. "It's the boy, _mordieu_!" he cried.
+
+"In effect, Captain McBean, it's the boy," says Colonel Boyce, who was
+trying to fix a pad of handkerchief on his own wound.
+
+McBean was down on his knees beside Harry, handling him gently. "Twice
+through the body, by God," says he. "What does this mean, Boyce? Damme,
+did you set your fellows on him?"
+
+"I am not an imbecile," Colonel Boyce said fiercely, stared at McBean
+and laughed his contempt. Then with another manner, he turned to the
+little crowd which was mustered: "Bring me a shutter, good lads. We've a
+gentleman here much hurt. And some of you call the watch."
+
+McBean rose with bloody hands. "He has it I believe," he muttered.
+"Hark in your ear, Boyce. If this is your work, I'll see you dead, by
+God, I will."
+
+"Oh, damn your folly," says Colonel Boyce. "I struck in to help him. I
+know nothing who the knaves were. Your own tail, maybe."
+
+"Aye, aye," McBean looked at him queerly. "You would say that. Well,
+maybe this rogue can speak. He groans loud enough." Down he dropped again
+by his victim to cry out "Ben! You filthy rogue! Ben! Who a plague set
+you to this business?"
+
+"Oh, you've found a friend, then?" Colonel Boyce sneered.
+
+The man who groaned was Harry's old friend, Ben the fat highwayman of the
+North Road. He rolled his eyes and made hoarse, grievous noises.
+"Captain! Lord love you, captain, I didn't know you was in it. Oh, gad,
+and you ha' been the death o' me,'
+
+"I shall be if you lie," quoth McBean. "You rogue, who set you on
+Mr. Boyce?"
+
+"How would I know he was a friend of yours? 'Twas a squire out of
+Hornsey. Squire Waverton of Tetherdown. Paying handsome to have him
+downed. Oh, gad, captain, don't be hard. I ha' had no luck since you
+turned me off."
+
+Now the constables came running up and Colonel Boyce turned to them:
+"Secure that fellow. He and some others which have escaped stabbed my
+son who lies there. I am Colonel Boyce at the Blue House in St.
+Martin's Lane."
+
+The wretched Ben was haled off, groaning.
+
+Harry, lifeless still and bleeding, for all McBean's work, they lifted
+and carried away to his father's lodging.
+
+"What's your Waverton in this, sir?" says McBean.
+
+"The silly gentleman wanted Harry's wife. Egad, I never thought he had so
+much gall in him."
+
+"I believe I'll be letting some of it out," says McBean.
+
+"You'll be pleased to leave that to me," quoth Colonel Boyce.
+
+McBean looked up at him oddly. "_Ventrebleu_, I wonder if I'll make you
+my apologies. Have you bowels after all, sir?"
+
+"You're impertinent."
+
+"If you like." McBean cocked a wicked eye at him.
+
+"You concern yourself with the affairs of my family. I resent it,
+Captain McBean."
+
+"I believe you, _mon vieux_."
+
+"You have done me a notable service to-night and I am ready to forget
+the older injuries, your ill offices with my son. Let us call quits and
+part, sir."
+
+"It won't do," said McBean with a grin.
+
+"What now, sir?"
+
+"I must know how Harry does and make sure that he has the best there is
+for him. Surgery and friends--he will need both, sound and sure."
+
+"Be satisfied. I shall well provide him."
+
+Captain McBean shook his head.
+
+"Damn your infernal impudence." Colonel Boyce's temper gave way. "Od's
+life, sir, this is infamous. You put upon me that I would mishandle my
+own son as he lies wounded and near death! I shall murder him, I
+suppose. You had that against me before. Shall I rob him too, or
+torture him maybe? This is raving. Carry it where you will, I'll none
+of it. You may go."
+
+"Fie, what a heat!" says McBean placidly.
+
+They were now come to Colonel Boyce's lodging and he bade the bearers
+take Harry up to his own room.
+
+"I sent a brisk lad for Rolfe," says McBean. "I could but stop the blood.
+He'll be here soon enough. It's but a step to Chancery Lane. He knows
+more of wounds than any man in the town."
+
+Colonel Boyce was for a moment speechless. "I shall send for Dr.
+Radcliffe and Sir Samuel Garth," says he majestically. "I wish you good
+night, sir."
+
+"I believe they have sense enough to do no harm," said McBean. "And now,
+Boyce, a word with you. Not in the street."
+
+"I don't desire it, sir," which McBean answered by passing in front of
+him into the house. Colonel Boyce came after, fuming. "Egad, sir, you
+presume upon my wound," he cried. "You--"
+
+"Not I. Patch yourself up and I'll meet you at your convenience. There's
+more urgent matter. When the boy comes to himself--if ever he comes to
+himself--I must have speech of him."
+
+Colonel Boyce, who now completely commanded himself, had grown very pale.
+"You have gone too far, Captain McBean. I desired to forget that I have
+you in my power. You force me to use it. If you thrust yourself upon me I
+shall have you arrested as a traitor."
+
+McBean flushed. "Odso, then there is some villainy of yours in the
+affair! Devil take you, I have a mind to finish you now, a wounded man as
+you are." He had his hand on his sword.
+
+"Will you go, sir?"
+
+"Not I. If you ha' murdered him, you"--he slapped his sword home
+again--"no, _mordieu_, I can't touch you so. And you may meddle with me
+if you dare."
+
+"Oh, you have a great devotion to the boy," Colonel Boyce sneered with
+pallid lips. "You would have him deeper dipped in your mad treasons? I
+think you have done him harm enough." He struck his bell.
+
+"Harm?" McBean cried. "Is it harm? You that begat him for the heir to
+your damned infamy? You that soured him with your husk of a soul and your
+cold cunning? You that made a dirt-heap of his life to suit your muddling
+need? You--"
+
+But Colonel Boyce swayed in his seat and fell sideways fainting.
+
+A moment McBean surveyed him as if he thought this too a trick. Then,
+"_Ventrebleu_" says he, "here's Providence takes a hand," and he
+whistled, and it is not to be denied that he looked covetously at the
+cabinet which held Colonel Boyce's papers. "The poor old devil," he said
+with a shrug. "He grows old, in fact. I suppose there's more blood in his
+shirt now than his damned body," and he knelt down and began to feel
+about the wound.
+
+He was at that when a woman announced the surgeon. "Mr. Rolfe? Never more
+welcome. Here's old Colonel Boyce with a hole in his shoulder, and young
+Mr. Boyce with two holes through and through. A street brawl. Pray go up,
+sir, the lad's in bad case."
+
+"Faith, it's Captain McBean," says Rolfe, a brisk, big man, as they shook
+hands. "What have you to do with Noll Boyce?"
+
+"A friend of the family," says McBean. "Away with you to the lad;" and he
+knelt again and ministered to the unconscious Colonel. "A friend of the
+family, old gentleman," says he with a grin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+ALISON KNEELS
+
+
+So all this while Alison lacked an answer to her letter. She fretted at
+the delay, she grew angry soon, but it does not appear that she allowed
+herself any new pique against Harry. She was angry with circumstance,
+with herself, and something much more than angry with Mr. Waverton. It
+was detestable of Geoffrey to dare spy and plot against Harry,
+intolerable in him to suppose that she would favour the villainy. But she
+had been a fool and worse to give him any chance of insulting her so. And
+yet she might have hoped that her letter--sure, she had been humble
+enough in it--that her letter would bring Harry back in a hurry. It was
+maddening that some trick of circumstance should have kept it from him or
+him from her. For she had no notion that he would read the letter and
+toss it aside or delay to come. There was nothing petty about Mr. Harry,
+no spite. Nothing of the woman in him, thank God.
+
+What had happened that he gave her no answer? For certain the letter had
+gone safely to the tavern. She could be sure of her servant. Harry was
+living at the tavern. The people there gave assurance of that. It was
+strange that he made no sign. The servant, indeed, had waited for an
+answer late into the night and seen nothing of him. Perhaps he had
+discovered Geoffrey's spies and gone into hiding. It would be like
+Geoffrey to devise some mighty cunning villainy and so manage it that it
+was futile. Perhaps Harry really was at some secret politics, captured
+again by his father and sent off to France, or too deep in some matter of
+danger to show himself. Perhaps--perhaps a thousand things, so that she
+made no doubt of Harry. He would not deny her when she came seeking him.
+
+She had no fear either. Her nature could not imagine perils or disasters.
+There was too proud a force in her life for her to admit a dread of being
+defeated. Her man must live and be safe, because she needed him. Harry
+could not fail her. But she was desperately impatient. She wanted him
+every instant, and even more she wanted to stand before him and accuse
+herself, confess herself. For the truth is that Geoffrey Waverton had
+profoundly affected her. When she found Geoffrey daubing her with
+patronizing congratulations, when he dared to claim her as ally in mean
+tricks against her husband, she discovered that she must be miserably in
+the wrong. Approved by Geoffrey, annexed, used by Geoffrey--faith, she
+must have sunk very low before he could dare venture so with her. She
+received illumination. She saw herself in the wrong first and last, the
+sole sufficient cause of their catastrophe, a petty mean creature,
+snarling and spiteful and passionate for trivialities--just like
+Geoffrey, just such a creature as she hated most. Pride and honour
+instantly demanded that she must seek Harry, indict herself and read her
+recantation. She needed that, longed for it, and to satisfy herself, not
+him. It is possible that she then began to love.
+
+So monsieur must be found instantly, instantly. When she thought of all
+her tale of sins, she must needs think also of Mrs. Weston. Poor Weston
+had enough against her too--Weston--his mother. It still seemed almost
+incredible that poor, grey, puritan Weston should be mother to Harry. But
+if she was indeed, she might know something of him. At least, it would be
+good to make peace with her again; it was necessary. And so on the day
+that Harry fell, Mrs. Alison marched off to the little cottage behind the
+High Street.
+
+It was a room that opened straight from the path, and it seemed very
+full. Susan was sitting there, who was now Susan Hadley. Her fair
+placidity admitted no surprise. She smiled and said, "Alison!"
+
+Mrs. Weston stood up in a queer frozen fluster. "What do you need,
+ma'am?" says she.
+
+"Oh, Weston, dear, don't take me so," Alison cried, and she edged her way
+between the little table and the stiff chairs, holding out her hands.
+
+Mrs. Weston flushed. "Your servant, ma'am," says she with a curtsy, but
+she ignored the hands.
+
+Then Susan stood up. "I must go, I believe," she smiled, and bent to
+offer one fair cheek to Mrs. Weston. The other was then given to Alison.
+She smiled upon them both benignly and made for the door.
+
+"Susan! You'll dine with me to-morrow," Alison put in.
+
+"Oh. Mr. Hadley will be at home."
+
+"But of course you bring him."
+
+"Thank you then." The door shut behind her, and the room was larger.
+
+"I can't tell why you have come," says Mrs. Weston tremulously.
+
+"To say I was wrong and I'm sorry. Oh, Weston, dear, to say I have been a
+peevish wicked fool."
+
+Mrs. Weston sat down again. "Where is Harry?" she said.
+
+"I have writ to him to beg him come back to me."
+
+"I am asking you to come back to us."
+
+"You--"
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"Ah, you don't know then?"
+
+"I have not seen him since he left your house."
+
+"He has been living at a tavern in the Long Acre. I have made sure of
+that, and I wrote to him there. But he has not answered me. He does not
+answer me. I can't tell if he has gone away."
+
+"Where is his father?" Mrs. Weston asked quickly.
+
+"His father? Colonel Boyce? Oh, Weston! Colonel Boyce is his
+father, then?"
+
+"Did you come to pry?" Mrs. Weston flushed.
+
+"I do not deserve that," Alison said, and then very gently, "Oh, my dear,
+but I have been cruel enough to you."
+
+"It's very well," Mrs. Weston said faintly. "Where is Colonel Boyce?"
+
+"I know nothing. Does it matter, Weston, dear? He cannot help us
+to Harry."
+
+"I am afraid of him. Oh, it's all wrong maybe. I am so weak and stupid.
+But I am afraid what he may do with Harry."
+
+"Indeed, I think Mr. Harry can keep his head even against Colonel Boyce,"
+Alison smiled.
+
+"His head?" Mrs. Weston looked puzzled. "I don't mean that, I believe. I
+am afraid he may win Harry to be like himself. He is so clever and
+dazzling, and he is full of wickedness. He cares for nothing but his own
+will and to have power. When I saw him so friendly with Harry I thought I
+should have died."
+
+"My poor Weston," Alison said gently. "But I am not afraid of that. Mr.
+Harry won't be dazzled."
+
+"You dazzled him."
+
+"Oh, and am I full of wickedness too?" Alison laughed. "Dear,
+forgive me."
+
+"No, but you are strong and hard as his father was."
+
+Alison drew in her breath. "I shall teach you not to call me that,
+Weston," she said. "And Harry--well, Harry shall find me for him."
+
+There was silence for a while, and Alison watched with new emotions the
+tired, wistful face. "Weston, dear, I want you to come back to me. I want
+Mr. Harry to find you with me when he comes home."
+
+Mrs. Weston cried out, "He does not know who I am!" in anxious fear, and
+clutched at Alison's hand.
+
+"No, indeed. But he loves you already, I think."
+
+"But I do not want him to know," Mrs. Weston cried. "I--I was not married
+to Colonel Boyce."
+
+"Weston, dear," Alison pressed the hand.
+
+"I lived at Kingston. My father reared us strictly. He was harsh. I think
+that was because my mother died so young. Mr. Boyce--he was a gentleman
+in the Blues then, and very fine, much gayer than Harry and more
+handsome. He used to ride out to Hampton Court to an old cousin of his,
+who had a charge at the Palace. He met me one day by the river. I don't
+know why he set himself upon me. I was never much to his taste, I think.
+But I thought him the most wonderful man in the world. I let him do what
+he would with me. I don't blame him for that. He never promised me
+anything. In a while he grew tired. Then Harry came. My father could not
+forgive me. Afterwards they said that I had killed him. Harry was born. I
+lay very ill and they believed that I should die. I never knew whether it
+was my father or my brother sent for Mr. Boyce. My brother boasted
+afterwards that it was he made him relieve them of the baby. And I--I did
+not die, you know. When I began to be well again my baby was gone. My
+father lay dying then. He would not see me. My brother was the head of
+the family, and he--I could not stay there. I tried to find Mr. Boyce,
+but he had left the regiment. He had gone to Holland, they said, after
+the Duke of Monmouth. I could do nothing. And my brother had told me that
+Mr. Boyce would soon find a way to be rid of my baby. I--I believed that
+he had. I never saw Harry again till--you know. I never saw his father
+till that day at Lady Waverton's. He told me afterwards that they had
+said to him I was dying, and he supposed me dead. I believe that is
+true. He would not have troubled himself with the child else."
+
+"Oh, Weston, dear," Alison murmured, and caressed her.
+
+Mrs. Weston pushed back the hair from her wrinkled brow. "Mr. Boyce
+promised me that Harry need know nothing of me now. I do not know if he
+has kept his word about that."
+
+"There's nothing about Harry that is not safe with me," Alison said. "Oh,
+my dear, now I know where Harry has his strength from and his
+gentleness."
+
+Mrs. Weston looked at her in a puzzled fashion. "I wonder what he is
+doing now?" she said wearily. "I think I have told you everything,
+Alison. Oh! Your father. Your father was very kind to me. When I did not
+know what to do--I had no money left--they gave me five pounds--I went to
+him. He used to come to my father's house, you know, when he had business
+in Kingston. He used to go all over the country about his trading. My
+father said he was a godless man, but he was always kind to me. I told
+him everything. He took me into his house, and indeed I did not know
+where to go for food. I was your mother's servant while she lived, but I
+think she doubted me. Your father never told her anything, and she--but
+she let me be."
+
+"Oh, Weston, Weston," Alison said. "And you have spent all your life
+caring for me."
+
+"There was nothing else to do. But I was glad to do that." She looked
+at the girl with strange, puzzled, wistful eyes and saw Alison's eyes
+full of tears. She put out her hand shyly, awkwardly, and touched
+Alison's cheek.
+
+Alison smiled, laughed with a sob in her voice. "It is a long while since
+I cried," she said, and put her arms round Mrs. Weston and laid her head
+on Mrs. Weston's bosom and cried indeed.
+
+Mrs. Weston held her close. "Alison! But this isn't like you."
+
+"Indeed it is," Alison sobbed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+EMOTIONS BY MR. WAVERTON
+
+
+You behold Mr. Waverton exhibiting a high impatience. He was alone in the
+best room of the "Peacock" at Islington, a well-looking place after its
+severe old oak fashion. Disordered food upon the table showed that Mr.
+Waverton had been trying to eat with little success. Mr. Waverton's hat
+upon one chair, his whip upon another, and his cloak tumbled inelegantly
+over a third proved that he was not himself. For he was born to treat his
+clothes with respect. Mr. Waverton would be jumping up to look out of the
+window, flounce down again in his chair to drink wine and stare with
+profound meaning at the table, start up and stride to the hearth and
+glower down at its emptiness--and repeat the motions in a different
+order. He must be theatrical even without an audience.
+
+But he had some excuse for his uneasiness. It was the evening of his
+conversation with my Lord Sunderland, and that fiasco had stimulated him,
+you know, to a grand exploit. He was waiting for news of it.
+
+The twilight darkened early. Mr. Waverton pushed the window open wider,
+and leaned out only to come in again in a hurry as if he were afraid of
+being seen. The room was close, and he wiped his large brow and flung
+himself down and drank. There was a dull sound of thunder rolling far
+away. In a little while came the beat of rain--slow, big drops. That was
+soon over. Then lightning stabbed into the room, and the storm broke.
+
+Candles were brought to Mr. Waverton's petulant appeal, and an excited
+maid-servant bustled and blundered over clearing his table with pious
+invocations at each thunder-clap. She fretted Mr. Waverton, who
+admonished her and made her worse.
+
+Upon him and her there came a man cloaked from heel to eye, streaming
+rain from every angle. He shook a shower from his hat. "Hell! What a
+night," says he, breathless. "Save you, squire!"
+
+"Begone, girl! Begone, I say. Od's life, leave us, do you hear?" says Mr.
+Waverton, in much agitation.
+
+"Bring us a noggin of rum, Sukey, darling," says the wet gentleman,
+dragging himself out of his sodden cloak. He flung it upon Mr.
+Waverton's.
+
+"Run, girl!" says Mr. Waverton, in a terrible voice. "Go, you fool." He
+advanced upon her, and she stopped gaping, and got herself out with a
+great clatter of crockery.
+
+"Od burn and blast it! I want it," says the wet gentleman, and collapsed
+into a chair. "I believe you, squire. I want it."
+
+"What is the news with you?" Mr. Waverton said.
+
+"Od's bones, ha' you got the megs? The megs, I say. Oh, rot you, the
+ready, the hundred guineas?"
+
+"Is it done then?" Mr. Waverton's voice dropped.
+
+"Out with the cole, burn you."
+
+Mr. Waverton put a bag of money down on the table. The man snatched at
+it, tore it open, and began to count. "Is it done, Ned, I say?" Mr.
+Waverton cried.
+
+Ned showed some broken teeth. "I believe you, by God. He has it. He's
+dead meat. Two irons through and through his guts."
+
+Mr. Waverton flung back in his chair. "How then?" he said, in a low
+voice. "Ned--was it in fight? You brought him into a fight?" Ned went
+on counting the guineas, and sometimes tried one in his yellow teeth.
+"Oh, have done with that!" Mr. Waverton cried. "They come straight
+from my goldsmith, man. Tell me--you said you would force a fight on
+him. Did he--"
+
+"Lay your life!" Ned grinned. "There was a fight, sure. Old Ben knows
+that, by God. Aye, aye, you're fond of fighting ain't you, squire?"
+
+"I fight with gentlemen, sirrah," says Mr. Waverton. "For such base
+rogues as this fellow, I must provide otherwise."
+
+"Provide my breeches!" says Ned coarsely, and swept up his money.
+"Where's that damned rum?"
+
+"You may take it in the tap." Mr. Waverton rose. "Nay, she'll bring it.
+Nay, but, Ned--how did he take it?"
+
+"Rot you, how would you take an iron in your gizzard?"
+
+"He said nothing?"
+
+"Now, stap me, do you think we waited for him to say his prayers?"
+
+"Prayers!" says Mr. Waverton grandly, "They would little avail him."
+
+"Well now, burn me, you're a saint yourself, ain't you?"
+
+The rum arrived, and the servant, with frightened eyes upon the
+bedraggled Ned, went stumbling out of the room again. "You are
+impertinent, sirrah," says Mr. Waverton. "The fellow well deserved his
+end. I may tell you that I was advised to deal with him thus privately by
+a noble lord in high place."
+
+"Then it's worth more than a hundred megs."
+
+"You have your pay, I believe. I am satisfied with you."
+
+"Damn your airs," says Ned, but something awed by this parade. "Well, I
+must quit."
+
+"It is better," Mr. Waverton agreed.
+
+"Oh! There was a letter for my gentleman at his tavern. We pouched that
+while we were waiting for him. D'ye care for it? It's a pretty, tender
+thing. I reckon it's cheap for another five pieces."
+
+"You are a scoundrel," said Mr. Waverton, and tossed another guinea on
+the table.
+
+"Pot to you," says Ned, but slapped down the letter. "Well, I'll march.
+Maybe you'll have some more in my way. I won't forget you, squire," and
+out he went.
+
+Mr. Waverton, left alone, fingered the letter contemptuously. His great
+mind was indeed possessed by thoughts of victory. He had hated Harry
+rarely with the chief count in his enmity that Harry was a low fellow,
+hireling, menial. He could have borne defeat with some grace, he might
+even have sought no revenge for being made ridiculous, if the offender
+had been of a higher station than his own. But such insolence from a
+pauper! The fellow must needs be crushed like an insect. Only such
+ignominious extinction could satisfy Mr. Waverton's dignity. He inclined
+to despise himself for a shadow of human concern about the manner of
+Harry's death. Faith, it was an extravagance of chivalry to desire that
+the rogue should have had a chance to fight--that generous chivalry which
+had ever been his bane. He felt nothing but exultation at the issue. The
+wretched creature had been properly punished--stamped out by knaves of
+his own class in a vulgar street brawl--a dirty hole-and-corner end.
+Egad, my lord was very right. These petty, shabby knaves should be dealt
+with privately. Mr. Waverton found revenge very sweet.
+
+So Mr. Harry Boyce had gone to his account, and Alison was happily
+delivered. Dear child! Mr. Waverton felt a pleasant warmth of heroism
+steal over him, felt himself a knight-errant rescuing his lady from the
+powers of darkness. Dear Alison! She was free now. To be sure, she need
+not be told the manner of the deliverance. That would be an outrage on
+her delicacy. Enough for her that the cunning wretch who had cozened her
+was dead, and she a happy widow. She had but to show a pretty penitence,
+and Mr. Waverton proposed to be magnanimous. The prospect much pleased
+him. He saw himself grandly accepting her; permitting her to be very
+tender; wittily, but with a touch of magnificence, restraining her from
+too much humility....
+
+He came out of this golden dream in the end, and was conscious again of
+the letter, and sneered at it. A nasty, infected thing, to be sure,
+damp and filthy from Ned's handling. What was it the fellow said? A
+tender composition? Pah, some blowsy paramour of the knave Boyce. But,
+perhaps it would be well that Alison should know the fellow had
+paramours in his own class. She ought to be made to feel how low she
+had sunk by yielding to him.
+
+Mr. Waverton opened the letter and saw Alison's writing:
+
+"MR. BOYCE,--I desire that you would come to me at Highgate. I have
+to-day heard from Geoffrey Waverton what you must instantly know. And the
+truth is, I cannot be content till I speak with you. But I would not have
+you come for this my asking. Pray, believe it is urgent for us both that
+we meet, and I do require it of you, not desiring of you what you may
+have no mind to, but to be honest with you, and lest that should befall
+which I hope you would not have me bear.
+
+"A."
+
+Mr. Waverton read with swelling eyes.
+
+It was a little while before the meaning came home to him. He was never
+quick. Then (a sin to which he was not prone) he used oaths. The
+treacherous, besotted woman! She was still craving for her shabby lover,
+then. She offered a fair face to her too generous, too faithful Mr.
+Waverton, only to obtain his confidence and betray him again. Egad, she
+was too base. Rotten at the very heart of her. Why, some women must lust
+after a low, common fellow, as dogs after dirt. So she would have saved
+her Boyce from his master's punishment? Mr. Waverton laughed. She would
+have had him back in her arms again? Mr. Waverton continued to laugh.
+
+But faith, she went too far when she tried to trick Mr. Waverton a second
+time. Much she had gained by her treachery. Her fine husband was out of
+her reach now. It would be a pleasure to advise her of his death. Nay,
+faith, a duty. The miserable creature had been saved from herself. She
+must be shown that--oh delicately, with something of a cold grandeur, a
+touch of irony maybe, but always in a lofty manner as became one who
+moved upon heights far above her grovelling soul. Mr. Waverton, for all
+his high irony, rode back home through the dregs of the storm very
+furiously.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+CAPTAIN McBEAN TAKES HORSE
+
+
+Captain McBean, healthily red and brown, showed no sign of having been
+out of bed all night. From cold water and a razor in his own lodgings he
+came back at a round pace to St. Martin's Lane. He found his aide, Mr.
+Mackenzie, taking the air on the doorstep of the Blue House, and rebuked
+him. "I bade ye bide with the lad, Donald."
+
+"The surgeon has him in hand, sir."
+
+"_Tiens_. He's a brisk fellow, that Rolfe."
+
+"I'm thinking Mr. Boyce will need him."
+
+"Eh, is there anything new?"
+
+"I would not say so. But he's sore hurt. And I'm thinking he takes it
+hard."
+
+"Aye, you're the devil of a thinker, Donald." Captain McBean grinned.
+"And the Colonel, has he made a noise?"
+
+"He's in the way of calling for liquors, but he's peaceable, the
+women say."
+
+"You'll go get your breakfast and be back again. And bring O'Connor with
+you. I'll hope to need the two of you." Captain McBean relieved guard on
+the doorstep till the surgeon came down. "I'm obliged to you, Mr. Rolfe.
+What do you make of him?"
+
+"Egad, Captain, you're devoted. Why, the old gentleman has put in for
+some fever, but I doubt he will do well enough."
+
+"Be sure of it. What of the young one?"
+
+Mr. Rolfe pursed his lip. "Faith, there's no more amiss. But--but--why,
+he was hard hit, I grant you--but you might take the young one for the
+old one. D'ye follow me? The lad hath no vigour in him."
+
+McBean nodded. "I'll be talking to him, by your leave."
+
+"Od's life, I would not talk long. I don't like it, Captain, and there's
+the truth. Go easy with him. I will be here again to-day."
+
+Captain McBean went up to the room where Harry lay as white as his
+pillows. A woman was feeding him out of a cup. "You made it damned salt,
+your broth," says Harry, in a feeble disgust.
+
+"'Tis what you lack, look you." Captain McBean sat himself on the bed and
+took the cup and waved the woman off. "'Tis the natural, hale salinity
+and the sanguineous part which you lose by a wound, and for lack of it
+you are thus faint. Therefore we do ever administer great possets of salt
+to the wounded, and--"
+
+"And pickle me before I be dead," says Harry. "Be hanged to your jargon."
+
+"You'll take another sup, my lad, if I hold your long nose to it. And you
+may suck your orange after."
+
+Harry made a wry face, swallowed a mouthful and lay back out of breath.
+After a while, "You were here all night, weren't you?" he said.
+
+"I am body physician to the family of Boyce, _mon brave_."
+
+"My father?"
+
+"Has a hole in his shoulder, praise God, and a damned paternal temper. He
+will do well enough."
+
+"How do you come into it?" McBean grinned. "Who were they?"
+
+"I am here to talk to you, _mon cher_. You will not talk to me, for it is
+disintegrating to your tissues. _Allons_, compose yourself and attend.
+Now I come into it, if you please, out of gratitude. Mr. Boyce--I have it
+in command from His Majesty to present you with his thanks for very
+gallant and faithful service."
+
+"Oh, the boy got off then?"
+
+"King James is returned to France, sir," says McBean with dignity.
+"Look 'e, tie up your tongue. His Majesty charged me to put this in
+your hands and to advise you that he would ever have in memory your
+resource and spirit and your loyalty. Which I do with a great
+satisfaction, Mr. Boyce."
+
+Harry fingered a pretty toy of a watch circled with diamonds, and wrought
+with a monogram in diamonds and sapphires. "Poor lad," says he.
+
+"It's his own piece and was his father's, I believe. _Pardieu_, sir,
+there's many will envy you."
+
+Harry's head went back on its pillows. "It's a queer taste."
+
+"Mr. Boyce, you may count upon it that when His Majesty is established in
+power, he--"
+
+"He will have as bad a memory as the rest of his family. Bah, what does
+it matter? You are talking of the millennium."
+
+"You will talk, will you?" says McBean. "I'll gag you, _mordieu_, if you
+answer me back again. Come, sirrah, you know the King better. It's a
+noble, generous lad. So leave the Whiggish sneers to your father. So much
+for that. Now, _mon ami_, you have put me under a great obligation. It
+was a rare piece of work, and to be frank, I did not think you had it in
+you. But I did count upon you as a gentleman of high honour, and,
+_pardieu_, I count myself very fortunate I applied to you. I speak for my
+party, Mr. Boyce, when I thank you and promise you any service of mine."
+
+Harry mumbled something like, "Damn your eloquence."
+
+But McBean was not to be put off. "You will like to know that the King
+when he was quit of Marlborough--egad, the old villain hath been a
+gentleman in this business--made straight for me and was instant that I
+should concern myself for you. I held it my first duty to get His Majesty
+out of the country. Between ourselves, I was never in love with this plan
+of palace trickery and Madame Anne. But the thing was offered us, and we
+could not show the white feather. _Bien_, His Majesty took assurance from
+Marlborough of your safety, so I had no great alarm for you. I could not
+be aware of your private feuds. But now, _mordieu_, I make them my own. I
+promise you, it touches me nearly that you should be hacked down, and
+egad, before my eyes."
+
+Harry tried to raise himself and said eagerly, "Who was in it? Who
+were they?"
+
+Captain McBean responded with some more of the salt broth. "Now I'll
+confess that I had some doubts of your father. As soon as I was back in
+London I made haste to find you. I was waiting at that tavern of yours
+when I heard the scuffle. You were down before I could reach you, and
+there was your father fighting across you most heroical. Faith, I did not
+know the old gentleman had it in him. He had pinked one, I believe, but
+he is slow, and they were too many for him. He took it badly in the
+shoulder as I came. But they were not workmen. I put one out at the first
+thrust, and the rogues would not stand. I tickled one in the ham as he
+ran, but missed the sinew in his fat. So it ended. Now I'll confess I did
+the old gentleman a wrong. I guessed the business might be one of his
+damned superfine plots. It would be like him to have you finished while
+he made a brag of fighting for you. But I was wrong. _Mordieu_, I believe
+he has a kindness for you, Harry."
+
+"What?" says Harry, startled by the name.
+
+"Oh, _mon ami_, you must let me be kindly too. Egad, you command my
+emotions, sir. No, the old gentleman hath his humanity. He would have
+died for you, Harry, and faith he is so rheumatic he nearly did. No, it
+was not he played this damned game. Who d'ye think it was that I put on
+his back? That rascal Ben--you remember Ben of the North Road? I put the
+villain to the question who set him on you. _Bien_ he was hired to it by
+that fine fellow Waverton."
+
+"Geoffrey!" Harry gasped.
+
+"Even so. Now, Harry, what has Master Geoffrey Waverton against you? If
+he wanted to murder your father I could understand it. That affair at
+Pontoise is matter enough for a life or two. Though he should take it
+gentlemanly. But why must he murder you?"
+
+"I am not dead yet," said Harry, and his mouth set.
+
+Captain McBean laughed. "Not by fifty year:" and he contemplated Harry's
+pale drawn face with benign approval. "But why does Mr. Waverton want you
+dead now?"
+
+"That's my affair," said Harry.
+
+"_Enfin_." Captain McBean shrugged, with a twist of the lip and a cock
+of the eye.
+
+"Is there more of that broth?" says Harry.
+
+Captain McBean administered it. "I go get another cup, Harry." He nodded
+and went out.
+
+His two aides, Mackenzie and O'Connor, were waiting below. "Donald, go
+up. The same orders. None but Rolfe is to come to him without you
+stand by. And shorten your damned long face, if you can. Patrick, we
+take horse."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+PERPLEXITIES OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+
+Captain McBean and Mr. O'Connor halted steaming horses before the door of
+Tetherdown. The butler announced that Mr. Waverton had gone out, and then
+impressed by the evidence of haste and the martial elegance of McBean,
+suggested that my lady might receive the gentleman.
+
+"How? The animal has a mother?" says McBean in French, and shrugged and
+beckoned the butler closer. "Now, my friend, could you make a guess where
+I should look for Mr. Waverton?" and money passed.
+
+"Sir, Mr. Waverton rides over sometimes to the Hall at Highgate. Miss
+Lam--Mrs. Boyce's house;" the butler looked knowing.
+
+"Mrs. Boyce? Eh, is that Colonel Boyce's lady?"
+
+The butler smiled discreetly. "No, sir, to be sure. Young Boyce--young
+Mr. Boyce, sir."
+
+Captain McBean wheeled round in such a hurry that the butler was almost
+overthrown. They clattered off.
+
+It was not till they were riding through the wood that McBean spoke:
+"Patrick, my man, would you say that Harry Boyce is the man to marry
+wisely and well?"
+
+"Faith, I believe he would not be doing anything wisely. That same is
+his charm."
+
+"_Tiens_, it begins now to be ugly. Why must the boy be married at all,
+_mordieu_?"
+
+"It will be in his nature," says O'Connor. "And likely to a shrew."
+
+"If that were all! Ah, bah, they shall have no satisfaction in it. But no
+more will I..."
+
+There were at the Hall two women who had almost become calm by mingling
+their distress and their tears. It's believed that they slept in each
+other's arms, and slept well enough. In the morning another messenger was
+sent off to the Long Acre tavern. If he came back with no news it was
+agreed they should move into town. They said no more of their fears. Each
+had some fancy that she was putting on a brave face for the other's sake.
+There is no doubt that they found the stress easier to bear for
+consciousness of each other's endurance.
+
+So Mr. Hadley and his Susan were received by an atmosphere of gentle
+peace. Much to Mr. Hadley's surprise, who would complain that venture
+into Alison's house was much like a post over against the Irish Brigade;
+for a man never knew how she would break out upon him, but could count
+upon it that she would be harassing.
+
+"We are so glad," says Susan.
+
+"She loves to march her prisoner through the town. It's a simple,
+brutish taste."
+
+"Oh. I am so, I believe," says Susan, and contemplated Mr. Hadley with
+placid satisfaction.
+
+"She is too honest for you, Mr. Hadley," Alison said.
+
+"Oh Lud, yes, ma'am. The mass of her overwhelms me, and it's all plain
+virtue--a heavy, solemn thing. Look you, Susan, you embarrass madame with
+your revelations."
+
+"It is curious. He is always ill at ease when I am with him."
+
+"Because you make me tedious, child."
+
+"That's your vanity, Mr. Hadley." Alison tried to keep in tune with them.
+
+"Look you, Susan, I am cashiered by marriage. Once I was Charles. Now I
+am without honour."
+
+"Mr. Geoffrey Waverton," quoth the butler.
+
+Alison's hand went to her breast and she was white.
+
+"Dear Geoffrey!" Mr. Hadley murmured. "I do not know when last I saw dear
+Geoffrey," and he turned a sardonic face to the door.
+
+Susan leaned forward. "Alison, dear--if you choose--" she began in
+a whisper.
+
+"Sit still," Alison muttered. "Stay, stay."
+
+Mr. Waverton came in with measured pomp, stopped short and surveyed the
+company and at last made his bow. "Madame, your most obedient. I fear
+that I come untimely."
+
+Alison could not find her voice, so it was Mr. Hadley who answered, "Lud,
+Geoffrey dear, you're never out of season: like mutton."
+
+"I give Mrs. Hadley joy," says Geoffrey. "Such wit must be rare company."
+
+Alison was staring at him. "You have something to say to me? You may
+speak out. There are no secrets here."
+
+"Is it so, faith? Egad, what friendship! But you have always been
+fortunate. And in fact I bring you news of more fortune. You are free
+of your Mr. Boyce, ma'am. You are done with him. He has been picked up
+dead." He smiled at Alison, Alison white and still and dumb. Mrs.
+Weston gave a cry and fell back in her chair and her fingers plucked at
+her dress.
+
+Mr. Hadley strode across and stood very close to Geoffrey. "Take care,"
+says he in a low voice.
+
+"Well. Tell all your story," Alison said.
+
+"They found him lying in the kennel in Long Acre," Geoffrey smiled. "Oh,
+there was some brawl, it seems. He was set upon by his tavern cronies in
+a quarrel about a wench he had. A very proper end."
+
+"Geoffrey, you are a cur," says Mr. Hadley in his ear.
+
+"You are lying," Alison cried.
+
+Mr. Waverton laughed and waved his hand. "Oh, ma'am, you are a chameleon.
+The other day you desired nothing better than monsieur's demise. Now at
+the news of it you grow venomous. I vow I cannot keep pace with your
+changes. I must withdraw from your intimacy. 'Tis too exacting for my
+poor vigour. Madame, your most humble."
+
+"Not yet," Alison cried.
+
+"Let him go, ma'am," Mr. Hadley broke in sharply. "Go home, sirrah.
+You'll not wait long before you hear from me."
+
+"From which hand?" Geoffrey flicked at the empty sleeve. "Nay, faith, it
+suits madame well, the left-handed champion."
+
+Mr. Hadley turned on his heel. "Pray, ma'am, leave us. This is become
+my affair."
+
+"I have not done with him yet," Alison said.
+
+But the door was opened for the servant to say: "Captain Hector McBean,
+Mr. Patrick O'Connor," and with a clank of spurs and something of a
+military swagger the little man and the long man marched in.
+
+Captain McBean swept a glance round the room.
+
+"So," says he with satisfaction and made a right guess at Alison. "Mrs.
+Boyce, I am necessitated to present myself. Captain McBean."
+
+"What, more champions!" Geoffrey laughed. "Oh, ma'am, you have too
+general a charity. My sympathy is in your way," and he made his bow and
+was going off.
+
+"_Mordieu_, you relieve me marvellously," says McBean, and O'Connor put
+his back against the door.
+
+Mr. Waverton waved O'Connor aside.
+
+"You'll be Mr. Waverton?" said O'Connor.
+
+"Od's life, sir, stand out of my way." But O'Connor laughed and McBean
+tapped the magnificent shoulder. Mr. Waverton swung round.
+
+"Hark in your ear," says McBean. "You're a lewd, cowardly scoundrel, Mr.
+Waverton."
+
+Mr. Waverton glared at him, stepped back and turned on Alison. "Pray,
+ma'am, control your bullies. I desire to leave your house!"
+
+"Let him be, sir," Alison stood up. "Leave us, if you please, I have to
+speak with him."
+
+"You have not," McBean frowned. "The affair is out of your hands. Come,
+sir, march. There's a pretty piece of turf beyond the gates. Your friend
+there may serve you."
+
+"Not I, sir," Mr. Hadley put in. "I have myself a meeting to require of
+Mr. Waverton."
+
+"So? I like the air here better and better, _pardieu_. Well, Mr.
+Waverton, we'll e'en walk out alone."
+
+"Your bluster won't serve you, sirrah. If you be a gentleman, which you
+make incredible, you may proceed in order and I'll consider if I may do
+you the honour to meet you."
+
+"Gentleman? Bah, I am Hector McBean, Captain in Bouffiers' regiment.
+Come, sir, now are you warmer?" He struck Mr. Waverton across the eyes.
+
+Mr. Waverton, drawing back, turned again upon Alison: "My God, did you
+bring your bullies here to murder me?"
+
+"I did not bid you here," Alison said.
+
+"_Lache_," says Mr. O'Connor with a shrug.
+
+"_En effet_," says McBean and sat down. "Observe, Waverton: I have given
+you the chance to take a clean death. You have not the courage for it.
+_Tant mieux_. You may now hang."
+
+Mr. Waverton again made a move for the door, but Mr. O'Connor stood
+solidly in the way. "Attention, Waverton. You have bungled your business,
+as usual. Your fellow Ned Boon hath been taken and lies in Newgate. He
+has confessed that he and his gang were hired for this murder by a
+certain Geoffrey Waverton."
+
+"It is a lie!"
+
+"Waverton--I have a whip as well as a sword."
+
+"I do not concern myself with you, sir," says Mr. Waverton with
+dignity. "You are repeating a lesson, I see. But I advise you, I shall
+not permit myself to be slandered. This fellow Ned Bone--Boon--what is
+his vulgar name? I know nothing of him. If he pretends to any knowledge
+of me, he lies."
+
+"You told me that you had hired men to spy upon Mr. Boyce," Alison said.
+
+Mr. Waverton laughed. "Oh, ma'am, I thank you for a flash of honesty.
+Here's the truth then. In madame's interest, I had arranged with her that
+a party of fellows should watch her scurvy husband. She suspected him of
+various villainies, infidelity, what you will. And, egad, I dare to say
+she was right. But I have no more concern in it. So you may his back to
+your employers, Captain Mac what's your name, and advise them that I am
+not to be bullied. I shall know how to defend myself."
+
+Alison came nearer Captain McBean. "Sir, this is a confection of lies. It
+is true the man told me he was planning a watch on Mr. Boyce. But not of
+my will. And when I knew I did instantly give Mr. Boyce warning."
+
+"I shall deal with you in good time," McBean frowned. "_Dieu de dieu!_ I
+do not excuse you. Attention, Waverton! You lie stupidly. Your bullies,
+_mordieu_, blunder in your own style. It would not content them to murder
+Mr. Boyce. They must have his father too. They could not do their
+business quietly nor finish it. The rogue Ben was caught and the Colonel
+has only a hole in his shoulder. You may know that he is not the man to
+forgive you for it. So, Waverton. You have suborned murder and furnished
+evidence to hang you for it. You must meddle with Colonel Boyce to make
+sure that his Whiggish party who hold the government shall not spare you.
+You set every Jacobite against you when you struck at Harry. However
+things go now there'll be those in power urgent to hang you. Go home and
+wait till the runners take you off to Newgate. March!"
+
+Mr. O'Connor opened the door with alacrity.
+
+"I am not afraid of you," Waverton cried. "And you, madame, you, the
+widow--be sure if I am attacked, your loose treachery shall not win you
+off. What I have done--you know well it was done for you and in commerce
+with you." Mr. O'Connor took him by the arm. "Don't presume to touch me!"
+he called out, trembling with rage. Mr. O'Connor propelled him out.
+
+"I believe Patrick will cut the coat off his back," said McBean pensively
+and then laughed a little. He brushed his hand over his face and stood up
+and marched on Alison. "Now for you," he said. "I beg leave of the
+company." He made them a bow and waved them out of the room.
+
+"Sir, Mr. Boyce?" Mrs. Weston said faintly.
+
+"Madame, Mr. Boyce is not dead. He lies wounded. I make no apology,
+_pardieu_! It is imperative to frighten the Waverton out of the
+country--since he would not stand up to be killed. You, madame," he
+turned frowning upon Alison, "you must have him no more in your
+neighbourhood."
+
+Alison bent her head. Mr. Hadley came forward. "Captain McBean, you take
+too much upon yourself."
+
+"I'll answer for it at my leisure, sir."
+
+"Pray go, Charles," Alison said gently. So they went out, Mrs.
+Weston upon Susan's arm, and Captain McBean and Alison were left
+alone, the fierce little lean man stretching every inch of him
+against her rich beauty.
+
+"You do me some wrong, sir," Alison said.
+
+"Is it possible?" McBean's chest swelled to the sneer.
+
+"Pray, sir, don't scold. It passes me by. Nay, I cannot answer you. I
+have no defence, I believe. Be sure that you can say nothing to make my
+hurt worse."
+
+"How long shall we go on talking about you, madame?"
+
+Alison flushed dark, and turned away and muttered something.
+
+"What now?" McBean said. In another moment he saw that she was crying.
+Some satisfaction perhaps, no pity, softened his stare....
+
+She turned, making no pretence to hide her tears. "I beg of you--take me
+to Mr. Boyce."
+
+"I said, madame, Mr. Boyce is not yet dead." The sharp, precise voice
+spared her nothing. "I do not know whether he will live." Alison gave a
+choking cry. "I do not now know whether he would desire to live."
+
+"What do you mean?" A madness of fear, of love perhaps, distorted her
+face.
+
+"You well know. When I rode out this morning, I had it in mind to kill
+the Waverton and conduct you to Mr. Boyce. But I did not guess that
+Waverton would refuse to be killed like a gentleman or that I should find
+you engaged in the rogue's infamy."
+
+"But that is his lie! Ah, you must know that it is a lie. You heard how
+he turned on me, and his vileness."
+
+"_Bien_, you have played fast and loose with him. I allow that. It does
+not commend you to me, madame."
+
+"I'll not bear it," Alison cried wildly. "Oh, sir, you have no right. Mr.
+Boyce would never endure you should treat me so."
+
+"_Dieu de dieu_! Would you trade upon Harry's gentleness now? Aye,
+madame, he would not treat you so, _mordieu_. He would see nothing, know
+nothing, believe nothing. And let you make a mock of him again. But if
+you please, I stand between him and you."
+
+"You have no right," Alison muttered.
+
+"It is you who have put me there. You, madame, when you played him false
+with this Waverton."
+
+"That is a lie--a lie," she cried.
+
+"Oh, content you. You are all chastity. I do not doubt it. But you drove
+Harry away from you. You admitted your Waverton to intimacy--you let him
+hope--believe--bah, what does it matter? You were in his secrets. You
+knew he put bullies upon Harry. Now he has failed and you are in a fright
+and want your Harry again. Permit me, madame, not to admire you."
+
+"What do you want of me?" Alison said miserably.
+
+"I cannot tell. I want to know what I am to do with Harry. And you--you
+are another wound."
+
+Alison shuddered. "For God's sake take me to him. I will content him."
+
+"Yes. For how long?"
+
+"Oh, I deserve it all. I cannot answer you. And yet you are wrong. I am
+not such as you think me. I have never had anything but contempt for Mr.
+Waverton. If he were not what he is, he must have known that. He came to
+me after I left Harry. He told me that he was having Harry spied upon.
+The moment he was gone I wrote to Harry and gave him warning and begged
+him come back to me. He has never answered me. And I--oh--am I to speak
+of Harry and me?"
+
+"If you could I should not much believe you. From the first, madame, I
+have believed you."
+
+"It was I who drove him away from me. I have been miserable for it ever
+since. I humbled myself."
+
+Captain McBean held up his hand. "I still believe you. Pray, order
+your coach."
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"He lies at his father's lodging. Observe, madame: I have said--he is
+not yet dead. Whether he lives rests, I believe to God, upon what you
+may be to him."
+
+"Then he will be well enough," she sobbed as she laughed.
+
+"Oh! I believe in your power," says McBean with a twist of a smile.
+
+She stayed a moment by the door and flung her arms wide. "What I am--it
+is all for him."
+
+Captain McBean left alone, took snuff. "A splendid wild cat--and that
+mouse of a Harry," says he.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+REMORSE OF COLONEL BOYCE
+
+
+Captain McBean was strutting to and fro for the benefit of his impatience
+when Mr. O'Connor returned to him. "Patrick, you look morose. Had he the
+legs of you?"
+
+"He had not," says O'Connor, nursing his hand. "But he had a
+beautiful nose. Sure, it was harder than you would think. And I have
+sprained my thumb."
+
+"What, did he fight?"
+
+"He did not--saving the tongue of him. But I had broke my whip upon him,
+so I broke his nose to be even. Egad, he was beautiful before and behind.
+He cannot show this long while. Neither behind nor before, faith. What
+will he do, d'ye think?"
+
+"Oh Lud, he'll not face it out. He would dream of hangmen. He'll take the
+waters. He'll go the grand tour. D'ye know, Patrick, there's a masterly
+touch in old Boyce. To choose that oaf for his decoy at Pontoise! Who
+could guess at danger in him? No wonder Charles Middleton saw no guile!
+Yet, you observe, the creature's full of venom."
+
+"He bleeds like a pig," says Mr. O'Connor. "What will we be waiting
+for, sir?"
+
+"The lady."
+
+"She goes to Harry? Oh, he's the lucky one. What a Venus it is!"
+
+"Aye, aye. She should have married you, Patrick. You would have
+ridden her."
+
+"Ah now, don't destroy me with envy and desires," says Mr. O'Connor.
+"But, sure, there was another, a noble fat girl. Will she be bespoke?"
+
+"She belongs to the one-armed hero."
+
+"Maybe she could do with another. There's enough of her for two. Oh, come
+away, sir, before I danger my soul."
+
+They heard the wheels of the coach and marched out. Alison was coming
+downstairs with Mrs. Weston. "What now?" says McBean glowering. "Do you
+need a duenna to watch you with your husband?"
+
+"Madame is Harry's mother, sir," Alison said.
+
+For once Captain McBean was disconcerted. "A thousand pardons," says he,
+and with much ceremony put Mrs. Weston into the coach.
+
+As they rode after it, "You fight too fast, sir," says O'Connor with a
+grin. "I have remarked it before."
+
+Captain McBean 'was still something out of countenance. "Who would have
+thought he had a mother here?" he growled.
+
+"Oh, faith, you did not suppose the old Colonel brought him forth--like
+Jove plucking Minerva out of his swollen head."
+
+"I did not, Patrick, you loon. But I did not guess his mother would be
+here with this gorgeous madame wife."
+
+"Fie now, is it the Lord God don't advise you of everything? 'Tis an
+indignity, faith."
+
+Captain McBean swore at him in a friendly way, and they jogged on
+through the Islington lanes....
+
+So after a while it happened that Colonel Boyce, raising a hot and angry
+head at the creature who dared open his bedroom door, found himself
+looking at Mrs. Weston. "Ods my life! Kate! What a pox do you want
+here?" says he.
+
+"You are hurt. I thought you would want nursing."
+
+"I do not want nursing, damme. How did you hear of the business?"
+
+"That Scotch captain rode out to tell us."
+
+"Od burn the fellow! Humph. No. Maybe he is no fool, neither. Us? Who is
+us, Kate? Mrs. Alison?"
+
+"She is gone up to Harry now."
+
+Colonel Boyce whistled. "Come up and we will show you a thing, eh? That
+is Scripture, Kate. You used to have your mouth full of Scripture."
+
+"You put me out of favour with that."
+
+"Let it be, can't you? What, they will make it up, then?"
+
+"Does that hurt you? Indeed, they would never have quarrelled but for
+you."
+
+"Oh, aye, blame it on me. I am the devil, faith. Come, ma'am, what have I
+done to the pretty dears? She's a warm piece and Harry's a milksop, and
+that's the whole of it."
+
+"With your tricks you made her think Harry was such as you are. And that
+wife you married came to Alison and told her that Harry was base-born."
+
+"Rot the shrew! She must meddle must she? Egad, she was always a blunder,
+Madame Rachel." He swore at her fully. "Bah, what though? Why should
+jolly Alison heed her?"
+
+"Alison knows everything now. I told her."
+
+"Egad, you go beyond me, Kate. You that made me swear none should ever
+know the boy was yours. You go and blab it out! Damn you for a woman."
+
+The woman looked at him strangely. "You have done that indeed," she said.
+
+"No, that's too bad. I vow it is." For once Colonel Boyce was stung. He
+fell silent and fidgeted, and made a long arm for the herb water by his
+bed. Mrs. Weston gave it him. "Let be, can't you?" he cried, and drank
+all the same. "Eh, Kate that came over my guard.... She has made you
+suffer, the shrew. Egad, I could whip her through the town for it."
+
+"Yes. Whip her."
+
+"Oh, what would you have?" Colonel Boyce shifted under a rueful air,
+strange in him. "I am what I am. I have had no luck in women. She was a
+blunder. And you--you have paid to say of me what you will. Egad, you
+have the chance now."
+
+"Are you in pain?"
+
+"Be hanged to pain! Don't gloat, Kate. That's not like you, at least."
+
+"Oh, I am sorry. I am sorry."
+
+"No, nor that neither. Damme, what should I be with you pitying me? Let
+it be. Come, you want something of me, I suppose. Something for your
+Harry, eh? What is it?"
+
+"I want nothing but that he should live. He has no need of you or me."
+
+"Oh Lud, he will live. But you were always full of fears."
+
+"Yes. You used to say that long ago."
+
+Colonel Boyce winced again. "Eh, you get in your thrusts, Kate, I swear I
+did what I could to save him."
+
+"I could not have borne to come to you else."
+
+"Humph. I see no good in your coming. There's little comfort for you or
+me in seeing each other. I suppose it's your damned duty."
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"Oh Lud, then begone and let's have done with it all."
+
+"I want to stay till you are well."
+
+"Aye, faith, it's comfortable to see me on my back and helpless."
+
+Mrs. Weston did not answer for a moment. She was busy with setting his
+table in order. "I want to have some right somewhere. She is with Harry."
+
+"By God, Kate, you're a good soul," Colonel Boyce cried.
+
+"I am not. I am jealous of her," Mrs. Weston said with a sob.
+
+"Does Harry know of you?"
+
+"What does it matter? He'll not care now."
+
+"Kate--come here, child."
+
+"No. No. I am not crying," Mrs. Weston said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+HARRY WAKES UP
+
+
+Harry lay asleep when Alison came into his room.
+
+She made sure of that and sat herself beside him to wait. It was not, you
+know, a thing which she did well. She looked down at him gravely.
+Afterwards Harry would accuse her that what first she felt was how little
+and miserable a man she had taken to herself.
+
+He lay there very still and his breath hardly stirred him. Indeed, the
+surgery of Mr. Rolfe had bound him up so tightly that he was in armour
+from waist to neck. After a moment, she started and trembled and bent
+over him and put her cheek close to his lips. She felt his breath and
+rose again slowly almost as pale as he. That cheating fear had stabbed
+cruelly, and still it would not let her be. His face was so thin, so
+white and utterly tired. The life was drained out of him....
+
+She sat beside him, still but for the beat of her bosom, and it seemed
+that the consciousness in her was falling from a height or galloping
+against the wind. She seemed to try to stop and could not.
+
+She tried to change the fashion of her thought and had no power in that
+either. It was a strange, half-angry, half-contemptuous pity that moved
+in her, and a fever of impatience. He was wicked to be struck down so,
+rent, impotent. Why must the wretch go plunging out into the world and
+measure himself against these swashbuckling conspirators? He had no
+equipment for it. He was fated to end it with disaster. Faith, it was a
+cruel folly to throw himself away and drag up her life by the roots as he
+fell. She needed him--needed him quick and eager, and there he lay, a
+shrunken thing that could use only gentleness, help, a tedious, trivial
+service like a child.
+
+He was humiliated, a condition not to be borne in her man. As she watched
+him, she saw Geoffrey Waverton rise between them, blusterous and
+menacing, and his lustiness mocked at the still, helpless body. But on
+that all other feeling was lost in a fever of hate of Mr. Waverton. He
+was branded with every contemptible sin that she knew, she ached to have
+him suffer, and (unaware of the contusions and extravasations
+administered by Mr. O'Connor) tried to console herself by recalling the
+ignominious condition of Geoffrey in the hands of the truculent gentlemen
+at Highgate. Bah, the coward was dishonoured for ever, at least. He would
+never dare show his face in town or country. How could he? Mr. Hadley
+would spit him like a joint. The good Charles! She found some consolation
+in the memory of Mr. Hadley's sardonic contempt. Nay, but the others,
+that fire-eating little Scotsman and his lank friend, they were of the
+same scornful mind about Mr. Waverton. His blusterous bullying went for
+nothing with them but to call for more disdain. They had no doubt that he
+cut a miserable figure, that it was he who was humiliated in the affair.
+And so all men would think, indeed. It was only a fool of a woman who
+could be imposed upon by his brag, only a mean, detestable woman who
+could suppose Harry defeated.
+
+Why, Harry must needs have done nobly to enlist these men on his side. He
+was nothing to Captain McBean, nothing but what he had done, and yet
+McBean took up his cause with a perfect devotion, cared for nothing but
+to punish his enemies, and to assure his safety. Faith, the little man
+would be as glad to thrash her as to overthrow Master Geoffrey. He had
+come near it, indeed. She smiled a little. The absurd imagination was not
+unpleasant. Monsieur was welcome to beat her if it would bring Harry any
+comfort. Aye, it would be very good for her. She would be glad to show
+Harry the stripes. Nay, but it was Harry who should beat her--only he
+never would. And these fantastics were swept away in a wave of
+tenderness.
+
+Mr. Harry was not good at making others suffer. He left it to his wife,
+poor lad, and she--she had done it greedily. Well. There was to be an end
+of that. Pray God he might ever be strong enough to hurt her. She bent
+over him in this queer mood, and her eyes were dim, and she kissed him,
+and whispered to herself--to him. Yes. She must make him hurt her. She
+must have pain of him to bear....
+
+Harry slept on. She began to caress his pillow, and crooned over him like
+a mother with her child, and found herself blushing and was still and
+silent again. Indeed, she was detestable. To make a show of fondling
+after having driven him to the edge of death! To chatter and flutter
+about him when he had no more than strength enough for sleep! Why, this
+was the very way for a light o' love. And, indeed, she was no better,
+wanting him only for her pleasure, for what he would give, watching
+greedily till he should be fit to serve her turn again. Yes, that was the
+only way of love Mrs. Alison understood.
+
+It was some satisfaction to scold herself, to make herself believe that
+she was vile. For she wanted to suffer, she wanted to be humbled. Not so
+much for the comfort of penance, not even for the luxury of sensation
+which makes self-torture pleasure, but that she might be sure of
+realizing her sins against the love which was now in command of all her
+being, and go on to serve it with a clean devotion. One thing only was
+worth doing, in one thing only could there be honour and joy, to make him
+welcome her and have delight in her... And so she fell among dreams....
+
+She saw something glitter on the table by the bed, and idly put out her
+hand for it. She found herself looking at the diamonds of the Pretender's
+watch. How did Harry come to such a gorgeous toy? J.R., the diamonds
+wrote. Who was J.R.?
+
+"Alison," Harry said.
+
+She started, stared at him, and stood up. His eyes were open, and he
+frowned a little.
+
+"Alison? It is you?" he said, and rubbed at his eyes.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Why have you come?"
+
+She fell on her knees by the bed. "Oh, Harry, Harry," she murmured, and
+hid her face.
+
+"Is it true?"
+
+"I will be true," she sobbed.
+
+"I want to see you."
+
+She showed him her face pale and wet with tears....
+
+After a while, "Why have you come?" he said again.
+
+"Harry, I knew about Geoffrey. He told me."
+
+"You--knew?"
+
+I wrote you warning. I begged you come back to me. Oh, Harry, Harry, you
+are proud."
+
+"I had no warning. Proud? Oh, yes, I am proud. What were you with
+Geoffrey?"
+
+"Harry! Oh, Harry! No, it's fair. Well. I tried to trick him for your
+sake to save you."
+
+"I am obliged for your care of me."
+
+She cried out "Ah, God," and hid her face again. Harry lay still and
+white as death.... "Oh, Harry, you torture me," she murmured. "You have
+the right. No man but you has ever had a thought of me. Harry--I want to
+pray you--oh, I want to lie at your feet. Only believe in me--use
+me--take me again."
+
+"I am a fool," Harry said, and she looked up and saw that he, too, was
+crying. "Oh, curse the wound," he said hoarsely. "Egad, I am damned
+feeble, child."
+
+"I love you, I love you," she sobbed, and pressed her face to his....
+"Oh, Harry, I am wicked."
+
+She raised herself. "You are hurt, and I wear you out."
+
+"That's a brag." Harry smiled faintly, "It takes more than you can give
+to kill me, ma'am."
+
+"Ah, don't."
+
+"Stand up and let me look at you." Which she did, and made parade of her
+beauty, smiling through tears. "Aye, you're a splendid woman," and his
+eyes brightened.
+
+She made him a curtsy. "It's at your will, sir." "Yes, and why? Why? What
+made you come back?"
+
+"My dear!" She held out her arms to him. "I have wanted you ever since I
+lost you. And now--now I am nothing unless you want me."
+
+"Oh, be easy. There is plenty of you, and I want it all."
+
+"Can you say so? Ah, Harry, you have known enough bad that's me, cruel
+and greedy and hard and cheating. I have always taken, and given
+nothing back."
+
+"Damn your humilities," Harry said.
+
+"Oh, sir, but I want them, my new humilities. I have nothing else to
+cover my nakedness."
+
+"You look better without them, ma'am."
+
+"Fie, I will stop your mouth." But it was a cup of herb water that she
+offered him instead of a kiss.
+
+"You are a cheat," Harry spluttered. "You presume on my infirmities."
+
+"No. No. I have made you talk too much. You must be still and rest
+again."
+
+"Burn your maternal care! I have hardly seen you yet a minute."
+
+"A minute! Oh!" She looked at the jewelled watch. "Aye, sir, an hour.
+And what's this pretty toy?"
+
+Harry laughed. "Why, now I have you. Sure, ma'am, it's a love token."
+
+"I shall go away, sir."
+
+"Not till you come by the secret. I know you."
+
+His ear was pinched. "J.R. Who is J.R., sir?"
+
+"Jemima Regina. A queen of beauty, ma'am. She fell in love with my nose.
+And offered me a thousand pound for it."
+
+"Harry! I am going to say good night."
+
+"Hear the truth, Alison. Do you remember--you told me I was born to be a
+highwayman--my stand-and-deliver stare--my--"
+
+"Oh! Don't play so. I was a fiend when I taunted you so."
+
+"Why, child, it's nothing. Come then--J.R., it's Jacobus Rex, the poor
+lad, Prince James, who will never be a king, God help him. He gave me
+that for the memory of some little service I did him. McBean brought the
+toy to-day."
+
+Alison nodded. "I will have that story from Captain McBean, sir. You tell
+stories mighty ill, do you know--highwayman. Yes, Harry, you are that.
+You pillage us all. Love, honour, you win it from all. And I--I am the
+last to know you."
+
+"Bah, you will never be a wife," Harry said. "You have too much
+imagination. But you make a mighty fine lover, my dear."
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Highwayman, by H. C. Bailey
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Highwayman, by H.C. Bailey
+
+Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
+copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing
+this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook.
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: The Highwayman
+
+Author: H.C. Bailey
+
+Release Date: January, 2006 [EBook #9749]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 15, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HIGHWAYMAN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan
+and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+ THE HIGHWAYMAN
+
+ BY
+
+ H. C. BAILEY
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. THE COMPLETE HERO
+
+ II. THE HOUSE OF WAVERTON
+
+ III. A MAN OF MANY WORLDS
+
+ IV. A GENTLEMAN'S PURSE
+
+ V. THE WORLD'S A MIRACLE
+
+ VI. HARRY IS NOT GRATEFUL
+
+ VII. GENEROSITY OF A FATHER
+
+ VIII. MISS LAMBOURNE LOOKS SIDEWAYS
+
+ IX. ANGER OF AN UNCLE
+
+ X. YOUNG BLOOD
+
+ XI. ABSENCE OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+ XII. IN HASTE
+
+ XIII. DISTRESS OF A MOTHER
+
+ XIV. SPECTATORS OF PARADISE
+
+ XV. MRS. BOYCE
+
+ XVI. THE AFFAIR OF SIR GEORGE
+
+ XVII. RETURN OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+ XVIII. HARRY IS DISMISSED
+
+ XIX. ALISON FINDS FRIENDS
+
+ XX. RETURN OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+ XXI. CONSOLATIONS BY A FATHER
+
+ XXII. TWO'S COMPANY
+
+ XXIII. THE HOUSE IN KENSINGTON
+
+ XXIV. QUEEN ANNE IS DEAD
+
+ XXV. SAUVE QUI PEUT
+
+ XXVI. REVELATIONS
+
+ XXVII. VIRTUE IS ITS OWN REWARD
+
+ XXVIII. IN THE TAP
+
+ XXIX. ALISON KNEELS
+
+ XXX. EMOTIONS BY MR. WAVERTON
+
+ XXXI. CAPTAIN McBEAN TAKES HORSE
+
+ XXXII. PERPLEXITIES OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+ XXXIII. REMORSE OF COLONEL BOYCE
+
+ XXXIV. HARRY WAKES UP
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE COMPLETE HERO
+
+
+Harry Boyce addressed Queen Anne in glittering verse. She was not
+present. She had, however, no cause to regret that, for he was tramping
+the Great North Road at four miles by the hour--a pace far beyond the
+capacity of Her Majesty's legs; and his verses were Latin--a language not
+within the capacity of Her Majesty's mind. Her absence gave him no grief.
+In all his twenty-four years he could not remember being grieved by
+anyone's absence. His general content was never diminished at finding
+himself alone. He chose the Queen as the subject of his verses merely
+because he did not admire her. She appeared to him then, as to later
+generations, a woman ineffectual and without interest; a dull woman
+physically, mentally, and perhaps morally; just the woman upon whom it
+would be hardest to make an encomium of any splendour. So he was heartily
+ingenious over his alcaics, and relished them.
+
+From this you may divine much that you have to know about the soul of
+Harry Boyce. It was more given to mockery than enthusiasms, apter to
+criticisms than devotion, not very gentle nor very kind, and so quite
+satisfied with itself and by itself. To be sure, it was yet only
+twenty-four.
+
+You discover also other things less fundamental. He was something of a
+scholar, as scholarship was reckoned in those placid days. He had even
+some Greek--more than Mr. Pope and quite as much as Mr. Addison. His
+Latin verses would have brought him a fellowship at Merton if he had
+been willing to take Holy Orders, "I may take them indeed; but how
+believe they have been given me?" quoth he to the Warden with a tilt of
+one eyebrow. Whereat the Warden, aghast, wrote him off as a youth
+unreasonable, impracticable, and impish. Many others had the same
+opinion of Harry Boyce before the world was done with him. Few of them
+saw in his antics the uncertain spasms of too tender a conscience. But
+you must judge.
+
+Of course he was poor. He could only boast a bob wig, a base thing,
+which, for all the show it made, might have been a man's own hair. He
+wore no sword. His hat lacked feather and lace. His coat and breeches
+were but black drugget, shiny at each corner of him and rusty everywhere.
+His stockings were worsted, and darned even on his excellent calves. His
+shoes had strings where buckles should have been, and mere black
+heels--and low heels at that. As you know, he could walk at a round pace
+with them--a preposterous, vulgar thing. There was nothing in him to give
+this poverty a romantical air. To be sure, he had admirable legs, but the
+rest was neither good nor bad. He was of the middle size and a wholesome
+complexion. You would look at him long and see nothing rare enough to be
+worth looking at. If you looked longer yet you might begin to be
+surprised: his so ordinary face was extraordinary in its lack of
+expression.
+
+The man who owned it must be either very dull of heart and mind, or
+self-contained and of self-control beyond the common. But whatever the
+heart might be, no one ever took the eyes for the eyes of a fool. They
+were keen, alert, perpetually on guard. There is a letter extant--it was
+indeed a dear friend who wrote it--which mocks at Harry for his "curst
+stand-and-deliver stare." But it is a queer thing that most men had to
+know Harry Boyce a long time before they remarked that his eyes were not
+quite of the same colour. The common English grey-green-blue was in both
+of them, but one had a bluer glint than the other. The oddity, when it
+was discovered, seemed to make the challenge of the eyes more defiant and
+more baffling, as though they gleamed from the shadow of a mask.
+
+Not that anyone cared yet whether he wore a mask or his soul in that
+placid, ordinary face. Who should care a pinch of snuff for "a scholar
+just from his college broke loose" with a penny farthing in his pocket,
+who had to pioneer young gentlemen through their Horace and their Tully
+for his bed and board? When you meet him, Harry Boyce was happy in having
+caught for his pupil a young fellow who had not merely money but brains,
+and so sublime a condescension that Harry was not sent away from table
+with the parson when the puddings came. Mr. Geoffrey Waverton was pleased
+to have a value for him, and defended him from his natural duty of being
+gentleman usher to Lady Waverton. So, Mr. Waverton having taken horse,
+Harry was free to go walking.
+
+It was late in a wet autumn, and all the clay of Middlesex slippery as
+butter and, withal, affectionate as warm glue. Harry kept to the highway.
+Though its miles of mud and water were, on the surface, even worse than
+the too green meadows or the gleaming brown furrows of plough land, a
+careful man could count upon its letting him go no further than knee
+deep. When he came to Whetstone, Harry's feet were brown, shapeless,
+weighty masses, but he had not lost either shoe, and he was still in
+hopes of reaching Barnet and a pint of small beer before it was time to
+struggle back. At the worst a dry throat and wet legs were a cheap price
+for escaping the voice of Lady Waverton, who, in the afternoons, read the
+romances of Mlle. de Scudery aloud.
+
+He could see the tufts of smoke above Barnet and its church on the
+hill-top. He was winding down to the bottom of the valley from which that
+hill rises, when eloquence arrested him. He may at other times have heard
+profanity as copious, but never profanity so vehement or at such speed.
+The orator was a woman.
+
+Harry stood to listen with critical admiration. Madame mixed the ugly and
+the pleasant rarely; she made a charming grotesque. Her mind was very far
+from nice and provided her with amazing images; but she had a pretty,
+womanly voice, and hard though she drove it, it would not break to one
+ugly note. Disgusting epithets, mean threats, poured out in mellow
+music. Harry splashed on round the corner. He was eager to see her.
+
+In the morass at the cross-lanes by the green, a coach was stuck--a coach
+of splendour. It was a huge thing as big as a room, half glass, half gold
+and garter blue, and it swayed luxuriously on its great springs. Six
+horses heaved at it in vain with great splashing and squelching, and a
+whole company of servants, some mounted, some afoot, struggled with them.
+
+The profane woman had half her body and two gesticulating arms out of the
+coach window. She was plainly neither a drab nor in liquor. Harry halted
+out of range of the splashes to examine and enjoy her. She had been
+comely, and still could hold a man's eye with her curves of neck and
+bosom. The piquant features must have been adorable before they sharpened
+and her cheeks faded and the lines came. Her abundant hair must once have
+been gold, and was not yet altogether grey.
+
+"You filthy slug," said she. "Samuel! Stand to it, I say. Damme, I'll
+have a whip about that loose belly of yours! Now pull, you swine, pull.
+Odso, flog the black horse. You, devil broil your bones, lay on to him.
+What now? Od rot you, Antony, you'll see no money this month, you--" She
+became unprintable. As she took breath again, she saw Harry Boyce calmly
+contemplative. "You dog, who bade you stand and gape? Go, give a hand
+there, I say."
+
+Harry touched his hat. "By your leave, ma'am, I am too busy admiring
+you."
+
+"William, put that rogue into the ditch," said she.
+
+All this while a man in the coach had been writing, calmly intent upon
+his tablets as though there was not a sound or a rage within a mile. He
+now stood up, and, while his lady was still execrating through one door
+of the coach, he opened the other and came out. Two of the servants,
+obedient to the lady's oaths, were approaching Harry, who waited them
+with calm and a swinging stick. The man waved his hand at them and they
+turned tail. But he had no further interest in Harry. He stood to watch
+the struggles of his horses and his men. He was of some height, and,
+though past middle age, bore himself with singular grace and vigour. He
+had still a rarely handsome face--too handsome, by far, for Harry's
+taste. The features were of an impossible, absurd perfection. There was
+something superhuman or fatuous, at least something vastly irritating, in
+his assured calm, his air of blandly confident supremacy.
+
+He walked on to the leaders and, with a gesture and a word, set the whole
+team pulling at an angle. Meanwhile the lady had earnestly continued her
+abusive orders, but none of the servants now professed to heed her.
+Dragging the horses on, or labouring hand and shoulder at the wheels,
+they were now effective, and they watched the man's eye as though it were
+an inspiration. Wondering why he did, Harry, too, put his weight on a
+wheel. The horses found a footing in the mire, the coach was dragged on
+to the higher, firmer ground beyond.
+
+My lady subsided. The man came back to the coach and touched his hat to
+Harry. "I'm obliged for your help, sir," he said, and climbed in. They
+drove away towards London.
+
+As the servants swung to their saddles, "Who's your obscene lady?"
+said Harry.
+
+"What, don't you know him, bumpkin?"
+
+"She will never be him. Her shape is all provocative she."
+
+This humble wit was not remarked. His ignorance occupied them, "Oh Lud,
+not to know the Old Corporal!"
+
+One of Harry's eyebrows went up. "That the Old Corporal? Faith, I am
+sorry for him."
+
+He received a handful of mud in his face. With a cry of "Rot your
+impudence," they splashed off.
+
+While he wiped the mud out of his eyes, Harry felt a very comfortable
+self-satisfaction. It was agreeable to pity His Grace of Marlborough. For
+the Duke of Marlborough was still the greatest man in Europe, the
+greatest man in the world--credibly the greatest man that ever lived. A
+pleasant fool, to marry such a wife and to keep her.
+
+Harry Boyce at no time in his life had much admiration for human
+eminence. In this, his hungry youth, he was set upon despising rank and
+power, great fame and pure virtue, as no more than the luck of fools. He
+would always atone by finding sympathy and excuses for any rogue's
+roguery. Highly fortified in this faith by the exhibition of
+Marlborough's matrimonial happiness, he trudged back.
+
+The delay over the coach had left him no time for small ale at Barnet.
+Mr. Waverton, though amiably pleased to deliver Harry from attendance on
+his mother, required constant attendance on himself. He would be, in his
+superb way, disagreeable if Harry were not in waiting when he was wanted
+to take a hand at ombre. Harry liked Mr. Waverton well enough, as well as
+he liked anybody, but found him in the part of offended majesty
+intolerable. So there was some hard walking back to Whetstone. On the way
+his temper was not sweetened by two horsemen at the gallop who gave him a
+shower-bath of mud.
+
+As he came through the village, behold another coach labouring up to the
+high road from Totteridge lane. This had but four horses, no array of
+outriders, no gilt splendours. It was a sober, old-fashioned thing, and
+it rumbled on at a sober gait. "Some city ma'am," Harry sneered at it,
+"much the same shape as her horses."
+
+But half an hour after he saw it again. Where the road was dark through a
+thicket it had come to a stand. "Oh Lud," said Harry, "here's more fair
+madames in the mud. They may sit on it till they hatch it for me." But he
+wondered a little. It was indeed nothing very strange in such an autumn
+to find a coach stuck upon the highway. But two for one afternoon, two so
+near was a generous provision. And hereabouts, where the road ran level
+and high, was a strange place for a coach to choose to stick. "Madame
+seems to be a gross girl," quoth Harry.
+
+And then he saw what made him step out. There were two men on horseback
+by the halted coach--two men with black upon their faces which must be
+masks, and that in their hands which must be pistols.
+
+"Egad, the road's joyful to-night," said Harry. "And two and one make
+three," and he began to run, and arrived.
+
+Of the two highwaymen one was dismounted. The other, holding his friend's
+horse, held also a pistol at the coachman's head, muttering lurid threats
+of what he would do if the coachman drove on. The dismounted man was half
+inside the coach where two women shrank from him, and thence his
+blusterous voice proceeded, "Now, my blowens, hand over, or I'll rummage
+you. A skinny purse? Come, now, you've more than that. What's under your
+legs, fatty? Stand up, I say. Ay, hand out the jewel-box. Now, my tackle,
+what ha' you got aboard? What's under that pretty tucker?" He threw the
+jewel-case out into the mud and, leaning across one woman, reached with a
+fat, foul hand to the younger bosom beyond.
+
+He was prevented by a whistle and a cry, "Behind you, Ben." His companion
+announced the arrival of Harry.
+
+Ben came out of the coach with an oath and thrust his pistol into Harry's
+face. "Good e'en to you, bully. Now cut and run or I'll drill you. Via,
+my poppet."
+
+Harry looked along the pistol and stood fast. The highwayman was no
+bigger than he, and bloated. "I am studying arithmetic, Benjamin," said
+he.
+
+"Burn your eyes, be off with you; run while you may."
+
+Harry laughed and swung his stick at the mud. "But, I wonder, is it
+addition or subtraction? Is it two and one makes three, or--"
+
+"Kick the bumpkin into the ditch, Ben," the man on horseback advised.
+
+"Off with you," Benjamin thrust him back, and in the act the pistol
+wavered. Harry slashed with his stick at the pistol hand. A yell, an
+oath, and the shot came together--a shot which went into the mud and sent
+it spattering about them. Harry sprang away from Benjamin's rush and
+brought his stick down on the hindquarters of the horses. They plunged
+forward, and the man in the saddle, wrestling with them, let off another
+aimless shot. Harry dodged round them and lashed them again, and they
+bolted down the road. He returned to fling himself upon Benjamin, who was
+ramming another charge into his pistol. "It seems to be subtraction,
+Benjamin," said he, embracing the man fervently. "One from two leaves
+one," and they swayed together, and he found Benjamin's body soft.
+
+Benjamin, panting, cursed him. "Od rot you, why must you meddle, bully?
+What's your will, burn you? Ha' done now, and--" Benjamin went down on
+his back in the mud with Harry on top of him. "Ugh! What's the game,
+bully?"
+
+"I think you call it the high toby," said Harry delicately and began to
+sing to the tune of a catch:
+
+"Oh, three merry men, three merry men, three highwaymen were we.
+You in a quag and he on a nag and I on top of the three."
+
+"Lord love you, are you on the road?" Benjamin cried. "Why, rot you,
+did you want a share then? You should ha' said so, bully. Come on now, my
+dear, let's up. We do be gentlemen and share fair enough."
+
+"I warrant you I am having my share," Harry laughed; "and I like it very
+well. But oh, Benjamin, there would have been nought to share if I had
+not come up. No fun at all, Benjamin." He wrenched the pistol away. "'Tis
+I have made the business joyous. You are a dull fellow by yourself."
+
+"Rot you," said Benjamin frankly. "When Ned comes back he'll shoot you
+like vermin."
+
+On which they both heard horses, and both, according to their
+abilities--Benjamin in the mud, and Harry keeping a sure hold of
+him--wriggled to look for them.
+
+Harry laughed. It was certainly not a returning Ned. These horses came
+from the other way, and there were four of them and each had a rider. "I
+fear your Ned will come too late, Benjamin--if, by the grace of God, he
+comes at all." So said Harry, chuckling, and to his amazement Benjamin
+also laughed. Why should Benjamin find consolation in the coming of this
+_posse_? It was not credible that they could be allies of his. Highwaymen
+did not work in gangs of half a dozen.
+
+The four horsemen, urged by the shots or by what they saw, came at a
+gallop and reined up almost on top of Harry and Benjamin. One of them, a
+little man with a lean, brown face, called out, "By your leave, sir!
+What's this?"
+
+"It's a rude fellow, sir," Harry said. "I fear a lewd fellow. By trade a
+highwayman. The highway, indeed, is his life's love, his adored mistress.
+Observe how he cleaves to it." He compressed Benjamin, who squelched,
+into the mud, and rose, standing on Benjamin's chest and stomach.
+
+Benjamin groaned, and the eyes behind his mask rolled towards the little
+man.
+
+"Filthy dog," that little man said with sincere disgust. "Can I serve
+you, sir?" he touched his hat to the women in the coach.
+
+"Why, Benjamin has a friend, one Ned. Ned hath a pistol or so and two
+horses which have bolted with him. But he may yet persuade them to bring
+back his pistols and him. Now, if you would be so good, it would be
+convenient in you to ride on and destroy Ned."
+
+"It's a pleasure, sir," the little man showed his teeth. "And the fat
+rogue there, can I help you with him? Shall we take him on to the
+constables?"
+
+"Oh, I thank you, but my Benjamin is docile. I'll e'en tie him up with
+his garters, and all will be well."
+
+The little man scowled at Benjamin. "I shall hope to be at his hanging,"
+he said incisively. "Sir, your most obedient! Ladies!" he bobbed at them
+and rode off, his three companions close about him in eager talk.
+
+As they went, Benjamin let out a cry of anguish: "Captain!"
+
+The little man and his company used their spurs.
+
+Harry looked at their hurry and then down at Benjamin.
+
+"Now why did you call him that, my Benjamin?" said he. "Indeed, why did
+you call on him at all?"
+
+From behind the mask Benjamin's prominent eyes stared sullenly. He
+said nothing.
+
+Harry shook his head. "I feel that I do not know you, Benjamin. I must
+see more of you," With which he fell upon the man again and twitched
+off the mask. The wig came with it. Benjamin was revealed the owner of
+a big, bald, shiny head with a face which was puffed and purple. "You
+were right, Benjamin," said Harry sadly, "You were kind. To wear a mask
+was charity, nay, decency--what breeches are to other men. That obese
+and flaccid nose--pah, let us talk of something else." He lay upon
+Benjamin and tugged at his sword-belt. Benjamin writhed and groaned.
+His sword was caught underneath him, the hilt deep in the small of his
+back. Harry hauled the sword-belt off at last and gripped at Benjamin's
+wrists. He began to struggle again. "Do not be troublesome or I'll tap
+the beer on your brain. So." He hauled the belt taut about the fighting
+arms and made all fast. Then he sat himself on Benjamin's legs, which
+thus ceased to be turbulent, and, taking off the garters, therewith
+tied the ankles together.
+
+Sighing satisfaction, Harry picked up the pistol and sword, spoils of
+victory, and rose at his leisure. He contemplated the hapless highwayman
+with benign interest for a moment, and turned to the coach. "You are
+still there, ladies? Benjamin is flattered and so am I. But the play is
+over. He will not be amusing for some time, and at any moment he may be
+profane. I see him bursting with it. Pray drive on and remove your chaste
+ears." He restored to them the jewel-case.
+
+"Put him up on the box, sir," the younger woman cried.
+
+"I beg your pardon, madame?"
+
+"We will take him to the constables at Finchley."
+
+"But why? He is beautiful there, my Benjamin, and I doubt he was never
+beautiful before. And I have planted him so firmly. I think if we leave
+him there he may grow and blossom. Do not dig him up again yet. Imagine
+Benjamin in flower! A thing to dream of."
+
+"You are pleased to be witty, sir. Come, we have lost time enough. Put
+the rogue up, and do you mount with us."
+
+Harry became aware that this young woman had a brow of pride. It was
+ample and broad and, after the Greek manner, it rose almost in a line
+with her admirable nose. A noble head, to be sure, but alarming to a mere
+human man. So Harry thought, and he touched his hat and said: "Madame,
+your most humble. Pray what do you want with my Benjamin? Your gentle
+heart would never have him hanged."
+
+Her eyes made Harry feel that he was impudent, which, unhappily, amused
+him. "I desire the fellow should be given up to the law, sir," she said
+coldly. "Have you anything against it?"
+
+"Oh, ma'am, a thousand things, with which I'll not weary you. For I see
+that you would not understand. You are very young (as I hope). Perhaps
+you may soon grow older (which I pray for you). Let this suffice then.
+My Benjamin may deserve a hanging. Who knows? We are not God, ma'am,
+neither you nor I. Therefore I have no mind to be a hangman. And
+you--why, you are young enough to wait another occasion. And so I give
+you good-night. Home, coachman, home."
+
+The young woman stared at him as though he were grovelling stupidity, and
+then lay back on her cushions with a "You will drive on, Samuel."
+
+Harry made his bow, and then, as the coach began to move, there was a
+cry: "Alison! Alison! It is not right!" The older woman leaned forward,
+and for the first time he remarked a gentle, motherly face, much lined
+and worn. "Sure, sir, you will ride with us," she said, and he liked the
+voice. "We may carry you home."
+
+Harry smiled at her. "Nay, ma'am. I am too dirty for such fine company."
+
+"Drive on," said Mistress Alison. And the coach rolled away.
+
+Harry looked down at the wretched Benjamin, whose eyes answered with
+apprehension and anxiety. "What's the game?" said Benjamin hoarsely. "I
+say, master--what d'ye want with me?"
+
+Harry did not answer. He was finding that motherly face, that pleasant
+voice, curiously vivid still. This annoyed him, and he forced himself
+back with a jerk to the oddity of events. "A queer business, my
+Benjamin," he said. "Who was your captain, I wonder?"
+
+Benjamin scowled. "I know nought o' no captain."
+
+"Ah, I thought you did. But I fear you have annoyed the captain,
+Benjamin. Now what had you done--or what had you not done?"
+
+"It's not fair, master," Benjamin whined. "You do be making game of me,
+and me beat."
+
+"I am rebuked, Benjamin. Good-night."
+
+"Oons, ye won't leave me so?" Benjamin howled. "I ha' done you no harm,
+master. Come now, play fair. What d'ye want of me?"
+
+"Nothing, Benjamin, nothing. I like you very well. You are a beautiful
+mystery. Pleasant dreams."
+
+The hapless Benjamin howled after him long and loud. Thereby Harry, who
+had a musical ear, was spurred to his best pace. "It's a vile voice," he
+reflected; "like Lady Waverton's. The marmoreal Alison was right. He
+would be better hanged. But so also would Lady Waverton. She will
+acridly want to know why I am late. Well! It will be a melancholy
+satisfaction not to tell her. That will also annoy Geoffrey, who'll
+magnificently indicate that I owe him an apology. The poor Geoffrey! He
+is so fond of himself!"
+
+His evening was as pleasant as he had anticipated. He won two shillings
+from Lady Waverton at ombre, which made her angry; and lost them to
+Geoffrey, which made him melancholy. For Mr. Waverton loved (in small
+things) to be a martyr.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE HOUSE OF WAVERTON
+
+
+Mr. Waverton had an idea in his head. That was not the least unusual. It
+was, unhappily, a wrong one. That was not unusual either. We must have a
+trifle of Latin. Mr. Waverton, studying Horace, desired to translate,
+_Civium ardor prava jubentium_ "the wicked ardour of the overbearing
+citizens." In vain Harry urged that he was outraging grammar. Mr.
+Waverton did not believe him, did not want to believe him--the same
+thing. Mr. Waverton was convinced that he had an insight into the soul of
+Horace which Harry's pedantic eyes could not share. He explained, as one
+explains to a dull child, the rare poetic beauty of the sentiment which
+he had produced. The hero whom Horace was celebrating, you know, was the
+man superior to the common herd. Now common men (as even Harry might be
+aware) are all overbearing. It is this quality in the vulgar which most
+distresses fine souls (like Mr. Waverton) who desire nothing but their
+just rights.
+
+"I dare say it is," Harry yawned. "If Horace had wanted to mean that, he
+would have said so."
+
+"I often think, Harry, you dry scholars have no sense for the thought of
+a poet," said Mr. Waverton elegantly, and lay back in his chair and
+surveyed Harry.
+
+He was a handsome lad and knew how to set it off. He had height and
+bulk--almost too much of that indeed, and so made light of it by a
+careless, lounging ease. At this time he was only twenty-two, but of a
+precocious maturity. He had the self-possession--as well as the
+full-bottomed wig--of experience and worldly wisdom, and would have liked
+to hear you say so. In its dark aquiline style his face was finely
+moulded and imposing, and already it had a massive gravity. "A mighty
+grand fellow indeed," said Lady Dorchester once, "if only his mouth had
+grown since he was a baby." It has to be admitted that Mr. Waverton's
+mouth, a small, pretty feature, was oddly assorted with the haughty
+manner in which the rest of him was constructed. The ladies who lamented
+that were, for the most part, consoled by his eyes--large, dark eyes of a
+liquid melancholy. But my Lord Wharton complained that they looked at him
+like a hound's.
+
+Mr. Waverton was an only son, and fatherless. He had also great
+possessions. From his house of Tetherdown all the fields that he could
+see stretching away to the Essex border were of his inheritance. His
+mother was no wiser than she should have been. She consisted spiritually
+of admiration for herself, for the family into which she had married, and
+the son whom she had borne. "After all," said Harry Boyce in moments of
+geniality, "it's wonderful the boy has come out of it so well."
+
+Mr. Waverton, thanks to vacillation of himself and his mother, doubt as
+to what career, what manner of education, what university, could be
+worthy his talents, went up to Oxford at last and (for those days) very
+late. After doing nothing for another year or two, he decided (which was
+also unusual for a gentleman of means in those days) that he had a genius
+in pure literature. Therefore Harry was hired to decorate him with all
+the elegances of Greek and Latin.
+
+The appointment was considered a great prize for a lad so awkward as
+Harry Boyce. It might well end in a luxurious competence--a stewardship,
+for example, and marriage with my lady's maid. "That is, if you play your
+cards well, sirrah," the Sub-Warden felt it his duty to warn Harry's
+difficult temper.
+
+"Oh, sir, I could never play cards," said Harry, for the Sub-Warden was a
+master at picquet. "I am too honest."
+
+Yet he had not fallen out with Mr. Waverton. It is probable that he was
+careful to keep on good terms with his bread and butter. But he had
+always, I believe, a kindness for Geoffrey Waverton, and bore no ill will
+for his parade of supremacy. Tyranny in small things, indeed, Mr.
+Waverton did not affect. He had a desire to be magnificent. Those who did
+not cross him, those who were content to be his inferiors, found him
+amiable enough and, on occasion, generous....
+
+"Shall we try another line, Mr. Waverton?" said Harry wearily.
+
+"I have a mind to make an epigram," Mr. Waverton announced. "The
+arrogance of the vulgar, the--the uninstructed--perhaps I lack the _mot
+juste_, but _quand meme_--the mansuetude of the loftier mind. A fine
+antithesis that, I think." He stood up, walked to the window, and looked
+out. Away down the hill the fields lay in a mellow mist, the kindly
+autumn sun made the copses glow golden; it was a benign scene, apt to
+encourage wit. Mr. Waverton lisped in numbers, but the numbers did not
+come. He turned to seek stimulus from Harry. "You relish the thought?"
+
+"It is a perfect subject for your style," said Harry.
+
+Mr. Waverton smiled, and turned again to the window for productive
+meditation.
+
+A third man came lounging in, unheard by Mr. Waverton's rapt mind. He
+opened his eyes at the back which Mr. Waverton turned upon Harry and the
+space between them. "Why, Geoffrey, have you been very stupid this
+morning? And has schoolmaster stood you in the corner? Well done, Mr.
+Boyce. I always told you, spare the rod and spoil the child. Shall I go
+cut a birch for you?"
+
+"I wonder you are not tired of that old jest, Charles," said Waverton
+with a dignity which did not permit him to turn round.
+
+"Never while it annoys you, child."
+
+"Mr. Waverton is in labour with a poem," Harry explained.
+
+"And it's indecent in me to be present at the ceremony? Well, Geoffrey,
+postpone the birth." He sat himself down at his ease in Geoffrey's chair.
+He was a compact man with only one arm. He looked ten years older than
+Geoffrey and was, in fact, five. The campaign in Flanders which had
+destroyed his right arm had set and hardened a frame and face by nature
+solid enough. That face was long and angular, with a heavy chin and an
+expression of sardonic complacency oddly increased by the jauntiness of
+its shabby brown wig.
+
+Waverton turned round wearily upon the unwelcome guest. "Well, Charles,
+what is it?"
+
+"It is nothing. My dear Geoffrey, if I had anything to do or anything to
+say why should I come to you?"
+
+"_Merci_, monsieur," Waverton smiled gracious indulgence.
+
+Mr. Hadley chuckled, and in French replied: "Yes, let's talk French; it
+embellishes our simple wit and elevates our souls above the vulgar."
+
+There is reason to believe that Waverton liked his French better in
+fragments than continuously. He still smiled condescension, but risked no
+other answer.
+
+"Come, Geoffrey, what's the news?" Mr. Hadley reverted to English.
+"Could you say your lessons this morning? And did you wear a new coat
+last night?"
+
+"You may go if you will, Harry. Mr. Hadley will be talking for some
+time," Waverton said. "Indeed, he may, perhaps, have something to say."
+
+Harry was used to being turned out for any reason or none. He well
+understood that Waverton was not fond of an audience when he was being
+laughed at. "If you please," he said, and made his bow to Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Why, what's the matter? I don't bite. You are too meek for this life,
+Mr. Boyce." He looked at Harry with some contempt in his grey eyes.
+"Oons, you're a man and a brother, ain't you? Sit down and be hearty.
+Lud, Geoffrey, why do you never have a pipe in the room?"
+
+"It's death to a clean taste, your tobacco smoking, and I value my wine."
+
+"Value it, quotha! Ay, by the spoonful. You ha' never known how to drink
+since they weaned you. And you, Mr. Boyce, d'ye never smoke a pipe over
+your Latin?"
+
+"I hope I know my place, Mr. Hadley," Harry said solemnly.
+
+Charles Hadley stared at him. "Hear the Scripture, Mr. Boyce: 'What shall
+it profit a man though he gain a pretty patron and lose his own soul?'"
+
+"You are very polite, sir," said Harry.
+
+"Upon my honour, Charles, this is too much," Mr. Waverton cried in noble
+indignation. "Mr. Boyce is my friend, and you'll be good enough to take
+him as yours if you come to my house."
+
+Charles Hadley was not out of countenance. He eyed them both, and his
+sardonic expression was more marked. "You make a pretty pair," said he.
+"When two men ride a horse, one must ride behind. Eh, Mr. Boyce? I
+wonder. Well, Geoffrey, it's a wicked world. Had you heard of that?"
+
+"The world is what you make it, I think," said Mr. Waverton with
+dignity.
+
+"Oons, I could sometimes believe you did make it. A simple, pompous
+place, Geoffrey, that is kind to you if you'll not laugh at it. And full
+of petty, pompous mysteries. Maybe you make the mysteries too, Geoffrey.
+Damme, it is so. It's perfectly in your manner," he chuckled abundantly.
+"Come, child, what were you doing on the highway yesterday?"
+
+Harry stared at him. "When you have finished laughing at your joke,
+perhaps you will make it," said Waverton. "Pray let us have it over
+before dinner."
+
+"My dear child, why be so touchy? Were you bitten? Well, you know, this
+morning one of my fellows brings in a miserable wretch he had found on
+the road by Black Horse Spinney. The thing was half-dead with wet and
+cold. He had been lying there all night--so he said, and it's the one
+thing I believe of him. He was found trussed as tight as a chicken in his
+own sword-belt and his own garters. Damme, it was a fellow of some humour
+had the handling of him. He had not been robbed, for there was a bag of
+money at his middle. He professed that he could tell nothing of who had
+trussed him or why he was set upon. He would have nought of law or hue
+and cry. Egad, empty and shivering as he was, he wanted nothing but to be
+let go. A perfect Christian, as you remark, Geoffrey. Now, you or I, if
+we had been tied up in the mud through one of these damned raw nights,
+would take some pains to catch the fellow who did the trussing. But my
+wretch was as meek as the Gospels. So here is a silly, teasing mystery.
+Who is the footpad that is at the pains of tying up a fellow and never
+looks for his purse? Odds fish, I did not know we had a gentleman of such
+humour in these parts. I suspect you, Geoffrey, I protest. There's a
+misty fatuousness about it which--"
+
+"By your leave, sir," a servant appeared, "my lady waits dinner."
+
+"Then I fear we shall pay for it," said Hadley, and stood up.
+
+"You dine with us, Charles?" Mr. Waverton was not hearty about it.
+
+"I'll give you that pleasure, child. Well, Mr. Boyce, what do you make of
+my mystery?"
+
+Harry had to say something. "Perhaps your friend was carrying more than
+guineas," he said.
+
+"What then? Papers and plots and the high political? I don't think it. If
+you saw him--a mere tub of beer--and a leaky tub this morning, for he had
+a vile cold in the head and dribbled damnably."
+
+"I give it up then. Have you let him go?" They were moving out in the
+corridor and Hadley did not answer. "Is he gone?" Harry said again.
+
+Hadley turned round upon him. "Why, yes. Does it signify?"
+
+"I wonder who he was," said Harry.
+
+Upon that they entered the drawing-room of Lady Waverton. It was
+congested and dim. The two oriel windows were so draped with curtains of
+pink and yellow that only a faint light as of the last of a sunset
+filtered through. The wide spaces were beset with screens in lacquer,
+odd chairs, Dutch tables, and very many cabinets,--cabinets inlaid with
+flowers and birds of many colours; cabinets full of shells, agates,
+corals, and any gaudy stone; cabinets and yet again more cabinets full of
+Eastern china. In the midst Lady Waverton reclined.
+
+She had been handsome in a large, bold style, and might still have been
+but for excessive decoration. Her dress was voluminous white satin
+embroidered in a big pattern of gold and set off with black. It was low
+at her opulent bosom, to the curves of which the eye was directed by
+black patches craftily fixed. There were many more patches on her face
+which, still only a little too full and too loose, had its colours laid
+on in sharp and vivid contrasts. Her black hair was erected in
+symmetrical waves high above her brow, and one ringlet was brought by
+glossy, frozen curls to caress her bosom. She held out the whitest of
+hands drooping from a large but still fine arm for Mr. Hadley to kiss.
+
+"You are a bad fellow, Charles Hadley," she pouted. "You make me
+feel old."
+
+"There's a common childish fancy, ma'am."
+
+"You never come to see me now. And when you do come, 'tis not to see me."
+
+"A thousand pardons. Mr. Boyce delayed me awhile with the beauties of his
+conversation."
+
+"Mr. Boyce?" she looked at Harry as if wondering that he dared exist. "Go
+and see why they do not bring in dinner."
+
+Having thus diminished Harry, she proceeded, without waiting for him to
+be gone, to criticize him. "You know, I would never have a chaplain in
+the house. This tutor fellow is of the same breed, Charles. They tease
+me, these men which are neither gentlemen nor servants. Faith, life's
+hard for the poor wretches. They are torn 'twixt their conceit and their
+poverty. They know not from minute to minute whether they will fawn or be
+insolent. So they do both indifferent ill."
+
+Harry, who chose not to hear, was opening the door. There came in upon
+him a woman--the young woman of the coach. Even as he recoiled, bowing,
+even as he collected his startled wits, he was aware of the singular
+beauty of her complexion. Its delicacy, its life, were nonpareil. The
+first clear process of his mind was to wonder how he had contrived not to
+remark that complexion when first he saw her.
+
+Lady Waverton lifted up her voice. "Alison! Dear child! And are you home
+at last? It's delicious in you. You seek us out first, do you not? My
+sweet girl!" Alison was engulfed. Conceive apple blossom in the embraces
+of a peony.
+
+The apple blossom emerged with a calm, "Dear Lady Waverton."
+
+"You are a sad bad thing. I writ you five letters, I think, and not one
+from you."
+
+"You are so much cleverer than I am. I had nothing to say." Alison's
+voice was sweet and low, but too sublimely calm for perfect comfort in
+her hearers. "So here I am to say it and make my excuses," she dropped
+a small curtsey, "my lady. Why, Geoffrey, I thought you had been back
+at Oxford!"
+
+Mr. Waverton came forward, smiling magnificence. "I am delighted to
+disappoint you, Alison."
+
+"Nay, never believe her, Geoffrey," Lady Waverton lifted up her voice
+and was arch. "I vow she counted on finding you here. Why else had she
+come? I know when I was a toast I wasted none of my time going to see old
+women," she languished affectionately at the girl.
+
+"Dear Lady Waverton,"--if it was possible, Alison's voice became calmer
+than ever--"how well you know me. And how cruel to expose me. If Geoffrey
+had his mother's wit, faith, I should never dare come here at all."
+
+"It is not my wit which you need ever fear, Alison," Geoffrey's eyes were
+ardent upon her.
+
+"Why, you are merciful. Or is it modest?"
+
+"I can be neither, Alison. I am a man."
+
+"My dear Geoffrey, I am sorry for all your misfortunes." She turned from
+him to Mr. Hadley, who was content in a corner. "Have we quarrelled?"
+
+"We never loved each other well enough."
+
+"Is that why I am always very glad to see Mr. Hadley?"
+
+"It is why he can tell Miss Lambourne that she looks divinely beautiful."
+
+"That means inhuman, sir."
+
+"Which is not my fault, ma'am."
+
+Geoffrey was visibly restive at his exclusion, "Charles never could pay a
+compliment without a sting in it."
+
+"That is why they are agreeable, sir," said she.
+
+"That is why they are true," said Hadley in the same breath, and they
+laughed together.
+
+Lady Waverton interfered imperiously. "Alison, dear, come sit by me and
+tell me all about yourself."
+
+"Faith, not with the gentlemen to listen," said she, and was saved by
+Harry and the butler, who came in together announcing dinner.
+
+Lady Waverton rose elaborately. "Give me your arm, Charles. My
+dear Alison--"
+
+"But who is this?" Alison said, and she stared with placid, candid
+interest at Harry. With equal composure Harry stared back. But there was
+no candour in his expressionless face. For he had become keenly aware of
+her beauty. It was waking in him desire and already something deeper and
+stronger, and he vehemently resented the disturbance. He had no wish to
+be troubled by any woman, and for this woman, judging her on her
+behaviour, he felt even a little more contempt than the store which he
+had for all her sex. It was cursedly impertinent in her to be such a joy
+to the blood. She stood there, her eyes level with his eyes, and dared to
+look as strong as he--slighter to be sure, but not too slight for a
+woman, and delectably deep bosomed. There was life and laughter in that
+calm Greek face, and the vivid, delicate colour of it maddened him. The
+great crown of black hair was just what her brow needed for its royalty.
+He could find no fault in the irksome wench. Even her dress, dark grey as
+her eyes, perfectly became her, perfectly pleased in its generous
+modesty. And she knew of her power too. There was a mocking confidence in
+every line of her.
+
+"But who is this, Lady Waverton?" she was saying again.
+
+Lady Waverton tried to draw her on. "'Tis but Geoffrey's new factotum."
+
+"My good friend, Harry Boyce, Alison," said Geoffrey with a patronly hand
+on Harry's shoulder.
+
+Harry made his bow.
+
+"Faith, sir, we have met before," she smiled.
+
+"No, ma'am," Harry bowed again. "I have never had an honour, which, sure,
+I could not forget."
+
+Her brow wrinkled. Lady Waverton swept her on, and Harry in the rear had
+the pleasure of hearing Lady Waverton say: "A poor, vulgar wretch, my
+dear. An out-at-elbows scholar which Geoffrey met at Oxford and keeps out
+of charity. He is too soft of heart, dear boy, and such creatures stick
+to him like burrs."
+
+The dinner-table was a blaze of silver, but otherwise not bountifully
+provided. Lady Waverton looked down it with pride. "I am of Mr. Addison's
+mind, my dear," she announced. "Do you remember? 'Two plain dishes with
+two good-natured, cheerful, ingenious friends make me more pleased and
+vain than all your luxury.'"
+
+"Why, then, you must now be sore out of countenance," Alison protested.
+"For I am not good-natured and I vow Mr. Hadley is not cheerful." Mr.
+Hadley's face, set in contemplation of the food, shed gloom and
+apprehension. "But perhaps Mr. Boyce is ingenious."
+
+"I hope so," said Hadley.
+
+It was Harry's task to carve, which dispensed him from answering the
+girl or even looking at her. One not abundant fowl and a calf's head
+smoked before him. Under a heavy fire of directions from Lady Waverton
+he did his duty.
+
+Miss Lambourne may have suddenly grown weary of Lady Waverton's eloquence
+upon the daintiest bits of these unexciting foods. She may have been
+waiting for the moment when Harry would have no occupation to prevent him
+listening to her. While my lady was still explaining the superiority of
+her calf, as bred and born in the house of Waverton, to all other calves,
+just when Harry had finished his work, Miss Lambourne broke out: "Faith,
+I was almost forgetting my splendid story. I wonder, now, have any of you
+met any ventures on the North Road?"
+
+Harry began to eat. Charles Hadley ceased an anxious examination of his
+plate and looked at her. Lady Waverton cried out: "Dear Alison! Don't
+tell me you have been stopped. Too terrible! I vow I could never bear it.
+I should die of shame. They tell me these rogues are vilely impudent to a
+fine woman."
+
+Geoffrey exhibited a tender agitation. "Why, Alison, what is it? Zounds,
+I cannot have you go travelling alone! You must give me news when you
+make a journey, and I'll ride with you."
+
+"Thank you for your agonies. But the virgin in distress found her
+knight-errant duly provided. He rose out of the mud romantically apropos.
+To be sure, I think he was mad. But that is all in the part. The complete
+hero. Geoffrey, could you be a little mad?"
+
+"More than a little," said he with proper ardour. "Pray don't torture us,
+Alison. Let us hear."
+
+"It's on my mind that I am going to hear news of my funny friend," said
+Hadley solemnly. "Don't you think so, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+Harry, who had been eating with the humble zeal appropriate to a poor
+scholar, looked up for a moment: "Why, sir, I can't tell at all. If you
+say so, indeed--" and he went on eating.
+
+"Come, are you in it too, Mr. Hadley?" Alison cried.
+
+"In it, odds life, I am bewilderingly out of it," quoth Hadley, and again
+told his tale of the mysterious man found tied up in the mud who knew
+nothing of his assailants and wanted no vengeance on them.
+
+"That's our Benjamin," Alison laughed. "Oh, but you did not let him go?"
+
+"Not let him go, quotha! For what I know, he was a poor, suffering
+martyr, though to look at his nose, I doubt it. And yet he was fool
+enough. Nay, how could I stay him?"
+
+"Why, send him to gaol for a rogue and a vagabond. Should he not?" she
+invited the suffrages of the table.
+
+"Dear Alison, to be sure, yes," Lady Waverton murmured. "These fellows
+must be put down."
+
+"You owed it to yourself to look deeper into the matter, Charles," said
+Geoffrey gravely.
+
+"Come, Mr. Boyce, your sentence too," Alison cried, wicked eyes
+intent upon him.
+
+He met them with bland meekness. "Indeed, ma'am, I can't tell. It's Mr.
+Hadley's affair."
+
+"From a virtuous woman, good Lord deliver us," Hadley groaned. "You would
+make a rare hanging judge, Alison. Now, i' God's name, let's have your
+tale. What's the rogue to you?"
+
+"Oh, sir, a great joy. Why, he gave me the only knight-errant ever I had.
+A vile muddy one, to be sure, but poor maids must not be choosers. We
+were driving home, Mrs. Weston and I, and by Black Horse Spinney we were
+stopped by two highwaymen. They had just begun to be rude, when out of
+the mud comes my knight-errant, bold as Don Quixote and as shabby withal,
+and with a pretty wit too--which is not much in the way of
+knight-errants, I think. He scared the highwaymen's horses and set them
+bolting with the one fellow which held them, then he knocked the other
+down, took his pistol, and tied the rogue up in his own garters. Oh, the
+neatest knight-errant ever you saw. Then we bade him put the fellow on
+the box and drive on with us. But monsieur was haughty, if you please. He
+wanted none of our company. Off he packed us, for me to cry my eyes out
+for love of him. Which I do heartily, I warrant you."
+
+"Alison!" Geoffrey cried, and laid his hand on hers.
+
+"Faith, yes, give me sympathy. I have loved and lost--in the mud. To be
+sure, I can ne'er be my own woman again till I find him and give him--a
+brush, I think, and maybe a pair of breeches too, for his own can never
+recover their youth. Dear Geoffrey, help me to find him."
+
+Geoffrey had taken his hand away in a hurry. He contemplated her with
+cold reproof. It did not trouble her. She was giving all her attention to
+Harry; gay, malicious eyes challenged him to declare himself, mocked him
+for his modesty, vaunted what she had to give.
+
+"Damme, this is madder and madder yet," Hadley broke in. "Who is your
+Orlando Furioso that's a champion of dames and too haughty to ride in
+their carriage; that ties up highwaymen and forgets to tell the constable
+where he left 'em? Odso, I thought I knew most of the fools in these
+parts, but there's one bigger than I know."
+
+"Dear Alison--I could never have survived it--but you are so strong--and
+what a person! My dear, I could not bear to think of him. A rude, low
+fellow, to be sure," Thus Lady Waverton coherently.
+
+Alison laughed. "I doubt I'm not so delicate," Then she leaned towards
+Harry. "Well, and you? Come, Mr. Boyce, why leave yourself out?"
+
+"I beg pardon, ma'am?"
+
+She made an impatient sound. "And what do you think of my hero?"
+
+"I wonder who the gentleman was, ma'am," Harry said.
+
+Her eyes fought a moment more with his bland, meaningless face. "Faith, I
+think he's a fool for his pains," said she.
+
+"Grateful woman," Hadley grunted. "Humph. _Spretae injuria formae_, ain't
+it, Mr. Boyce? Give miss a construe."
+
+Harry gave a deprecating cough instead.
+
+"Oh, be brave, sir," she jeered.
+
+"I am afraid it means 'the insult of slighting your beauty,' ma'am," said
+Harry meekly.
+
+Lady Waverton straightened her back and looked ice at him. But the
+butler was at her elbow, whispering. "Colonel Boyce?" she repeated. "What
+Colonel Boyce? Who is Colonel Boyce?
+
+"It might be my father," Harry suggested.
+
+"Why, Harry, I never knew you had a father," Waverton sneered amiably.
+
+"Is your father a colonel?" Lady Waverton was torn between incredulity of
+such presumption and rage at it.
+
+"Not that I know of, my lady. But he has always surprised me."
+
+"Shall we have him in, Geoffrey?" said Lady Waverton.
+
+"My dear mother!" Geoffrey waved his hand to the butler. "Ask the
+gentleman to be so good as to join us."
+
+Mr. Hadley turned in his chair, and over the remnants of the fowl and the
+calf's head directed a grim smile at Harry. "Thank you for a very
+pleasant dinner," said he.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A MAN OF MANY WORLDS
+
+
+There came in a man of many colours. Dazzled eyes, recovering from their
+first dismay, might admit that his splendours were harmonious. A red coat
+with gold buttons, a waistcoat of gold satin embroidered in blue,
+breeches of blue velvet with golden garters were topped by a face burnt
+brown and a great jet-black periwig. He carried off all this with airy
+ease. "My lady, your most humble and devoted," he bowed to Lady Waverton.
+"Harry, dear lad," he held out his hands, and Harry, rising, found
+himself embraced and kissed on both cheeks.
+
+"Colonel Boyce is it?" said Lady Waverton with some emphasis on
+the title.
+
+"In the service of your ladyship," he laughed, and bowed to her again,
+and turned upon the company. "Pray present me, dear lady." She made
+some stumbling about it, but Colonel Boyce appeared to enjoy himself
+with an "I account myself fortunate, ma'am," for Miss Lambourne; with a
+"My boy's friends are mine, sir--and his debts too," for Geoffrey; and
+to Mr. Hadley, "You have served, sir?" with a look of respect at the
+empty sleeve.
+
+Hadley nodded. "Ay, ay. The red field of honour. Well, there's no
+life like it."
+
+"That's why I left it," Hadley grunted.
+
+"Come, sir, draw up a chair and join us," Geoffrey said. "Be sure you are
+very welcome."
+
+"Ten thousand thanks." Without enthusiasm Colonel Boyce looked at the
+calf's head. "But--egad, I am sorry for it now--but I have dined."
+
+"At least you'll drink a glass of wine with us?"
+
+"Oh, I can't deny myself the pleasure, sir." He drew up a chair, Geoffrey
+reached at a decanter, and so Lady Waverton rose and Alison after her.
+
+Colonel Boyce started up. "But no--not at that price. Damme, that would
+poison the Prince's own Tokay. Nay, you are too cruel, my lady. I come,
+and you desolate the table to receive me. Gad's life, ma'am, our friends
+here will be calling me out for my daring to exist."
+
+Lady Waverton was very well pleased. "Sir, you will let me give you a
+dish of tea. I warrant the men were already sighing to be rid of us."
+
+"Then I vow they be blind," quoth Colonel Boyce, and opened the door,
+from which he came back with a laugh to his glass of port. Over drinking
+it he went through all the tricks of the connoisseur and ended with a
+cultured ecstasy.
+
+"I see you are a man of the world, Colonel," Hadley sneered.
+
+"A man of many worlds, sir," the Colonel laughed easily.
+
+"I wonder which this is?"
+
+"Why, this is the world of good company and good fellowship--" he smiled
+and bowed to Geoffrey--"of sound wine and sound learning."
+
+"Sir, you are very good. But I hope my wine is better than my
+scholarship. This is our man of learning," he slapped Harry on the
+shoulder. "And Harry counts me a mere trifler, a literary exquisite, an
+amateur of elegances."
+
+"If your scholarship has the elegance of your wine, Mr. Waverton, you do
+very well. I doubt my Harry is no judge of the graces. He has always been
+something of a plodder."
+
+"Have I?" Harry found his tongue. "How did you know?"
+
+The Colonel laughed. "He has me there, the rogue. The truth is,
+gentlemen, I have not seen him in these six years. Damme, Harry, you are
+grown no fatter."
+
+"Servitors don't make flesh," said Harry.
+
+"And soldiers don't make money. Still; there's enough for two now, boy."
+
+"I am glad you have been fortunate," the tone suggested that though
+the father had quite enough for two; there would be none to spare
+for the son.
+
+"Why, sir," Waverton was grandly genial, "I hope you don't mean to rob me
+of Harry. He's the most useful fellow, and, I promise you; I value him."
+
+"Thank you very much," said Harry.
+
+"I'll take you into my confidence, Mr. Waverton," the Colonel leaned
+across the table.
+
+"Then I'll take my leave," said Hadley.
+
+"No need, sir. At this time, we all know, there are higher claims on a
+man than a friend's or a father's."
+
+"I feel like a pawn," Harry complained.
+
+"Egad, sir, a pawn may save a queen or check a king."
+
+"But do you suppose it enjoys it?"
+
+"Are you away to the war, sir?" Geoffrey smiled. "I doubt our Harry has
+no turn for soldiering."
+
+"You are always right, Mr. Waverton," Harry nodded at him.
+
+"It is not only soldiers who fight our battles, Mr. Waverton," said the
+Colonel with dignity. "There's danger enough for a quick wit and a cool
+judgment far behind the lines. And you need not go to Flanders to find
+the war. It's flaming all over England, all over--France," he dropped the
+last word in a lower tone, as if his heat had carried him away and it was
+a blunder. He flung himself back and emptied his glass, and looked
+gloomily at the empty decanter. "Why, Mr. Waverton, you have made me into
+a babbler. It's time you delivered me to the ladies."
+
+"Aye, aye," Hadley yawned. "Let's try another of the worlds."
+
+They marched out, but the Colonel and Waverton, waiting on each other,
+were some distance behind the other pair.
+
+"You must know I have often had some desire for the life of action," said
+Mr. Waverton.
+
+To which the Colonel earnestly, "I have never known a man more fit for
+it," and upon that they entered my lady's drawing-room.
+
+Miss Lambourne was singing Carey's song of the nightingale:
+
+"While in a Bow'r with beauty blest
+ The lov'd Amintor lies,
+While sinking on Lucinda's breast
+ He fondly kiss'd her Eyes.
+A wakeful nightingale who long
+ Had mourn'd within, the Shade
+Sweetly renewed her plaintive song
+ And warbled through the Glade."
+
+On the coming of the men the wakeful nightingale broke off her plaintive
+song abruptly.
+
+Lady Waverton, who was again at full length on her couch, then opened
+her eyes. "Delicious, delicately delicious," she sighed. "Why did you
+stop, dear?" she controlled a yawn. "Oh, the men! Odious creatures!" she
+rose on her elbow and looked at them, and looked down at her dress and
+patted it.
+
+Colonel Boyce accepted the challenge briskly, and marched upon her.
+"Egad, my lady, your name is cruelty."
+
+"Who--I, sir? I vow I never had the heart to see any creature suffer."
+
+"Nay, your very nature is cruelty. You exist but to torture us."
+
+"Good lack, sir," says my lady, well pleased, "and must I die to serve
+your pleasure?"
+
+"Why, there it is. We can neither bear to be with you nor to be without
+you. I protest, ma'am, your sex was made for our torture. 'Tis why you
+parade it and delight in it."
+
+"Lud, sir, you are mighty rude," my lady simpered. "I parade my sex?
+Alack, my modesty!"
+
+"Modesty--that's but another weapon to madden us. Fie, ma'am, why do you
+clothe yourself in such beauty but to flaunt upon our senses that sex of
+yours?" My lady was duly shocked and hid behind her fan. "Aye, there it
+is! We catch a whiff of paradise and straightway it is denied us. Our
+nightingale there is silent when we draw near. Our Venus here hides
+herself when our eyes would enjoy her. As His Grace said to me, you women
+are like heaven to a damned soul."
+
+"You are a wicked fellow," said Lady Waverton with relish.
+
+Geoffrey at his elbow put in, "'His Grace,' Colonel?"
+
+"The Old Corporal, Mr. Waverton. The Duke of Marlborough."
+
+"You have served with him, sir?"
+
+Colonel Boyce gave a laugh of genial condescension. "Why, yes, Mr.
+Waverton, I stand as close to His Grace as most men."
+
+After a moment of impressive silence, the Wavertons vigorously directed
+the conversation to the Duke of Marlborough. Colonel Boyce made no
+objection. In the most obliging manner he admitted them to a piquant
+intimacy with His Grace's manners and customs. He mingled things personal
+and high politics with a fascinating air of letting out secrets at every
+word; and, throughout, he maintained a tantalizing discretion about his
+own position. My lady and Mr. Waverton were more and more fascinated.
+
+So that Miss Lambourne had good opportunity to try her maiden steel upon
+Harry. As soon as he came in, he withdrew himself to a cabinet of medals
+in a remote corner. Mr. Hadley approached the harpsichord and reached it
+just before it fell silent. Miss Lambourne looked up into his face.
+
+"Yes, shall we lay our heads together?" said he.
+
+"But I doubt mine would turn yours."
+
+"If you'll risk it, ma'am, I will."
+
+"La, sir, is this an offer? I protest I am all one blush."
+
+"Then your imagination is bolder than mine, ma'am. I mean--"
+
+"Oh, fie for shame! To disgrace a poor maid so! To betray her weakness!
+It is unmanly, Mr. Hadley. Sure, my father (in the general resurrection)
+will have your blood. I leave you to your conscience, sir," which she
+did, making for Harry.
+
+Mr. Hadley, remaining by the harpsichord, contemplated them, and with his
+one hand caressed his chin. "It's a fascinating family, the family of
+Boyce," said he to himself.
+
+Miss Lambourne sat herself down beside Harry before he chose to be aware
+of her coming. He started up and obsequiously drew away.
+
+"You are very coy, Mr. Boyce," said the lady.
+
+Harry replied, with the servile laughter of a dependent, "Oh, ma'am, you
+are mocking me."
+
+"Tit for tat"--Alison's eyes had some fire in them.
+
+"Tat, ma'am?"
+
+"Lud, now, don't be tedious. Sir, the house of Waverton is entranced by
+your splendid father: and Charles Hadley (as usual) is entranced by
+himself. You have no audience Mr. Boyce. Stop acting, and tell me--what
+is wrong with me?"
+
+Harry considered her with calm criticism. "It's not for me to tell Miss
+Lambourne that she is too beautiful."
+
+"Indeed, I thought you had more sense."
+
+"Too beautiful," Harry persisted deliberately; "too beautiful to be
+good company."
+
+"That will not serve, sir. You are not so inflammable. Being more in the
+nature of a tortoise."
+
+"If you had a flaw or so: if your nose had a twist; if your cheeks had
+felt the weather; if--I fear, ma'am, I grow intimate. In fine, if you
+were less fine, you would be a comfort to a man. But as it is--permit the
+tortoise to keep in his shell."
+
+"I advise you, Mr. Boyce--I resent this."
+
+Harry bowed. "I dare to remind you, ma'am--I did not demand the
+conversation."
+
+"The conversation!" Her eyes flashed. "What do I care if a lad's
+impudent? Perhaps I like it well enough, Mr. Boyce. There is more than
+that between you and me. You have done me something of a service, and
+you'll not let me avow it nor pay you. Well?"
+
+"Well, ma'am, you're telling the truth," said Harry placidly.
+
+The lady made an exclamation. "I shall bear you a grudge for this, sir."
+
+"I am vastly obliged, ma'am."
+
+The lady drew back a little and looked at him full, which he bore
+calmly. "I suppose I am beneath Mr. Boyce's concernment."
+
+"Not beneath, ma'am. Above. Above. Do you admire the Italian medals?
+They are of a delicate restraint," He turned to the cabinet and began
+to lecture.
+
+Miss Lambourne was not repulsed. He maintained a steady flow of
+instruction. She waited, watching him.
+
+By this time Colonel Boyce was growing tired of his Duke of Marlborough
+and his State secrets, and seeking diversion. "Odds fish, it's a hard
+road that leads to fortune. You are happy, Mr. Waverton. You were born
+with yours."
+
+"I conceive, sir, that every man of high spirit must needs take the
+road to fame."
+
+"A dream of a shadow, Mr. Waverton," said the Colonel, with melancholy
+grandeur. "'Take the goods the gods provide you,'" he waved his hand at
+the crowded opulence of the room and then, smiling paternally, at Miss
+Lambourne.
+
+Lady Waverton simpered at her son. He chose to ignore the hint.
+"Why, Colonel, if a man is happily placed above vulgar needs, the
+more reason--"
+
+"Vulgar needs! Oh, fie, Mr. Waverton. A divine creature." Colonel
+Boyce looked wicked, and his easy hand designed in the air Miss
+Lambourne's shape.
+
+Lady Waverton tittered. Geoffrey blushed, and "You do me too much honour
+sir, indeed," he stammered.
+
+Colonel Boyce turned smiling upon Lady Waverton. "I vow, ma'am, a man
+hath twice the modesty of a maid."
+
+"You are a bad fellow," said Lady Waverton, very well pleased.
+
+"You go too fast, sir;" with so much mirth about him Geoffrey feared for
+his dignity. "There is nothing between me and Miss Lambourne."
+
+The Colonel shook his head. "I confess I thought better of you, sir.
+What, is miss her own mistress?"
+
+"Miss Lambourne has no father or mother, sir."
+
+"And her face is her fortune? Egad, 'tis the prettiest romance!"
+
+Geoffrey and his mother laughed together. "Not quite all her fortune,
+sir. She is the only child of Sir Thomas Lambourne."
+
+"What! old Tom Lambourne of the India House?" Colonel Boyce whistled. He
+looked with a new interest at her as she stood by Harry, absorbing the
+lecture on medals, and as he looked his face put on a queer air of
+mockery. This he presented to Geoffrey. "Something of a plum, sirrah.
+Well, well, some folks have but to open their mouths."
+
+Mr. Waverton, not quite certain whether the Colonel ought to be so
+familiar, concluded to be pleased, and laughed fatuously. During which
+music the butler announced "Mrs. Weston."
+
+Lady Waverton and Geoffrey exchanged a glance of disgust. Lady Waverton
+murmured, "What a person!" It escaped their notice that Colonel Boyce had
+stiffened at the name. His full face lost all its geniality, all
+expression. He was for the first time singularly like his son.
+
+Mrs. Weston was Alison's companion of the coach, a woman of middle age,
+inclining to be stout; but her face was thin and lined, belying her
+comfortable aspect,--a wistful face which had known much sorrow, and had
+still much tenderness to give.
+
+Lady Waverton put out a languid and supercilious hand. "I hope you
+are better."
+
+"Thank you. I have not been ill."
+
+"Oh, I always forget."
+
+"Your servant, ma'am." Geoffrey bowed.
+
+"Oh,"--Lady Waverton turned on her elbow. "Colonel Boyce--Mrs. Weston,
+Alison's companion. Faith, duenna, I think."
+
+"Your most obedient, ma'am." Colonel Boyce bowed low.
+
+Mrs. Weston stared at him, seemed to try to speak, said nothing, and
+hurried across the room.
+
+"Alison, dear, are you ready?" her voice sounded hoarse.
+
+"Am I ever ready?" Alison laughed. "Weston, dear, we are finding friends
+here;" she pointed to Harry.
+
+Colonel Boyce had followed. He laid his hand on Harry's shoulder: "My
+son, ma'am," said he.
+
+Mrs. Weston's eyes grew wide, and her face was white and drawn, and she
+swayed. As Harry bowed to her, a lacquered box was swept off the table
+with a great clatter, and Colonel Boyce cried, "Odds life, Harry, you are
+a clumsy fellow. Here, man, here," and made a great commotion over
+picking it up.
+
+Alison had her arm about Mrs. Weston: "Why, Weston, dear, what is it? Are
+you seeing a ghost?" She laughed. "Pray, Mr. Boyce, come to life."
+
+"I ask pardon, ma'am." Harry rose with the box.
+
+"'Bid me to live and I will live,'" said the Colonel, with a grand air.
+
+"Come away, dear, come," Mrs. Weston gasped, in much agitation.
+
+"Why, Weston, he is not our highwayman, you know," Alison was still
+laughing, and then seeing her distress real, took it in earnest. "You are
+shaken, poor thing. Come!" She mothered the woman away and, turning,
+called over her shoulder--
+
+"_Revanche_, Mr. Boyce." There was an explanation to Lady Waverton: poor
+Weston had been so alarmed by the highwaymen that she was not fit to be
+out of her bed, and anything alarmed her; even Mr. Boyce; so dear Lady
+Waverton must forgive them. And Geoffrey took them to their carriage.
+
+"What a person!" said Lady Waverton.
+
+Mr. Hadley came out of his corner and looked Harry up and down with
+dislike. "Let me know when you play the next act, Mr. Boyce," he
+said, and turned to Lady Waverton. "My lady, I beg leave to go with
+my friends."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+A GENTLEMAN'S PURSE
+
+
+In a small, bare room Colonel Boyce sat himself down on a pallet bed and
+made a wry face at his son. "My poor, dear boy," he said, and shifted
+uneasily, and looked round at the stained walls and shivered. "It's damp,
+I vow it's damp," he complained.
+
+"Oh yes. It's damp after rain, and it's hot after sun, and it's icy after
+frost. It's a very sympathetic room," said Harry.
+
+"They are barbarians, these Wavertons. I vow they give their horses
+better lodging."
+
+"Oh yes. I am not worth so much as a horse," said Harry.
+
+"Lud, Harry, don't whine,"--his father was irritated. "Have some spirit.
+I hate to hear a lad meek."
+
+"I thought you did," said Harry.
+
+The Colonel laughed. "Oh, I am bit, am I? _Tant mieux_. But why the devil
+do you stay here?"
+
+"Now why the devil do you want to know?" said Harry.
+
+"No, that is not kind, boy."
+
+"Oh, Oh, are we kind?"
+
+"My dear Harry, I have not seen you for six years, and I have not come
+now to quarrel."
+
+"Then why have you come?" said the affectionate son.
+
+"You are a gracious cub." Colonel Boyce would not be ruffled. "When I saw
+you last, Harry--"
+
+"You borrowed a shilling of me. I remember I was glad that I had
+not another."
+
+"You can have it back with interest now. There is plenty in the purse,
+Harry, and half of all mine is yours."
+
+"You have changed," Harry said. "Odds life, Harry, bear no grudges. I
+dare say I was hard in what you remember of me. Well, things were hard
+upon me and I lived hard. You shall find me mellow enough now."
+
+"Hard? I don't know that you were hard. I thought you were as cold as
+ice. I believe, sir, I am still frozen."
+
+"Egad, Harry, you must have had a curst childhood."
+
+"Oh, must we be sympathetic?" said Harry.
+
+"You're right, boy. The past is past. 'Tis your future which is the
+matter. So again--why do you stay here?"
+
+Harry laughed. "They give me bed and board, and a shilling or two by
+the month."
+
+"Bed?" His father shifted upon it. "A bag of stones, I think. And for the
+board--bread of affliction and water of affliction by what I saw of the
+remains. Egad, Harry, they are savages, these Wavertons."
+
+"I did not hear you say so to madame. And Geoffrey is not a bad fellow
+as far as he has understanding."
+
+"A dolt, eh? He might take a woman's eye, though. These big dreamy
+fellows, the women hanker after them queerly. Take care, Harry." He
+looked knowing. "Bed and board--bah, you can do better than that. Now
+what do you think I have been doing?"
+
+"Something profitable, to judge by your genial splendours. Have you
+turned highwayman?"
+
+"You all talk about highwaymen in this house," said the Colonel with a
+frown and a keen glance.
+
+"Damme, no."
+
+"Why, are you really a colonel?"
+
+"Faith, you may come see my commission,"--Colonel Boyce was not
+annoyed,--"and, egad, share my pay." He pulled out a fat purse and thrust
+some guineas upon Harry. "Don't deny me now, boy," he said, with some
+tenderness.
+
+"I never meant to," said Harry, and counted them. "But how long have you
+been a soldier? I never knew you were anything."
+
+"I have been with his Grace of Marlborough in every campaign since
+Blenheim. Do you think it's a good service, Harry?" he smiled at his
+own opulence.
+
+"For a versatile man," said Harry, and looked at his father curiously.
+
+"Why, I can take the field as well as another. Egad, when Vendome fell
+back from Oudenarde I was commanding a battalion. But it is not in the
+field that my best work is done."
+
+"Faith, I had guessed that," Harry said.
+
+"You have a sharp tongue, Harry. It's a dangerous weakness. Be careful
+to grow out of it. Then I think you may do well enough."
+
+"In your profession, sir? To be sure, you flatter me."
+
+"In my profession--" His father looked at him keenly. "I am not sure.
+Maybe you can do better, which will be well enough. Now, what can you do?
+You can use a sword, I suppose, though you wear none?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "I know the rigmarole, the salutes; I could begin a duel,
+_par exemple_. It's the other man who would end it."
+
+"Duels--bah, only dolts are troubled with them. You must learn to hold
+your own in a flurry. You can ride, I suppose?"
+
+"If the beast has a mane."
+
+"Humph. You speak French?"
+
+"As we speak it in England."
+
+"Yes." His father nodded. "When a man is no fool, he finds his profit in
+not doing things too well. Well, Harry, are you Whig or Tory--Jacobite or
+Hanoverian?"
+
+"Whichever you like, sir."
+
+"By the Lord, you take after me mightily. Now look 'e, thus it is. The
+Queen grows old. She eats too well and drinks too well, and she has the
+gout. It's common among all who know her ways that she cannot last long.
+The poor soul will not be wise at dinner. But even if she should last, we
+are in an odd case. For Anne hath a conscience as well as a stomach, and
+it seems they grow together. As the old lady gets fatter, she feels
+remorse. When she's tearful after dinner now she asks her women what
+right she has to be queen and keep a good cellar while her poor
+half-brother Prince James lives in exile on _vin ordinaire_."
+
+Harry shrugged his shoulders. "'Poor, dear lad,' says she, 'and to
+be sure I am a sad, bad woman. But I think I'll die a queen.' What
+then, sir?"
+
+"I don't say you are wrong, Harry. She's more like to drown the lad in
+tears than right him. And meanwhile our rightful king, James the
+Pretender, is left to his _vin ordinaire_. Faith, it's a proper liquor,
+for rightful heirs which can't right themselves. And yet there is a
+chance. The Queen has always been religious, and when a woman hath
+religion she may play the devil with your reason any minute. But here is
+what's more likely. You know when an old fellow hath played the knave
+with some wardship or some matter of trust, often he holds fast to it all
+his life and then seeks to commend himself to the day of judgment by
+bequeathing his spoils to those from whom he stole them. Well, it's
+whispered among them that know her that Madame Anne will do her possible
+to make Prince James King when she is gone."
+
+"A dead Queen is but a corpse," said Harry. "When she is gone 'twill not
+be for her to say who shall reign."
+
+"That's half a truth. You know the law is so that Prince George of
+Hanover should be the King. About him no man knows anything save that he
+hath a vile taste in women. I do suspect Marlborough is in the right--he
+has a nose for men--when he saith there is nought to know. Well, we
+tried a Dutchman once for our King and liked him ill enough. Who is to
+say that we shall like a German better? Now Prince James--he is half an
+Englishman at least, though they say he has his father's weakness for
+priests. I'll not hide from you, Harry, that I am in the confidence of
+some great men. It's laid upon me to go to France with an errand to
+Prince James."
+
+"I suppose that is high treason, sir."
+
+Colonel Boyce smiled queerly. "You see how I trust you, Harry. Bah, you
+are not frightened of words. Who is the worse for it, if I find out
+what's Monsieur's temper and how he would bear himself if he were King?"
+
+"And what he would pay any kind gentlemen who chose to turn
+Jacobites apropos."
+
+"If you like." Colonel Boyce laughed. I promise you, Harry, there are
+great men in this. Now I need a trusty fellow to my right hand: a fellow
+who can talk and say nothing: a fellow who is in no service but mine: and
+all the better if he hath some learning to play the secretary. So I
+thought of you. And since it may carry you to something of note, I chose
+you with right good will."
+
+"Do you wonder that you surprise me?"
+
+"I profess you're not generous, Harry. It's true enough, I have done
+little for you yet. But the truth is I could do nothing. As soon as I
+have it in my power, I come to you--"
+
+"And offer me--a game at hazard."
+
+"Why, Harry, you're not a coward?"
+
+"Faith, I can't tell. Perhaps I will go with you. But I have no
+expectation in it."
+
+"I suppose you have some here," his father sneered. "What do they call
+you? You seem to be something better than Master Geoffrey's valet and a
+good deal worse than my lady's footman."
+
+"Why, I believe you have lost your temper." Harry laughed. "Oh, admirable
+sight! Pray let me enjoy it! The father rages at his son's ingratitude!"
+
+But Colonel Boyce had quickly recovered his equanimity. "They used to
+tell me that I was a cold fellow. But I vow you are a very fish. So you
+have half a mind to stay here, have you? Well, I bear no malice."
+
+"It is only half a mind," Harry said. "Are you in a hurry?"
+
+"Oh, you may sleep on it. Damme, I suppose there is little to do here but
+sleep. What does Master Geoffrey want with you? He is old to keep a tame
+schoolmaster."
+
+"I listen to his poetry."
+
+"Oh Lud!" said Colonel Boyce, with sincere sympathy. "I suppose they are
+wealthy folk, your Wavertons. Do they keep much company?" Harry shrugged.
+"Who is this Mrs. Weston?"
+
+"I never saw her before." Harry paused, and then with a laugh
+added--"before yesterday."
+
+"That's a fine woman, her mistress. Do you do anything in that
+quarter, sirrah?"
+
+"Why should you think so?"
+
+"She was willing enough that you should try."
+
+"She is meat for my betters," said Harry meekly.
+
+"For Master Geoffrey?" The Colonel looked knowing. "Do you know, Harry, I
+think Master Geoffrey is a pigeon made to be plucked. Well. What was the
+pretty lady's talk about highwaymen?"
+
+Harry looked at his father for some time. "The truth is, I don't
+understand Benjamin," he said at last. "I wonder if you will. Faith, sir,
+here is a pretty piece of family life. The good son confides in his
+father alone of all the world."
+
+"Go on, sir," Colonel Boyce chuckled. "I play fair."
+
+So Harry told his tale of Benjamin and Benjamin's companion and their
+disaster. It was that appearance in the crisis of the fight of other
+gentlemen on horseback which most interested Colonel Boyce. "So they went
+in pursuit of the fellow who had fled and they never came back again." He
+looked quizzically at his son. "These be very honest gentlemen."
+
+"Why, sir, I thought nothing of that. They were plainly travelling at
+speed. I suppose they missed him, and had no time to waste in searching."
+
+"Then why o' God's name did he not come back to help his fellow? He was
+mounted, he was armed, and only you and your cudgel against him. Bah,
+Harry, do not be an innocent. Consider: these fellows went after him at
+speed. He cannot have been far away. It is any odds that he had his
+bolting horses in hand before he had gone two furlongs. Then--allow him
+some sense--then he must have turned and come back for his friend. And
+then these other honest gentlemen swept down on him. Well. Why have you
+heard no more of them or him?"
+
+"Faith, sir, you are right," Harry conceived for the first time some
+admiration for his father. "I had missed that: and, egad, it is the chief
+question of the puzzle. But--"
+
+"Puzzle! Oh Lud, there's no puzzle. They were all one gang, these
+fellows."
+
+Harry laughed. "Then there was not much honour among the thieves. They
+abandoned their Benjamin to me with delight."
+
+"Ah, bah, you do not suppose they were out for such small game as your
+pretty miss. They would not work in a gang to stop a simple, common
+coach, be it never so rich. Come, Harry, use your wits. Did you hear of
+any great folks on the road yesterday?"
+
+Harry made an exclamation. "Odds life, sir, you would make a great
+thief-catcher. You have hit it. There was your friend, the Duke of
+Marl-borough, stuck in the mud below Barnet Hill." And he told that part
+of the story.
+
+"Humph. So they came too late," his father said. "You see how it is. This
+gang was charged to stop his Grace, and was something slow about it. The
+two first, your Benjamin and his friend, I suppose they should have held
+the Duke's fellows in play till the others came up. They missed him, or
+they shirked it, and instead, tried to stay their stomachs with some
+common game. The rest of the gang would be well enough pleased that you
+should baste Benjamin while they hurried on after the Duke. Did you mark
+any of them, what like they were?"
+
+"Not I. I was too busy with Benjamin."
+
+"And your pretty miss, eh? A pity. But it's well enough for your
+first affair."
+
+"First? Why, am I to spend my life tumbling with gentlemen of the road?"
+
+"And a profitable, pleasant life too, if you use your wits."
+
+Harry opened his eyes. "Do you know it well, sir? Now, what I don't
+understand is why a gang of highwaymen should appoint to set upon the
+Duke of Marlborough. It's dangerous, to be sure--"
+
+"You will understand why, if you come to France," said Colonel Boyce,
+with a queer smile. "There be many would pay high for a sight of his
+Grace's private papers," and he laughed to himself over some joke. "Nay,
+but you have done very well, Harry," he condescended. "I like this
+business of leaving Benjamin tied up on the road. 'Tis damned nonsense,
+to be sure, but it has an air, a distinction. Your pretty miss will like
+that. And I judge you have not told the Wavertons you were the hero, nor
+let miss tell them. 'Tis your little secret for yourselves. A good touch,
+Harry. Odds life, I begin to be proud of you. I suppose you will soon go
+pay your respects--to Mrs. Weston." He laughed heartily.
+
+Harry was not amused. "Do you know, I think I like you much less than you
+like me," he said.
+
+Colonel Boyce seemed very well content.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE WORLD'S A MIRACLE
+
+
+Colonel Boyce was established in the house, a guest of high honour.
+
+Harry, dazed at the mere fact, could not be very sure how it had happened
+or why. The Wavertons, mother and son, had assaulted the Colonel with
+hospitality--for a night--for another--for longer and longer--and he,
+appearing at first honestly dubious, remained with a benign
+condescension.
+
+There is no doubt that, in an honourable way, Lady Waverton was
+fascinated by Colonel Boyce. She saw nothing coarse in his
+highly-coloured manners, suspected no guile in his flattery or his parade
+of importance. Harry, who had never supposed her a wise woman, was
+surprised by her complete surrender. He had credited her with too much
+pride to succumb to flattery, which was to his taste impudently gross.
+But he was not yet old enough to allow that other folks might have tastes
+wholly unlike his own, and he had himself--it is perhaps the only trait
+of much delicacy in him--a shrinking discomfort under praise.
+
+Colonel Boyce took his victory with a complacency which Harry thought
+oddly fatuous in a man so acute.
+
+"Egad, the old lady would go to church with me to-morrow if I asked her;"
+he laughed, and seemed to think that in that at least my lady showed
+sense.
+
+"You had better take her, sir," said Harry, with a sneer. "I know she has
+a good dower. And a fool and her money are soon parted."
+
+"Damme, Harry, you are venomous!" For the first time in their
+acquaintance Colonel Boyce showed some signs of smarting. "What harm have
+I done you? No, sir, you have a nasty tongue. I intend the old lady no
+harm, neither. What if she has a tenderness for me? I suppose that does
+not make me a fool."
+
+"To be sure, sir, I did not know your affection was serious." Harry
+laughed disagreeably.
+
+"I believe you would not miss a chance to say a bitter thing though it
+ruined you, Lud, Harry, if you can't be grateful, don't be a fool too.
+What a pox are your Wavertons to me? I don't value them a pinch of snuff.
+What I am doing, I am doing for you. You know what you were when I found
+you--no better than a footman out of livery. Now, they treat you like a
+gentleman."
+
+"And all for the _beaux yeux_ of my father. Well, it's true, sir. But I
+don't know that I like any of us much the better for it."
+
+To his great surprise his father looked at him with affectionate
+admiration. "Egad, you take that tone very well," said he. "It's a good
+card. Maybe it's the best with the women."
+
+Harry had to laugh. "I think you have the easiest temper in the
+world, sir."
+
+"Aye, aye. It has been the ruin of me."
+
+And so they parted the best of friends. Indeed Harry had never liked his
+father so well or felt so much his superior. Thus from age to age is
+filial affection confirmed.
+
+But he had to allow some adroitness in his father. Not only Lady
+Waverton, but Geoffrey too, succumbed to the paternal charms. That was
+the more surprising. Geoffrey, behind his vanity and his affectation, was
+no fool. He had also a temper apt to dislike any man who made a show of
+position or achievement beyond his own. Yet he hung upon the lips of
+Colonel Boyce. What they gave him was indeed a pleasing mixture--secrets
+about great affairs flavoured with deference to his ingenious criticisms.
+There was something solid about it, too. The Colonel, displaying himself
+as a man of much importance, perpetually hinted that only the occasion
+was needed for Mr. Waverton to surpass him by far, and to that occasion
+he could point the way. It appeared to Harry that his father had in mind
+to enlist Geoffrey for the proposed mission to France, or some other
+scheme unrevealed. And being unable to see any reason for wanting
+Geoffrey as a man, he suspected that his father wanted money.
+
+He saw clearly that nobody wanted him, and was therewith very well
+content. At this time in his life he asked nothing better than to be left
+alone with his whims and the open air. He covered many a mile of sticky
+clay in these autumn days, placidly vacant of mind, and afterwards
+accounted them the most comfortable of his life.
+
+Mr. Waverton's house was set upon a hill, at one end of a line of hills
+which now look over the wilderness of London, falling steeply thereto,
+and upon the other side, to northward and the open country, more gently.
+In the epoch of Harry Boyce those hills were all woodland--pleasant
+patches still remain,--and if the need of great walking was not upon him
+he was often pleased to loiter through their thickets. It was on a wild
+south-westerly day when the naked trees were at a loud chorus that Alison
+came to him.
+
+The dainty colours of her face laughed from a russet hood, russet cloak
+and green skirt wind-borne against her gave him the delight of her shape.
+
+"'Stand, sir, and throw us that you have about you,'" she cried.
+
+"You're poetical, ma'am."
+
+"I vow not I. I say what I mean. There's an unmaidenly trick. And, faith,
+I am here to rifle you, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Wish you joy, ma'am. What of?"
+
+"Of your conceit, to be sure. Have you anything else?"
+
+"I have nothing which could be of any use to Miss Lambourne. So God knows
+why she runs after me."
+
+"Oh, brave!" Miss Lambourne was not out of countenance. "'Tis a shameless
+maid indeed which runs after a man"--she made him a curtsy. "But what is
+the man who runs away from a maid?"
+
+Harry Boyce cursed her in his heart. She was by far too desirable. The
+rain-fraught wind had made the dawn tints of her clearer, lucent and yet
+more delicate. Her grey eyes danced like the sunlight ripples of deep
+water. Her lips were purely, brilliantly red. She fronted him and the
+wind, flaunting the richness of her bosom, poised and strong. She seemed
+the very body of life. For the first time he felt unsure of himself. "Did
+you come to call names, ma'am?" he growled.
+
+"I allow you the privileges of a gentleman, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Gentleman? Oh Lud, no, ma'am. I am an upper servant. Rather better than
+the butler. Not so good as the steward."
+
+"It won't serve you, sir. You have insulted me, and I demand
+satisfaction." She drew off her gauntleted glove and flicked him in the
+face with it. "Now will you fight?"
+
+"Oh, must we slap and scratch then?" Harry flushed darker than the mark
+of the glove. "I thought we had been fighting."
+
+Miss Lambourne laughed. "You can lose your temper then? It's something,
+in fact. Yes, we have been fighting, sir, and you don't fight fair."
+
+"Who does with a woman?" Harry sneered. "I cry you mercy, ma'am. You are
+vastly too strong for me. Let me alone and I ask no more of you."
+
+To which Miss Lambourne said, very innocently, "Why?" Harry looked up and
+saw her beautiful face meek and appealing, with something of a demure
+smile in the eyes. "Come, sir, what have I asked of you? You have done
+me something of a great service. There was a man handling me--do you know
+what that means? "--she made a wry face and gave herself a shaking
+shudder--"You rid me of him, and with some risk to your precious skin.
+Well, sir, I am grateful, and I want to show it. Odds life, I should be a
+beast did I not. I want to thank you and to sing your praises--to
+yourself also perhaps. And you are pleased to be a churl and a boor."
+
+"In effect," said Harry coolly. "Egad, ma'am, let me have the luxury of
+hating you. For I am the Wavertons' gentleman usher and you are the
+nonpareil Miss Lambourne, vastly rich and--" he ended with a shrug and
+a rueful grin.
+
+"And--?" Miss Lambourne softly insisted.
+
+"And damnably lovely. Lord, you know that."
+
+"I thank God," said Miss Lambourne devoutly.
+
+"Is it true, Mr. Boyce--do the meek inherit the earth?" She held out her
+hands to him, one bare, one gloved, she swayed a little towards him, and
+her face was gentle and wistful. "Nay, sir, I ask your pardon. Call
+friends if you please and will please me."
+
+Harry lost hold of himself at last. The blood surged in him, and he
+caught at her and kissed her fiercely.
+
+It was he who was embarrassed. As he stood away from her, eyeing her with
+a queer defiant shame, she smiled through a small matter of a blush, and
+breathing quickly said: "What does it feel like, sir?"
+
+"The world's a miracle," Harry said unsteadily and would have caught
+her again.
+
+She turned, she was away light of foot, and in a moment through the wind
+he heard her singing to a tune of her own the child's rhyme:
+
+"Fly away, Jack,
+ Fly away, Jill,
+Come again, Jack,
+ Come again, Jill."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HARRY IS NOT GRATEFUL
+
+
+Where the lane from Fortis Green crosses the high road there stood an
+ale-house. On the wettest days, and some others, the place was Harry's
+resort. Not that he had a liking for ale-house company--or indeed any
+company. But within the precincts of the Wavertons' house tobacco was
+forbidden and--all the more for that--tobacco he loved with a solid
+devotion. The alehouse of the cross roads offered a clean floor, a clean
+fire, air not too foul, a tolerable chair, a landlord who did not talk,
+and until evening, sufficient solitude. There Harry smoked many pipes in
+tranquillity until the day when on his entry he found Mr. Hadley's
+sardonic face waiting for him. He liked Charles Hadley less than many men
+whom he more despised. Nobody in a position just better than menial can
+be expected to like the condescending mockery which was Mr. Hadley's
+_metier_. But Harry--it is one of his most noble qualities--bore being
+laughed at well enough. What most annoyed him was Mr. Hadley's parade of
+a surly, austere virtue. He did not doubt that it was sincere. He could
+more easily have forgiven it if it had been hypocritical. A man had no
+business to be so mighty honest.
+
+Mr. Hadley nodded at Harry, who said it was a dirty day, and called for
+his pot of small ale and his pennyworth of Spanish tobacco. Mr. Hadley
+was civil enough to pass him a pipe from the box. Both gentlemen smoked
+in grave silence.
+
+"So you are still with us," said Mr. Hadley.
+
+"By your good leave, sir."
+
+"I had an apprehension the Colonel was going to ravish you away."
+
+"I hope I am still of some use to Mr. Waverton."
+
+"Damme, you might be the old family retainer. 'Faithful service of the
+antique world,' egad. I suppose you will end your days with Geoffrey, and
+be buried at his feet like a trusty hound."
+
+"If you please, sir."
+
+They looked at each other. "Well, Mr. Boyce, I beg your pardon," Hadley
+said. "But you'll allow you are irritating to a plain man."
+
+"I do not desire it, sir."
+
+"I may hold my tongue and mind my own business, eh? Why not take me
+friendly?"
+
+"I intend you no harm, Mr. Hadley."
+
+"That's devilish good of you, Mr. Boyce. To be plain with you, what do
+you want here?"
+
+"Here? Oh Lord, sir, I come to smoke my pipe!"
+
+"And what if I come to smoke you? Odds life, I know you are no fool. Do
+me the honour to take me for none. And tell me, if you please, why do you
+choose to be Master Geoffrey's gentleman in waiting? You are good for
+better than that, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"No doubt, sir. But it brings me bread and butter."
+
+"You could earn that fighting in Flanders."
+
+Harry shrugged. "I am not very brave, Mr. Hadley."
+
+"You count upon staying here, do you?"
+
+"If I can satisfy Mr. Waverton," said Harry meekly.
+
+Hadley's face grew harder. "I vow I do my best to wish you well,
+Mr. Boyce. I should be glad to hear that you'll give up walking in
+the woods."
+
+There was a moment of silence. "I did not know that I had asked for your
+advice, sir." Harry said. "I am not grateful for it."
+
+"Damme, that's the first honest answer you have made," Hadley cried.
+"Look 'e, Mr. Boyce, I am as much your friend as I may be. I have an
+uncle which was the lady's guardian. If I said a word to him he would
+carry it to Lady Waverton in a gouty rage. There would be a swift end of
+Mr. Boyce the tutor. Well, I would not desire that. For all your airs,
+I'll believe you a man of honour. And I ask you what's to become of Mr.
+Boyce the tutor seeking private meetings with the Lambourne heiress?
+Egad, sir, you were made for better things than such a mean business."
+
+"Honour!" Harry sneered. "Were you talking of men of honour? I suppose
+there is good cover in the woods, Mr. Hadley."
+
+Hadley stared at him. "It was not good enough, you see, sir." He knocked
+out his pipe and stood up. "Bah, this is childish. You don't think me a
+knave, nor I you. I have said my say, and I mean you well."
+
+"I believe that, Mr. Hadley"--Harry met him with level eyes--"and I am
+not grateful."
+
+"You know who she is meant for."
+
+"I know that the lady might call us both impudent."
+
+"Would that break your bones? Come, sir, the lady hath been destined for
+Master Geoffrey since she had hair and never has rebelled."
+
+"Lord, Mr. Hadley, are you destiny?"
+
+Mr. Hadley let that by with an impatient shrug. "So if you be fool enough
+to have ambitions after her, you would wear a better face in eating no
+more of Master Geoffrey's bread."
+
+"It's a good day for walking, Mr. Hadley. Which way do you go? For I go
+the other."
+
+"I hope so," Mr. Hadley agreed, and on that the two gentlemen parted,
+both something warm.
+
+We should flatter him in supposing Harry Boyce of a chivalrous delicacy.
+Whether the lady's fair fame might be the worse for him was a question of
+which he never thought. It is certain that he did not blame himself for
+using his place as Geoffrey's paid servant to damage Geoffrey in his
+affections. And indeed you will agree that he was innocent of any
+designed attack upon the lady. Yet Mr. Hadley succeeded in making him
+very uncomfortable.
+
+What most troubled him, I conceive, was the fear of being ridiculous. The
+position of a poor tutor aspiring to the favours of the heiress destined
+for his master invites the unkind gibe. And Harry could not be sure that
+Alison herself was free from the desire to make him a figure of scorn.
+Such a suspicion might disconcert the most ardent of lovers. Harry
+Boyce, whatever his abilities in the profession, was not that yet. But
+the very fact that he had come to feel an ache of longing for Alison made
+him for once dread laughter. If he had been manoeuvring for what he could
+get by her, or if he had been merely taken by her good looks, he might
+have met jeering with a brazen face. But she had engaged his most private
+emotions, and to have them made ludicrous would be of all possible
+punishments most intolerable. The precise truth of what he felt for her
+then was, I suppose, that he wanted to make her his own--wanted to have
+all of her in his power; and a gentleman whom the world--and the
+lady--are laughing at for an aspiring menial cannot comfortably think
+about his right to possess her.
+
+There was something else. He was not meticulously delicate, but he had a
+complete practical sanity. He saw very well that even if Alison, by the
+chance of circumstance, had some infatuation for him, she might soon
+repent: he saw that even if the affair went with romantic success--a
+thing hardly possible--his position and hers might be awkward enough.
+Her friends would be long in forgiving either of them, and find ways
+enough to hurt them both. Mr. Hadley, confound him, spoke the common
+sense of mankind.
+
+There was one solution--that estimable father. By the time he came back
+to the house on Tether-down, Harry was resolved to enlist under the
+ambiguous banner of Colonel Boyce.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+GENEROSITY OF A FATHER
+
+
+With grim irony Harry congratulated himself on his decision. When first
+he came into the house he heard Alison singing. There was indeed (as he
+told himself clearly) nothing wonderful about her voice--it resembled
+the divine only in being still and small. Yet he could not (he called
+himself still more clearly a fool) keep away from it, and so he slunk
+into Lady Waverton's drawing-room. Only duty and stated hours were wont
+to drag him there. Lady Waverton showed her appreciation of his unusual
+attendance by staring at him across the massed trifles of the room with
+sleepy and insolent amazement. But it was not the glassy eyes of Lady
+Waverton which convinced Harry that flight was the true wisdom. Over
+Alison at the harpsichord, Geoffrey hung tenderly: their shoulders
+touched, eyes answered eyes, and miss was radiant. She sang at him with a
+naughty archness that song of Mr. Congreve's:
+
+"Thus to a ripe consenting maid,
+Poor old repenting Delia said,
+Would you long preserve your lover?
+ Would you still his goddess reign?
+Never let him all discover,
+ Never let him much obtain.
+
+Men will admire, adore and die
+While wishing at your feet they lie;
+But admitting their embraces
+ Wakes 'em from the golden dream:
+Nothing's new besides our faces,
+ Every woman is the same."
+
+She contorted her own face into smug folly by way of illustration. Then
+she and Geoffrey laughed together. "I vow you're the most deliciously
+wicked creature that ever was born a maid."
+
+"D'ye regret it, sir? Faith, I could not well be born a wife."
+
+"No, ma'am, that's an honour to be won by care and pains."
+
+"Pains! Lud, yes, I believe that. But, dear sir, I reckon it the
+punishment for folly. Why,"--she chose to see Harry--"why, here is our
+knight of the rueful countenance!"
+
+Mr. Waverton laughed. "It is related of the Egyptians--"
+
+"God help us," Alison murmured.
+
+He went on, giggling. "It is related of the Ancient Egyptians that they
+ever had a corpse among the guests at their feasts."
+
+"Were their cooks so bad?" said Alison.
+
+"To remind them that all men are mortal. Now you see why we keep Harry."
+
+"I wonder if he looked as happy when he was alive," said Alison,
+surveying his wooden face.
+
+"_De mortuis nil nisi bonum_," Geoffrey laughed. "No jests about the
+dead, Alison. But to tell you a secret, he never was alive. He doesn't
+like it known."
+
+Colonel Boyce, who had listened to the song and the first
+coruscations of wit with the condescending smile of a connoisseur,
+now exhibited some impatience. "Egad, Harry, why will you dress like
+a parson out at elbows?"
+
+"His customary suit of solemn black," said Geoffrey.
+
+"He is in mourning for himself, of course," Alison laughed.
+
+"I have two suits of clothes, ma'am," said Harry meekly. "This is
+the better."
+
+"Poor Harry!" Geoffrey granted him a look of protective affection. "I vow
+we are too hard on him, Alison." And then in a lower voice for her
+private ear. "A dear, worthy fellow, but--well, what would you have?--of
+no spirit." Alison bit her lip.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Waverton," Harry protested, "indeed, I am proud to be the cause
+of such wit."
+
+Colonel Boyce stared at his son with an enigmatic frown. Alison's eyes
+brightened. But Geoffrey suspected no guile. "Not witty thyself, dear
+lad, but the cause of wit in others, eh? Odds life, Harry, you are
+invaluable."
+
+"'Tis your kindness for me makes you think so, Mr. Waverton. And, to be
+sure, I could ask no more than to amuse your lady."
+
+Alison said tartly, "Oh, it takes little to amuse me, sir."
+
+"I am sure, ma'am," Harry agreed meekly.
+
+"It's a happy nature." and he bowed to Geoffrey, humbly congratulating
+him on a lady of such simple tastes.
+
+Geoffrey, who had now had enough of his good tutor, eliminated him by a
+compliment or so on Alison's voice and the demand that she should sing
+again. He found her in an awkward temper. She would not sing this, she
+would not sing that, she found faults in every song known to Mr.
+Waverton. Yet in a fashion she was encouraging. For this new method of
+keeping him off was governed by a queer adulation of him: no song in the
+world could be worth his distinguished attention; her little voice must
+be to his accomplished ear vain and ludicrous; the kind things he was so
+good as to say were vastly gratifying, to be sure, but they were merely
+his kind condescension. And, oh Lud, it was time she was gone, or poor,
+dear Weston would be imagining her slaughtered on the highway.
+
+Geoffrey could not make much of this, but was pleased to take it as
+flattering feminine homage to his magnificence. By way of reward, he
+announced an intention of riding home with her carriage. "Faith, you are
+too good"--her eyes were modestly hidden--"but then you are too good to
+everybody. Is he not, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+"Oh, ma'am, we all practise on his kindness," Harry said.
+
+"A good night to your mourning," she said sharply, "dear Lady Waverton."
+They kissed. "Colonel Boyce, I hold you to your promise."
+
+"With all my heart, ma'am. Your devoted."
+
+She was gone, and Harry, with a look of significance at his father, went
+off too....
+
+In that shabby upper chamber of his, Harry again offered the Colonel a
+choice between the bed and the one chair. Colonel Boyce made a gesture
+and an exclamation of impatience, and remained standing. "Now, what the
+devil do you want with me?" he complained.
+
+"I want to be very grateful. I want to enlist with you. When shall
+we start?"
+
+His father frowned, and in a little while made a crooked answer, "Do you
+know, Harry, you are too mighty subtle. I was so at your years. It's very
+pretty sport, but--well, it won't butter your parsnips. The women can't
+tell what to make of it. Having, in general, no humour, pretty
+creatures."
+
+"I am obliged for the sermon, sir. Shall we leave to-morrow?"
+
+"Egad, you are in a fluster," his father smiled. "Well, to be sure, he is
+a teasing fellow, the beautiful Geoffrey."
+
+Harry made an exclamation. "You'll forgive me, sir, if I say you are
+talking nonsense."
+
+"Oh Lud, yes," his father chuckled.
+
+"Whether I am agreeable to women, whether Mr. Waverton is agreeable to
+me--odds life, sir, I don't trouble my head about such things. Pray,
+why should you? As well sit down and cry because my eyes are not the
+same colour."
+
+"No. No. There is something taking about that, Harry," his father
+remonstrated placidly.
+
+"When you please to be in earnest, sir," Harry cried, "if this affair of
+yours is in earnest--" "Oh, you may count on that." Colonel Boyce was
+still enjoying himself.
+
+"Then I am ready for it. And the sooner the better."
+
+"Hurry is a bad horse. The truth is, something more hangs on this affair
+than Mr. Harry's whims. Oh, damme, I don't blame you, though. He is
+tiresome, our Geoffrey."
+
+"Why, sir, if we have to waste time, we might waste it more comfortably
+than with the Waverton family. Shall we say to-morrow?"
+
+Colonel Boyce tapped his still excellent teeth. "Patience, patience," he
+said, and considered his son gravely. "As for to-morrow, I have friends
+to see, and so have you. Your pretty miss engaged me to ride over with
+you to her house. And behind the brave Geoffrey's back, if you please.
+She is a sly puss, Harry." He expected so obviously an angry answer that
+Harry chose to disappoint him.
+
+"I shall be happy to take leave of Miss Lambourne. And shall I ride
+pillion with you, sir? For I have no horse of my own."
+
+"Bah, dear Geoffrey will lend me the best in the stable."
+
+"I give you joy of the progress in his affections."
+
+Colonel Boyce laughed. "You are pledged for the forenoon then," he
+paused. "And as to that little affair of mine--you shall know your part
+soon enough."
+
+"It cannot be too soon, sir."
+
+"No." Colonel Boyce nodded. "I think it's full time."
+
+He took leave of his son with what the son thought superfluous
+affection.
+
+Half an hour afterwards he was in Mr. Waverton's room--a place very
+precious. Everything in it--and there were many things--had an air of
+being strange. Mr. Waverton slept behind curtains of black and silver.
+His floor was covered with some stuff like scarlet velvet. There was a
+skull in the place of honour on the walls, flanked by two Venetian
+pictures of the Virgin, and faced by a blowsy Bacchus and Ariadne from
+Flanders. The chairs were of the newest Italian mode, designed rather to
+carry as much gilding as possible than to comfort the human form. Colonel
+Boyce, regarding them with some apprehension, stood himself before the
+fire and waved off Geoffrey's effusive courtesy.
+
+"I hope you have good news for me, Mr. Waverton?" So he opened the
+attack.
+
+"Why, sir, I have considered my engagements," Geoffrey said
+magnificently. "I believe I could hold myself free for some months--if
+the enterprise were of weight."
+
+"You relieve me vastly. I'll not disguise from you, Mr. Waverton, that I
+am something anxious to secure you. I could not find a gentleman so well
+equipped for this delicate business. You'll observe, 'tis of the first
+importance that we should have presence, an air, the _je ne sais quoi_ of
+dignity and family."
+
+"Sir, you are very obliging." Geoffrey swallowed it whole.
+
+"When I came here I confess I was at my wit's end. Indeed, I had a mind
+to go alone. The gentlemen of my acquaintance--either they could not be
+trusted with an affair of such value, or they had too much of our English
+coarseness to be at ease with it. Faith, when I came to see my poor, dear
+Harry, little I thought that in his neighbourhood I should find the very
+man for my embassy." The two gentlemen laughed together over the
+incompatibility of Harry with gentlemanly diplomacy.
+
+"Not but what Harry is a faithful, trusty fellow," said Mr. Waverton,
+with magnificent condescension.
+
+"You are very good to say so. A dolt, sir, a dolt; so much the worse for
+me. Now, Mr. Waverton, to you I have no need of a word more on the
+secrecy of the affair. Though, to be sure, this very morning I had
+another note from Cadogan--Marlborough's _ame damnee_ you know--pressing
+it on me that nothing should get abroad. So when we go, we'll be off
+without a good-bye, and if you must leave a word behind for the anxieties
+of my lady, let her know that you are off with me to see the army in
+Flanders."
+
+"I profess, Colonel, you are mighty cautious."
+
+"Dear sir, we cannot be too cautious in this affair. There's many a
+handsome scheme gone awry for the sake of some affectionate farewell.
+Mothers, wives, lady-loves--sweet luxuries, Mr. Waverton, but damned
+dangerous. Now here's my plan. We'll go riding on an afternoon and not
+come back again. Trust my servant to get away quietly with your baggage
+and mine. We must travel light, to be sure. We'll go round London. I have
+too many friends there, and I want none of them asking where old Noll
+Boyce is off to now. Newhaven is the port for us. There is a trusty
+fellow there has his orders already. I look to land at Le Havre. Now, the
+Prince, by our latest news, is back at St. Germain. As you can guess, Mr.
+Waverton, to be seen in Paris would suit my health even less than to be
+seen in London. Too many honest Frenchmen have met me in the wars, and,
+what's worse, too many of them know me deep in Marlborough's business. I
+could not show my face without all King Louis's court talking of some
+great matter afoot. What I have in mind is to halt on the road--at
+Pontoise maybe--while you ride on with letters to Prince James. I warrant
+you they are such, and with such names to them, as will assure you a
+noble welcome. It's intended that he should quit St. Germain privately
+with you to conduct him to me. Then I warrant you we shall know how to
+deal with the lad." He paused and stared at Geoffrey intently, and
+gradually a grim humour stole into his eyes. He began to laugh. "Egad, I
+envy you, Mr. Waverton. To be in such an affair at your years--bah, I
+should have been crazy with pride."
+
+"You need not doubt that I value the occasion, sir," Geoffrey said
+grandly. "Pray, believe that I shall do honour to your confidence."
+
+"To be sure you will. Odds life, to chaffer with a king's son about
+kingdoms, to offer a realm to a prince in exile (if only he will be a
+good boy)--it's a fine, stately affair, sir, and you are the very man to
+take it in the right vein."
+
+"Sir, you are most obliging. I profess I vaunt myself very happy in your
+kindness. Be sure that I shall know how to justify you."
+
+"Egad, you do already," Colonel Boyce smiled, still with some touch of
+cruelty in his eyes.
+
+"Pray, sir, when must we start?"
+
+"When I know, maybe I shall need to start in an hour."
+
+"I shall not fail you. I shall want, I suppose, some funds in hand?"
+
+Colonel Boyce shrugged. "Oh Lud, yes, we'll want some money. A matter of
+five hundred pounds should serve."
+
+"I will arrange for it in the morning," said Mr. Waverton, too
+magnificent to be startled. "Pray, what clothes shall we be able
+to carry?"
+
+"Damme, that's a grave matter," said Colonel Boyce, and with becoming
+gravity discussed it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+MISS LAMBOURNE LOOKS SIDEWAYS
+
+
+Thus Colonel Boyce blandly arranged the lives of his young friends. It is
+believed that he had a peculiar pleasure in manoeuvring his
+fellow-creatures from behind a veil of secrecy. For in this he sought not
+merely his private profit (though it was never out of his calculations);
+he enjoyed his operations for their own sake; he liked his trickery as
+trickery; to push and pull people to the place in which he wanted them
+without their knowing how or why or to what end they were impelled was to
+him a pleasure second to none in life. And on a survey of his whole
+career he is to be accounted successful. Though I cannot find that he
+ever achieved anything of signal importance even for himself, at one time
+or another he brought a great number of people, some of them powerful,
+and some of them honourable, under his direction, he had his complete
+will of many of them, and was rewarded by the bitter hostility of the
+majority. He contrived, in fact, to live just such a life as he liked
+best. What more can any man have?
+
+So he told Harry nothing of his engagement of Mr. Waverton, and Harry,
+you have seen, was not likely to guess that anyone would enlist his
+Geoffrey for a serious enterprise. On the next morning, indeed, Harry did
+remark that Geoffrey was more portentous than usual, but thought nothing
+of it. He was embarrassed by thinking about himself.
+
+There was, as Colonel Boyce predicted, no difficulty about a horse for
+Harry. When the Colonel suggested it, Geoffrey showed some satirical
+surprise at Harry's daring, but (advising one of the older carriage
+horses) bade him take what he would. Colonel Boyce spoke only of riding
+with his son. He said nothing of where they were going. Harry wondered
+whether Geoffrey would have been so gracious if he had known that Alison
+was their destination, and, a new experience for him, felt some qualms of
+conscience. It was uncomfortable to use a favour from Geoffrey, even a
+trifling favour granted with a sneer, for meeting his lady; still more
+uncomfortable to go seek the lady out secretly. But if he announced what
+he was doing, there would be instantly something ridiculous about it, and
+he would have to swallow much of Geoffrey's humour. Geoffrey might even
+come with them, and Alison and he be humorous together--a fate
+intolerable. There was indeed an easy way of escape. He had but to stay
+away from the lady. But, though he despised himself for it, he desired
+infinitely to see her again. She compelled him, as he had never believed
+anything outside his own will could compel. After all, it was no such
+matter, for he would soon be gone with his father to France. He might
+well hope never to see her again.
+
+So on that ride through the steep wooded lanes to Highgate, his father
+found him morose, and complained of it. "Damme, for a young fellow that's
+off to his lady-love you are a mighty poor thing, Harry."
+
+"My lady-love! I have no taste for rich food. I thought it was your lady
+we were going to see."
+
+"What the devil do you mean by that?" Colonel Boyce stared.
+
+"Oh, fie, sir! Why be ashamed of her?"
+
+"God knows what you are talking about." Colonel Boyce was extraordinarily
+irritated. "Ashamed of whom?"
+
+"Of the peerless Miss Lambourne, to be sure. Oh, sir, why be so innocent?
+How could she resist your charms? And indeed--"
+
+"Miss Lambourne! What damned nonsense you talk, Harry."
+
+"I followed your lead, sir," said Harry meekly. "But if we are to talk
+sense--when shall we start for France?"
+
+"You shall know when I know."
+
+And on that they came to the top of the hill and the gates of the Hall.
+The wet weather had yielded to St. Martin's summer. It was a day of
+gentle silver-gold sunlight and benign air. With her companion, Mrs.
+Weston, Miss Lambourne was walking in the garden. She met the gentlemen
+at a turn of the drive by rampant sweetbriers. "Here's our knight of the
+rueful countenance, and faith, on Rosinante, poor jade," she patted
+Harry's aged carriage horse. "Oh, and he has brought with him Solomon in
+all his glory," she made a wonderful curtsy to the splendours of Colonel
+Boyce. "Now, who would have dreamt Don Quixote's father was Solomon?"
+
+"I suppose I take after my mother, ma'am," Harry said meekly. "It's a
+hope which often consoles me."
+
+"Why, they say Solomon had something of a variety in wives, and
+among them--"
+
+Colonel Boyce dismounted with so much noise that the jest was hardly
+heard and the end of it altogether lost.
+
+"You did not tell me"--Mrs. Weston was speaking and seemed to find it
+difficult--"Alison, you did not tell me the gentlemen were coming." It
+occurred to Harry that she looked very pale and ill.
+
+"Why, Weston; dear, I could not tell if they would keep troth." She
+began to hum:
+
+"Men were deceivers ever,
+ One foot on sea, and one on shore,
+To one thing constant never."
+
+"Nay, ma'am, sigh no more for here are we," Colonel Boyce said brusquely.
+
+"Oh Lud, he overwhelms us with the honour." She laughed. "How can we
+entertain him worthily? Sir, will you walk? My poor house and I await
+your pleasure."
+
+"I am vastly honoured, ma'am. I have never had a lady-in-waiting."
+
+"Oh, celibate virtue!" quoth Miss Lambourne. And so to the house Colonel
+Boyce led her and his horse, and a little way behind Harry followed with
+his and Mrs. Weston.
+
+She had nothing to say for herself. She looked so wan, she walked so
+slowly, and with such an air of pain that Harry had to say something
+about fearing she was not well. Then he felt a fool for his pains; as she
+turned in answer and shook her head he saw such a sad, wistful dignity in
+her eyes that the small coin of courtesy seemed an absurd offering. A
+fancy, to be sure, in itself absurd. Yet he could not make the woman out.
+There was something odd and baffling in the way she looked at him.
+
+She led off with an odd question, "Pray, have you lived much with
+Colonel Boyce?"
+
+"Not I, ma'am." Harry laughed. "If I were not a very wise child I should
+hardly know my own father. Lived with him? Not much more than with my
+mother, whom I never saw."
+
+"Oh, did you not?" Her eyes dwelt upon him. After a little while, "Who
+brought you up then?"
+
+"Schools. Half a dozen schools between Taunton and London, and
+Westminster at last."
+
+"Were you happy?"
+
+"When I had sixpence."
+
+"But Colonel Boyce is rich!" she cried.
+
+"I have no evidence of it, ma'am."
+
+"I cannot understand. You hardly know him. But he comes to you at Lady
+Waverton's; he stays with you; he brings you here. I believe you are
+closer with him than you say."
+
+"Why, ma'am, it's mighty kind in you to concern yourself so with my
+affairs. And if you can't understand them, faith, no more can I."
+
+She showed no shame at this rebuke of impertinence. In a minute Harry was
+sorry he had amused himself by giving it. There was something strangely
+affecting in the woman. Middle-aged, stout, faded, bound in manner and
+speech by a shy clumsiness, she refused to be insignificant, she made an
+appeal to him which he puzzled over in vain. Her simplicity was with
+power, as of a nature which had cared only for the greater things. He
+felt himself meeting one who had more than he of human quality, richer in
+suffering, richer in all emotion, and (what was vastly surprising) under
+her dullness, her feebleness, of fuller and deeper life.
+
+From vague, intriguing, bewildering fancies, her voice brought him back
+with a start. "He brought you here?" she was asking.
+
+To be sure, she was wonderfully maladroit. This buzzing, futile curiosity
+irritated him again into a sneer. "He is no doubt captivated by the
+beautiful eyes of Miss Lambourne."
+
+"He! Mr. Boyce?"--she corrected herself with a stammer and a
+blush--"Colonel Boyce? Oh no. Indeed, he is old enough to be her father."
+
+"I think we ought to tell him so." Harry chuckled. "It would do
+him good."
+
+"I think this is not very delicate, sir." Mrs. Weston was still blushing.
+
+"Egad, ma'am, if you ask questions, you must expect answers," Harry
+snapped at her.
+
+"Why do you sneer at her? Why should you speak coarsely of her? I suppose
+you come to the house of your own choice? Or does he make you come?"
+
+Harry saw no occasion for such excitement. "Why, you take away my breath
+with your pronouns. He and she--she and he--pray, let's leave him and
+her out of the question. Here's a very pretty garden."
+
+"Indeed, we need not quarrel, I think." She laughed nervously, and gave
+him an odd, shy look. "Pray, do you stay with the Wavertons?"
+
+"Alas, ma'am, I make your acquaintance and bid you farewell all in one
+day."
+
+"Make my acquaintance!" Again came a nervous laugh, and it was a moment
+before she went on. "We have met before to-day."
+
+"Oh Lud, ma'am, I would desire you forget it."
+
+"I am to forget it!" she echoed. "Oh ... Oh, you are very proud."
+
+"Not I, indeed. The truth is, ma'am, that silly affair with our
+highwayman, it embarrasses me mightily. I want to live it down. Pray,
+help me, and think no more about it."
+
+"I suppose that is what you say to Alison?" For the first time there was
+a touch of fun in her eyes.
+
+"Word for word, ma'am."
+
+"Why do you come here then?"
+
+"As I have the honour to tell you--to say good-bye."
+
+She checked and stared at him. She was very pale. But now they were at
+the steps of the house, and Colonel Boyce, who had resigned his horse to
+a groom, turned with Alison to meet them.
+
+"I am hot with the Colonel's compliments, Weston, dear," she announced.
+"I must take a turn with Mr. Boyce to cool me. 'Tis his role. A
+convenient family, faith. One makes you uncomfortably hot and t'other
+freezes you. You go get warm, my Weston. Though I vow 'tis dangerous to
+trust you to the Colonel. He has made very shameless love to me, and you
+have a tender heart."
+
+It occurred to Harry that Mrs. Weston and his father, thus forced to look
+at each other, wore each an air of defiance. They amused him.
+
+"I am not afraid," Mrs. Weston said.
+
+"I profess I am abashed," said Colonel Boyce. "Pray, ma'am, be gentle to
+my disgrace," and he offered his arm. She bowed and moved away, and he
+followed her.
+
+Harry and Alison, face to face, and sufficiently close, eyed each other
+with some amusement.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Boyce," said she, and shook her head.
+
+"Oh, Miss Lambourne," Harry exhorted in his turn.
+
+"You have fallen. You have walked into my parlour."
+
+"I am the best of sons, ma'am. I endure all things at my father's
+orders--even spiders."
+
+She still eyed him steadily, searching him, and was still amused. She
+moved a little so that the admirable flowing lines of her shape were more
+marked. Then she said, "Why are you afraid of me?"
+
+Harry shook his head, smiling. "Vainly is the net spread in the sight of
+the bird, ma'am. But, faith, it was a pretty question, and I make you my
+compliments."
+
+"So. Will you walk, sir?" She turned into a narrow path in the shadow of
+arches, clothed by a great Austrian brier, on which here and there a
+yellow flame still glowed. "Mr. Boyce--when I meet you in company you
+shrink and cower detestably; when I meet you alone, you fence with me
+impudently enough and shrewdly; and always you avoid me while you can. I
+suppose there's in all this something more than the freaks of a fool.
+Then it's fear. Prithee, sir, why in God's name are you afraid of me?"
+
+"Miss Lambourne got out of bed very earnest this morning," Harry grinned.
+"But oh, let's be grave and honest with all my heart. Why, then, ma'am,
+I've to say that a penniless fellow has the right to be afraid of Miss
+Lambourne's money bags."
+
+"Fie, you are no such fool. If one is good company to t'other, which is
+rich and which is poor is no more matter than which fair and which dark."
+
+"In a better world, ma'am, I would believe you."
+
+"And here you believe kind folks would sneer at Harry Boyce for scenting
+an heiress. So you tuck your tail between your legs and go to ground. I
+suppose that is called honour, sir."
+
+"Oh no, ma'am. Taste."
+
+"La, I offend monsieur's fine taste, do I?"
+
+"Not often, ma'am. But by all means let us be earnest. I believe I mind
+being sneered at no more than my betters. _Par exemple_, ma'am, when you
+laugh at me for being shabby, I am not much disturbed."
+
+She blushed furiously. "I never did."
+
+"Oh, I must have read your thoughts then," Harry laughed. "Well, what
+matters to me is not that folks laugh at me but why they laugh. That they
+mock me for being out at elbows I swallow well enough. That they should
+sneer at me for making love to a woman's purse would give me a nausea."
+
+Miss Lambourne was pleased to look modest. "Indeed, sir, I did not know
+that you had made love to me."
+
+"I am obliged by your honesty, ma'am."
+
+Miss Lambourne looked up and spoke with some vehemence. "It comes
+to this, then, you would be beaten by what folks may say about you.
+Oh, brave!"
+
+"Lud, we are all beaten by what folks might say. Would you ride into
+London in your shift?"
+
+"I don't want to ride in my shift," she cried fiercely.
+
+"Perhaps not, ma'am. But perhaps I don't want to make love to your
+purse."
+
+"Od burn it, sir, am I nothing but a purse?"
+
+"I leave it to your husband to find out, ma'am, and beg leave to take my
+leave. My kind father offers me occupation at a distance, and I embrace
+it ardently. Who knows? It may provide me with a coat."
+
+"You are going away?"
+
+"I have had the honour to say so."
+
+"And why, if you please?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "Because, ma'am, without my assistance, Mr. Waverton can
+very well translate Horace into his own sublime verse and Miss Lambourne
+into his own proud wife."
+
+He intended her to rage. What she did was to say softly: "You do not want
+to see me that?"
+
+"I have no ambition to amuse you, ma'am." Miss Lambourne looked
+sideways. "What if I don't want you to go away?"
+
+"Egad, ma'am, I know you don't." Harry laughed. "You amuse yourself
+vastly (God knows why) with baiting me."
+
+"Why, it amuses me." Alison still looked at him sideways. "Don't you
+know why?"
+
+He did not choose to answer.
+
+"Indeed, then, if I am nought to you why do you care what folks say of
+you and me?"
+
+Harry made a step towards her. "You mean to have it again, do you?"
+he muttered.
+
+"Pray, sir, what?" and still she looked sideways.
+
+"What you dragged out of me in the wood."
+
+"Dragged out of--oh!" She blushed, she drew back, and so had occasion to
+do something with her cloak which let a glimpse of white neck and bosom
+come into the light. "You flatter us both indeed."
+
+"I'll tell you the truth of us both"--he, too, was flushed: "you are a
+curst coquette and I am a curst fool."
+
+Now she met his eyes fairly, and in hers there was no more laughter,
+but she smiled with her lips: "I think you know yourself better than
+you know me."
+
+Harry gripped her hands. "You go about to make me mad with desire for
+you, you--"
+
+"I want you so," she breathed, and leaned back, away from him, her eyes
+half veiled.
+
+He had his arms about her body, held her close. The red lips curved in a
+riddle of a smile. He saw dark depths in the shadowed eyes.
+
+"_Malbrouck s'en va t'en guerre_" she murmured.
+
+Harry exclaimed something, felt her against him, was aware of all her
+form--and heard footsteps.
+
+Alison was out of his grasp, her back to him, plucking a rose. "You will
+see me again--you shall see me again. I ride in the wood to-morrow
+morning," she muttered.
+
+"You'll pay for it," Harry growled.
+
+His father arrived, Mrs. Weston, a servant at their heels.
+
+Alison came round with a swirl of skirts. "Dear sir, I doubt you have
+burnt up dinner by your long passages with my Weston. Come in, come in,"
+and she led the way.
+
+For once Colonel Boyce was without an answer. Harry, who was dreading
+witticisms, looked at him in surprise, and with more surprise saw that he
+looked angry. Mrs. Weston hurried on before them all. Her eyes were red.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+ANGER OF AN UNCLE
+
+
+It seems certain that on this day Alison wore a dress of a blue like
+peacock's feathers. That colour--as you may see, she wears it in both the
+Kneller and the Thornhill portraits--was much a favourite of hers, and
+indeed it set off well the rare beauty of her own hues. The clarity, the
+delicacy, of her cheeks were such as you may see on one of those roses
+which, white in full flower, have a rosy flush on the outer petals of the
+bud, and the same rose open may serve for the likeness of a neck and
+bosom which she guarded no more prudishly than her day's fashion
+demanded. For all the daintiness, her lips, a proud pair, were richly red
+(stained of raspberries, in Charles Hadley's sneer), and with the black
+masses of her hair and grey eyes almost as dark, gave her an aspect of,
+what neither man nor woman ever denied her, eager and passionate life.
+All this was flowering out of her peacock blue velvet, and Harry, I
+infer, went mad.
+
+She never expanded into the larger extravagances of the hoop, preferring
+to trust to her own shape. Her waist made no pretence of fine-ladyship,
+but the bodice was close laced _a la mode_ to parade the riches of her
+bosom. Strong and gloriously alive, and abundantly a woman--so she smiled
+at the world.
+
+It was a delirious hour for Harry, that dinner. He knew that Alison was
+pleased to be in the gayest spirits, and his father, in his father's own
+flamboyant style, seconded her heartily. He joined in, too, and seemed to
+himself loud and vapid, yet had no power of restraint. It was as though
+his usual placid, critical mind were detached and watched himself in the
+happy exuberance of drunkenness--which was a state unknown to him, for
+excess of liquor could only move him with drowsy gloom. And in the midst
+of the noise Mrs. Weston sat, pale and silent, a ghost at the feast.
+
+He was glad when his father spoke of going, though he found himself
+talking some folly against it, on Alison's side, who jovially mocked the
+Colonel for shyness. But Colonel Boyce, it appeared, had made up his
+mind, and Harry was surprised at the masterful ease with which, keeping
+the empty fun still loud, he extricated himself and his unwilling son.
+
+They were all at the door, a noisy, laughing company, and the
+horses waited.
+
+"It's no use, ma'am," Harry cried, "he knows how to get his way,
+_monsieur mon pere_."
+
+"Pray heaven he hath not taught his son the art!"
+
+"Oh Lud, no, I am the very humble servant of any petticoat."
+
+"Fie, that's far worse, sir. I see you would still be forgetting which
+covered your wife."
+
+"Never believe him, Madame Alison." quoth the Colonel. "It's a strong
+rogue and a masterless man,"
+
+"Why, that's better again. And yet it's not so well if he'll be
+mistressless too."
+
+"Fight it out, child," the Colonel cried. "'Lay on, Macduff, and curst be
+she that first cries hold, enough!' Come, Harry, to horse."
+
+"See, Weston, he deserts me, and merrily!"
+
+There came upon the scene two other horsemen--Mr. Hadley's gaunt,
+one-armed frame and a big, lumbering elder with a rosy face.
+
+Harry bowed over Alison's hand. It was she who put it to his lips, and
+nodding a roguish smile at the other gentlemen, "So you run away,
+sir?" she said.
+
+Harry looked at her and "Give me back my head," he said in a low voice.
+"I have lost it somewhere here."
+
+"Oh, your head!" She laughed. "Well, maybe it's the best part of you."
+
+He mounted, and Colonel Boyce, already in the saddle, kissed his hand to
+her. They rode off, compelled to single file by the plump old gentleman
+who held the middle of the road and glowered at them. Mr. Hadley made an
+elaborate bow.
+
+The old gentleman watched them out of sight round the curve of the drive,
+then sent his horse on with an oath and, dismounting heavily at Alison's
+toes, roared out: "What the devil's this folly, miss?" He made angry
+puffing noises. "I vow I heard you laughing at Finchley. Might have heard
+him kissing too."
+
+"Kissing? Oh la, sir, my hand, and so may you." She held it out and made
+an impudent little curtsy. "I protest the gentleman is all maidenly. That
+is why he and I make so good a match."
+
+The old gentleman spluttered and was still redder. "Match, miss? What,
+the devil!"
+
+"Oh no, sir. Pray come in, sir. I see you are in a heat, and I fear for a
+chill on your gout."
+
+"You are mighty civil, miss. You are too civil by half," the old
+gentleman puffed, and stalked past her.
+
+Alison stood in the way of Charles Hadley as he made to follow. There was
+some pugnacity on her fair face. "It's mighty kind of Mr. Hadley to
+concern himself with me."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, if I come untimely it's pure happy chance."
+
+She whirled round on that and they went in. "Will you please to drink a
+dish of tea, Sir John?"
+
+"You know I won't, miss." The old gentleman let himself down with a grunt
+into the largest chair in her drawing-room. "Now who the plague is this
+kissing fellow?"
+
+"Sure, sir, it's the gentleman Mr. Hadley told you of," said Alison
+meekly. She hit both her birds. Mr. Hadley and his uncle looked at each
+other. Sir John snorted. Mr. Hadley shrugged and gave an acid laugh.
+
+"What, what, that fellow of Waverton's? Od burn it, miss, he's a
+starveling usher."
+
+"Oh, sir, don't be hasty. I dare say he'll be fat when he's old."
+
+"Don't be pert, miss. D'ye know all the county's talking of you and
+this fellow?"
+
+Alison paled a little. She spoke in a still small voice. "I did not know
+how much I was in Mr. Hadley's debt. I advise you, Sir John, don't be one
+of those who talk."
+
+"You advise me, miss! Damme, ain't I your guardian?"
+
+"I am trying to remember that you once were, sir. But you make it
+very hard."
+
+"What the devil do you mean?"
+
+"I mean--"
+
+"I vow neither of you knows what you mean," Mr. Hadley drowned her in a
+drawl. "I never saw such fire-eaters. Look 'e, Alison, we come riding
+over in a civil way and--"
+
+"Tell me you have been planning a scandal about me. Oh, I vow I am
+obliged to you."
+
+Mr. Hadley laughed. "Lud, child, you ha' known me long enough. Do I deal
+in tattle? And if we have seen what we should not ha' seen, if you're hot
+at being caught, prithee, whose fault is it? Egad, you know well enough
+there's things beneath Miss Lambourne's dignity."
+
+"Yes, indeed, and I see Mr. Hadley is one of them."
+
+"You're a fool for your pains, Charles," John shouted. "What's sense to a
+wench? Now, miss, I'll have an end of this. You're old Tom Lambourne's
+daughter for all your folly, and I'll not have his flesh and blood the
+sport of any greedy rogue from the kennel."
+
+There was a moment of silence. Then Alison, whose colour was grown high,
+said quietly, "Pray, Sir John, will you go or shall I? I do not desire to
+see you again in my house."
+
+"Go?" The old gentleman struggled to his feet. "Damme, Charles, the
+girl's mad. Yes, miss, I'll go--and go straight to my Lady Waverton. Od
+burn it, we'll have your fellow out of the county in an hour. Egad, miss,
+you're besotted. Why, what is he?--a trickster, a knight of the road.
+'Stand and deliver,' that's my gentleman's trade. He's for your father's
+money, you fool."
+
+"Good-bye, Sir John," Alison said, and turned away.
+
+With unwonted agility, Mr. Hadley came between her and the door. "You are
+not fair to us, Alison," he said. "Prithee, be fair to yourself." She
+passed him without a word. Mr. Hadley turned and showed Sir John a rueful
+face. "We have made a bad business of it, sir."
+
+Sir John swore. "Brazen impudence, damme, brazen, I say."
+
+"Oh Lord! Don't make bad worse."
+
+Sir John swore again. Upon his rage came Alison's voice singing:
+
+"When daffodils begin to peer
+ With heigh! the doxy, over the dale,
+Why, then comes in the sweet o' the year,
+ For the red blood reigns in the winter's pale."
+
+Sir John spluttered, and went out roaring for his horse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+YOUNG BLOOD
+
+
+There is reason to believe that from the first Mr. Hadley suspected he
+was making a fool of himself. This sensation, the common accompaniment of
+an attempt to do your duty, was just of the right strength to ensure that
+all his actions should be disastrous. It was, as you see, not strong
+enough to restrain him from exciting the dull and choleric mind of Sir
+John Burford; it did not avail to direct the ensuing storm. And then,
+having first failed to be sufficient check, it developed into a very
+paralysis.
+
+Startled by the furies he had roused in Alison, Mr. Hadley found that
+suspicion of his own folly develop into a gruesome conviction. It
+compelled him to labour with Sir John vehemently until that blundering
+knight consented to wait before exploding his alarms upon Lady Waverton.
+Even as the first blundering remonstrances had irritated Alison's wanton
+will into passionate resolution, so this ensuing vacillation and delay
+gave it opportunity.
+
+If the tale had been told to Lady Waverton, no doubt but Harry would have
+been banished from Tetherdown that night. It is likely, indeed, that the
+ultimate fates of Alison and Harry would have been the same. But many
+antecedent adventures must have been different or superfluous.
+
+Mr. Hadley was now full of common sense. Mr. Hadley sagely argued with
+his uncle that they would do more harm than good by carrying their tale
+to Lady Waverton. The woman was a fool in grain, and whatever she did
+would surely do it in the silliest way. Tell her a word, and she would
+swiftly give birth to a scandal which the world would not willingly let
+die, in which Mr. Harry Boyce, if he were indeed the knave of their
+hypothesis, might easily find a means to strengthen his grip of Alison.
+It was better to wait and (so Mr. Hadley with a sour smile) "see which
+way the cat jumped."
+
+Perhaps Madame Alison, who was no kitten, might not be altogether
+infatuated. The shock of the afternoon, for all her heroics, might have
+waked in her some doubt of the charms of Mr. Boyce. The girl was shrewd
+enough. She had dealt with fortune-hunters before--remember the Scottish
+lord's son--and shown a humorous appreciation of the tribe. She was not a
+chit with the green sickness; she was neither so young nor so old that
+she must needs fall into the arms of any man who made eyes at her. After
+all, likely enough she was but amusing herself with Mr. Boyce. Not a very
+delicate business, but they were full-blooded folk, the Lambournes.
+Remember old Tom, her father: there was a jolly bluff rogue. Well, if
+miss was but having her fling, it would do no good to tease her.
+
+Thus Mr. Hadley, cautiously recoiling, doubting or hoping he was making
+the best of things, brought Sir John, in spite of some boilings over,
+safe back to his home and his jovial daughter.
+
+When Harry and his father rode away from Alison, for once in a while
+Harry found his father's mood in tune with his own. Colonel Boyce
+suddenly relapsed from hilarity into a perfect silence. He soon reined
+his horse to a walk, and his wonted alert, soldierly bearing suffered
+eclipse. He gave at the back, he was thoughtful, he was melancholy--a
+very comfortable companion.
+
+"Pray, sir, when do we start for France?" said Harry at length.
+
+"What's that? Egad, you're in a hurry, ain't you? Not to-night nor yet
+to-morrow. Time enough, time enough. Make the best of it, Harry." It
+occurred to Harry that his father was preoccupied.
+
+But with that he did not concern himself. He was in too much tumult. It
+appeared that he would be able to meet Alison in the morning. He did
+not know whether he was glad. He had been telling himself that he would
+have snatched at the excuse to fail her, and yet was not sure that if
+his father had announced instant departure he would not have bidden his
+father to the devil. But still in a fashion he was angry, in a degree
+he was frightened. He knew that he would go meet the girl now; he could
+not help himself--an exasperating state. And when he was with her--her
+presence now set all his nature rioting--with other folk by, it was
+hard enough to be sane; when he was alone with her in the wood, what
+would the wild wench be to him before they parted? There was no love in
+him. He had no tenderness for her, he did not want to cherish her,
+serve her, glorify her. Only she made him mad with passion. But,
+according to his private lights, he was honest, and wished to be, and
+was therefore commanded to try to save the girl from his wicked will
+and hers. He despised himself for the gleam of cautious duty. What in
+the world was worth so much as the rose petals of her face, the round
+swell of her breast?
+
+"Damme, Harry, a man's a fool to be ambitious," so his father broke in
+upon this tumult. "Why do we fret and trick after a place, or a purse, or
+a trifle of power?"
+
+Harry stared at him. "Lord, sir, why are you so moral?"
+
+And then Colonel Boyce began to laugh. "I grow old, I think. Oh, the
+devil, I never had regrets worse than the morning's headache for last
+night's wine. I suppose if you live long enough, life's a procession of
+morning headaches. Well, I vow I've not lived long enough yet, Harry."
+
+"I dare say you are the best judge," Harry admitted.
+
+"There's a higher court, eh? Who knows? Maybe we are all the toys of
+chance." He shrugged. "Why then, damme, I have never been afraid to take
+what I chose and wait for the bill. Dodge it, or pay it. Odso, there is
+no other way for a hungry man."
+
+"Lord, sir, now you are philosophical! What's the matter?"
+
+"Humph, I suppose my stomach is weakening," said Colonel Boyce. "I don't
+digest things as I did."
+
+In this pensive temper they came back to Tetherdown. The Colonel's
+servant was waiting for him with letters, and he was seen no more that
+night. Harry did not know till afterwards that Mr. Waverton, as well as
+letters, was taken to the Colonel's room.
+
+Madame Alison was left by the exhortations of her anxious friends feeling
+defiant of all the world. It is a comfortable condition, but, for a
+passionate girl of twenty-two, fruitful of delusions.
+
+Alison was so far happier than Harry in that she knew what she wanted.
+You may wonder if you will how Harry Boyce, with nothing handsome about
+him but his legs, could rouse in the girl just such a wild longing as her
+beauty set ablaze in him. These problems, comforting to the conceit of
+man, are numerous. And, as usual, madame had dreamed her gentleman into a
+wonderful fellow. The overthrow of the highwayman became from the first a
+splendid achievement. Sure, Mr. Boyce must be of rare courage and
+strength, even as he was deliciously adroit, and that insolent air with
+which he did his devoir gave one a sweet thrill.
+
+Afterwards, he progressed in her imagination from victory to victory.
+What served him best was his capacity for puzzling her. That its hero
+should want to keep such a gallant affair secret proved him of amazing
+modesty or amazing pride--perhaps both--a titillating combination. It
+surprised her more that he should dare rebuff the advances of Miss
+Lambourne. Madame knew very well the power of her beauty over men. If she
+gave one half an inch she expected that he should be instantly mad to get
+an ell of her. But here was Mr. Boyce, though she gave him a good many
+inches, as supercilious about her as if he were a woman. It was
+incredible that the creature had no warm blood in him. Indeed, she had
+proof--she could still make herself feel the ache of his grasp in the
+wood--that he was on occasion as fierce as any woman need want a man.
+Why, then, monsieur must be defying her out of wanton pride. A marvellous
+fellow, who dared think himself too good for her.
+
+She made no account of all his wise, honest talk about being poor while
+she was rich. To her temper it was impossible that a man who wanted her
+in his arms should stop to weigh his purse and hers, or to consider what
+the world would say of him for wooing her. All that must be mere fencing,
+mere mockery.
+
+To be sure, he fenced mighty cleverly. The smug meekness which he put on
+when she attacked him before others was bewildering. If she had never
+seen him in action she must have been deceived. And, faith, it seemed
+certain that he wanted to deceive her, to put her off, to put her aside.
+The haughty gentleman dared believe that he could be very comfortable
+without Miss Lambourne. It must not be allowed. He was by far too fine a
+fellow to be let go his way. Faith, it was mighty noble, this
+self-sufficient power of his, capable of anything, caring for nothing,
+hiding itself behind an impenetrable mask, and living a secret life of
+its own. She was on fire to enter into him and take possession, and use
+him for herself.
+
+So she was driven by a double need, knew it, and was not the least
+ashamed. She longed to have Harry Boyce in her arms and his grip cruel
+upon her. But also she wanted to conquer him and hold his mind at her
+order. She imagined him under her direction winning all manner of fame.
+And she believed herself mightily in love....
+
+There is a moss on the birch trunks which makes a colour of singular
+charm, a soft, delicate, grey green. A hood of that colour embraced
+Alison's black hair and the glow of the dark eyes and her raspberry lips.
+The cloak of the same colour she drew close about her with one gauntleted
+hand, so that it confessed her shape.
+
+The birches could still show a few golden leaves, though each moment
+another went whirling away as the crests bowed and tossed before the
+wind. In the brown bracken beneath Harry Boyce stood waiting. His graces
+were set off with his customary rusty black. His hat was well down upon
+his bobwig, and he hunched his shoulders against the wind, making a
+picture of melancholy discomfort. He rocked to and fro a little,
+according to a habit of his when he was excited.
+
+Alison was very close to him before she stopped.
+
+"What have you come for?" he growled.
+
+She drew a breath, and then, very quietly, "For you," she said.
+
+"You have had enough fun with me, ma'am."
+
+Her breast was touching him, and he did not draw back.
+
+"Then why did you come?" She laughed.
+
+"Because I'm a fool."
+
+"A fool to want me?"
+
+"By God, yes. You know that, you slut."
+
+"No. You would be a fool if you didn't, you--man."
+
+"Be careful." Harry flushed.
+
+"Oh Lud, was I made to be careful?"
+
+He gripped her hand, and, after a moment, "Take off your hood," he
+muttered.
+
+"Is that all?" She laughed, and let it fall from hair and neck, and
+looked as though sunlight had flashed out at her. "Honest gentleman, you
+are lightly satisfied."
+
+"So are not you, I vow."
+
+She was pleased to answer that with a scrap of a song:
+
+"Jog on, jog on the footpath way,
+ And merrily hent the stile-a!
+A merry heart goes all the way,
+ A sad one tires in a mile-a."
+
+"Faith, yours is a mighty sad one, Harry. Pray, what are you the better
+for stripping me of this?" She flirted the hood.
+
+"I can see those wicked colours of yours. Lord, what a fool is a man to
+go mad for a show of pink and white!"
+
+"And is that all I am?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "Item--a pair of eyes that look sideways; item--a woman's
+body with arms and sufficient legs."
+
+"Lud, it's an inventory! I'm for sale, then. Well, what's your bid?"
+
+"I've a shilling in my pocket ma'am and want it to buy tobacco."
+
+"Oh, silly, what does a man pay for a woman?"
+
+Harry laughed. "Why, nothing, if she's worth buying."
+
+Then Alison said softly, "Going--going--gone," and clapped her hands
+and laughed.
+
+"You go beyond me at least," Harry said in a moment.
+
+She put her hands behind her and leaned forward till her bosom pressed
+upon him lightly, and then, with her head tilted back so that he saw the
+white curve from under her chin, and the line of the blue vein in it,
+"You want me, Harry," she said.
+
+"You know that too well, by God."
+
+"Too well for what, sir?"
+
+"Too well for my peace, ma'am." He flushed.
+
+"His peace!" She laughed. "Oh Lud, the dear man wants peace!"
+
+He flung himself upon her, holding her to him as she staggered back, and
+kissed her till she was gasping for breath, gripped her head to hold it
+against his kisses, buried his face in the fragrance of her neck. She
+gave herself, her arms still behind her, offering the swell of her
+breasts to him, her eyes gay....
+
+"You are mine, now. You're mine, do you hear?" he said unsteadily.
+
+"I want you," she smiled, and was crushed again.
+
+When he let her go, it was to step back and look at her, wondering and
+intent. She stood something less than her full height, her bosom beating
+fast. She was all flushed and smiling, but now her eyes were dim and they
+met his shyly.
+
+"Egad, you're exalting," he said with a wry smile.
+
+"I feel all power when you grasp at me so--power--just power."
+
+"No, faith, you are not. When I hold you to me, when you yield for me, I
+am all the power there is. Damme, the very life of the world."
+
+"So then," she looked at him through her eyelashes, "and have it so. For
+it's I who give you all."
+
+"In effect," Harry said: and then, "go to, you make us both mad."
+
+"I am content."
+
+"Yes, and for how long?"
+
+She made an exclamation. "Have I worn out the poor gentleman already?"
+
+"Would you keep yourself for me? Will you wait?"
+
+"Why, what have we to wait for now?"
+
+"Till I am something more than this shabby usher."
+
+"I despise you when you talk so." Her face flamed. "Fie, what's a word
+and a coat? You have lived with me in your arms. You are what I make of
+you then. Is it enough, Harry, is it not enough?"
+
+"I'll come to your arms something better before I come again. I am off
+to France."
+
+"Ah!" Then she studied him for a little while. "You meant to run away,
+then. Oh, brave Harry! Oh, wise! Pray, are you not ashamed?"
+
+"Yes, shame's the only wear."
+
+"I'll not spare you, I vow."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, mercy never was a virtue of yours."
+
+"Is it mercy you want in a woman?"
+
+"I'll take what I want, not ask for it."
+
+"Why, now you brag! And if there is not in me what monsieur wants?"
+
+"So much the worse for us both. But you should have thought of
+that before."
+
+"Faith, Harry, you take it sombrely." She made a wry mouth at him. "Pluck
+up heart. I vow I'll satisfy you."
+
+"You'll not deny me anything you have."
+
+She paused a moment. "Amen, so be it. And must we never smile again?"
+
+"I wonder"--he took her hands; "I wonder, will you be smiling to-morrow
+when I am away to France."
+
+"Oh, are you still set on that fancy?" She gave a contemptuous laugh.
+"Prithee, Harry, shall I like you the better for waiting till you have
+French lace at your neck and a frenchified air?"
+
+"You'll please to wait till I bring Miss Lambourne a fellow who has done
+something more than snuffle over a servitor's books. I want to prove
+myself, Alison."
+
+"You have proved yourself on me, sir. What, am I a lean wench in despair
+to hunger for a snuffling servitor? If you were that, I were not for you.
+But I know you better, God help me, my Lord Lucifer. Why then, take the
+goods the gods provide you and say grace over me." Harry shook his head,
+smiling. "Lord, it's a mule! Pray what do you look to do in France?"
+
+"I am pledged to my father and his policies--to go poking behind the
+curtains of the war and deal with the go-betweens of princes."
+
+"So. You talk big. Well, I like to hear it. What is the business?"
+
+"My father, if you believe him, has Marlborough's secrets in his pocket
+and is sent to chaffer for him. You may guess where and why. Queen Anne
+hath a brother."
+
+Her eyes sparkled. "You like the adventure, Harry?"
+
+"Egad, I begin to think so."
+
+"I love you for that!" she cried, and it was the first time she spoke the
+word. "Why then, first go with me to church and call me wife!"
+
+He drew in his breath. "By God, do you mean that?"
+
+"Why, don't you mean me honourably?" She gave an unsteady laugh, her eyes
+mistily kind.
+
+He sprang at her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+ABSENCE OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+
+It was always in after life alleged by Mr. Hadley that his steady
+interest in the family of his uncle was nothing but a desire to keep the
+old gentleman out of mischief. Sir John Burford was indeed of a temper
+too irascible to be safe with his bucolically English mind: a man who in
+throwing tankards at his servants and challenges at his friends was a
+source of continuous anxiety to his reasonable kinsfolk. But he had also
+a daughter.
+
+She received the benevolent Mr. Hadley when on the morning after the
+explosions in Alison's house he came to see whether Sir John was still
+dangerous or his daughter any thinner. It was the latter purpose which he
+professed to Susan Burford. She was not annoyed. In her cradle she had
+been instructed that she was a jolly, fat girl, and through life she
+accepted the status, like every other which was given her, with great
+good humour. She was, in fact, no fatter than serves to give a tall woman
+an air of genial well-being. It was conjectured by her friends that her
+father, needing all his irascibility for himself, had allowed her to
+inherit only his physical qualities. She had indeed the largeness of Sir
+John and his open countenance. Her supreme equanimity perhaps came from
+her mother. She was by a dozen years at least younger than Mr. Hadley,
+and always thought him a very clever boy.
+
+"Sir John is gone out to the pigs, Mr. Hadley. Perhaps you'll go too,"
+she said, and looked innocent.
+
+"Well, they are peaceful company, Susan. And you're so surly."
+
+"I thought you would find some joke in that," said Susan, with kindly
+satisfaction.
+
+"Damme, don't be so maternal. It's cloying to the male. Be discreet,
+Susan. You will talk as though you had weaned me but a year or two, and
+still wanted me at the breast."
+
+Susan was not disconcerted. "Will you drink a tankard?" said she. "Or Sir
+John has some Spanish wine which he makes much of."
+
+"Susan, you despise men. It is a vile infidel habit." He paused, and
+Susan dutifully smiled. "Why now, what are you laughing at? You! You
+don't know what I mean."
+
+"To be sure, no," said Susan. "Does it matter?"
+
+"Oh Lud, your repartees! Bludgeons and broadswords! I mean, ma'am, you
+think men are nought but casks--things to fill with drink and victuals.
+Is it not true?" Susan considered this, her head a little on one side and
+smiling. She wore a dress of dark blue velvet cut low about the neck, and
+so, nature having made her sumptuous, was very well suited. "Egad, now I
+know what you're like," Mr. Hadley cried. "You're one of Rubens' women,
+Susan; just one of those plump, spacious dames as healthy as milk and
+peaches, and blandly jolly about it."
+
+Susan looked down at herself with her usual amiable satisfaction and
+patted the heavy coils of her yellow hair and said: "Sir John often
+talks of having me painted. But that's after dinner. Will you stay
+dinner, Mr. Hadley?"
+
+"Damme, Susan, what should I say after dinner, if I say so much now?"
+
+Susan smiled upon him with perfect calm. "Why, I never can tell what you
+will say. Can you?"
+
+"You're a hypocrite, Susan. You look as simple as a baby, and the truth
+is you're deep, devilish deep. Here!" He fumbled in his pocket. "Here's a
+guinea for your thoughts if you tell them true. Now what are you
+thinking, ma'am?"
+
+"Why, I am thinking that you came to see my father, and yet you stay here
+talking to me;" she gurgled pleasant laughter and held out her hand for
+the guinea.
+
+Mr. Hadley still retained it. "That pleases you, does it?"
+
+"Yes, indeed. You're so comical."
+
+Mr. Hadley surrendered the guinea, looked at his empty left sleeve and
+made a wry face. "Lord, yes, I am comical enough. A lop-sided grotesque."
+
+"That's not fair!" He had at last made her blush. "You know well I did
+not mean that. I think it makes you look--noble."
+
+"It makes me feel a fool," said Mr. Hadley. "Lord, Susan, one arm's not
+enough to go round you."
+
+"So we'll kill the Elstree hog for Christmas;" that apposite
+interruption came in her father's robust voice. Sir John strode rolling
+in. "What, Charles! In very good time, egad. You can come with me."
+
+"What, sir, back to the swine? I profess Susan makes as pretty company."
+
+Sir John was pleased to laugh. "Ay, the wench pays for her victuals, too.
+Damme, Sue, you look good enough to eat." He chucked her chin paternally.
+"Well, my lad, I ha' thought over that business and I'm taking horse to
+ride over to Tetherdown."
+
+"Oh Lord," said Mr. Hadley. "And what then, sir?"
+
+"I'll talk to Master Geoffrey."
+
+"Oh Lord," said Mr. Hadley again. "Do it delicately."
+
+"Delicate be damned," said Sir John.
+
+"I had better ride with you," said Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Good boy. Here, Roger--Mr. Hadley's horse."
+
+Susan stood up. "Lud, sir, you will not be here to dinner then?"
+
+Sir John shook his head. Mr. Hadley scratched his chin. "I am not so sure
+that Geoffrey will give us a dinner," said he.
+
+"Why, sir," Susan was interested, "what's your business with Mr.
+Waverton?"
+
+"To tell him he's a fool, wench," quoth Sir John.
+
+"Oh. And will Mr. Waverton like that?"
+
+"Like it! Odso, he'll like it well enough if he has sense."
+
+Mr. Hadley grinned. "That's logic, faith. Well, sir, have with you."
+
+So off they rode. On the way Sir John was pleased to expound to Mr.
+Hadley the profound sagacity of his new plan. He would rally Geoffrey on
+his flaccidity; accuse him of being an oaf; and, describing all the while
+in an inflammatory manner the charms of Alison, hint that Geoffrey's
+tutor had ambitions after them. "And if that don't wake up my gentleman,
+he may go to the devil for me and deserve it."
+
+It crossed Mr. Hadley's lucid mind that a gentleman who required so much
+waking up did not deserve Miss Lambourne. But she was quite capable of
+discovering that for herself, if indeed she had not already. And
+certainly it would do Geoffrey no harm to be made uncomfortable. So Mr.
+Hadley rode on with right good will.
+
+But when they came to Tetherdown it was announced that Mr. Waverton had
+gone riding. "Why, then we'll wait for him." Sir John strode in. The
+butler looked dubious. Mr. Waverton had said nothing of when he would
+come back.
+
+"Why the devil should he?" Sir John stretched his legs before the fire.
+"He'll dine, won't he?"
+
+The butler bowed.
+
+"Prithee, William," says Mr. Hadley, "is Mr. Boyce in the house?"
+
+"Mr. Boyce, sir, is gone walking."
+
+Mr. Hadley shrugged. "Odso, away with you," Sir John waved the man off.
+"Let my lady know we are here."
+
+The butler coughed. "My lady is in bed, Sir John."
+
+"What, still?" quoth Sir John, for it was close upon noon.
+
+"Hath been afoot, Sir John. But took to her bed half an hour since."
+
+"What, what? Is she ailing?"
+
+The butler could not say, but looked a volume of secrets, so that Sir
+John swore him out of the room.
+
+"Vaporous old wench, Charles," Sir John snorted. And a second time Mr.
+Hadley shrugged.
+
+In a little while the butler came back even more puffed up. Her ladyship
+hoped to receive the gentlemen in half an hour.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+IN HASTE
+
+
+Oh, Harry, Harry, I give in. I am the weaker vessel. At least, I have the
+shorter legs."
+
+"What, you're asking me to spare you already? Lord, how will you bear me
+as a husband?"
+
+They were under the great beeches in Hampstead Lane, breasting the rise
+to the heath, on their march for that kindly chapel, where, if you dined
+in the tavern annexed, the incumbent would marry you for nothing, charge
+but the five shillings, cost price of the Queen's licence, and ask no
+questions.
+
+Harry shortened his stride, and looked down with grim amusement at
+Alison's breathless bosom.
+
+"I believe you mean to make an end of me before you have begun with me,"
+she panted. "Lord, sir, what a figure you'll cut if you bring me to
+church too faint to say, 'I will.'"
+
+"Why, the Levite would but take it for maiden modesty. Not knowing you."
+
+"You are trying to play the brute. It won't save you, Harry. I shan't be
+frightened."
+
+"You! No, faith, it's I. I am beside myself with terror."
+
+"I do believe that's true!" She laughed at him. "But, oh, dear
+sir, why?"
+
+"Lest I should not fulfil the heroical expectations of Miss Lambourne.
+Confess it, ma'am; you count on me to exalt you into heavens of ecstasy,
+to bewilder the world with my glories, and be shaved by breakfast-time."
+
+"To be sure, I'll always expect the impossible of you."
+
+"There it is. I suppose you expect me to begin by creating a
+wedding-ring."
+
+"Why, you have created me."
+
+"Oh, no, no, no. You're a splendid iniquity, but not mine, I vow."
+
+"This woman of yours never lived till you made her. I profess Miss
+Lambourne was ever known for a dull cold thing born 'to suckle fools and
+chronicle small beer.'"
+
+"So she wrote me down her property. Egad, ma'am, it was very natural."
+
+"You know what you have made of me," Alison said.
+
+"God knows what you'll make of me. And now in the matter of the ring--"
+
+"Oh Lud, what a trivial thing is a man!" She drew off her glove and held
+out a hand with two rings on it. "Marry me with which you will." One was
+a plain piece of gold, paler than the common, carved into an odd device
+of a snake biting its tail.
+
+"With thine own ring I thee wed," Harry said, and took it off. "I
+take you to witness, Mrs. Alison, the snake was in your paradise
+before I came."
+
+They were across the heath now and going down the steep, narrow lane
+beyond. The chapel of the Hampstead marriages stood raw red beside a
+garden with lawns and arbours shaggy in winter's untidiness. Even the
+tavern at the gate, a spreading one-story place of timber, looked dead
+and desolate.
+
+Harry forced open the sticking door and strode in, Madame Alison
+loitering behind. He was met by a dirty lad whose gaping clothes were
+half hidden by a leather apron, and whose shoes protruded straw--a lad
+who smelt of the stable and small beer.
+
+"Where's the priest?" said Harry.
+
+"In the tap," said the boy, and shuffled off.
+
+There came out into the passage, wheezing and wiping his chops, a little
+bloated man in a cassock, with his bands under his right ear. He leered
+at Harry and tried to look round him at Alison.
+
+"You're out of season, my lord," said he. "These chill rains, they play
+the mischief with lusty blood. Go to, you'll not be denied, won't you? Do
+you dine here?"
+
+"We have no time for it."
+
+"What, you're hasty, ain't you?" He gave a hoarse laugh. "There's my fee
+to pay then."
+
+"Here's a guinea to pay for all," said Harry.
+
+The dirty fist took it, the little red eyes peered at it closely, the
+dirty mouth bit it and was satisfied. "Go you round to the chapel door
+and wait. Lord, but man and wench never had to wait for me." He
+waddled off.
+
+Harry turned upon Alison. "So with all my worldly goods I thee endow," he
+said, with a crooked smile. "God give you joy of them. I vow I was never
+so frightened of spending a guinea."
+
+"Why, d'ye doubt if I'm worth it? Nay, sir, I'm honest stuff and
+challenge any trial."
+
+Harry looked down at her and was met by eyes as bold as his own.
+
+The chapel door opened, and the little priest beckoned them in. A pair of
+witnesses were already posted by the altar, the dirty lad of the tavern
+and a shock-headed wench.
+
+"Licence first, licence first." The parson bustled off to a table in a
+corner. "I warrant you we do things decently in Sion. Aye, and tightly,
+my pretty. Never a lawyer can undo my knots, never fear."
+
+He scratched laboriously over their names, while the dank smell of the
+place sank into them.
+
+They were marched to the altar. A hoarse muttering poured from the
+priest. He made no pretence of solemnity or even of meaning. He was
+concerned only to make an end and have done with them. Of all the service
+they heard nothing clearly but what they said themselves, and while they
+were deliberate over that the little priest grunted and puffed at them.
+
+He ended with a leer and drove them before him back to the table. There
+was more scratching in his register. The two uncouth witnesses scrawled
+something for their names and shambled off.
+
+"Let's breathe some free air," said Harry, and laid hold of his wife.
+
+The parson chuckled. "Free? You'll never be free again, my lord. I can
+see that in madame's eye. What, you ha' sold your birthright for a mess
+of pottage, ain't you? And mighty savoury pottage, too, says you." He
+rolled his eyes and smacked his lips. "Softly now, softly, madame wants
+her certificate. Madame wants to warrant herself a lawful married wife,
+if you don't ... There, my lady. And happy to marry you again any day at
+the same price."
+
+They were away from him at last and in clean air stretching their legs up
+the hill again.
+
+"Poor Harry!" Alison laughed. "Before you looked like a man fighting
+for his life. Now you look like a man going to be hanged. Dear lad!
+Pray how much would you give to escape me now?" She put her arm into
+his. He let her shorten his stride a little, but made no other
+confession of her existence. "Fie, Harry, it's over early to repent. In
+all reason you should first be sure of your sin. Who knows? I may not
+be deadly after all. 'Alack,' says he, 'I will not be comforted. Egad,
+the world's a cheat. A fool and his folly are soon parted they told me,
+and here am I tied to her till death us do part. So, a halter, gratis,
+for God's sake.'"
+
+"You're full of other folks' nonsense, Mrs. Boyce," said Harry with a
+grim look at her.
+
+"Oh, noble name!" She bobbed a curtsy. "Full? I am full of nothing but
+fasting, aye," she sighed, and turned up her eyes--"fasting from all but
+our sacrament."
+
+They were upon the ridge of the heath and Harry checked her, and stood
+looking away over the wide prospect of mist-veiled meadow and dim blue
+woods. She was beginning her mocking chatter again when he broke in
+with, "Ods life, ha' done!" and turned to look deep into her eyes.
+"There's mystery in this, and I think you see nothing of it."
+
+"Why, yes, faith. If you were no mystery, should I want you? If you had
+discovered all of me, would you want me?"
+
+"Bah, what do we know of living, you and I, or--or of love?"
+
+She laughed, with a scrap of twisted song:
+
+"Most living is feigning.
+Most loving mere folly,
+Then heigho the holly,
+This life is most jolly."
+
+He shrugged and marched her on again.
+
+"Pray, sir, will you dine at home?" she said demurely.
+
+Harry flushed. "I must go tell my father and all," he growled. "I'll be
+with you soon enough, madame wife."
+
+"Oh brave! Dear sir, have with you. I must see Geoffrey's face."
+
+"Egad, let's be decent!" Harry cried.
+
+"Decent! For shame, sir! What's more decent than man and wife?"
+
+"Man and wife!" Harry echoed it with a sour laugh. "Do you feel a wife? I
+never felt less of a man."
+
+"You shall be satisfied," she said, and looked at him gravely. "And I--I
+am not afraid, Harry."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+DISTRESS OF A MOTHER
+
+
+Mr. Hadley and Sir John Burford in the hall at Tetherdown looked at each
+other across the fire. "Would you call for a pipe now, Charles?" says Sir
+John, fidgeting.
+
+"There'll be none in the house, sir. Geoffrey has no stomach for
+tobacco."
+
+"Damme, if I know what he hath a stomach for," Sir John grumbled, and
+kicked at the burning logs. "He don't eat no more than an old woman, nor
+drink so much as a young miss. Ain't the half-hour gone, Charles?"
+
+"That's a poetic phrase, sir. It means a year or so--while she's tiring
+her hair."
+
+"What and painting her face, too? Same as Jezebel."
+
+My lady's waiting-woman, Arabella, came in. She minced in the manner of
+her mistress, but, being a foot shorter, with different effect. She stood
+before Sir John, who had the largest chair, and stared at him, with
+languid insolence. "Ods my life, don't ogle me, woman," says he.
+
+"At your leisure, sir, if you please." She tossed her head.
+
+"Leisure! Oh Lord, I'm at leisure, thank 'e."
+
+Arabella sniffed.
+
+"I think you are in madame's chair, sir," Mr. Hadley explained.
+
+"What, then? She ain't here, nor I don't carry the plague."
+
+"The lady-in-waiting wants to compose it for madame."
+
+"Compose!" Sir John exploded an oath, and jumped up. "I ha'n't
+decomposed it."
+
+Arabella dusted the chair, wheeled it a little this way and that, put two
+footstools before it, and three cushions into it, contemplated them for
+some time, and then shifted them a little. After which she minced out
+with a great sigh.
+
+"Good God!" says Sir John.
+
+"I wonder," says Mr. Hadley--"I wonder if we've come to take the breeks
+off a Highlander?"
+
+"What's your will?" Sir John gasped.
+
+"I wonder if my lady knows all we can tell her. It might have made her
+hypochondriac."
+
+"Hip who? Odso, I am hipped myself."
+
+My lady came. She had so much flowing drapery about her that she seemed
+all robes. She moved very slowly, she was bowed, and she leaned upon the
+shoulder of Arabella. With care she deposited herself in the big chair.
+Arabella arranged her draperies, arranged the cushion, and stood aside.
+My lady lay back, put back the lace about her head, and showed them her
+large pale face and sighed. "You are welcome, gentlemen," said she. "You
+are vastly kind."
+
+"Odso, ma'am, what's the matter?" Sir John cried.
+
+"Why, have you not heard? Arabella, he has not heard!" My lady was
+convulsed, and clutched at the maid, who comforted her with a
+scent-bottle. "He has gone!" she sighed. "He has gone."
+
+"What the devil! Who the devil?"
+
+My lady recovered herself. From somewhere in her voluminous folds she
+produced a letter. "If it would please you, be patient with me. My
+unhappy eyes." She dabbed at them with a handful of lace, and read:
+
+"My lady, my mother,--I have but time for these few unkempt lines,
+wherein to bid you for a while farewell. My good friend, Colonel Boyce,
+has favoured me with an occasion to go see something of the warring world
+beyond the sea. And I, since the inglorious leisure of the hearth irks my
+blood, heartily company with him. It needs not that you indulge in tears,
+save such as must fall for my absence. I seek honour. So, with a son's
+kiss, I leave you, my mother. G.W."
+
+On which his mother's voice broke, and she wept.
+
+"Lord, what a fop!" said Sir John. My lady swelled in her draperies. "So
+he's gone to the war, has he? Odso, I didn't think he had it in him."
+
+"Sir, if you jeer at my bereavement!" my lady sobbed.
+
+"And where's Harry Boyce?" says Mr. Hadley.
+
+Sir John stared at him. "Why, seeking honour too, ain't he? What's in
+your head, Charles?"
+
+"This is rude," my lady sobbed; "this is brutal. The tutor! Oh, heaven,
+what is the tutor to me? I would to God I had never seen him--him nor his
+wicked father."
+
+Sir John tugged at Mr. Hadley's empty sleeve and drew him aside. "What
+are you pointing at, Charles? D'ye mean the two rogues have took Geoffrey
+off to make away with him between 'em?"
+
+"Lord, sir, you've a villainous imagination." Mr. Hadley grinned. "I mean
+no such matter. Nay, I'll lay a guinea, Harry Boyce is not gone at all."
+
+"Sir John"--my lady raised herself and was shrill--"what are you
+whispering there?"
+
+"What, what? You mean the old fellow took Geoffrey off to leave the young
+fellow a clear field with Ally Lambourne? Odso, that's devilish deep,
+ain't it? But we can set the young fellow packing, my lad. We--"
+
+"Sir John!" my lady's voice rose higher yet.
+
+"Coming, ma'am, coming. Od burn my heart and soul!" That last invocation
+was not directed at her but an invading tumult.
+
+The butler entered backwards, protesting, between two men who did not
+take off their hats. They were in riding-boots and cloaks, and splashed
+from the road. They had pistol butts ostentatious in their side pockets,
+and one carried some papers in his hand.
+
+"Stand back, my bully, stand back, or you'll smell Newgate," says he to
+the butler.
+
+"Burn your impudence," Sir John roared, and strode forward.
+
+"In the Queen's name. Messengers of the Secretary of State, with his
+warrant." The man waved his papers under Sir John's nose. "Master of the
+house, are you?"
+
+"I am Sir John Burford of Finchley, and be hanged to you."
+
+"There is the mistress of the house, sirrah," says Mr. Hadley
+
+"Thank'e. In the Queen's name, ma'am. Warrants to take Oliver Boyce,
+Colonel, and Geoffrey Waverton, Esquire."
+
+My lady shrieked, fell back, and was understood to be fainting.
+
+"You come too late, sirrah," says Mr. Hadley. "Your foxes be gone away."
+
+The man tapped his nose and grinned. "That won't do, sir. Set about it,
+Joe," and he nudged his fellow.
+
+"What's the charge against them?" says Mr. Hadley.
+
+The man laughed. "Come, sir, you know better than that. I ain't here to
+answer questions." Mr. Hadley put his hand in his pocket. The man grinned
+and shook his head, and went out pushing his comrade in front of him. Mr.
+Hadley followed them. As soon as they were out in the corridor and the
+door was shut behind them, the man turned and held out his hand to Mr.
+Hadley, who dropped into it a couple of guineas. "Lord, now, what did you
+think it was?" says the messenger genially. "Treasonable
+correspondence--Pretender--Lewis le Grand and so forth. Quite
+gentleman-like, d'ye smoke me?"
+
+"Prithee, who set you on?" says Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Now you go too far, ecod, you do. I don't mind obliging a gentleman,
+but you want to lose me my place. We'll be searching the house, by
+your leave."
+
+Off they went, and Mr. Hadley went back to my lady. She had been revived,
+and the air was heavy with scent. She fluttered her hands at the
+ministering Arabella and said faintly, "What is it, Charles?"
+
+"It seems there's some talk of their having dealings with the Pretender."
+
+"Lord bless my soul," Sir John puffed.
+
+"The Pretender?" Lady Waverton smiled through her powder. "La, now,
+Geoffrey's father always had a kindness for the young Prince."
+
+"I vow, ma'am, you take it with a fine spirit," says Mr. Hadley in
+some surprise.
+
+"You'll find, Mr. Hadley, that such families as ours, the older families,
+know how to bear themselves in this cause."
+
+Sir John stared at her and puffed the louder, and muttered very audibly,
+"Here's a turnabout!"
+
+"Oh, ma'am, to be sure it's a well-born party," Mr. Hadley shrugged.
+"D'ye give us leave to remain and see that these fellows show no
+impudence?"
+
+"Oh, sir, you are very obliging," says my lady superciliously.
+
+Mr. Hadley bowed, and withdrew to the recess of a window with Sir John
+following. "Here's a queer thing, Charles. Did ever you know Master
+Geoffrey was a Jacobite?" Mr. Hadley shook his head. "Nor this Colonel
+Boyce neither?"
+
+"I never saw a Jacobite in so good a coat, and I never thought Geoffrey
+would risk his coat for any king. And thirdly and lastly, I never knew
+Whitehall put itself out in these days whether a man was Jacobite or no.
+Why, damme, they be all half Jacobites themselves, from the Queen down."
+
+"Aye, aye," says Sir John sagely. "A devilish queer thing indeed."
+
+And on that came Alison and Harry--Alison rosy and smiling, Harry a
+pale and deliberate appendage. "Dear Lady Waverton, let me present
+my husband."
+
+Lady Waverton sat up straight. Lady Waverton embraced the pair of them
+with a bewildered glare.
+
+"I married him this morning," Alison laughed.
+
+"Alison, this is unmaidenly jesting," said my lady feebly.
+
+"Why, if it were, so it might be. But the truth is, it's unmaidenly
+truth. For I am Mrs. Harry Boyce. Give me joy."
+
+"Joy!" my lady gasped. "It's unworthy! It's cruel! Oh, Geoffrey,
+Geoffrey! How dare you?" She was again understood to faint.
+
+Through the rustle of Arabella and the odours of scent came the
+explosions of Sir John, swearing.
+
+Mr. Hadley moved forward, and, ignoring Alison, addressed himself to
+Harry. "Pray, sir, did you know that Mr. Waverton this morning left
+Tetherdown in your father's company, your father taking him, as he says
+in a letter, to the wars?"
+
+"Knew?" Lady Waverton chose to speak out of her swoon. "To be sure they
+knew. They would not have dared else. Dear Geoffrey! A villain! And you,
+miss--you whom he trusted! Oh!" She again took scent.
+
+"La, ma'am, he trusted me no more than I him. You are not well, I think."
+
+"You give me news, Mr. Hadley," Harry said. "I knew that my father meant
+to go abroad, and understood that I was to go with him."
+
+"Perhaps you'll go after him." Mr. Hadley shrugged and turned away.
+
+"Why, what's all this, Harry?" Alison laughed. "Your wise father hath
+chosen to take Geoffrey instead of you?"
+
+"In spite of my modesty, I'm surprised, ma'am," says Harry.
+
+"Burn your impudent face," quoth Sir John from the background.
+
+"Well, sir, if you were in your father's plans, maybe you'll pay your
+father's debts," quoth Mr. Hadley.
+
+"What do I owe you, Mr. Hadley?" says Harry, bristling.
+
+The two messengers came back again. "Right enough, sir, gone away." The
+spokesman nodded at Mr. Hadley. "We'll be riding. Trust no offence?" He
+looked hopeful.
+
+"Here's Colonel Boyce's son, wishing to answer for his father."
+
+The man looked Harry up and down and chuckled.
+
+"Lord, and mighty like. Servant, sir," he winked at Harry. "Tell the
+Colonel, sorry we missed him," He winked again and laughed.
+
+"What's this comedy of yours, Mr. Hadley?" says Harry.
+
+"Your friends have warrants to arrest your father and Mr. Waverton for
+treasonable correspondence with the Pretender. But none for you, I fear,
+Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Devil a one," the man laughed. "Come, Ned, we'll be jogging," Out
+they swung.
+
+A bewildered company, full of suspicions, stared at one another.
+
+"Come, Harry, let us go home," Alison said.
+
+"Home!" Lady Waverton gasped with an hysterical laugh. "Hear her!"
+
+"My lady"--Alison made her a curtsy--"gentlemen--all the friends of Mr.
+Boyce will be very welcome to me."
+
+Sir John swore. "You for a fool and he for a knave, damme, you're
+well matched."
+
+"When you were younger, sir, I suppose you were less of a boor," says
+Harry. "Mr. Hadley--my lady--" he made two stiff bows and gave his arm
+to Alison.
+
+"Humph, they go off with the honours." Mr. Hadley shrugged, and held out
+his arm in front of Sir John, who was plunging after them.
+
+"Be hanged to you. What did the rogue mean, telling me I was old?"
+
+"Why, he meant that a man who is too old to fight should be civil."
+
+"Too old?" Sir John fumed. "Burn him for a coward."
+
+"I think not," says Mr. Hadley. "But for the rest--God be with you. My
+lady--sincerely your servant."
+
+My lady was now weeping. "You never loved him," she complained. "You were
+never his friend," and she became speechless.
+
+The two men looked at each other. "Well, Charles, we'll to horse," Sir
+John concluded. "Servant, ma'am." They left her in the scented embraces
+of Arabella.
+
+To Harry as he went out came the butler, who, with something of a furtive
+manner, produced and gave him a letter. Harry looked at the writing and
+thrust it into his coat. Alison saw and took no notice.
+
+They walked on for some way before silence was broken. Then Harry said:
+"Well, madame wife, so you feel you've been bit."
+
+"Who--I? What do you know of what I feel?"
+
+"Oh, I can tell hot from cold. I know when you are thinking you ought to
+have thought twice. Egad, I agree with you. You've been badly bit. Here
+you were told that I was just off out of the country; that you must catch
+me at once if you wanted to catch me; that if you took me you would soon
+have me off your hands. And now we're tied up, you find I'm not going at
+all. I vow it's disheartening. But if you'll believe me, I did honestly
+believe my old rogue of a father. I did think he meant to take me."
+
+"And now you can't be comforted because you have to stay with me. Oh,
+Harry, you're a gloomy fellow to own a new wife. But why did the good man
+take Geoffrey when he might have had you? I should have thought he knew a
+goose when he saw one."
+
+"I can't tell. I never saw much meaning in the old gentleman."
+
+"You might as well look at his letter."
+
+Harry stared. "How did you know that was his?"
+
+"You like doing things mysteriously, the family of Boyce."
+
+The letter said this:
+
+"MR. HARRY,--I flatter myself that you will be offended. But 'tis all for
+your good. When I came after you I did not know that you were so clever a
+fellow. No more did I expect that I should have to like you. But since I
+do, I prefer that I should do without you. And since you have some of my
+wits, you may very well do without me. But I believe you will do the
+better without friend Geoffrey. Therefore I take him, who will indeed do
+my business much more sincerely than your worthy self. With the dear
+fellow safe out of the way, I count upon you to push on bravely with Mrs.
+Alison. You'll not find two such chances in one life. If you were master
+of her you could promise yourself anything in decent reason you please to
+want. For all your wits you are not the man to make his own way out of
+nothing. So don't be haughty. Why should you? It's a mighty pretty thing,
+Harry, and (trust an old fellow who hath made some use of the sex in his
+day) as tender as you may hope for in an heiress. She has looked your way
+already, and in her pique at the good Geoffrey deserting her, you'll find
+her warmer for you. If you don't make her warm enough for wiving, you're
+an oaf, which is not in my blood--nor your mother's, to be honest. Nor if
+I was young again and played your hand, I wouldn't let her grow cold when
+I had her safe.... So be a man, and I give you my blessing.
+
+"O. BOYCE"
+
+Harry held it out to Alison. "We're a noble family--the family of
+Boyce," said he.
+
+But Alison read it without a blush or a sneer, and when she gave it back
+she was laughing. "Oh, he's more cunning than any beast of the field! Oh,
+he knows the world! Poor, dear fellow."
+
+"Oh Lud, yes, he's a fool for his wisdom. But he's my father."
+
+"Well, sir?" Harry scowled at the ground. "Oh, what does he matter?
+Harry, what does anything matter to-day--or to-morrow, or to-morrow's
+to-morrow?"
+
+"I had no guess of all this." Harry crushed the paper. "You
+believe that?"
+
+"Oh, silly, silly."
+
+"You're still content?"
+
+"Not yet," Alison said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+SPECTATORS OF PARADISE
+
+
+In the old house on the hill Mrs. Weston sat alone. She was looking out
+of the oriel window at a garden of wintry emptiness and wind swept. The
+westerly gale roared and moaned, the heavy earth was sodden and beaten
+into hollows and pools through which broke tiny pale points of snowdrops.
+Away beyond the first terrace of lawn the roses bowed and tossed wild
+arms. A silvery gleam of sunlight fell on the turf, glistened, and was
+gone. Mrs. Weston sat with her hands in her lap and her needle at rest in
+a half-worked piece of linen. A veil of languor had fallen upon the
+wistfulness of her face. Her bosom hardly stirred. The sound of the
+opening door broke her dream, and she picked up her work and began to sew
+eagerly. It was Susan Burford who came in, royally neat in her
+riding-habit, for all the storm. She walked in her leisurely, spacious
+fashion to Mrs. Weston, who started and stood up, laughing nervously.
+"Indeed Alison will be pleased. You are kind. I know she has been longing
+to see you."
+
+Susan laughed and, a large young goddess of health, stooped to kiss the
+worn face. "You always talk about somebody else. Are you pleased?"
+
+"My dear!" Mrs. Weston protested. "You know I am."
+
+"We match very well. You never want to talk, and I never have anything to
+say." Susan sat down, and for some time the only sound was from Mrs.
+Weston's needle. At last, "You are still here, then," Susan said.
+
+"My dear! Why not, indeed?"
+
+"Oh. But you would always stay by Alison if she needed you."
+
+"Why, she never has needed me. And now less than ever."
+
+"Oh." Susan considered that. "And is he kind to you?"
+
+Mrs. Weston flushed. "Indeed he has been very good to me."
+
+"That is all I wanted to ask you," said Susan, and again there was
+silence.
+
+After a little while Mrs. Weston dropped her sewing and looked anxiously
+at Susan. "Have you ever seen him?"
+
+"Only his back. He used to keep in the corners at Tetherdown."
+
+"I suppose people--talk about him."
+
+"I don't listen," said Susan, "People are always in such a hurry. I
+can't keep up."
+
+"I suppose you think Alison was in a great hurry."
+
+"Only Alison knows about that."
+
+"Yes." Mrs. Weston looked at her with affectionate admiration, as though
+she had been endowed with rare understanding of the human heart. "Do you
+know you are the only one of the people Alison liked who has come
+here--since?"
+
+"Oh." (Susan's favourite eloquent reply.) "I don't mind about people."
+
+"He doesn't mind at all. She doesn't mind yet."
+
+"What is that you are working?" said Susan.
+
+"But indeed they are most perfectly happy," said Mrs. Weston, in a hurry.
+
+"Is it for a tucker?" said Susan.
+
+In a greater hurry, Mrs. Weston began to explain. She was still at it
+when Alison and Harry came back.
+
+They too had been riding. The storm had granted Alison none of Susan's
+majestic neatness. She looked a wild creature of the hills, her wet habit
+clinging about her, black ringlets broken loose curling about her, brown
+eyes fierce with life, and all the dainty colours of her face very clear
+and bright. She saw Susan and cried out, "Oh, my child, I love you."
+
+Susan rose leisurely to her majestic height and smiled down upon her. "I
+think you are the loveliest thing that ever was made," said she. Alison
+laughed, and they kissed.
+
+"I am quite of your mind, ma'am," said Harry. "Or I was," he made Susan a
+bow, "till this moment."
+
+"I was going to ask her if she was happy, sir," Susan said. "I shan't ask
+her." She held out her hand.
+
+"But I want you to ask me a thousand things." Alison put an arm round
+her, "Come away, come. At least I am going to tell you"--she shot a
+wicked glance at Harry--"everything." Off they went.
+
+"What's this mean, ma'am?" Harry stood over Mrs. Weston. "Is our wise
+Sir John sending to spy out the land?"
+
+"I wish you would not talk so." Mrs. Weston shivered. "It is like your
+father. Oh, sure, you have no need to be suspicious of every one."
+
+"Suspicious? Faith, I don't trouble myself." Harry laughed. "All the
+world may go hang for me. But you'll not expect me to believe in it."
+
+"I think you need fear no one's ill will. You are fortunate enough now."
+
+"Miraculously beyond my deserts, ma'am. As you say. But there's the
+wisdom of twenty years' shabbiness in me. And I wonder if the good Sir
+John wants to be meddling."
+
+"You need not be shabby now."
+
+"Lord, I bear him no malice. For he can do nought. Only I would not have
+him plague Alison."
+
+At last Mrs. Weston smiled upon him. "Aye, you are very careful of her."
+
+"I vow I would not so insult her." Harry laughed.
+
+"But you need not be afraid. Susan is here for herself. She is like that.
+She is the most independent woman ever I knew. She has come because she
+loves Alison."
+
+"Why, then, I love her. And egad it will be easy. She's a splendid
+piece."
+
+Mrs. Weston gave him an anxious glance. "She is very loyal," said she,
+with some emphasis.
+
+"It's a virtue. To be sure it's a virtue of the stupid." Harry cocked a
+teasing eye at her. "And I--well, ma'am, you wouldn't call me stupid."
+
+"I don't think it clever to jeer at what's good--and true--and noble."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, you are very parental!" Harry grinned. "You will be talking
+to me like a mother--and a stern mother, I protest."
+
+"Am I stern?" Mrs. Weston looked at him with eyes penitent and tender.
+
+"Only to yourself, I think. Lud, ma'am, why take me to heart?"
+
+"What now, Harry?" Alison and Susan close linked came back again. "Whose
+heart are you taking?"
+
+"Why, madame's," said Harry, with a flourish. "You see, ma'am," he turned
+to Susan, "I've a gift for making folks cry."
+
+"Oh. Like an onion," says she, in her slow, grave fashion.
+
+"Susan dear! How perfect," Alison laughed. "Now I know why I am growing
+tired of him. A little, you know, was piquant. But a whole onion to
+myself--God help us!"
+
+"Yet your onion goes well with a goose," Harry said.
+
+"Alack, Harry, but there's nothing sage about you and me."
+
+"Oh, fie! See there she sits, our domestic sage"--he waved at Mrs.
+Weston.
+
+"To be sure we couldn't do without her." Alison caressed the grey hair.
+
+"I must be riding, Alison," Susan said.
+
+Alison began to protest affectionate hospitality. Harry shook his head.
+"I have warned you of this, Alison. We are too conjugal. It embarasses
+the polite."
+
+"I am not embarassed," said Susan, with her placid gravity. "I want to
+come again."
+
+"By the fifth or sixth time, ma'am, I may feel that I am forgiven."
+
+"I have nothing to forgive you, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Then you can do it the more heartily." Harry smiled and held out his
+hand.
+
+"Oh." There was a faint shadow of a blush. "I did not think I should like
+you." She turned. "I beg your pardon, Alison."
+
+"I beg, ma'am, you'll come teach my wife to be kind. She also is frank.
+But for kindness--well, we are all sinners."
+
+"There it is, Mr. Boyce," said Susan, holding out her hand.
+
+And when she was gone. "Now, why did I not marry her first?" said Harry
+pensively.
+
+"Because she would never have married you, child. Being of those who like
+the man to ask."
+
+As Susan rode down the north slope of the hill, she was met by Mr.
+Hadley, gaunt upon a white horse, like death in the Revelation. The
+comparison did not occur to Susan, who had a fresh mind, but she did
+think white unbecoming to Mr. Hadley, and said, gurgling, "Where did you
+find that horse? Or why did you find it?"
+
+"He was a bad debt. But he has a great soul. And don't prevaricate,
+Susan. Where have you been?" Mr. Hadley bent his sardonic brows.
+
+"To gossip with Alison."
+
+"Odso, I guessed you would turn traitor."
+
+"No. I haven't turned at all, Mr. Hadley."
+
+"She has declared war on us. Your dear father fizzes and fumes like a
+grenade all day. And you go gossip with her. It's flat treason, miss.
+Come, did you tell Sir John you were going?"
+
+"No. But he would guess. He is so clever about me. Like you."
+
+"Humph. If he guesses you're a woman, it's all he does. And, damme, I
+suppose it's enough. So your curious sex bade you go and pry. Well, and
+what did you see in Mr. Harry Boyce?"
+
+"I suppose you are scolding me," said Susan placidly.
+
+"With all my heart."
+
+"Oh. Why do you ride that horse?"
+
+"Damme, miss, don't wriggle. You had no business at Highgate!"
+
+"He looks as if he had the gout."
+
+Mr. Hadley grinned. "But as you went, let's hear what you saw."
+
+"I always loved Alison."
+
+"Your business is to love your father, Susan--till some other man
+asks you."
+
+"I love her better now. She is so happy."
+
+"Damn her impudence," said Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Why did you lose your temper with her?"
+
+"I never lose my temper with any one but you."
+
+"Well. You made my father lose his."
+
+"Ods life, Susan, don't you know it's a man's right to tell women how
+they ought to live? Dear Alison wouldn't listen."
+
+Susan laughed. "She has made you look very foolish."
+
+"If she has I'll forgive her."
+
+"Oh. You do then," said Susan.
+
+"On your honour, miss, what did you think of Mr. Harry Boyce?"
+
+"I wondered Alison should love him."
+
+"Ods life, yes. But what's this you're saying?"
+
+"He is so quiet and simple."
+
+"Simple! Damme, the fellow's an incarnate mask."
+
+"Oh. I think I know all about him. I never thought I knew all about
+Alison. She wants so much."
+
+"And she hasn't got all she wants, eh?"
+
+"Yes, I believe," said Susan, after a moment.
+
+"Pray God you're right."
+
+"Oh. I like to hear you say that. You have been so"--for once her placid
+words stumbled--"so sordid about this."
+
+"Damme, Susan, don't be a saint." Mr. Hadley grinned. "They die virgins."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+MRS. BOYCE
+
+
+It was a time of wild plots. The long war of Marlborough had left England
+impregnably triumphant, and France ambitious of nothing but peace. No
+fear remained that foreign arms would carry James, the Pretender by right
+divine, to his sister's throne. Who should reign when Anne's growing
+weakness ended in death was for England alone to decide, and English law
+gave the succession to Prince George of Hanover. But there was a party,
+or at least the leaders of a party, who saw more profit to themselves in
+importing the Pretender.
+
+Harley and Bolingbroke, they had thrust out of the Queen's confidence and
+the government the friends of Hanover. They had undermined the authority
+of Marlborough at home and abroad, and were now ready, honourably or
+dishonourably, to put an end to the war which made him necessary. If he
+were dispatched into ignominy or exile, there could be no one strong
+enough, they believed, to prevent them driving England the way they
+chose. What that way would be no one clearly knew, themselves, perhaps,
+least of all. But together and singly they set going many strange secret
+schemes which were to make a new king, a new England, and new
+magnificence for themselves, singly or together. All which the mass of
+England watched with shrewd, incurious eyes. It could not long be a
+secret that plots were afoot. To shoulder out of power all who were
+committed friends of the lawful order was a confession of designs against
+it. As if that were not enough, Bolingbroke and Harley so managed their
+business that everything they did was wrapped in a mist of trickery and
+intrigue. And yet, though they were vastly mysterious over what could
+have borne the light without much shame, they contrived to let the agents
+of their deeper treachery blunder into notice and fill the air with
+rumours of untimely truth. Still England gave no sign.
+
+"Under which King"--Hanoverian or Pretender--perhaps there were few in
+England who cared. If the Pretender was bred French and a Papist, Prince
+George was a German born. Some of those who had joined heartily in
+driving out his father began to put it about that the son would be a
+better king for that lesson. George of Hanover had the right of law, but
+the Parliament of to-morrow might undo what the Parliament of yesterday
+had done. Who could be ardent for the right of an unknown foreigner over
+England? And few were ardent, but there were many who, caring nothing for
+Pretender or Hanoverian, had a solid resolution that England should not
+be torn in the cause of either. Whatever was done, must be done quietly
+and in good order. Since it seemed that the Hanoverian had no need to
+change anything in law or State or Church, best that he should be king.
+As for the devious politics, the tricks, and the mystery of Harley and
+Bolingbroke, they were of no account to plain men.
+
+There was yet another party not content to watch and wait till the
+plotters lost themselves in their own mysteries. The men whom Harley and
+Bolingbroke had driven from power had no mind to submit to impotence.
+They well knew what they wanted: the Hanoverian, the lawful, limited king
+upon the throne and themselves as his ministers. They were not delicate
+about the means they used. Since there were treason and plots, they too
+turned their hands to plotting and with a vigour and ruthless resolution
+of which the other camp was innocent.
+
+So the wise and eminent were busy while Harry Boyce and his Alison made
+trial of their marriage. Harry lived in a dream of bewildered happiness.
+He had counted on nothing but the need of his passion, hoped for nothing
+but its ecstasy in her beauty, and at its wildest the strain of gloom in
+him had bade him dread what lay beyond. She gave him a miracle of mad
+delight. A new force of life was born in him while he enjoyed her joy. It
+was a discovery of intoxicating power that he could wake that rare,
+consummate creature to such eager exultation as his own. In those
+wonderful hours it seemed that they passed out of themselves into a world
+where every part of their being was one and in the happiness of unbounded
+strength. So passion and she kept faith with him and something more. But
+the miracle of passion in her arms had less enchantment than the joy of
+the quiet hours. It was with this that she bewildered him. Before she
+yielded to him, he would have jeered at the hope that she might bring the
+gift of peace in her bosom. As the first days of marriage passed he
+learnt that all his placid loneliness had been the mere endurance of
+hunger. He had stayed himself with the husk of life. She satisfied him
+with the fruit. For she too could be calm, delighting in the little daily
+things, utterly happy with nonsense. To share all that with her was to
+find in it a strange, lulling enchantment of content.
+
+His fortune seemed too good to be real. For he possessed all that ever
+fancy had pretended was worth coveting: his life was a perfect happiness.
+No doubts from within, no troubles from without, had power to assail him.
+All the old, reasonable, practical fears were become ludicrous cowardice,
+only remembered for Alison to tease with. As for other people, and what
+they said and thought and did, some folks were kind and were welcome, no
+folks were of account. He and she deliciously sufficed themselves. And
+there was no dread of change, save in age and death, infinitely distant
+and insignificant--no matter but to glorify the power of life. Sometimes
+he was aware that the wonder of passion must grow faint and fail, but he
+saw nothing which could take from him the quiet, exquisite, daily joys.
+Was it real, or a charmed dream, this perfect fortune of content? Indeed,
+nothing was real in those days but the delight in being with her.
+
+Alison had her share. He did not deceive himself. She had her ecstasies
+and her exultations, she thought herself even madder than he was. And in
+these days, perhaps, her passion was deeper and stronger than his. She
+was satisfied, she felt herself accomplished, and gloried in her new
+power with a more profound, a more secret delight than his. She had given
+him eagerly all that she had, and in the giving found herself more than
+ever her own. For all the union, the deepest, truest self in her stood
+aloof in a mystery. It was not of her will, for she desired to deny him
+nothing. She did not reckon him weak in failing to take all of her. This
+must needs be the way of life. No man's passion could be stronger than
+his. Doubtless he too had his secret soul apart. And indeed it was
+glorious not to lose self in love, to stay always, through the ecstasies,
+aloof, to give always anew of will and choice--never to merge helpless in
+some unknown double being and become only half a body, half a soul,
+capitulating always to the rest, to the other.
+
+This self-glorious pride of hers gave her for a while that zest in all
+the trivial common things which made her a companion so delightful to
+Harry's temper. But she enjoyed them in a spirit different from his. All
+the bread-and-butter business of living was to him delightful in itself
+and for itself. He was born to want no better bread than is made of
+wheat. She played with it, made a dainty mock of it, amused herself with
+it, and at the back of her mind despised it.
+
+So they lived, and you imagine Mrs. Weston's dim, wistful eyes watching
+them with a great tenderness. For she understood them no better than
+they themselves.
+
+It was Alison who first grew tired. Not of love or passion, but of the
+trivialities and the quiet life at Highgate. She had ambitions, or
+thought she had. It had been just rediscovered that women could be
+leaders in the world--at least in politics and the tricks of statecraft.
+Women were the fiercest partisans and their voices powerful in the
+warring parties. It was a woman, his termagant duchess, who had given
+Marlborough his ascendancy in England, made him dominate all Europe. It
+was a clever woman who had contrived Marlborough's downfall and given his
+enemies the government of England. It was a woman--another duchess--who
+beat Swift. You need not suspect Alison, who had some humour, of
+imagining Harry Boyce a Marlborough. But he did believe him able to make
+a noise in the world, and coveted much the sensation of owning him while
+the world listened. She did not see herself controlling queens and kings
+and parties, but she was well aware of her beauty and its power, and had
+a mind to use it widely. She was hungry for excitement.
+
+So Mrs. Alison determined to set her man upon a larger, busier stage. The
+decree went forth that old Tom Lambourne's house in the Lincoln's Inn
+Fields was again to be inhabited. Harry was asked for his advice
+afterwards. Perhaps he would have been wiser if he had begun their first
+quarrel then. But he was enjoying her too much to deny her her ways or
+her whims, and he only laughed at her. He was not pleased, to be sure. He
+had a taste, which cannot have come from his father, for copse and
+field. He never found anything in the town which was worth the living in
+other folk's smoke. He disliked crowds and in particular crowds of fine
+ladies and gentlemen. So with some horror he saw before him a vista of
+polite splendours, and said so.
+
+"Oh Lud, sir," says she, "if I had wanted to sleep my life away I should
+not have married you. And if you wanted to sleep out yours you should not
+have married me."
+
+"I was born for innocence and green fields. You'll make me a bull in a
+china shop."
+
+"I'll love you the better, child. Faith, Harry, I would be very glad to
+have you break something."
+
+"Madame's heart, _par exemple_?"
+
+"That would be an adventure."
+
+So you find them arrived in the Lincoln's Inn Fields as the first step
+to the conquest of the world. The world was not as excited as Alison
+thought fit. Her father, old Tom Lambourne, had commanded reverence in
+the City and some respect even as far west as St. James's by sheer
+weight of wealth. A rare capacity for living hard had won him an army of
+diverse friends. But neither his business nor his pleasures provided him
+with many who could be bequeathed to his daughter. Her mother, born a
+baker's daughter in Shoe Lane, having died in giving Alison birth, had
+left her nothing besides her admirable body but some grumbling objects
+of charity. It remained for Alison to make her own way in the world of
+fine ladies and gentlemen. Since she was by certain fame an heiress of
+great possessions, her way might have been easy if she had not found
+herself a husband. The taint of the city, if she had borne herself
+humbly, need not have made her quite intolerable to people of birth. But
+since her money was already married she could only be reckoned as a city
+goodwife; pretty enough, indeed, to be game for fine gentlemen, but to
+fine ladies a nobody.
+
+Folks were slow in coming to the grand house in Lincoln's Inn Fields;
+slower still, if they had houses of elegance, to ask Mrs. Alison back. It
+suited Harry very well. He would, as his wife complained, go mooning
+across the fields to Islington almost as happily as through the woods at
+Highgate. His books had almost as good a savour in town as in the
+country. When she dragged him to hear Nicolini or Wilks or the
+Bracegirdle, he could console himself by gentle jeering over the fact
+that in a playhouse where everybody knew everybody not a creature had a
+bow for him or her. Of course she smarted. Day by day he chose to affect
+astonishment over her failures, believing with infatuated content that he
+was slowly driving her back to the country and sanity, though he was but
+driving her away from him. And she, choosing to feel humiliated, blamed
+him for the shame of it.
+
+"Why, child," says he in his supercilious way, "'tis not failing to be in
+the _beau monde_ that's ridiculous, but wanting to be."
+
+To such monitions she began not to answer back--a symptom very dangerous.
+
+She set up a basset table. That, if anything could, must proclaim her a
+woman of fashion--a woman, indeed, who had a fancy to be a trifle
+daring. There's no doubt that Alison about this time and afterwards did
+want to dabble in danger. She was not her father's daughter for nothing.
+She encouraged high play. For herself, she enjoyed the excitement of it,
+having no need to care if she lost. She wanted to have about her people
+who affected heavy stakes, believing in the innocence of her heart that
+they were exhilarating company. So she made for herself a queer society,
+which Harry to her angry disgust defined as a mixture of sheep and
+wolves. There were good wives and lads from the city anxious to make a
+jingling show with the funds of the family counting-house, there were
+hungry beaux and madames from the other end of the town seeking their
+fortune impudently wherever it might be found.
+
+To one of these happy parties there was introduced a Mrs. Boyce. She
+was a faded, handsome creature much jewelled about lean shoulders.
+Alison, who hardly heard her name in the rout, took no account of it
+and little of her. But on the next day this Mrs. Boyce came early and
+caught Alison alone.
+
+She began with such a fuss about apologizing for her earliness that
+Alison set her down for an ill-bred, tiresome creature. She had a high
+voice which, like the rest of her, was a trifle faded. "I protest, ma'am,
+I have long desired to know you better." Alison languidly muttered
+something civil. "Let me make myself known first, I beg. I am the niece
+of Sir Gilbert Heathcote."
+
+Alison, of course, had heard of Sir Gilly--one of the chiefs of high
+finance--but cared nothing about him. "I am vastly honoured, ma'am. I was
+only born Thomas Lambourne's daughter."
+
+"There is no need; ma'am." A long, lean hand was waved. "I wonder if we
+are in some fashion connected. We are both called Mrs. Boyce. The Boyces
+of Oxfordshire, ma'am?"
+
+Alison's laugh had something of a sneer in it, "Of nowhere that I know,
+ma'am. My husband is Mr. Harry Boyce, son of Colonel Oliver Boyce."
+
+The lady fluttered her fan, settled herself afresh in her chair,
+rearranged her close-fitting lips. Alison was reminded of a hen preening
+itself. "I had heard so, ma'am. And my husband is Colonel Oliver Boyce."
+
+"La, ma'am, do you mean the same?" Alison cried.
+
+Mrs. Oliver Boyce gave a lifeless smile. "That is why I did myself the
+honour of giving you my confidence, ma'am. I think there are not two
+Colonel Oliver Boyces. The younger son of one of the Oxfordshire family."
+
+"Oh Lud, how should I know? I never looked into the grandfathers."
+
+"No, ma'am?" The tone was patronizing contempt. "You might have been the
+wiser of it. Colonel Oliver Boyce--he has taken the title lately--when I
+knew him he was something in the service of the Duke of Marlborough. Oh,
+a fine man to the eye, ma'am, and very splendid in his talk."
+
+"Why, that's his likeness," Alison laughed. "And what then, ma'am? Have
+you come seeking the Colonel? He is the Lord knows where. Or is
+it--faith, you don't tell me Harry is your son?"
+
+"No, ma'am. At least I was spared bearing children."
+
+"Oh--why, give you joy if you would have it so. But how can I serve you?
+Maybe your Colonel is not my Colonel after all. At least he and Harry are
+father and son heartily enough."
+
+"It may be so, ma'am," said the lady heavily, and here Harry came in.
+
+Alison looked up laughing and then frowned. Harry would not ever dress
+fine. His wig was still unfashionably small, he wore some sombre stuff,
+and to her eye (as she said) looked like a mole. "Here's Mr. Boyce,
+ma'am. Harry, Mrs. Oliver Boyce, who is come to say that you never had
+father nor mother."
+
+"Your obliged servant, ma'am." Harry opened his eyes. "Pray, has my
+father married again?"
+
+"You'll find, sir, that Colonel Boyce has only been married once."
+
+"If you please, ma'am," said Harry blandly. "Pray, are you blaming him?
+Or--" a gesture expressed his complete ignorance of what she was doing.
+
+The lady seemed to force herself to laugh. "Oh, fie, sir. Sure it is not
+for me to blame him."
+
+"No, ma'am?" Harry was first interrogative then acquiescent. "No, ma'am.
+I wonder if you could give me the Colonel's direction."
+
+"I, sir? You are pleased to amuse yourself."
+
+"I vow, ma'am, I was never less amused."
+
+"Colonel Boyce was pleased to leave me five years ago. I have not
+forgotten it, if you have."
+
+"Faith, this is very distressing," Harry protested in bewilderment. "But
+you do me injustice, ma'am. I have forgotten nothing about my father. For
+I never knew anything."
+
+"As you please, sir," the lady drawled. "I was talking, by your leave, to
+Mrs. Boyce."
+
+"Oh, ma'am, a hundred pardons," Harry took himself off in a hurry. His
+chief emotion over the lady seems to have been satisfaction that she
+wanted nothing to do with him. As for her story of being his father's
+deserted wife, he had long supposed his father capable of anything. As
+for the lady herself, he wrote her down a tiresome busybody and perhaps
+he was not far wrong.
+
+Alison too was much of the same opinion, but it was unfortunately
+hampered by a natural curiosity to hear what the lady could tell
+about the mystery of Harry and his father. "You had something to say
+to me, ma'am?"
+
+"I count it my duty, ma'am, to give you warning of Colonel Boyce."
+
+Alison stood up. "Duty? I know nothing of your duty, ma'am. But I think
+it is mine not to listen to you."
+
+"I protest, I should have said the same," the lady drawled. "I too had
+spirit once, child. That was before I suffered. I would I had known you
+earlier. And yet perhaps I may do something to save you even now."
+
+"I cannot tell how, ma'am."
+
+"Listen, if you please!" the lady said dramatically. "I was something of
+an heiress as you are and maybe something of a toast too. The worse for
+me. I choose to believe it was not only my money which brought Oliver
+Boyce upon me. He took all I could give him and very soon gave me
+nothing, not even common courtesy. When I began to be careful he began to
+be brutal. But for my family--I told you that Sir Gilbert Heathcote was
+my uncle--he would have stripped me of every penny. When they stepped in
+to save me some rag of my fortune, my good Mr. Boyce left me. I have
+never had a word from him since. Pray, child, take warning."
+
+"If it is so, I am sorry for it," said Alison coldly, "I believe I hear
+company." She began to walk to the outer room.
+
+Behind her, "As for your Harry Boyce," said the lady, "oh, I make no
+doubt he's Oliver's son, though certainly he is none of mine."
+
+Alison made as if she did not hear, and she was spared more by the coming
+of some of her guests. The card tables filled. There was no more danger
+of being private with Mrs. Oliver Boyce. Indeed, the lady, as if she had
+done all she wanted, took her leave early. She was affectionate about it,
+for which Alison liked her none the better. Through most of that evening,
+amid the flutter of cards and the clatter--"Spadillio, on my life! What,
+it's Basto, is it? Did you hear of Mrs. Prue? She'll not show for a
+month. We win the Codille, ma'am. They say the Duchess and she pulled
+caps"--Alison was telling herself over and over that the creature was a
+detestable low thing who only wanted to make mischief. It should, you
+think, have needed no effort to believe that. But the obvious malice had
+power to annoy a mind already discontented. Alison could not stop
+wondering what the mystery was about Harry's birth and his father.
+Perhaps Harry knew more than the little he professed. Perhaps he was not
+the careless, indolent fellow he chose to seem, but something more
+cunning and less lofty. What if he were just such another as the woman
+painted his father--a fellow on the hunt for an heiress, who, once he had
+her and her money, cared no more about her? To be sure there was some
+evidence for that. Since they had come to town, he was always off by
+himself. If she wanted him with her, she had to plead and plague him. A
+proud office! Why, that very night monsieur did not please to appear at
+the card tables. He was too fine for her and her company. So she fretted
+and rubbed the poison in. And naturally, she fared ill at the card table.
+Her cards were bad and she made the worst of them. She was not a good
+loser and it was a wife much inflamed who, when her guests were gone,
+sought out her husband.
+
+Harry sat with Mrs. Weston, who was at needlework and, if Alison had been
+able to see, looked very benign. But it was he who demanded all the
+wife's angry eyes. His wig was on the table beside him. He had a pipe in
+his mouth. He was lolling in the deeps of a chair and smiling to himself
+over a book. "You might be in an ale-house, you look so slovenly."
+
+Harry grinned up at her. "Oh, madame wife hasn't been winning to-night.
+Tell me all about it."
+
+"Faugh! Your pipe," Alison coughed. "For God's sake keep it to the
+tavern. It's enough that you reek of it without making my house
+reek too."
+
+Harry gave a great sigh and put the pipe down. "We were so comfortable
+till you came. I am glad to see you, dear."
+
+"I was comfortable till you came." Alison snapped.
+
+"Pray, mother Weston," says Harry, "forgive our public caresses. We have
+not long been married."
+
+Alison looked ice at him. "Weston dear, would you leave us? I have
+something to say to Harry." Harry opened his eyes. Mrs. Weston looked at
+her anxiously, bade them a nervous good-night, and hurried out.
+
+"Harry--who was your mother?" Alison stood stern over the lolling
+husband.
+
+"Egad, what's this? Have you been brooding over your bony friend?
+Who is she?"
+
+"She says she is your father's wife; and says he left her."
+
+"Well, if she is his wife, I wager he did leave her. Faith, she was made
+to be deserted."
+
+"What do you know of her?"
+
+"Nothing, by the grace of God. Why should I? If my father got drunk and
+married her, he would not want to talk about it when he was sober."
+
+"I despise you when you talk so," Alison cried.
+
+"And yet you listened to her, child."
+
+"She says that he took all her money before he left her."
+
+"Oh! Pray, why has she so much to say, and to you?"
+
+"She wanted to warn me against Colonel Boyce."
+
+"And against his son, I think. And you were so kind as to listen. Egad,
+ma'am, I am obliged to you. Well, now you know what to do. You have the
+money and I have none. Pray, lock up your purse to-night."
+
+"You are childish," said Alison with lofty scorn. "Harry--who was
+your mother?"
+
+"Oh, I thought your kind friend told you I had none. I dare say it's as
+true as the rest."
+
+"You don't know?"
+
+"I never saw her."
+
+"She said--" Alison hesitated.
+
+"Oh Lud, don't be squeamish now."
+
+"She said your father had never been married except to her."
+
+"Odso! That is what you had to tell me. I am a bastard, am I?" He laughed
+and turned in his chair. "Give you good-night, madame wife."
+
+"Harry--"
+
+"Oh, God save you!" He took up his pipe. "I am no company for you. And,
+by God, you are no company for me."
+
+She looked at him a moment, hesitated, went slowly out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE AFFAIR OF SIR GEORGE
+
+
+The irruption of Mrs. Oliver Boyce could not easily have been foretold.
+That the past life of Colonel Boyce was likely to throw shadows over his
+son Harry might have considered, but the nature of the lady and her care
+and the successful opportunity of her malice were hardly to be
+calculated. There is less excuse for him in the affair of Sir George
+Anville. Given the conditions of that hasty marriage and the state into
+which it had brought them and the society about them, some Sir George or
+other was a natural consequence.
+
+The ugly quarrel which Mrs. Oliver Boyce had made for them was never
+composed. When they met again in the morning they were coldly and
+haughtily civil, and so they chose to remain. Mrs. Weston, not being
+blind, saw that something was amiss and tried with blundering motherly
+affection to push them back into one another's arms. She hardened, as is
+usual, their hostility. Each was mortally afraid of weakening, each
+suspected the other at once of softness and of guile and so held aloof
+and fed upon scorn. They had both enough of that pride of sex which gives
+one pleasure in the sufferings of the other. And of course the quarrel
+was poisoned with a sordid taint. The colder, the haughtier Harry was,
+the more Alison inclined to believe that he had wanted nothing of her but
+her money. The haughtier, the colder Alison was, the more Harry raged
+against her for a mean creature who desired to make him feel his
+dependence upon her money bags.
+
+In himself Sir George Anville was of no importance. If Harry had been
+comfortable he could never have taken the trouble to be angry over the
+man. It is certain that Alison never thought him worth any thought of
+hers, still less worth one finger's surrender. And yet Sir George
+contrived to be disastrous to the pair of them.
+
+That was not, as Lady Mary Wortley Montagu said of him in another matter,
+altogether his fault. "The fool has excuses," quoth she, "which others
+have not. He is so great a fool that you hardly believe his folly is but
+folly." Sir George was a man born without impulse or capacity for
+anything. Lady Mary, who was fond of using him for her wit, made a
+grammarian's jest on him, "The creature's an anomaly: active in form,
+passive in meaning." He was bred in a society which made it a fashion to
+be vicious. He affected to follow the fashion. If vice must needs be
+something active, or at least, something of the will, Sir George Anville
+must escape punishment. But he was to a wholesome taste more offensive
+than sinners who did more damage. It was Harry's worst blunder in the
+affair that he treated Alison as if she did not feel that.
+
+Sir George knew no other way of passing his life than in dangling about
+women. He was generally tolerated as a butt, and being impervious to
+contempt, supposed that his fascinations procured him immunity. He
+did--it must be reckoned the first of his two accomplishments--he did
+know a pretty woman from a plain one, and therefore as soon as he knew
+Alison much resorted to her. His other accomplishment was to dress well.
+He was lean and had an air of languor which was not affected, but a
+natural lack of vigour. It may be believed that Alison tolerated him
+because he made a not disagreeable decoration to her rooms. But at this
+era she was cynical, and perhaps told herself that Sir George was as good
+a man as another.
+
+He began to come at hours when she could be found alone and was sometimes
+admitted. So Harry caught him once or twice, was ironically obsequious to
+him (which Sir George took for solemn earnest), and afterwards amused
+himself by congratulating Mrs. Alison on the power of her charms. "Odds
+fish, I can't tell where you'll stop, ma'am. You'll have a corpse on his
+knees to you yet. Maybe the corpse of a lord. I vow I'm proud of you."
+Which was not likely to get the door shut on Sir George.
+
+So that dangling gentleman became convinced that Alison was yielding to
+his embraces. He was, in a limp way, gratified. A devilish fine woman to
+be sure. She might be a trifle exhausting to a man of _ton_. But what
+would you? Women were greedy and must be satisfied with what one could
+spare them. And it was pleasant to see the pretty creatures pining. He
+would lure madame on with a few tit-bits. In this kindly mood he went to
+her on a wet April day when Alison was fretting for a wild walk or a
+wilder ride in wind and rain. But even to herself she would not confess
+that she was tired of the town. It would have assimilated her to Harry.
+
+Sir George sat himself down by Alison's side, simpered at her, sniffed,
+put his thin hands on his thin knees and ogled them. Alison held out to
+him a cup of tea. He arranged his rings before he took it and then again
+simpered at her. After some humming and hawing, "D'ye go to the play
+to-night, ma'am?" he drawled.
+
+"What play is it?"
+
+"Ah--some curst play or other," said Sir George; and exhausted by that
+effort relapsed for a while into silence.
+
+Alison did not help him out. It is possible that she was wondering how a
+creature so vapid could go on existing. She looked Sir George over with
+an odd, close inspection. Sir George, who had some perceptions, became
+aware of it and according to his nature misunderstood it. He sniffed
+again, and "Pray, ma'am, what perfume do you use?" Alison stared at him.
+"I am delicate in such things," said he, and smelt his own handkerchief.
+
+Alison hesitated between disgust and amusement. To be sure the creature
+was such a fool that it was not fair to think of him save as a buffoon.
+So unfortunately she chose amusement. "Oh, I vow, Sir George, your
+delicacy is rare," she laughed.
+
+The poor creature took it for a compliment. He leered at her: "But you
+are exquisite, my Indamora."
+
+"Who?"
+
+"It's an amorous lady in a play," Sir George explained. "Pretty
+creature," he patted Alison's arm, and leaned upon her to kiss her neck.
+
+She was so surprised that his lips had almost time to reach her. "Lord,
+sir, are you mad?" she cried, as she thrust him off.
+
+"Pretty creature," Sir George giggled, and clung to her.
+
+"Your carriage is at the door, Sir George." Harry stood over them. His
+face was as much a mask as ever, his voice placid.
+
+Alison started up and stood to face him with a lowering brow. He did not
+appear to see her. Sir George shook down his ruffles. "Carriage? What
+d'ye mean?" says he. "I ha' had no carriage this year. I came in a
+hackney coach."
+
+Harry turned away from him and opened the door.
+
+"Eh? Oh, stap me!" Sir George giggled and got on to his feet, "Madame,
+your eternally devoted." He went out with a strut, waving his scented
+handkerchief in the direction of Harry.
+
+Then Alison spoke. Her eyes were furious. "You--oh, you boor! How
+dare you?"
+
+"Egad, that's very good!" Harry laughed.
+
+She beat her foot on the floor. "Oh, you are not to be borne! To make a
+noise of it! To make a scandal of me and that--that creature!"
+
+"To be sure, I came untimely. Well, ma'am, if you wanted to be quiet
+about it, I had rather it made a noise."
+
+"My God!" she was white. "You dare say that to me! Be careful, Harry."
+
+"Pray, ma'am, no heroics."
+
+"I warn you, there are things I'll not bear."
+
+"Is it possible?" Harry sneered.
+
+She swept past him and away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+RETURN OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+
+It seems that, years afterwards, Harry and Alison were afflicted with a
+dreary and remorseful wonder at these wars. Both, as they grew older, had
+something of a turn for moralising, and in their copious letters to their
+several children is evidence of much penitence and puzzling over the
+disasters of their youth. Each plainly took all the blame. Each is
+eloquent about the sins of pride and hardness. Harry preaches the duty of
+trust; Alison the folly of easy intimacies. Both of them, in those latter
+days when they could calmly estimate what they had lost, still wondered
+with a gloomy scorn how they had come to let the ugly, ridiculous affair
+of Sir George set them against each other. You find them both trying to
+recall (or guess) what exactly it was that, in the time of crisis, they
+felt and believed.
+
+When it was all part of their history, Harry could hardly persuade
+himself that ever he had fancied Alison untrue, even disloyal; or Alison
+believe that she had stormed against him for driving out of the house a
+man who had been impudent to her. Yet it is not to be doubted that Harry
+did let suspicions of her honesty poison him. He could not, at the worst
+of his anger, believe that she would play false with such a husk of a
+fop; but he told himself that she wanted to make the fellow into a
+waiting gentleman, a servant, and a toy at once--a thing more nauseous
+than a lover. And Alison, though at the back of her brain she was aware
+that Harry had excuse for what he had done, raged the more against him
+for the intolerable things he had said. His suspicions made her despise
+him. For his assumption of authority she hated him.
+
+There were almost from the first the usual sage and kindly friends to
+tell them that it was all a misunderstanding, that they had only to be
+frank with each other and commonly reasonable and there would be no
+quarrel left. But it is doubtful whether this sagacious advice could
+have done them much good if they had taken it. "Talk things over like
+rational creatures," was (as usual) the prescription. But if they had
+really been rational, they would only have come to the conclusion that
+they ought not to be married. The force of their passion, to be sure,
+was real enough and still moved in them. To hold them together they had
+nothing else. There was no consciousness of other need, no longing for a
+common life, no desire to help or give. If they had been most calmly
+wise and wisely calm in a dozen conversations, they would but have made
+this all the clearer.
+
+Still it is true, as the sagacious friends guessed, that they did not
+try to compose the quarrel. Each was by far too proud. Harry was
+pleased to consider that he had done his duty by a flighty wife, and
+would take no more account of her unless she were penitent--or provoked
+him again. Alison, reckoning herself meanly insulted, was resolved that
+he could never again be more than an unwelcome guest in her house. They
+were, to be sure, ridiculous. In private they avoided each other. In
+public they continued to meet, for each was too proud to confess to the
+world the failure of their marriage. You imagine how poor Mrs. Weston
+enjoyed life in an icy atmosphere, the temperature of which she was not
+permitted to notice.
+
+Such were their relations when the final blow fell upon them. They dined
+late in the Lincoln Inn Fields. It was as much as six o'clock and they
+were still at table--as jovial as usual. The butler came to Alison with
+an elaborate whispering. "Pray him come up," she said aloud, and looked
+defiance down the table at Harry. "It is Mr. Waverton."
+
+"Lord, Lord, is he still alive?" Harry grinned. "That's heroic."
+
+"Back from France? Is Colonel Boyce come back?" Mrs. Weston cried.
+
+"I know nothing of Colonel Boyce," said Alison coldly.
+
+"You couldn't please him better," Harry laughed. "Dear Geoffrey! I wonder
+if he knows anything? Well I It would be a new experience."
+
+Mr. Waverton came. He was more stately than ever--browner also, but not
+changed otherwise. His large and handsome face affected all the old
+melancholy.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Waverton!" Harry grinned. "You do honour me. Pray let me present
+you to my poor wife."
+
+Geoffrey took no notice of him. "Madame, your obedient," he bowed to
+Alison. "I beg leave to have some speech with you."
+
+"There's still some dinner. Draw up a chair," said Harry.
+
+"I did not come to dine, sir."
+
+"Oh, that's a sad stomach of yours. A glass of wine, then?"
+
+"I do not take wine with you, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"I wonder if you have made a mistake. For you have come into my house."
+
+"I will answer for all my mistakes, sir, with hearty goodwill."
+
+"Egad, you'll be busy."
+
+"Oh, be silent!" Alison cried. "You are welcome, Mr. Waverton. How can I
+serve you?"
+
+"I understand the gentleman's desire to hurry me into a quarrel, ma'am.
+Be sure that I shall not permit it." Harry laughed disagreeably. "It's
+very well, sir. But I choose first that you should listen to what I
+have to say."
+
+"Listen I Oh Lud, is it a poem?"
+
+Mr. Waverton flushed. "You are impertinent, sir. It shall not serve
+you. I intend that madame shall know the truth of your father's
+treachery and yours."
+
+Harry stood up. "Are we to stay for more of this, ma'am?"
+
+"I shall stay," Alison said.
+
+"You remark the gentleman's impatience to silence me, ma'am. I promise
+you that I shall tell you nothing which he or any man can deny."
+
+"It's a dull tale, then," Harry muttered.
+
+"I think it will excite you enough, ma'am. You are advised that I went to
+France with Colonel Boyce. The office which he offered me was to
+negotiate with Prince James. This I undertook readily, for to his party
+my family hath ever had an inclination, nay, an affection, and I saw in
+the affair duties of honour and moment."
+
+"To the greater glory of Geoffrey, first Duke of Waverton, whom God
+preserve," quoth Harry.
+
+"I did not, I will avow, foresee that the thing was but a trick to take
+me away from my house and out of the country. Though I may regret,
+ma'am"--he bowed magnificently to Alison--"I do not even now blame myself
+for my blindness, for I have ever accounted it unworthy of a man of
+honour to fear treachery in his servants"--he glared at Harry--"or
+weakness--ah--weakness in those to whom he gives his devotion"--he made
+melancholy eyes at Alison. "No more of that. In fine, I did not suspect
+that a fellow who was taking wages from my hand had plotted to rob me of
+what was my dearest hope, or that another--another--would surrender
+herself a prey to his crafty greed."
+
+"Damme, it is a poem after all," Harry groaned.
+
+"You said you had something to tell me, sir," said Alison coldly.
+
+"Nay, ma'am, be patient. I give you no reproaches. But what is, is. If it
+irks you that I remind you of it, do not give the blame to me."
+
+"I shall blame you for being tedious, by your leave." Alison yawned.
+
+"Wait till all's told. Well, ma'am, I left Tetherdown with Colonel
+Boyce, and we rode posthaste to Newhaven. He was there joined by some
+half-dozen fellows, low fellows to my eye. This much surprised me, and I
+took occasion to tell him so, for he had given out that his was a very
+secret errand of Marlborough's privy policy, into which he would admit
+none but me. He made out that these fellows were but messengers and
+escort, and I permitted myself to be satisfied, though I remarked that
+he was on familiar terms with them. But that gave me little concern, for
+I had from the first remarked in Colonel Boyce a coarse habit of
+intimacy with the vulgar."
+
+"Aye, aye, you and he took to each other famously," says Harry.
+
+"Lud, sir, must you be so wordy?" Alison cried.
+
+"You will find that every word has its import, ma'am. From some of these
+fellows Colonel Boyce learnt that there was a warrant out against him for
+treasonable practices with the Pretender. This affected him to great
+indignation, in which, as I frankly told him, I found matter for
+bewilderment. Since he was, as he professed, about to deal with the
+Pretender, it was but fair that the Government should arraign him on that
+charge. Over which he was pleased to laugh at me, and then, to explain
+his mirth, averred that the Government, and in particular Mr. Secretary
+St. John, was much more Jacobite than he, and so had no title to meddle
+with him. Then he said that what irked him was that they should have
+heard of his dealings with France, which must be done secretly or fail.
+So we went in a hurry aboard the schooner which was ready for him, and
+crossed to Dieppe, landing by night beyond the town. I make no doubt from
+his adroitness that Colonel Boyce hath done business in France before,
+but of what kind I leave you to guess when you have heard all. We were
+well furnished with horses and upon the road to Paris before noon. He
+gave out to some officers which questioned him that we were of Prince
+James's service upon our way to St. Germain. We rode to Pontoise, and
+there, as it had been planned from the first, Colonel Boyce stayed while
+I rode on to the Prince. He dared not, as he said, go himself to Paris,
+for fear that some of the French officers should recognize him as
+Marlborough's man and denounce him for a spy. Therefore was I to go with
+letters to the Prince, and messages which should persuade him to ride out
+to Pontoise and come to business with Colonel Boyce. I went on then
+alone, save that Colonel Boyce gave me one of his fellows to be my guide
+and servant, and he stayed with the rest at Pontoise. Thus far, I beg you
+remark, I had no cause to apprehend treachery. Upon the face, the scheme
+was fair enough, and all had been done even as Colonel Boyce proposed to
+me in England. I will maintain myself honourably free of any blame in the
+affair against any man whomsoever."
+
+"God bless you," said Harry heartily.
+
+Mr. Waverton visibly laboured with a repartee.
+
+"Oh, sir, a prayer from you is a rare honour," he said at length.
+"You're to understand, ma'am, that I was furnished with letters of
+credence from certain of the Jacobite agents in England--John Rogers and
+Mrs. White, I remember. How they were come by, I cannot now tell, though
+I may guess, for it is plain that there was no stint of money in the
+affair. So I came easily to speech with the Prince and his secretary, my
+Lord Middleton. And I will ever maintain that His Royal Highness is
+altogether such as a prince should be. Being of a dark complexion and a
+melancholy dignity, there is in him no lightness of thought or word. To
+me he was, I profess, very flattering, showing me courtesies beyond my
+rights or expectations. He received me, in a word, most favourably, and
+being influenced, as I regret I cannot doubt, by my person and address,
+was easily inclined to ride out to Pontoise. Only my Lord Middleton made
+difficulties. He is of a sardonic turn, and permits his wit to outrun his
+civility. He set me questions in a fashion which my honour could not
+brook. Yet I can relate that in the end I prevailed over my Lord
+Middleton's jealousy. For he said to the Prince: '_Enfin_, sir, I can
+tell no reason why you should not go see this Colonel if you choose. If
+there were any guile in the business, faith, they would never have
+trusted it to this fellow!'
+
+"So the thing was agreed. In the morning we rode for Pontoise, the
+Prince, my Lord Middleton, myself. His Royal Highness was pleased to
+limit himself to one servant. The man with whom Colonel Boyce had
+provided me went on to carry advice of our coming. We came to Pontoise
+towards evening. Colonel Boyce had put up at the Lion d'Or. He was
+waiting for us in the courtyard and received us, as I thought, something
+shortly, hurrying us into the house. But once inside, he made ceremony
+enough, with endless speeches about the condescension of His Royal
+Highness. All this too obsequious, in a boorish taste, so that the Prince
+bade him have done and come to business. Therewith Colonel Boyce was as
+full of apologies as he had been of servilities. I vow I never heard him
+so copious as that night.
+
+"He took us, you are to understand, to an upper room. And what first
+moved my suspicion was that he bade me be gone. Then my Lord Middleton
+countered him with, 'I believe, sir, the gentleman had best stay.'
+Immediately Colonel Boyce was all smiles over his blunder, and we sat
+down about the table in that upper room and came to the substance of his
+negotiation. He kept, I'll allow, to the purposes which, from the first,
+he had pretended to me: whether Prince James, if assured of support from
+Marlborough and his friends, would choose to avow himself Protestant; but
+he made so many conditions over it, he was so vague and wary that 'twas
+hard to tell what he would be at. When my Lord Middleton tried to pin him
+to something plain and certain he would ever evade, till it began to grow
+late and the Prince talked of supper and bed. This Colonel Boyce took up
+very heartily, and was indeed giving his orders when there came a noise
+in the courtyard and he ran to the window and looked out.
+
+"My Lord Middleton was behind him, with a 'What's your anxiety, sir?'
+
+"'Why, my lord, I would not have these roysterers break upon the Prince's
+incognito. Pray, sir, this way and you'll be secure'; he points to an
+inner door.
+
+"'I believe we are as safe here, sir,' says my Lord Middleton.
+
+"'Egad, sir, come away,' says Colonel Boyce; and he was in fact dragging
+the Prince across the room when the door bursts open and in comes a
+stranger, a little man. He flung himself across the room upon Colonel
+Boyce, making some play with a pistol. There was some grappling and
+wrestling. I recall that they gasped and breathed hard. But it's odd, I
+believe, that there was no word spoken. Then Colonel Boyce freed himself
+and bolted through that inner door. The stranger fired a shot after him,
+and while we were all deaf and sneezing with it and utterly amazed he
+turns on us. 'That's a miss,' says he. 'Please God they'll bag him below.
+Eh, Charles,' he wags his head at my Lord Middleton, 'I thought you had
+more sense,'
+
+"'Damme,' says my lord, 'it's Hector McBean. And prithee what's all this
+ruffling, Mac?'
+
+"'Why, you have let His Majesty walk into a stinking trap. That fellow
+Boyce, he hath been Marlborough's spy, Sunderland's spy, the devil's spy
+this twenty year.'
+
+"'Why, I thought he had something the smack of it,' says my lord.
+'And yet--'
+
+"'Who's this now?' Captain McBean turned on me. 'Yours or his?'
+
+"'His ambassador in fact,' My lord looked me over and took snuff. 'You
+won't tell me that hath any guile in it. Prithee, what is it you have
+against the man Boyce?'
+
+"'Eh, did ye see him run?' says Captain McBean. 'A man's not in that
+hurry if he hath a good conscience. If ye'll please to have him up, maybe
+we'll hear a tale.'
+
+"But as he spoke there came into the room a French officer of dragoons,
+who, saluting the Prince, asked Captain McBean if he had found his rogue.
+On which 'Have I found him?' Captain McBean cries out, 'Eh, sir, did he
+not run into your arms?' But it appeared that Colonel Boyce had not been
+caught, and they determined at last that he must have made his way out by
+a door at the back of the inn and won clear away. But I am sorry to tell
+you, ma'am, that he hath not yet been found. For if they catch him in
+France, he may count on a hanging."
+
+"Pray, sir, how did you dodge the rope?" Harry said. "Did you talk them
+to death, your Pretender and his tail?"
+
+"You're too eloquent for me, Mr. Waverton," Alison yawned. "I can't tell
+what you want to say. What is this mighty crime which you and Colonel
+Boyce were compassing?"
+
+"Sneers become you ill, ma'am," says Mr. Waverton magnificently. "I
+repudiate any charge whatsoever; and tell my story my own way. Some hot
+words passed between Captain McBean and the Frenchman, each blaming the
+other for Colonel Boyce's escape. Then Captain McBean says 'The fellows
+that were drinking in the tap, I suppose you've let them dodge you too?
+No? Well, that's a wonder. Tie this rogue up with them and have them in
+guard.' So he mocked at me, but the Prince brought him up roundly.
+
+"'You go too fast for me, my good captain,' quoth he. 'What's your charge
+against the gentleman?--who is to my mind a very simple gentleman.' So
+His Royal Highness was pleased to honour me."
+
+"Egad, he was right, Waverton," Harry laughed.
+
+"I think I know how to value your fair words now, sir," says Mr. Waverton
+grandly. "Be pleased to spare them. Upon that, as I was saying, Captain
+McBean lost command of himself and was grossly violent. Roaring that I
+was none the less a knave because I was so natural a fool, and the like
+empty insolence. Accusing me of being art and part in a vile plot with
+Colonel Boyce to kidnap and murder His Royal Highness."
+
+"Now we have it," Alison murmured and looked at Harry strangely.
+
+"Aye, ma'am. Now, perhaps (though late enough) your eyes are opened,"
+said Mr. Waverton with relish. "Well, I let the man run on. He was indeed
+not to be stopped. A rude, vehement fellow. When he was exhausted, I
+addressed His Royal Highness."
+
+"Lack a day, I believe you," says Harry.
+
+"I made it clear to him, sir, that my birth and position must warrant me
+innocent of any treachery, and though I might well disdain to answer
+these reckless charges I owed it to myself to remark to His Royal
+Highness that, but for my desire to serve him, I had never meddled in the
+affair. So that when I had done, my Lord Middleton says, laughing, 'Egad,
+sir, it seems you owe this fine gentleman thanks for his kindly
+condescension to you'; and the Prince was pleased to answer, 'We are too
+small for his notice, faith. But is he finished yet?' Then I bowed to His
+Royal Highness and sat down, well enough pleased, as you may believe.
+
+"But this Captain McBean called out in his rude fashion, 'Eh, sir, he may
+e'en be the booby he pretends. The better decoy, I allow. But by your
+leave, we'll look into it more narrowly. Would Your Majesty please to
+permit me have up the other rogues?'
+
+"This, in a word, they did, and Captain McBean and my Lord Middleton (who
+is to my mind something more of the attorney than becomes a man of rank)
+questioning the fellows shrewdly, it was made put--I crave your
+attention, madam--it was made out that Colonel Boyce had undertaken for
+the service of the Hanoverian junto here to kidnap or kill Prince James.
+And the plan was to bring the Prince out to Pontoise and so drag out
+affairs that he passed the night there. Then in the night they were to
+invade his room and command him to follow them. They pretended indeed
+that they meant only to carry him off. But 'tis not to be doubted that
+they looked for resistance and a bloody issue to the affair. So, ma'am,
+here is the trade of the family of Boyce--to procure murder, and the
+murder of a prince of the blood royal, of our lawful king. I give you joy
+of the name you bear."
+
+Alison bent her head. "You may well be proud of your part, Mr.
+Waverton."
+
+"They let you go, did they?" says Harry; "your captain and your lord and
+your prince?"
+
+"Let me go, sir? There is nothing against me. I defy your impudence. Nay,
+I thank you, I thank you. You lead me gracefully to the end of my story."
+
+"Good God! It has an end!"
+
+"When these rogues were questioned about me, not a man of them could
+pretend to have anything against me. They openly confessed that Colonel
+Boyce had warned them that I must be kept in innocence of the affair lest
+I should thwart it. For he said that he had brought me into it to show a
+good face to the Prince as one beyond suspicion of treachery. Nay and
+moreover--and here's my last word to you, ma'am--he avowed that he chose
+me because he wanted me out of England where I stood between his own son
+and a pretty heiress. At which, as I remember, my Lord Middleton chose to
+be amused."
+
+"Damme, I like that man," says Harry.
+
+"So, ma'am," Mr. Waverton tossed his head. "Here you have it. I am drawn
+into a murderous, vile, base treason that I may be kept out of the way
+while Mr. Boyce prosecutes his designs upon you. I give you joy of the
+loyal fidelity which yielded to him. I leave you to enjoy him with what
+appetite you may."
+
+He made a majestic bow, he turned and was gone.
+
+Harry and Alison were left staring at each other.
+
+From behind came a small strained voice: "Colonel Boyce--he--he is safe,
+then?" It was Mrs. Weston.
+
+The two turned with a start, surprised by her existence.
+
+Harry laughed. "Oh aye, he is safe. He would be."
+
+Mrs. Weston rose slowly and then made a rush for the door.
+
+The husband and wife were left alone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+HARRY IS DISMISSED
+
+
+Alison turned and stared into the fire. Harry filled himself a glass of
+port and drank it and laughed. She looked round at him. "Faith, Mr.
+Waverton is mighty good entertainment," he explained.
+
+"Is that all you want to say?"
+
+Harry would not be awed by that ominous voice. "Oh Lud, how could I dare
+talk after him? Our poetic orator!" He made flourishes in the air after
+Mr. Waverton's manner. "Nay, but I would give my new wig to have been in
+that upper chamber at Pontoise. Dear Geoffrey on his defence booming
+noble periods--and the Prince, poor gentleman, with his fingers in his
+ears! If dear Geoffrey was telling the truth. I wonder."
+
+"Oh, is that what you'll pretend?"
+
+"Pretend? I pretend nothing, ma'am. Why, to be sure, our Geoffrey always
+means to tell the truth--having, God bless him, no imagination. But
+you'll remark what when he tells a tale, it's Mr. Waverton has always the
+_beau role_. He sees the world like that, dear lad. So I should be glad
+to hear the Caledonian gentleman's notion of what happened."
+
+"I see. You'll make that your defence. Geoffrey imagined it all."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, you may lower your tone. I have nothing to defend, nor are
+you set in judgment."
+
+Alison started up. "Do you suppose all this is to make no change?"
+she cried.
+
+"You're a splendid creature, by heaven," says Harry, tilting his chair
+back and watching her with a little epicurean smile, the proud vigour of
+her, the blood in her cheeks, the flash of her eyes, and the sweep of the
+white arm.
+
+"I could hate you for that," she said, and her lips set.
+
+"Yes. I think you're in a fair way to it," says Harry. "I wonder if you
+know why."
+
+"Because I have come to despise you," she cried sharply.
+
+"You will be solemn, will you?" says Harry. "Much good may it do you. And
+so, egad, have at you heartily. For you have said things which both of us
+will find it hard to forget."
+
+"Oh, you can feel that?"
+
+"Look 'e, ma'am, if we are to be in earnest, we had best not snap at each
+other like a pair of puppies. Now, what's happened?"
+
+"You have to ask that? My God, if you have to ask, there's no use in
+words between you and me."
+
+"Oh Lud, don't be mystical. Mr. Waverton comes here to do his poor
+possible to make mischief between us. I suppose you saw that. He tells us
+that he went blundering with my father into a muddle of a plot."
+
+"He tells us that your father planned a vile base murder and sought to
+make him, a man of honour, part in it. Pray, sir, is that not infamous?"
+
+"Egad, if you haven't caught his style! You believe all that, do you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"We shall go far to-night, I think," Harry shrugged. "And shall I tell
+you why you believe it, ma'am? It's because you are looking about to find
+matter for blackening me."
+
+Alison hesitated a moment. "You cannot deny it. It is proved. Your father
+would not stay to face them."
+
+"Face a pistol and a furious Scot? Well, I never said he was a hero."
+
+"Do you pretend it was only a fight he feared? Do you dare tell me it was
+an honest, honourable plan? Nay, come, let me see if there's anything you
+think shameful."
+
+Harry shrugged. "I know my father not much better than you do, ma'am. I
+never thought him a Bayard. Some plot there was, I think, and these
+political plots are all dirty enough. But, Lord, who is clean of them?
+And I'm not ready to write my father off a murderer because Mr. Waverton
+went blundering into a business which, on his own confession, he does not
+understand."
+
+"He went in your place. You should have gone with your father."
+
+"Should have gone? D'ye wish I had, ma'am?"
+
+"Perhaps."
+
+Harry started up. "Oh, say it out. I knew we should go far to-night."
+
+They stood close, fronting each other fiercely. "My God, is it strange
+if I wish you had gone? Your father is a base wretch who should be on the
+gallows, and I am to be his son's wife and bear the name, and the while
+he goes bragging that he took Geoffrey Waverton off so that you should be
+free to come at me."
+
+"Aye, that. To be sure, that rankles. But you have known it long. I
+showed you the letter he left me which said he had taken Geoffrey out of
+my way and bade me snatch my chance of you. And you made light of that,
+ma'am. Oh, it was a base thing, if you will, but you know well enough it
+went for nought. We had done our work before. By God, Alison, Geoffrey
+there or Geoffrey here, you would have come to me."
+
+"Ah!" It was like a cry of pain. "You brag of it. I forced myself on you,
+I suppose." Harry exclaimed something, made a gesture. "Oh yes, you were
+all cold virtue and chastity and honour, and I--what was I?" She
+shuddered and drew back from him. "Yes, you would turn on me. You would
+taunt me with that."
+
+"Egad, you're in a frenzy," says Harry. "You cry aloud and cut yourself
+with knives. You will be hurting yourself."
+
+"I loathe you for that calm way of yours," she cried. "You mock me till
+I am mad, and then you please to be grave and lofty. You--I took you out
+of the gutter."
+
+"What now, ma'am?" Harry stiffened.
+
+"It's all a mask!" she cried. "Nothing of you shows in your voice or your
+face--your face, bah, it's always the same, when you kiss and when you
+strike. A mask! You're always in a mask. That's how you took me. I was a
+fool, and thought there must be something fine behind it." She laughed.
+"You were clever enough. You knew the trick and the mystery of it would
+take a woman. A mask! Yes, faith, that is the wear for a highwayman. I
+remember how Charles Hadley used to laugh at your 'Curst
+stand-and-deliver stare.' I liked it, I liked the challenge of it. But he
+knew you better. That's your trade, the highwayman, faith, the
+highwayman! You trick us all and prey upon us, as you dare. So you marked
+me down, who was rich and a girl, and you have caught me, and you have
+rifled me, and, for what you care I may now go hang. I ask you for my
+pride again, my honour, and you mock at me. Oh, I am ashamed for a fool
+and worse, and you know it, God help me, but you--you--"
+
+Harry shrugged. "I suppose we have come to the end now," he said coolly.
+"Well, ma'am, to be sure we married in haste, and it seems we have both
+come to repentance. As for wrong that I have done you--why, I can't make
+you a maid again, and, if you please, more's the pity. My apologies and
+regrets. For the rest, all of your money that hath been spent on me will
+go in a small purse, and, I promise you, you shall spend no more. So you
+may sleep sound, and I wish you good night."
+
+She watched him cross the room, and, as he was opening the door, cried
+out, "What do you mean?"
+
+He turned. "Why, would you still be talking?" Their eyes met in
+defiance. "You can go," she said.
+
+"I have had the honour to tell you so," he said, and was gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+ALISON FINDS FRIENDS
+
+
+It was on the second day after that Susan Burford and Mr. Hadley rode in
+to the Lincoln's Inn Fields. They found Alison and Mrs. Weston together,
+and both sewing--a fact which failed to interest Mr. Hadley, but
+surprised Susan, who knew Alison, without a taste for needlework.
+
+"My dear," says Susan, embracing Alison physically and spiritually in her
+large, buxom, genial way.
+
+"You have been a long time finding me," says Alison and put her off. "I
+suppose I know why you kindly come to me now."
+
+"B-r-r-r-r!" Mr. Hadley made the sound of one who comes into a cold
+draught. "The truth is, Susan has been so busy improving herself that she
+has had no time for her friends. In fine, she has been trying to make
+herself worthy the honour of my affections and large enough to support
+the burden of my dignity. I don't say she satisfies me, but she does her
+best." He propelled Susan forward with his one hand. "'A poor thing,
+ma'am, but mine own.'"
+
+"Oh, he is amusing himself, you see," says Susan, in her leisurely
+fashion.
+
+"Damme, Susan, you're so mighty innocent that sometimes I believe you
+are innocent."
+
+"But you have known me so long," Susan protested.
+
+Alison stood up with an air of ceremony. Her pale face constrained itself
+at last to smile at them. "My dear, I wish you may be very happy," says
+she, and gave Susan a matronly kiss. "Mr. Hadley, you're a fortunate
+man." She put out a stately hand.
+
+Having bowed over it. "B-r-r-r," says Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Damn these east winds. Susan, you're a plague with your affections. You
+will have me talk about you, and I can't make you interesting, I hope,
+ma'am, we find Mr. Boyce well?"
+
+Alison drew back. "Why do you ask that? You have seen Mr. Waverton,
+of course."
+
+Mrs. Weston put down her work and folded her hands upon it.
+
+"Why, yes, I have seen Geoffrey; and what's worse, heard him. I hope he
+did not plague you too long."
+
+"Pray, Mr. Hadley, don't be ironical. You can spare me that. Mr. Waverton
+told us his story the night before last. Thereupon Mr. Boyce and I parted
+company. He left my house immediately and I do not know where he is."
+
+Mr. Hadley distinguished himself by containing an oath. Susan said, "Oh,
+my dear," in that slow, calm way which might mean anything.
+
+It was Mrs. Weston who cried out, "Alison, you never told me."
+
+"You asked once or twice where he was, and I told you I did not know.
+What does it matter?"
+
+"You quarrelled with him?"
+
+"Quarrelled!"
+
+"Because of what this Mr. Waverton said?"
+
+"Do you think it could make no difference?"
+
+Mrs. Weston clasped her hands and swayed in her chair.
+
+"Alison; we had no guess of this. I am sorry. I am so sorry," Susan said.
+
+"There is no need." Alison held her head high.
+
+"If we have, in some sort, forced your confidence, I beg you believe,
+ma'am, it was not meant," So Mr. Hadley in the grand style. "For I
+protest it never came into my head that Geoffrey would make mischief
+between you and Mr. Boyce."
+
+"You say that?" Alison stared at him. "Oh, you mean I was so besotted
+with him."
+
+Mr. Hadley relapsed to his ordinary manner. "Damme, d'ye think we came
+for nothing but to jeer at you? I promise you we have pleasanter matter
+to hand. Neither to jeer at you, nor to meddle with you, Alison, but
+friendly. So take us friendly in God's name. If you will go about to find
+a sneer in every word, why, a sneer you'll find, but not of my making. We
+bring you nothing but goodwill, and want nothing more of you. But if we
+irk you, why, let us go and we'll see you again in good time."
+
+"That's a pretty speech to begin with an oath," Alison said, through the
+flicker of a smile. "And, faith, I should be slow to take offence at you.
+For we quarrelled before, because you were at pains to warn me. Well,
+sir, I humble myself before your wisdom."
+
+There was a pause. "Oh. Now we are all ill at ease," says Susan.
+
+"Odso, ma'am, it's not fair," Mr. Hadley cried. "I am not here to say, 'I
+told you so,' I am not so proud of it. Well, damme, I have no temptation
+to be meddling in your affairs. But I think you will have to know. It is
+with Mr. Waverton I have fallen out now."
+
+"With Mr. Waverton?" Alison repeated. "What is there between you and
+him?"
+
+"I believe he had the impertinence to expect my sympathetic admiration.
+While I was thinking him a low fellow. Which I took occasion to tell him.
+Without result." Mr. Hadley shrugged. "But I believe he did not feel it.
+It's a thick hide."
+
+"And what was your difference?"
+
+"Why, this precious story of his."
+
+There was some little time of silence. "You don't believe it," Alison
+said slowly. "Come, you must say more than that."
+
+"I profess, ma'am, I have no will to say anything. Whatever I say, I'll
+be impertinent."
+
+"Oh. Shall we mark it in you?" Susan said.
+
+"Well, sir, you were not always so shy of scolding me," says Alison, and
+again with a faint smile.
+
+"Scold you! God warn us, I have no commission. I can tell you what I
+thought of Waverton and his tale. Did I believe it? Ods fish, I never
+remember believing Geoffrey. If he had to tell you two and two was four,
+he would pretend that his genius first discovered it. So I don't know
+what happened at Pontoise. Likely the old Colonel did mix him up in some
+plot which some other fellows smoked. Maybe it was even such as Geoffrey
+said, kidnapping and murder to follow. These plots, they grow nastier and
+nastier the longer they are afoot. And Colonel Boyce--well, by your
+leave, I don't think him delicate. But for the rest of it, I'll wager
+that's Geoffrey's sprightly invention. You know very well, ma'am, I have
+no kindness for your Mr. Boyce. But, damme, he never thought of tricking
+Geoffrey out of the way to give himself a free hand with you. And it's a
+low trick in Geoffrey to go about with that tale."
+
+"Oh! But he is stupid," Susan said.
+
+"What if Colonel Boyce thought of the trick?" says Alison.
+
+"Egad, Mr. Boyce is unfortunate in his father. Maybe he knows that as
+well as we. But--damme, ma'am, you will have it--I believe there was not
+much trick in his affair with you."
+
+"I believe you once warned me of his tricks," Alison said coldly. "It's
+no matter now. I tease you with my affairs."
+
+"If I can serve you, I'm heartily at your command."
+
+"Oh, you have worked hard to make the best of a bad business. But I can
+do that for myself, and I like my own way of it."
+
+Mr. Hadley bowed.
+
+"Oh! Let us go home," Susan said.
+
+Alison looked at her in some surprise, and, as she stood up, came quickly
+to kiss her. "Have I been rude?" she whispered.
+
+"That would be no matter," Susan said, "You choose to be angry with me?"
+Alison stiffened.
+
+"Oh! One isn't angry. One is sorry," Susan said.
+
+Alison let her go, and Mr. Hadley, ceremonious but with visible relief,
+went after her.
+
+Then Mrs. Weston said suddenly, quickly, "Where is he?"
+
+"He?" Alison chose to be slow. "Mr. Boyce? I have no notion."
+
+"You drove him out?"
+
+"I could not endure him longer. Or he could endure me no longer. He went
+heartily enough. I think we were both glad it was over."
+
+"You taunted him till he had to go?"
+
+"Weston, dear!" Alison laughed at the sudden fierceness of the meek.
+"What's the matter?"
+
+"I have heard you mocking him."
+
+"Maybe. We both have sharp enough tongues."
+
+"You used to jeer at him for being poor."
+
+"Good lack, are you calling me to account, ma'am?"
+
+"Yes, you may well be ashamed! Where is he?"
+
+"Ashamed? What do you mean, Weston? What is the man to you?"
+
+"I am his mother," Mrs. Weston said.
+
+"You!... You! Oh, but this is mad!"
+
+"I am not mad."
+
+"But, Weston, dear, you knew nothing about him till he came; nor he of
+you. How could he be your son?"
+
+"I had never seen him since he was a baby. I was not married."
+
+"That is why you would not tell me? Oh, Weston, dear!"
+
+"I did not mean to tell you now. I knew it would hurt him with you. But I
+suppose it's no matter now. But these are my affairs, not yours."
+
+"My dear--"
+
+"You need not pity me."
+
+"What am I to say?" Alison held out her arms.
+
+"You have nothing to say now. You are not his wife now. You have never
+been anything but a bad wife." She gathered up her work with unsteady
+hands and turned away.
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+"I am going out of your house. Away from you."
+
+"But, Weston--not now, not to-night. Where can you go? What can you do?"
+
+"I can do well enough without you, as he can.... Why don't you tell me
+that I have been living on your money? You told him so often enough."
+
+"Oh ... you're cruel," Alison said.
+
+"What does it matter? You'll not be hurt. You are too hard." She hurried
+to the door.
+
+"Ah, don't go like this," Alison cried. "Weston, let's part kindly. I
+could not know. I have done nothing against you." Mrs. Weston laughed.
+"Stay a moment at least. I want to know. Harry's father--is Colonel
+Boyce--?"
+
+"Yes, there it is. That is all you want--to pry into all the story. It is
+nothing to you. He is nothing to you now."
+
+The door closed behind her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+RETURN OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+
+Harry was not gone far. In Long Acre stood a tavern calling itself 'The
+Hand of Pork.' This had always tempted Harry, whose tastes were of the
+people. While still a domesticated husband, he had tried its ale with
+satisfaction. When he left Alison it was to 'The Hand of Pork' that he
+brought his small, battered box.
+
+He had a few guineas in his pocket, and made a wry face over them.
+"Ill-gotten gains," says he, for some were the scraped savings of
+Geoffrey Waverton's tutor and some the pocket money of Alison's husband.
+But he was in no case to be delicate. Beef and bread had to be paid for,
+and, in fact, his scruples were little more than a joke. It is not to be
+concealed that in minor things Harry Boyce was not nicely honest. If you
+can imagine him seriously arguing over that money--a thing impossible--he
+would have said that the guineas were of consequence to him and none to
+Geoffrey and Alison, that whether he had dealt honestly by them or not,
+it would not better his case to pay them back a few shillings. You have
+seen that he had qualms of conscience over the rights of Geoffrey's
+service and Alison's arms. But the ugly, awkward details gave him no
+trouble. He may, if you please, have swallowed a camel or so, but he
+never strained at a gnat.
+
+Now that he was done with Geoffrey and Alison, both, his first feeling
+was comfort. It was a huge relief to be his own man again. He told
+himself indeed that he was mighty grateful to Geoffrey for bringing on
+the final explosion. For one thing, it wiped off all Geoffrey's score. If
+Master Geoffrey had been treated shabbily, Master Geoffrey had played a
+shabby trick. They could call quits--a pleasant sensation. It would have
+been awkward if Geoffrey had chosen to be magnanimous nobility. But he
+was never intelligent, the poor Geoffrey.
+
+He had done his best to be damaging, bless him, and in all ways had been
+a benefactor. For, in fact, it was a great relief to be done with Alison.
+What with her fretful discontent, her rages, her industrious hate, she
+had made herself intolerable. I do not suppose that he forgot, even in
+the heat of the divorce, the exquisite pleasure which for a while she had
+given him. I think he was always ready to acknowledge that to himself,
+for it is certain that he bore her no malice, and if he blamed her for
+their catastrophe, blamed himself as much. He might make the most or more
+of all the taunts, of her zeal to find occasions for despising him. He
+forgot nothing and forgave her nothing; he wrote her down a cruel enemy.
+But he did not pay her back with equal hate; he dismissed all the warfare
+and the wounds with a shrug of sagacious cynicism.
+
+She hated him? She had the right, she was his wife. And perhaps she was
+in the right too. He must fairly be reckoned a very poor match for her
+beauty and her wealth and her not insignificant brains. After all, he was
+essentially a nobody--a nobody in every department, body, mind, and soul.
+She might even claim that she had been cheated, for if she ought to have
+known that she was marrying a nobody, she could not guess that he had a
+bar-sinister or a disreputable father. Certainly Madame Alison could
+plead something of a case.
+
+You are not to suppose Harry in an ecstasy of meek devotion. He was quite
+sure that she had behaved to him very badly. He admitted no excuse for
+her eagerness to hurt him as soon as she was tired of him. She might hate
+him; but after all there were obligations of courtesy, of decency, of
+womanhood, and her venomous temper had broken them all. He was well rid
+of her. In fine, she and he could call quits as well as he and Geoffrey.
+There was no occasion to rage against her. She had treated him badly,
+but, first, he had brought her into an awkward mess. Faith, she ought not
+to have hurried into a marriage for passion if passion was so soon to
+sate her. But then, what man would blame a woman for marrying for
+passion? Not the man she married, who might rather humble himself because
+he had not been able to keep her passion alive. Well, it was over, and
+since it was over, nothing for it but to part. God be with her! She had
+given him his hour. And he--why, at least she had lived with him moments
+she would not forget. A glorious woman. It is probable that in these
+first hours of their parting he began to love her.
+
+So much for his emotions. But you will not suppose that Harry Boyce was
+wholly occupied with emotions. He could not indeed afford it. He had to
+make some provision for keeping alive. Perhaps you will be surprised to
+hear that he had a friend or two. There was an usher at Westminster, and
+a hack writer of Lintot's in Little Britain. He did not propose to live
+on them, who had hardly enough to feed themselves. But he looked for them
+to put him in the way of some pittance, and they did. The usher had news
+that, after Ascension-Day, Westminster would be wanting a writing master,
+for the man in possession hoped by then to marry the dean's cook and set
+up an ale-house. The author procured a commission to write two lampoons
+and a pamphlet against French wines. In the intervals of this occupation,
+Harry looked for his father.
+
+It would be hard to guess--Harry himself could not have told--what he
+hoped to gain by that. He wanted, of course, to find out the truth of the
+mission to France. Whether his father was likely to tell it, he could not
+make up his mind. What he would do with the truth if ever he learnt it,
+he did not know in the least. Suppose the best event: suppose his father
+could declare excellent intentions and Geoffrey a liar. Harry imagined
+himself going to Alison with the news and demanding to be taken on again.
+A nightmare joke.
+
+Yet to come at the truth seemed the most important task in life. The
+first step, though you think it impossibly difficult, did not dismay
+him. He had no doubt of discovering his father. That Colonel Boyce should
+have been killed or even caught was incredible. He was not the man so to
+oblige his enemies. It was incredible, too, that he would go long into
+hiding. Away from the importance of bustle and intrigue he could not
+exist. Therefore he would certainly come back to London: therefore sooner
+or later he would be found at one of the coffee-houses favoured by the
+brisk fellows in the underworld of politics--at Tom's, or the British, or
+Diggory's by the Seven Dials. He might be heard of among the fire-eating
+Jacobites of Sam's. There were not so many likely places, but Harry laid
+down more pennies than he could spare at the bars, and all in vain.
+
+He sat in Sam's on an afternoon chopping Greek tags with a jolly,
+fanatical old parson. The days were fast lengthening, and for one reason
+or another--the company at Sam's were not too fond of light--only a
+candle here and there was burning. A little man came in with a party very
+obsequious to him. As he walked up to the bar Harry had a glimpse of a
+lean, brown face. He remembered it and yet no more than faintly, and
+could not tell where he had seen it. It did not much engage him, and he
+went on with his Greek and his parson. The little man made some noise
+with the pretty girl behind the bar, claiming the privileges of an old
+friend and a good deal of liquor, and it was a little while before he was
+established at a table with his party. Harry chose to mouth out something
+Homeric and sounding. The little man stopped in the middle of lighting
+his pipe. "I know that roll, _pardieu_!" he muttered, and in a florid
+fashion declaimed, "Fol de rol de row," and laughed alcoholically. "Who's
+talking Hebrew here?"
+
+One of his party pointed out Harry and the parson. The little man blinked
+through the smoky twilight. He stood up, took his candle and lurched
+across the room to Harry. Down under Harry's nose he put the candle with
+a bang. Harry jerked back and glared at him, and he, rocking a little and
+blinking, said thickly, "It's a filthy likeness, after all, it is."
+
+"No, sir, there's only one of me," said Harry. "If you see two, give God
+the glory and go to bed."
+
+"I'm saying, bully, I'm saying," the little man's accent became more
+Caledonian and he clutched at Harry's shoulder. "I'm saying, my
+laddie--"
+
+"Damme, that's what I complain of."
+
+"I'm saying I do not like your complexion. It's yellow, my jo, it's a
+wee rotten orange, it is so." His company, a faithful tail, shook
+with laughter.
+
+"Sleep it off, sir," says Harry, with a shrug.
+
+"What's your will? Clip it off, do ye say so? Losh, you would have a face
+or two to spare. Eh, but I'm doubting you know too much o' clipping.
+There's clippit ears, and maybe you have a pair." He twitched Harry's bob
+wig awry; and with singular luck reeled out of the reach of Harry's
+answering blow. "Ay, and there's clippit shillings and maybe ye make your
+filthy living by their parings and shavings. Well a well, and there's
+clippit wings; and I'll clip yours, my bonny goose, the night." He
+clutched at the wig again and tossed it into the fire.
+
+Harry sprang up and struck at him. He flung himself backwards into the
+arms of his friends and with a surprising adroitness plucked out his
+sword. "Have at ye, my man;" he giggled and made a pass.
+
+"Easy, Captain," says one of his company. "The boy hath no sword."
+
+"Oh ay, 'tis the Lord that's a man of war. The devil was aye for peace.
+Well, what ails ye not to lend the imp a bodkin?"
+
+The fat old keeper of the coffee-house waddled into the midst. "Sure,
+Captain, you don't mean it. I would need to set my lads upon you. 'Tis
+disorderly homicide, indeed. Ye can't mean it. Not downstairs. I'll not
+deny there's the elegant parlour on the first floor."
+
+"Ye're a canting old devil, Sam," says the little man. "But I'll oblige
+you. Come up, my bully, and I'll show you a thing."
+
+"Here's for you, cully." One of the company thrust upon Harry a sword.
+
+"Oh, by your leave,"--Harry waved it oft--"I don't fight a drunken man."
+
+"Drunk!" the little man screamed. "Ods blades, there's a naughty way to
+mock a gentleman. I'll school you, bully; fou or fasting, I'll school
+you. What, you'll not lug out, like a bonny lad should? I jaloused it.
+I'm thinking you would take a beating like a lamb, laddie. Well a well.
+I'll be blithe to rub you down with an oaken towel. Here, Patrick, give
+us your staff."
+
+"Oh, I see you must be let blood." Harry shrugged. "Well, sir, do I
+fight the whole platoon?"
+
+"You're peevish, do you know, you're peevish. Here, Fraser, give him your
+hanger. Do you second the bairn, Donald? Come, Patrick, I'll have you.
+There's one for you and one for me, my man, and damn all favours."
+
+It seemed to Harry that the little man's company were something surprised
+at this turn, but they took it in a disciplined silence. So the party of
+four marched up the stairs. You will believe that Harry liked the
+business ill enough. He shot glances at the two chosen for seconds. There
+was nothing sottish about them. They were very soberly alert, they had
+the tan and the vigour of open-air life. They looked anything but the fit
+comrades for a swashbuckling tavern hero. They were as stiff as pokers,
+they said not a word, they showed not a sign of interest in the
+affair--rather like two soldiers on guard than ready seconds in a drunken
+brawl. Once in the upper room they made their arrangements with solemn
+care, locking the door, clearing a sufficient space, and setting the
+candles so that the light fell fairly. Harry was taken aside, helped out
+of his coat, asked if he needed anything, gravely advised to risk nothing
+and play close.
+
+"We are at your service, Mr. O'Connor," says Donald.
+
+"At your pleasure, Mr. Mackenzie," says the other.
+
+Harry was set against the little man and the swords crossed. It then
+occurred to him that the little man was very suddenly recovered from his
+liquor. The blustering chatter had been cut off as soon as they started
+up the stairs. Since then the little man had spoken not one word. Of the
+unsteadiness, the blinking, the rocking to and fro, nothing remained. He
+had marched to his place with a formal precision. There was the same
+manner, a correctness exact and staccato, about this sword play.
+
+The knave can never have been drunk, Harry said to himself as he
+sweated and was the more embarrassed by bewilderment. But he dared not
+let himself think. The little man was urgently dangerous, and Harry
+knew enough to know it. Harry had no pretensions to science. All he
+could use was the rudiments. He had kept his head at singlestick, held
+his own with the foil against other lads, and never before faced a
+point. The little man had the speed and certainty of a _maitre
+d'armes_. So Harry fought, breathing hard, every muscle aching, mind
+numb and dazed under the strain, expecting--hoping--every moment the
+thrust that would make an end.
+
+It did not come. The ache and fever of the fight went on and on. Still
+the little man was masterful and precise. Still he demanded all Harry's
+vigour and more than all, kept him struggling desperately, beset by fear
+on the edge of death. Harry felt himself weakening, faltering, and still
+the opposing blade searched his defence sharply, still the little man was
+an exemplar of easy precision. And yet Harry's maladroitness always
+sufficed to save his skin. He was puzzled, and blundered and fumbled the
+more. The play grew slower and slower, and he was the more tortured,
+enduring many times the shame and the pain of defeat.
+
+At last he had hit upon the truth. He was wondering in a dazed fashion
+why that other sword seemed always to wait on him when he made a gross
+mistake. Visibly, palpably, the little man's blade halted to give him
+time for a parry. Harry dropped his point and gasped out, "Damme, sir,
+you are playing with me."
+
+"What's your will? I fight my own way. At your convenience, sir."
+
+"The Captain's within his right, sir," says Harry's solemn second.
+
+"Damn you, for a pack of mountebanks!" Harry cried.
+
+"On guard, sir," says the little man.
+
+Harry gave him an oath and dashed at him. There was a moment's wild
+fighting and then the little man forced it back to order. They were at
+the old game again, precise scientific thrust, pause, and blundering
+parry, when to Harry's amazement the little man's sword wavered and flew
+from his hand.
+
+Through a long minute Harry stood staring at him, and he waiting unarmed
+for Harry's thrust. Again Harry lowered his sword. At once the little
+man stooped and picked up his. "Do you demand to continue, Captain?"
+says his second.
+
+"You're a fool, Patrick," quoth the little man.
+
+The impenetrable second saluted and turned to his fellow. "Another bout,
+if you please, Mr. Mackenzie."
+
+"Would you grant it, sir?" says Harry's solemn Scot.
+
+"Egad, we are all mad here," Harry wiped his brow. "Oh, play it
+out to hell."
+
+The little man saluted formally and again they engaged. And now Harry was
+enveloped in another kind of fighting. Scientific it might be, but
+science far beyond his understanding. The little man's point was
+everywhere upon him and he thrusting blindly at the air. He might have
+been pinked a score times over, he was for all he knew. And then on a
+sudden his own point touched something. Next moment it was struck up to
+the ceiling. Some one called out "A hit." He saw the two seconds standing
+between the swords and a red scratch on the little man's cheek.
+
+"_Touche_," says he with a bow. "My compliments, if you please. It's some
+while since a man marked me. I am glad to know you, sir. Pray, what's
+your name?"
+
+"Harry Boyce, sir."
+
+"Egad, it's wonderful!" says the little man, with a laugh which appealed
+to Harry. "Hector McBean, at your service." Harry stared. "Aye, aye, I'm
+thinking we'll explain ourselves. Will you walk, sir?"
+
+"If you please."
+
+Captain McBean took his arm, said over his shoulder to the two seconds
+"To-morrow," and marched off with him. Once they were out in the
+street, "So you are Colonel Noll Boyce's son," says Captain McBean with
+an odd look.
+
+"He has often told me so."
+
+"If you had not such a look of him I wouldn't believe it. Oh, pardon,
+monsieur, _mille pardons_, _ma foi._ I have been insolent to you in all
+this affair. You'll please to observe that the whole of it, and the
+issue, is to your honour. Will I have to say more?"
+
+"Oh Lud, no. Pray, let's talk sense."
+
+"I take to you marvellously, _mon enfant_. Well now, have you
+heard of me?"
+
+"Enough to want much more."
+
+"What, has father been talking?"
+
+"D'ye know where he is, Captain McBean?"
+
+"I wish I did."
+
+"So do I. It was Mr. Waverton who told the tale. Now you know why I am
+eager to hear what you can say of my father or my father of you."
+
+"Are you a good son, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+"I pay my debts."
+
+"There's a crooked answer. Are you in the Colonel's secrets?"
+
+"I have no reason to think so."
+
+"I guess he did not trust you. I guess he was right. Do you remember
+where you met me first?"
+
+"I remember that I can't remember."
+
+"And me that thought I was a beauty! Well, but you were busy. You were
+making mud pies with Ben."
+
+"I have it. You were his captain on the horse. Pray, sir, what was my
+Benjamin's mystery?"
+
+"I am going to trust you, Mr. Boyce. I shall not require you to trust me
+unless you choose. I tell you frankly I hope for it. And so--come in
+with you."
+
+They turned out of the Strand into Bow Street. Captain McBean let
+himself into a house, and took Harry up to a room very neat and cosy.
+"D'ye drink usquebaugh? A pity. It's the cleanest liquor. Well, draw up."
+He pushed a tobacco-box across the table. "That's right Spanish. Now,
+_mon cher_, are you Jacobite or Hanoverian?"
+
+"I never could tell."
+
+"Oh, look you, I ask no confidences. And I make no doubt of your honour.
+If you had a mind to play tricks you would have tried one on me to-night.
+Well, I have proved you. Your pardon again. But when I saw Noll Boyce's
+son lurking in Sam's, how could I know he was without guile? Now there is
+something I must say to you. But how much I say is a question. I have no
+desire to embarrass you with awkward knowledge. So which is your king,
+_mon enfant_, James or George?"
+
+"I care not a puff of smoke for either."
+
+"So. I suppose there is something you care for. Well--you asked about
+Ben's mystery. It's a good beginning. The rascal should have stopped the
+Duke of Marlborough's coach and held it till I came up with my fellows.
+Instead of which he went about some private thieving. I am your debtor
+for giving the knave his gruel. What's Marlborough to me? It's not his
+dirty guineas I was after, but his papers. He was then pretending to
+negotiate with St. Germain. There were those of us who doubted the old
+villain had some black design in his head again, and it was thought that
+if we could turn over his private papers, we should know where to have
+him. It was certified that he had with him something from his agents
+abroad. Well, we missed him, and how deep he is dipped in this business,
+I know no more than you.
+
+"Now I come to your father, _mon enfant_, and I promise you I will be as
+delicate as I may. Do you know, _par exemple_, how Colonel Boyce is in
+the mouths of gentlemen?"
+
+"Oh, sir, that's another of the matters for which I care nothing."
+
+"_Tenez donc_. You were born old, I think. Well, Colonel Boyce has been
+in some few plots, devices, and manoeuvres. No man ever denied him wit,
+nor will I, _mordieu_. But it's his virtue that neither his friends nor
+his enemies were ever sure of him. I believe, Mr. Boyce, that if he heard
+me he would thank me for a compliment. _Bien_--I come back to my tale.
+
+"It was known to us poor Jacobites in England that Colonel Boyce was
+making salutes to St. Germain. Which much intrigued us, for we would not,
+by your leave, have him of our side. They don't know him there as we do,
+and King James, God save him! is young and honourable and sanguine."
+
+"Poor lad," says Harry with a shrug.
+
+"You may keep your pity, Mr. Boyce," McBean said stiffly. "I would have
+him so, by your leave. Now we heard that letters went to St. Germain from
+Colonel Boyce full of windy promises--_verbosa et grandis epistola_. D'ye
+keep up your humanities?--in the name of my Lord Sunderland and my Lord
+Stair. Black names both. But they were vastly intrigued at St. Germain.
+If Sunderland and Stair were ready to turn honest, then _pardieu_, there
+was hope of the devil himself. Oh, I don't blame the King nor even
+Charles Middleton, though he is old enough to be slow. The times are
+changing, and maybe Stair and Sunderland they see it as well as we, and
+mean to find salvation. I can't tell. But the thing looked ill. Stair and
+Sunderland--there is no treachery too foul for those names. And if they
+meant honestly, why--saving your presence, _mon enfant_--why did they
+choose Colonel Boyce for their agent? It was no good warranty. So we
+adventured a counter. We have friends enough now in the Government, _mon
+cher_, and it was arranged that the Colonel should be arrested as a
+Jacobite. A good stroke, I think. It was mine. Only the old gentleman
+dodged it."
+
+"Pray, what did you know of Mr. Waverton?"
+
+"That sheep's-head!" McBean laughed. "Why, a letter came to hand in which
+the Colonel talked of taking the pretty gentleman to France. So he was
+joined in the warrant. _D'ailleurs_--it made a good appearance. However,
+we missed him; but we found something in his papers which made me queasy.
+So I e'en was off to France after him.
+
+"The Colonel stayed at Pontoise and sent your Waverton off to St. Germain
+with a mighty plausible letter about secret proposals from the chiefs of
+the Whigs, which brought the King out to hear them secretly. _Ma foi_! I
+think Charles Middleton should have smelt a rat. But it was a clever
+trick, and to choose your Waverton to play it was masterly. For who could
+think that peacock would be in anything crafty? At Pontoise I tumbled in
+upon them, and your father, _mon cher_, he ran off on sight of me.
+Observe, I press nothing against him. I allow that the best evidence I
+have against him is just that--he ran away when he saw me. Secondly, he
+had with him some three-four rascals whose faces would hang them. And
+thirdly and lastly, beloved brethren, these fellows, when put to it and
+charged with a plot to murder King James, were frightened for their lives
+and babbled wildly, of which the sum was that they had been brought but
+to kidnap him. I grant ye, they may have lied, and I would not hang a dog
+(who was not a Whig) upon their word. But confess, _mon cher_, the thing
+is black enough. What did the Colonel want with King James alone? Why did
+he need his bullies? Why did he run away? I leave it with you."
+
+Harry knocked out his pipe. "I am obliged for the story, sir. Why did
+you tell it?"
+
+"You have a cold blood in you, _mon enfant_" says Captain MacBean.
+"Observe, I look for nothing wonderful from you. I allow your position is
+very difficult to a man of honour. And with all my heart--"
+
+"Oh Lud, sir, let's have nothing pathetic."
+
+"Aye, aye," McBean bowed. "Mr. Boyce! I do profess I feel the delicacy of
+the affair, and I detest it, _pardieu_. But I dare not absolve ye from
+your duty."
+
+"Oh, sir, you are very sublime."
+
+"Hear me out, Mr. Boyce. I have shown you cause to fear that your
+father has it in mind to compass a vile treachery, perhaps a murder.
+Would you deny it?"
+
+"Damme, sir, I am not the day of judgment."
+
+"_Bien_. I believe that is an answer. I declare to you there is yet a
+chance that he may succeed, aye, here in London."
+
+Harry swore. "If your friends must go walking into traps what is
+it to me?"
+
+"Well, sir, though you will own no loyalty to king or queen or country,
+I'll not be deceived. I call on you for your aid. It's believed your
+father is in London. It is likely he will seek you out, as he did before.
+Maybe at this hour you know where he is."
+
+"If I did, should I betray him to you, sir?"
+
+"I ask no treachery. But I do call on you, discover his purpose if you
+can, and if he intends violence to the King, prevent it. Lord, sir, it's
+to save your father from infamy, and your own name."
+
+"The King? The Pretender is in London?" Harry cried.
+
+"I told you that I should trust you far, Mr. Boyce."
+
+Harry stared at him, and after a moment stood up. "I can do nothing," he
+said. "It is of all things most unlikely that I should do anything. For
+what I know, my father is dead. He has been nothing else to me all my
+life. But I believe I should thank you."
+
+"Well!" quoth McBean. "God help you. I ha' drawn a bow at a venture. I
+think I have hit something, Mr. Boyce."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+CONSOLATIONS BY A FATHER
+
+
+Do you remember how frightened Swift was of the Mohocks? How he came
+home early, and even (that was bitter) spent some pence on being carried
+in a sedan chair to avoid the "race of rakes that play the devil about
+this town every night, slit people's noses," and so forth? He had some
+reason to fear.
+
+"Was there a Watchman took his hourly rounds
+Safe from their blows or new invented wounds"
+
+in these last days of Queen Anne? Their way was to gather and take
+plenty of liquor, "then make a general sally and attack all that are
+so unfortunate as to walk the streets through which they patrol. Some
+are knocked down, others stabbed, others cut and carbonadoed." The
+women would be turned upside down or clapped into barrels and rolled
+over the stones.
+
+It was a dark night with but a glimpse of the new moon when Harry left
+Captain McBean. From Bow Street to the "Hand of Pork" in Long Acre was
+only a few hundred yards, but murky enough, and Harry took Mr. Gay's
+advice for such night walking:
+
+"Let constant Vigilance thy footsteps guide,
+And wary Circumspection guard thy side."
+
+Nevertheless, as he was coming by the corner into Long Acre, he was
+surprised by a sound at his heels. He stepped quickly aside and turned
+upon it, felt a blow upon his head, saw flashes of light and the street,
+whirling round, rose up to meet him, and he knew no more.
+
+When he came to himself he was in a room with fire and lights. He raised
+himself and heard voices. Then some one was standing over him. He looked
+up into his father's face. "Who was that?" he said feebly.
+
+"Don't you see yet, Harry? It will soon pass off."
+
+"Lord, I know you. Who are the others?"
+
+"There is none here but me," said Colonel Boyce.
+
+Harry looked painfully round the room and saw that it had become empty.
+"What was it? A pistol?" said he, and began to feel his head.
+
+"Egad, nothing so gentlemanly. A cudgel, by the look of the bruise. A
+Mohock's club, I suppose. I found you lying in the kennel as I was
+coming home."
+
+"Oh, you're at home are you?" Harry laughed stupidly. "And where is
+home?"
+
+"These are my lodgings in Martin's Lane, Harry, and you are welcome. But
+what have you to do in town? Young husbands should not be night walkers."
+
+Harry stared at him for a moment. "I thought you knew everything," he
+said. Then, beginning to scramble up, he became aware that his clothes
+were all undone--coat, shirt, even breeches. "Odso, why were you
+stripping me?"
+
+"I found you so. They shave you close, the Mohocks."
+
+"They are a queer crew, your Mohocks." Harry looked at his father. "What
+should I carry inside my shirt?" Then he thrust his hands into his
+pockets. "Well, I had not much, but all's gone."
+
+"Damned rogues," said his father with honest indignation. "How much have
+you lost, Harry?"
+
+"Five guineas or so."
+
+"I can make that good at least. But what is it to you? You are a warm
+fellow now. What, you've made no hole in Madame Alison's money bags yet."
+
+"You're offensive, do you know?" Harry said. "I have been itching to
+tell you so."
+
+Colonel Boyce's face set. "What now? Are you against me, sirrah?"
+
+"Ods fish, you're a martyr, ain't you?" Harry laughed. But we are
+beginning at the end, I think. If you remember, sir, you promised to take
+me to France and went off without me."
+
+"D'ye quarrel with that? Why, you had a fatter fish to fry than you could
+catch with me. So I left you at her and you ha' dined upon her. What's
+the matter then?"
+
+"You were not honest with me--"
+
+Colonel Boyce laughed, "Ah, bah, you will be a Puritan. It must be your
+mother in you."
+
+"My mother! Thank you. We'll come to her. But one tale at a time. You let
+me think I was to go with you till you were gone without me. You took
+Waverton and told me nothing of that till you had him safe away."
+
+"Egad, boy, it was all for your good."
+
+"Perhaps you did think so," said Harry after a moment. "In fact it's what
+I complain of. You want to play Providence to me. Pray, sir, go about
+your business."
+
+Colonel Boyce shrugged. "You're a proper grateful son. So be it. You have
+your wealthy wench and want no more of me. Well, go to the devil your own
+way, Harry."
+
+"By your leave, I prefer it. But there's more, sir. Now comes Mr.
+Waverton and declares to my wife and me that you enticed him into a vile
+plot: for your pretence of a mission to the Pretender was nothing but a
+device for murder."
+
+"Mr. Waverton said that to Mrs. Harry Boyce? Egad, it wasn't civil of Mr.
+Waverton. And what did the lady say to him?"
+
+"That's no matter. What do you say to him, sir? Did you intend murder?"
+
+"Lud, Harry, you talk like a ranting parson. It was not your way. Who has
+put this buzz of morality into your head? I suppose your pretty wife
+would have you break with your father. He's a low, coarse fellow, faith,
+who might want some of her money."
+
+"We will leave my wife out, if you please. She will not trouble you. She
+and I have parted."
+
+"God's my life! What's the quarrel?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "Does one ever know? I was not good enough for her, I
+believe. And perhaps she was not good enough for me."
+
+"Damn you for a prig," says his father.
+
+"If you like. But you'll remark that I do not complain of her."
+
+"Bah, you make me sick, sir! Not complain of her! That luscious piece!
+Egad, you should be drunk with her. But you're not a man, Harry, you're
+a parson."
+
+"Oh, command your emotions! She rebelled against being wed to a man whose
+father ran about the world compassing murder, to a man who was withal a
+low fellow, a bastard. So far, it is your affair."
+
+"I see you are no hand with a woman."
+
+"Do I take after you, sir? We came upon a woman who said she was Mrs.
+Oliver Boyce and could not live with him, and boasted vehemently that she
+was no mother of mine."
+
+Colonel Boyce plucked at his mouth. "So dear Rachel has got her finger
+into the pie. Why, Harry, you have had no luck."
+
+"She is your wife, then. Oh, I admire your taste, sir. And pray, who was
+my mother?"
+
+Colonel Boyce began to say something and stopped. "It's no matter. I
+believe she would not wish you to know. Why, Harry, I profess I am sorry.
+If we had been married, better for us all."
+
+"Oh, you will be mysterious still. I suppose you are as tender of her
+honour as of mine or your own. And this matter of murdering the
+Pretender, pray, is that a mystery too?"
+
+Colonel Boyce became restless. "Ods life, sirrah, there is no matter
+of murder. Who told you so? The fool Waverton. And where did he get
+the tale?"
+
+"A gentleman who runs away tells his own tale."
+
+"Now mark, Harry. The plan was but to bring Prince James to England--"
+
+"Dead or alive," Harry laughed.
+
+"Pshaw. I had him at Pontoise and was doing well with him. Then in comes
+a swashbuckling Scots Jacobite which is my private enemy, and a dozen
+bullies at his tail. Well, I had no mind to have him stick me or turn me
+over to the French as a spy of Marlborough's, so I went off. The fool
+Waverton let himself be taken. I make no doubt the Scot filled him to the
+brim with slanders of me. But is that my fault?"
+
+"So you're done with the Pretender?"
+
+Colonel Boyce gave his son a queer look. "Why, there's not much to be
+done with him in Martin's Lane, boy."
+
+"Then what are you doing?"
+
+"Egad, Harry, I should think you want to lay an information against
+me. Waiting for better times is all my business now. My bolt's shot.
+And pray, sirrah, what may be your business now you've cut loose from
+Mrs. Alison?"
+
+Harry laughed. "Living on my means."
+
+"Why, does she settle something on you?"
+
+Harry looked at his father without affection. "Do you know, sir, I am not
+always proud of your name."
+
+"Egad, but you must have money somehow."
+
+"The family motto, I suppose. Well, sir, I write for the Press."
+
+"Good God, not for the newspapers? You have not fallen to that?"
+
+"Oh, sir, the shillings are clean by comparison."
+
+They looked at each other for a minute or two. "You walk abroad late, Mr.
+Author," says Colonel Boyce. "Do you make friends in your profession?"
+
+"I believe I have two in the town--a hack writer for Lintot and an usher
+at Westminster. And what then, pray?"
+
+"You were with them to-night?"
+
+"You are paternal on a sudden, sir. Do you think of putting me out to
+nurse again?"
+
+"So." Colonel Boyce stood up as if he had finished and then forced a
+laugh and slapped his son's shoulder, "Come, Harry, why quarrel? There's
+room enough for you here. I allow I owe you something. Join in with me."
+
+"I have no luck in mysteries, sir. I'll wish you goodnight."
+
+"Now you bear me a grudge," his father protested.
+
+"What, for getting me born? Sometimes, perhaps."
+
+"Egad, Harry, I should like to do something for you."
+
+"Then give me a sword."
+
+"A sword? And what for i' God's name?"
+
+"In case I meet any more of your Mohocks."
+
+Colonel Boyce was taken aback for a moment. Then he cried out heartily:
+"Damme, the rogues took five guineas from you too. Here, fill your purse,
+child." He shot out gold on the table.
+
+"I'll take back my five guineas," said Harry, and counted them, while
+his father watched with a frown.
+
+"There are swords of mine below," said Colonel Boyce.
+
+They went down and from a rack of arms Harry chose a plain black hanger
+with an agate hilt. As he did it on he saw below it some heavy staves
+loaded with lead--just such as the Mohocks used.
+
+"And where do you lodge?" says Colonel Boyce.
+
+"At the 'Hand of Pork' in Long Acre. Goodbye, sir."
+
+Colonel Boyce nodded, and for some time after he had gone stood at the
+door, watching.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+TWO'S COMPANY
+
+
+Alison was gone back to her house at Highgate--and immediately regretted
+it. She took her adventures in a youthful, egoistic fashion: saw herself
+as a lovely woman made the prey of man and robbed of her right to her
+own life, a tender, confiding soul deceived and tortured into despair.
+The Lincoln's Inn Fields became the abomination of desolation, her fine
+society was dust and ashes and mankind in general all mocking villainy.
+So it was natural that she should retire from the world and become a
+recluse of tragic dignity. What other part is there for the deserted
+wife to play?
+
+But she came upon awkward difficulties. The world would not be left
+behind. It was much more closely about her among the woods and meadows of
+Highgate than in her London drawing-room. The would-be fine ladies and
+gentlemen of her routs and her card parties, so the sweetmeats and the
+wines and strong waters were good enough, cared nothing whether she had a
+husband upstairs or somewhere else. Out in the country every one, gentle
+and simple, had a curious eye upon her. The very woods and meadows must
+be jogging her memory and putting her questions. Every one had known Miss
+Lambourne of the Hall and gone whispering about her strange, passionate
+marriage. Each pleasant path and lane had seen something of that first
+wild happiness. All day long she was driven back upon herself and what
+she had lost.
+
+There is no doubt that she suffered. Of course she still told her heart
+wonderful tales about the shame that she had to bear and her torturing
+wrongs, and beyond doubt she believed most of them. For she could still
+profess to herself a miserable degradation in being married to a man of
+no name: she would be gloomily convinced that Harry was by his father's
+villainy a proven knave. But what hurt her most was the growing suspicion
+that she was much to blame for her own plight. Alison Lambourne, who
+acknowledged no law but her own will, who had never dreamed that she
+could be wrong in her desires, driven to confess a ruinous blunder!
+Imagine her distress. At first she chose to pretend that she had been
+overthrown by passion. The more she tried to despise Harry, the more that
+fancy shamed her. But there was in her a strength which refused to be
+content with that. She would still boast to herself that she was not the
+woman to be swept away by a gust of longing for the man who chanced to
+take her eye. And so she brought down on herself the inexorable
+question--if Harry were man enough to wake passion in her and deserve her
+magnificence, why had she driven him off? For all her selfishness and her
+insolent pride, she had a vehement desire, a part perhaps of her very
+pride in her womanhood, to owe him nothing, to play him fair, to give
+him all that a man could ask. Little by little she forced herself to
+believe that she had failed of that. After all, he had offered her
+nothing but himself, poor, friendless, of no repute, indolent, careless
+of all the world--and she had professed content. What his father might do
+was no matter to that. He had offered her what he was and given it
+faithfully. And she had not played fair. When she found herself
+confessing that, she discovered a new power of being wretched. All the
+romantic, egoistic melancholy went down the wind. The finest, proudest of
+her, her own honour, told of a torturing wound.
+
+"I'll satisfy you"--that had been the boast before the wild marriage was
+done. And after all she had chosen to deny him. Nothing else could
+matter. There could be no excuse. It was he that she had taken, not his
+name or what he might be, and he had not changed. It was herself that she
+had promised--what other honour for woman or man than to give like for
+like?--and she had broken faith. She was humiliated--a state of all
+others the most dolorous for Alison.
+
+To it came on a merry spring day Mr. Waverton. She was in two minds
+whether to let him see her, and then--too proud to hide from him or
+greedy of a chance to hurt him--had him in.
+
+Mr. Waverton had decorated himself for a house of mourning. His large
+form was all black and silver and drooped sympathetically. His handsome
+face was set in a chastened melancholy as of one who grieves for
+another's trouble with a modest satisfaction. "Dear lady," says he
+tenderly, and bowed over her hand.
+
+"Dear Geoffrey," says she. "Here's a new song."
+
+"Madame?"
+
+"'Vengeance is mine' was the refrain last time. Now it's weeping over the
+penitent prodigal. How I love you, Geoffrey."
+
+Mr. Waverton made a gesture of emotion, an exclamation. "I wronged you,
+Alison," he said in a deep voice. "Nay, but you must forgive me. I have
+suffered too. Remember! I had lost all."
+
+"Ah, no," says Alison tragically, "you had still yourself, Geoffrey."
+
+His emotion was understood to be too much for Mr. Waverton. In a little
+while, "We have both been the sport of villainy," he said. "Forgive me,
+Alison. I remember that I spoke bitterly. Can you wonder? I had dreamed
+of you in his arms. To see you there in that knave's power--ah, I was
+beside myself. And he laughed, do you remember, he laughed!"
+
+"He never would take you to heart, in fact."
+
+"A treacherous hound!" said Mr. Waverton with startling vehemence.
+
+"Oh, he was honest when he laughed."
+
+Mr. Waverton swept Harry out of the conversation. "Forgive me, Alison, I
+should have known. My heart should have told me."
+
+"Oh Lud, and is your heart to give tongue now?"
+
+"My heart," said Mr. Waverton with dignity, "my heart is always crying to
+you. And now--now that the first agony is past, I know all."
+
+"I wish I did," said Alison and looked in his eyes.
+
+"But even then--ah, Alison, I have blamed myself cruelly--even then I
+should have known that when your eyes were opened, when you knew the
+truth, you would have no more of him."
+
+"You might have known," Alison said slowly. "You might have judged me by
+yourself."
+
+"Aye, that indeed," says Mr. Waverton heartily. "For we are very like,
+Alison, we are of the same spirit, you and I."
+
+"You make me proud."
+
+"It's our tragedy: we so like, so made to answer each other, should be
+betrayed to our ruin by this same vile trickster. Oh, I blame you no more
+than myself."
+
+"This is too generous."
+
+"No," says Mr. Waverton. "No. When I came on that woman of yours, that
+Mrs. Weston--faith, I am glad that you have cut her off too. I never
+liked that woman."
+
+"Yes, she is poor."
+
+"There it is! I doubt she was in Boyce's pay."
+
+Alison opened her eyes at him. "Oh, Geoffrey, you surpass yourself
+to-day. Go on, go on."
+
+"If you please," says Mr. Waverton, something ruffled. "I believe he
+hired her to play his game with you. Had you a suspicion of it when you
+sent her packing?"
+
+"By God, Geoffrey, I could suspect anyone when you talk to me."
+
+"She is bitter against you. When I heard from her that you had driven
+the fellow away from you, I was on fire to come to you."
+
+"To forgive the prodigal! Oh, your nobility, Geoffrey. And pray where did
+you meet Mrs. Weston?"
+
+"Why, in the High Street here. She lodges in one of those wretched
+cottages behind the street."
+
+"She is here?" Alison shivered a little.
+
+"Perhaps she has some game to play yet. She may be his spy. Be warned
+against her."
+
+Alison leant forward in her chair. Her face was hidden from him. "You are
+giving me a lesson, Geoffrey. I'll profit by it, I promise you!"
+
+"Alison!" Mr. Waverton gave a laugh of triumph. "I fight for us both. And
+I promise you I am eager enough. As soon as I learnt that you had left
+him, why, he was delivered into my hand. By heaven, he shall find no
+mercy now. Already I have him watched. I went to an attorney much
+practised in these treasonous cheating plots, and of him I have hired
+trusty fellows who know all the rogues in London and their hiding-holes.
+You said something?"
+
+But Alison was laughing.
+
+"I believe there is some humour in it," Mr. Waverton conceded grandly.
+"Well, they have tracked him down. Our gentleman lies at a filthy tavern
+in the Long Acre. The 'Leg of Pork,' or some such lewd name. He haunts
+Jacobite coffeehouses and the like low places. They believe that he makes
+some dirty money by scribbling for the Press. A writer in the newspapers!
+He is sunk almost to his right depth. They make no doubt that before
+long we shall catch him dabbling in some new treasonous matter. And
+then--" he made gestures of doom.
+
+"Well? And then?"
+
+"The law may revenge us on the treacherous rogue," said Mr. Waverton
+with majesty.
+
+Alison stood up. Mr. Waverton, always polite, started up too. "I give you
+joy, Geoffrey," she said very quietly.
+
+"Not yet! Not yet!" Mr. Waverton put up a modest hand.
+
+"I believe there is nothing you could feel." Mr. Waverton recoiled
+and stared his bewilderment. "You carry a sword, Geoffrey. Oh, that I
+were a man!"
+
+"To use it upon him! Bah, such rogues are not worth the honour of steel."
+
+"Oh! Honour! Honour!" she cried and flung out her arms, trembling. "The
+honour of you and me!"
+
+What was Mr. Waverton to make of that? "I believe I have excited
+you," says he.
+
+"By God, it is the first time," Alison cried and turned on him so
+fiercely that he started back.
+
+There was a servant at the door saying something which went unheard. Then
+Susan Burford came into the room, an odd contrast in her placid
+simplicity to the amazed magnificence of Mr. Waverton or Alison's
+tremulous, furious beauty. Alison was turned away from her and too much
+engaged to hear or be aware of her.
+
+"Here is Miss Burford," said Waverton in a hurry.
+
+Alison whirled upon her. "You! You have nothing to do here."
+
+"My dear Alison!" Waverton protested. "Miss Burford, your very obedient."
+
+Susan made him a small leisurely curtsy and sat down. "Oh, please give me
+a dish of tea," she said.
+
+"We have not seen you at Tetherdown in this long while," Mr. Waverton
+complained genially.
+
+"I believe not," says Susan.
+
+Alison stared at her. "Why do you come here? You know you despise me."
+
+"I do not come to people I despise," says Susan placidly.
+
+"Well. I am private with dear Geoffrey, if you please."
+
+"My dear Alison! I must be riding. We have finished our business, I
+think. I'll not fail to be with you again soon. I hope to have news for
+you. Miss Burford, your most obedient." Susan bent her head. "Alison--"
+he held out his hand and smiled at her protective affection.
+
+"Geoffrey," said Alison, and looked in his eyes. She did not take the
+hand. She was very pale.
+
+Mr. Waverton's smile was withered. He took himself out with a jauntiness
+that sat upon him awkwardly.
+
+Then Alison turned again upon Susan. "You want to know what I have to do
+with him?" she said fiercely.
+
+"No," says Susan.
+
+Alison stared at the fair, placid face and cried out: "You are a fool."
+
+"Oh, my dear," says Susan.
+
+"I hate that cold, flabby way of yours. You think it is all good and
+wise and kind. It's like a silly mother with a spoilt child. You've not
+spirit enough to scold, and all the while you are thinking me vile and
+base and mean."
+
+"But that is ridiculous. Nobody could think you mean," Susan said.
+
+"There it is again. You believe it is kind to talk so, and it drives me
+mad. I am shameful--do you hear? I am shameful and perhaps I want to be,
+and I loathe myself. Now, go. I shall not stay with you. Go."
+
+Susan stood up. "Alison, oh, Alison," she said. Alison flung out
+of the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+THE HOUSE IN KENSINGTON
+
+
+Late in that evening one of Alison's servants rode up to the "Hand of
+Pork" and inquired for Mr. Boyce. After some parley, he was told that Mr.
+Boyce had not been in the tavern that day. So he left a letter in the tap
+and rode back to Highgate.
+
+That letter, which was not heard of till long afterwards, ran thus:
+
+"Mr. Boyce,--I desire that you would come to me at Highgate. I have
+to-day heard from Geoffrey Waverton what you must instantly know. And the
+truth is, I cannot be content till I speak with you. But I would not have
+you come for this my asking. Pray believe it is urgent for us both that
+we meet, and I do require it of you, not desiring of you what you may
+have no mind to, but to be honest with you, and lest that should befall
+which I hope you would not have me bear.--A."
+
+An ungainly, confused composition, as you see, but it set forth very
+clearly the state of Alison's unhappy mind. She was revolted, of course,
+by Geoffrey's scheme of spying and trapping, loathed him for
+propounding it to her, and was eager to warn Harry against it and clear
+herself of any part in the vile business. But she would not have Harry
+suppose that she was praying him to come back to her. This time, at
+least, there should be no wooing on her side. If she wanted him
+hungrily, shamefully, he should not know till he chose to take her. But
+he must come to her and be told all the tale, and hold her free of any
+part in Geoffrey's baseness.
+
+So she fought with herself and wrote of her strife, and, as things
+went, it mattered nothing to Harry, for he never knew of it till much
+else had happened.
+
+When he woke on the morning after his affairs with Captain McBean and the
+Mohocks and his father--woke with a sore head and a very stiff shoulder,
+he was a prey to puzzled excitement. There is no doubt that McBean had
+engaged his affections. He was not, indeed, very grateful for the
+fantastic duel. Of all men, Harry Boyce was the least likely to be
+pleased by oddity or an extravagance of chivalry. He always thought, I
+believe, that Captain McBean was a little mad, and liked him none the
+better for it. But he confessed that with the madness there was allied a
+most persuasive mind, a very reasonable reason. The combination may not
+be so surprising to you as to Harry Boyce. He thought that McBean's
+exposition of the affair of his father, and his consequent duty, was
+exactly and delicately true--which means, of course, that it agreed with
+his own temper. He had no more doubt than McBean that his father had
+planned, was planning, treachery which, win or lose, would disgrace him.
+He admitted that it was his own wretched duty to do what he might to make
+an end of these plans.
+
+You smile, perhaps, at Harry Boyce claiming for himself the commands of
+duty. He was eminently not a saint. He was not delicate. And yet, thrust
+upon an awkward choice, it is certain that he chose what must be
+difficult, hazardous, and distressing, rather than stand aloof and let
+his father's villainy go its way.
+
+I make no pretence of exalting him into a tragic fellow. He had no
+affection for his father, no respect. Merely to work against his father's
+will, to smash his father's schemes, would certainly not have cost him
+one twinge. He had no hate for his father either, not the least ambition
+to ruin him or make him suffer. But he would heartily have liked to bring
+these murderous plots to nothing and yet save his father from vengeance.
+Harry had his share of the common human instinct to keep one's family out
+of mischief--or at least out of the newspapers.
+
+And it is not to be denied that there was also active in him a simple
+human animosity. He bore his father a grudge for being publicly a knave:
+a man who had received nothing from his parents but the gift of birth
+might fairly demand that they should not bother him with their rogueries.
+He did not extenuate his father's share in the catastrophe of the
+marriage. Perhaps it was in itself fated to miscarry, but if Colonel
+Boyce had not mixed up his affairs with it, the end need not have been
+ignominious. Harry vigorously condemned the old gentleman's meddling. It
+was an impertinence at the best to manipulate other folks, and a father
+who did it so stupidly as Colonel Boyce was a pestilent nuisance. But all
+this, I believe, rankled less than the behaviour of Colonel Boyce on the
+night before. If the old gentleman had acknowledged his offences, if he
+had even been content to talk of them frankly, man to man, he might have
+been forgiven. But his affectation of profound wisdom, his patronage, and
+above all, his parade of mystery infuriated Harry's lucid mind.
+
+It sought further causes of offence and had no difficulty in finding
+them. Everything about that conversation was suspicious. For how did it
+begin? With a broken head, with every button of his clothes torn open as
+though he had just been searched to the skin, he woke up in his father's
+presence. The father might pose as a good Samaritan who had come upon a
+sufferer by the wayside, but he should not have shown so nervous an
+anxiety to know what the sufferer had been about. The father talked of
+Mohocks; but what Mohocks were these who knocked a man down before making
+sport of him and, not content with taking his money, went through all his
+clothes? Why was a Mohock's club lying there beneath the father's swords?
+Harry made a ready guess at the riddle. His father must have fellows
+watching McBean's house. They had knocked him down to search him for
+papers. Then the father must have known that he had been with McBean, and
+those anxious questions were to discover how much he was McBean's friend.
+Colonel Boyce must have a lively interest in the affairs of McBean--and
+yet he professed that he had now nothing in hand. What if he knew of the
+secret of the Pretender's coming to London? What if he was still seeking
+a chance to accomplish his plot of murder?
+
+Well, Captain McBean expected no less of him. Captain McBean was in the
+right of it. It became a good son's duty to confound his father's
+politics. There's no denying that Harry went into the business with zest.
+
+While he ate his breakfast in the taproom, he caught sight of a fellow
+lurking about outside. Whose spy this was is, in fact, not certain.
+Afterwards Colonel Boyce vehemently denied that he had commissioned any
+man against Harry. Though you may not believe him, it is possible that
+the fellow was one of those in Waverton's pay. Harry made no doubt that
+his father was the offender.
+
+He went upstairs again and put a book in his pocket. (He had been
+commissioned for a translation of Ovid, which, let us be thankful, never
+came into print.) Thus characteristically provided, he went out to
+baffle the spy and the father. In the courts between Drury Lane and Bow
+Street he did some ingenious marching and counter-marching whereby--he
+was always confident and we cannot be quite sure--the spy was shaken
+off. He then came into St. Martin's Lane by the north end, and dodging
+in and out of it more than once, made for a tavern close to his father's
+lodging. He planted himself inside by a window, called for a tankard and
+a pipe, and divided his attention between the Tristia and his father's
+door across the lane.
+
+It soon appeared that Colonel Boyce was to have a busy morning. By ones
+and twos a dozen men went into his house. They were not, even to Harry's
+hostile eye, brazenly ruffians. Something of the bully they might have
+about them, for they ran to brawn and swagger, but they were trim enough
+and brisk, and had no smack of debauch--a company of old soldiers, by the
+look of them, and still not past their prime. They were with Colonel
+Boyce a long time, and Harry grew very sick of the Tristia, and had to
+drink more beer over it than was his habit of a morning.
+
+They came out at last singly, and yet with very short intervals between
+them. They all turned the same way--across Leicester Fields. There seemed
+to Harry something so uncommon in this that he was moved to follow. He
+made his way out by the back door and the tavern yard. As he came into
+Leicester Fields, he saw that the units had already amalgamated into
+three companies. They were all steadily marching westward. Keeping behind
+a cart he followed them, and after a while bought for twopence a lift in
+an empty hay wagon. I record all this because he seems to have been very
+proud of it, which is characteristic of his simple nature. The hay wagon
+rumbled him past two companies of them halted and coalescing at an inn.
+The first still headed him at a good round pace all the way to
+Kensington.
+
+The wagon was going through Kensington village when he saw that this
+vanguard too had found an inn. A little farther on he abandoned his
+wagon and, buying bread and cheese at a farm, made his dinner under
+the hedge. It was a long while before he saw anything more of the
+gentlemen of the inn, and lying among primroses and cowslips he nearly
+forgot all about them and his excitement and his wonderful tactics. He
+was, in fact, becoming sentimental, and had made three neat
+hendecasyllabics to the cowslips when the gentlemen came out again.
+They split into pairs and marched on briskly. Harry went through the
+hedge, and from behind it he watched them pass. Then, as now, the road
+ran straight, and it was not safe to come out and follow them till they
+were far ahead. While he waited he heard more tramping, and in a little
+while the rest of the company went by. He peeped out after them and saw
+an odd thing: though the road ran straight for a mile or more, the
+first party had vanished already.
+
+Harry climbed a tree. It was some little time before he discovered the
+lost party. They had scattered, they had taken to the fields and, under
+hedges, they were making southward. The rest of the company did likewise.
+Soon he saw what they were after. There was a lane running from the high
+road towards Fulham. A little way back from it, in a good garden, stood a
+house of modest comfort, doubtless the place to which some gentleman
+about town came for his pleasures or a breath of fresh air. About its
+grounds the company went into hiding.
+
+Harry came down from his tree in a hurry and, like an honest man, took to
+the high road. It was, you know, his one uncommon capacity to go easily
+at a round pace. He did his best along the road and down the lane and,
+though he caught a glimpse of a coat here and there, unchallenged he came
+up the drive and across the garden to the door of the house. He had
+hardly knocked before he was being inspected through a peep-hole. The
+door was opened and instantly shut behind him. He was in darkness dimly
+lit by one candle. The windows had their shutters closed and barred.
+
+"What's your will, sir?" says the man who let him in.
+
+"The master of the house, if you please," Two other men lounged
+into the hall.
+
+"And your name, sir?"
+
+"You may say that I came from Captain McBean."
+
+The man appeared to think it over. "That's true enough, faith," says
+another, advancing out of the shadow. Harry recognised one of the solemn
+seconds of the duel, Patrick O'Connor. "Will I serve your turn, sir?"
+
+"If you're master here."
+
+"I am not. Come on now." He led the way to a room where a cadaverous man,
+richly dressed, sat huddled over a fire. "'Tis a gentleman from the
+captain, my lord. Mr. Boyce, my Lord Sale."
+
+Harry bowed. My lord yawned. "You've a devil of a name, Mr.
+Boyce," says he.
+
+"I deplore it, and hope to disgrace it."
+
+"Is it possible?" said my lord, and yawned again.
+
+"I had the honour to tell you, my lord, that I answer for the gentleman,"
+says Mr. O'Connor.
+
+"You may endorse the devil, if you please," my lord sneered.
+
+Harry struck in, "I came to tell you, my lord, that your house is
+watched, and by now surrounded."
+
+"Damn them, they have found it out, have they?" says my lord, and spread
+out his lean hands to the fire.
+
+"How many, if you please?" says O'Connor.
+
+"A dozen or so. They marched out this morning, scattered, and met again
+in the village and came here across country. They are well-armed, I
+believe, and look men who would fight."
+
+"Ods fish, that nets this hole," says my lord. "Pray, Mr. Boyce, when
+will they put the ferret in?" Harry shrugged. "Oh, there's a limit to
+your kindness, is there? Do you choose to tell us who sent them?"
+
+Harry was silent a moment and then blurted out: "They came from Colonel
+Boyce's lodging."
+
+My lord laughed.
+
+"Sure, 'tis an honour to know you, sir," says O'Connor, and bowed to
+Harry.
+
+"Damned filial, indeed," my lord chuckled.
+
+O'Connor turned upon him. "They have you beat easily, my lord," he said
+fiercely. "Damned courageous indeed." But my lord only nodded at him.
+"What, we be six--to count Mr. Boyce. Sure, we could hold the house
+against the devil's christening."
+
+There came in briskly a tall fellow crying: "Come, Sale, it's full time,
+I believe."
+
+My Lord Sale got on his feet, "Stap me, sir, I believe not," he drawled.
+"We must stay at home. They have smoked us. Here's a gracious youth come
+to tell us that his Whiggish friends beset the house."
+
+The Pretender frowned and seemed slow to understand. Harry looked him
+over. He was certainly a fine figure of a man, and bore himself gallantly
+enough. His face was darkly handsome in a melancholy fashion, not unlike
+the youth of his uncle, Charles II. He turned upon Harry. "What is all
+this, sir?"
+
+"Oh, sir, it's that old rogue Noll Boyce," my lord put in. "And here's
+his son betraying the father."
+
+"Faith, my lord, I'll remind you of that," O'Connor said. "Sir, the
+gentleman is an honest gentleman."
+
+"Colonel Boyce--he is your father, sir?" the Pretender bent his black
+brows over Harry.
+
+"He begot me, he says." Harry shrugged. "I desire to defend you from him.
+He has surrounded your house here with a dozen sturdy knaves who intend
+you, I believe, the worst."
+
+"I am obliged by your service, sir," says the Pretender coldly. "Pray, my
+lord, is the coach ready?"
+
+My lord shook his head. "I don't advise it, sir. The good Mr. Boyce
+cannot be lying. Or allow the knaves mean but to frighten you. I dare not
+risk your person."
+
+"Dare? You dare too much, my lord, who command neither my person nor my
+honour. I do not thank you for your advice. You will have the coach
+brought instantly."
+
+"I ask your pardon, sir, and beg you to consider. What will the world
+say of me if I let you run into a gang of murderers? We can maintain
+the house against them till our friends come seeking us. In the open
+we are outnumbered desperately. Nay, sir, be advised; what is to lose
+by waiting? If you go, you grasp at a shadow and may throw away your
+life for it."
+
+"I say, my lord, I do not thank you for your care of me, which is
+careless of my honour and your own. I am promised to our friends. Do you
+desire me to go afoot, my lord?"
+
+"I have done, sir." My lord bowed and went out.
+
+"Sir, I believe they will not spare you," says Harry.
+
+"I have heard you," the Pretender said haughtily, and waved him away.
+
+"I'll not be put off so." The Pretender turned upon him. "Sir, I have
+done what I could to save your life from a base plot. If it succeeds, the
+shame of it must fall upon me and my name, for it's my cursed father that
+planned it. And you choose to run upon the danger. I entreat you, do me
+right. Your blood should not be upon my head."
+
+"You have done your duty, Mr. Boyce," the Pretender bowed. "I thank you.
+But I must do mine."
+
+"Why, faith, sir, 'tis the right principle of war to wait the rogues
+here," says O'Connor. "You will not?"
+
+"Go to, man, I say it again and again."
+
+For the first time in their acquaintance, Harry saw Mr. O'Connor smile.
+"I have the honour to take your orders, sir. But sure, we are not at the
+end of our tactics. I'll presume to advise you. Let the coach come to the
+door, and me and the other gentlemen will make some display of mounting
+her and guarding her; she moves off slowly; it's any odds the rogues will
+believe we have you with us and deliver their main attack, while you'll
+be mounting quietly in the yard with my lord and ride off with him to
+Kensington."
+
+"The plan is well enough. Have it so," said the Pretender carelessly.
+
+O'Connor went out in a hurry and Harry followed him. "I'll join you, if
+you please, Mr. O'Connor."
+
+O'Connor laughed. "Oh, your servant, your servant. No offence, Mr.
+Boyce. I profess I have an admiration for you. But, faith, you are not a
+man of war. Do you go round to the stable-yard, now, and watch there to
+see they prepare nothing against us from the back." He bustled off,
+calling up his fellows.
+
+So Harry, with a long face, I suppose, drifted away to the back of the
+house. The coach was already moving out of the yard, and he saw no sign
+of his father's legion. In a moment the groom, with one of O'Connor's
+men to help him, was busy again in the stable. Still the legion did not
+reveal themselves. O'Connor's man ran back into the house, leaving two
+horses saddled in the stable. Then the Pretender and my lord hurried
+out, and the horses were brought to meet them. As they mounted, Harry
+heard the clatter of the coach and then pistols and shouts, and the
+clash of fighting.
+
+The Pretender spurred off, my lord taking the lead of him through the
+gate. As they passed, a shot was fired out of the hedge. My lord swayed,
+fumbling at his holsters, and crying out: "Ride on, sir, ride," fell from
+the saddle. His foot was caught in the stirrup, and the frightened horse
+dragged him along the ground.
+
+Harry ran up and snatched the bridle. "How is it with you, my lord?"
+
+"I have enough, I believe," my lord gasped. "Damme, sir, don't fumble at
+me. Mount and after him."
+
+So Harry went bumping in the saddle after the Pretender.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+QUEEN ANNE IS DEAD
+
+
+The Pretender looked over his shoulder as Harry came up. "Where is he
+hit?"
+
+"He has it in the body and he suffers."
+
+The Pretender muttered something. "I bring ill-luck to my friends, you
+see. Best ride off, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"You can do me no harm, sir. God knows if I can do you any good."
+
+The Pretender looked at him curiously. "I think you are something of my
+own temper. In effect, there is little to hope with me."
+
+"Who knows?" Harry shrugged. "_Par exemple,_ sir, do you know where we
+are going now?"
+
+"This is a parable, _mordieu_! I leave my friends to be shot for me and
+die, perhaps, while I ride off and know not the least of my way."
+
+"Egad, sir, you were in enough of a hurry to go somewhere." Harry reined
+up. "Am I to be trusted in the affair?"
+
+The Pretender amazed Harry by laughing--a laugh so hearty and boyish that
+he seemed another man from the creature of stiff, pedantic melancholy.
+
+"Oh Lud, Mr. Boyce, don't scold. You might be a politician. Tell me,
+where is this damned palace?"
+
+"Kensington, sir? Bear to the left, if you please."
+
+So they swung round, and soon hitting upon a lane saw the village and the
+trees about the palace. In a little while, "Mr. Boyce: how much do you
+know?" the Pretender said; and still he was more the boy than the
+disinherited king.
+
+"Egad, sir, no more than I told you: that my father had bullies
+watching for you."
+
+"And I believe I have not thanked you."
+
+It was Harry's turn to laugh. "Faith, sir, you ought to be grateful to
+the family of Boyce."
+
+"I shall not forget."
+
+"He takes care that you shall remember him, my honourable father."
+
+"I do not desire repartees, Mr. Boyce. Come, sir, you carry yourself too
+proudly. You are not to disdain what you have done, or yourself."
+
+Harry bowed,--permitted himself, I suppose, some inward ironic smile,--he
+was not born with reverence, and the royal airs of this haughty, gloomy
+lad had no authority over him. Then and always the pretensions of the
+Pretender appeared to him pathetically ridiculous. But for the man he
+would sometimes profess a greater liking than he had learnt to feel for
+any other in the world.
+
+Harry was careful to avoid most of the village. As they came into it on
+the eastward side a horseman galloped up to them. "From my Lord Masham,
+sir. Pray you follow me at speed." He led them on to the palace, but not
+by the straight approach, and brought them to a little door in the garden
+wall upon the London side.
+
+There a handsome fellow stood waiting for them, and bowed them in with a
+"Sir, sir, we have been much anxious for you. I trust to God nothing has
+fallen out amiss?"
+
+"There was a watch set for me, my lord, and I fear some of our friends
+are down. But for this gentleman I had hardly been here."
+
+Masham swore and cried out, "They have news of the design! I profess I
+feared it. Pray, sir, come on quickly. The Queen is weaker, and my lady
+much troubled for her. By God, we have left it late. And the ministers
+must still be wrangling, and my Lord Bolingbroke like a man mazed. We
+must be swift and downright with the Council."
+
+Then at last Harry understood. The Pretender was to be brought face to
+face with his sister, the weakening weak Queen, and a Privy Council was
+to be in waiting. Suppose she declared him her heir; suppose she
+presented him to a Council all high Tories and good Jacobites! A good
+plot, a very excellent plot, if there were a man with the courage and the
+will to make it work.
+
+Within the palace it was now twilight. They were hurried up privy
+stairways and along corridors, and Harry fancied behind the gloom a
+hundred watching eyes, and could not be sure they were only fancy. As
+they crossed the head of the grand staircase Masham made an exclamation
+and checked and peered down. The Pretender turned and Harry, but Masham
+plunged after them and wildly waved them on.
+
+"What is it, my lord? Have you seen a ghost?" The Pretender smiled.
+
+"Oh God, sir, go on!" Masham gasped. "We can but challenge the hazard
+now," and he muttered to himself.
+
+"You are inconvenient, my lord," says the Pretender with a shrug. "Go
+before. Conduct me, if you please," Masham brushed by him and hurried on.
+
+Harry understood my lord's alarm. He, too, had seen a little company
+below by the grand entry, and among them one of singular grace, a rare
+nobility of form and feature, a strange placidity. There was no
+forgetting, no mistaking him. It was the gentleman of the bogged coach,
+the Old Corporal, the Duke of Marlborough.. Marlborough, who was in
+disgrace, who should be in exile, back at the palace when the Tories were
+staking their all on a desperate, splendid throw: Marlborough, who had
+betrayed and ruined James II, come back to baffle his son! No wonder
+Lord Masham was uneasy for his head.
+
+They were brought to a small room, blatantly an antechamber, and Masham,
+brusquely bidding them wait, broke through the inner door. He was back in
+a moment as pale as he had been red. "Come in, sir," he muttered. "I
+believe we had best be short." And through the open door Harry heard
+another voice. It was thin and strained, and seemed to make no words,
+like a baby's cry or an animal's.
+
+Across another antechamber, they came into a big room of some prim
+splendour, and as they passed the door Harry made out what that feeble
+voice was saying: "The Council, Abbie: we must go to the Council: we keep
+the Council waiting, Abbie:" that came over and over again, and he knew
+why he had not understood. The words were run together and slurred as if
+they were shaped by a mind drowsy or fuddled.
+
+A great fire was burning though the day was warm enough, and by the fire
+sat a mound of a woman. She could be of no great height, perhaps she was
+not very stout, but she sat heaped together and shapeless, a flaccid
+mass. She had a table by her, and on it some warm drink that steamed.
+Through the drifting vapour Harry saw her face, and seemed to see it
+change and vanish like the vapour. For it was all bloated and loose, and
+it trembled, and it had no colour in it but a pallid grey. And as he
+looked there came to him a sense of death.
+
+Yet she was pompously dressed, in a dress cut very low, a dress of rich
+stuff and colour, and there was an array of jewels sparkling about her
+neck and at her bosom, and her hands lay heavy with rings.
+
+There hung about her a woman buxom and pleasant enough, yet with
+something sly in her plump face. "Fie, ma'am, fie," she was saying, "the
+Council is here but for your pleasure:" she looked up and nodded
+imperiously at Masham.
+
+"The Prince James, ma'am," Masham cried.
+
+The Queen, who had seemed to see nothing of their coming, started and
+shook and blinked towards him. "He is loud, Abbie. Tell him not to be
+loud," she complained.
+
+"Look, ma'am, look," Lady Masham patted at her. "It is your brother, it
+is Prince James."
+
+The Pretender came forward, holding out his hand. "Am I welcome, Anne?"
+he said heavily.
+
+The Queen stared at him with dull eyes. "It is King Charles," she said,
+and stirred in her chair and gave a foolish laugh. "No, but he is like
+King Charles. But King Charles had so many sons. Who is he, Abbie? Why
+does he come? The Council is waiting."
+
+"I am your brother, Anne," the Pretender said.
+
+"What does he say, Abbie?" the Queen turned to Lady Masham and took her
+hand and fondled it feebly. "I am alone. There is none left to me. My boy
+is dead. My babies--I am alone. I am alone."
+
+"I am your brother and your King," the Pretender cried.
+
+She fell back in her chair staring at him. Her mouth opened and a mumble
+came from it. Then there was silence a moment, and then she began to
+shake, and one hand beat upon the table with its rings. So they waited a
+while, watching the tremulous, shapeless mass of her, and the tap, tap,
+tap of her hand beat through the room.
+
+Lady Masham took command. "Nay, sir, leave her. You can do no more now.
+Let her be. I will handle her if I can." She rustled across the room
+and struck a bell. "Masham, bring Dr. Arbuthnot. He irks her less than
+the rest."
+
+Harry followed the Pretender into the outer room, shambling
+awkwardly. The progress from failure to failure dazed him. He recalled
+afterwards, as many petty matters of this time stayed vivid in his
+memory, a preposterous blunder into a chair. The Pretender sat down
+and stretched at his ease. "We are too late, I think," he said coldly.
+"It is the genius of my family." He took snuff. "You may go, if you
+will, Mr. Boyce."
+
+Harry looked up and struggled to collect himself. "Not till you are in
+safety," he said, and was dully aware of some discomfort. The dying
+woman, the sheer ugliness of death, the sordid emotions about her numbed
+the life in him. He felt himself in a world inhuman. Yet, even
+afterwards, he seems not to have discovered anything ignoble in his
+admired Pretender. The blame was fate's that mocked coldly at the hopes
+and affections of men.
+
+"I am obliged, sir," said the Pretender, and so they waited together....
+
+After a little while of gloomy silence in that bare room, Masham broke
+in, beckoning and muttering: "Sir, sir, the Queen is dead."
+
+The Pretender stood up. "_Enfin_" said he, with a shrug.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+SAUVE QUI PEUT
+
+
+"Sir, you must be gone instantly," says Masham.
+
+"You are officious, my lord." The Pretender stared at him. "I have
+nothing to fear."
+
+"I warrant you have," Masham cried. "And so have others."
+
+"I believe that, _pardieu_. Come, my lord, command yourself. Where is
+this Council? I may still show myself to the lords and challenge them."
+
+"Damme, you cannot be so mad! 'Tis packed with Whigs. They must have wind
+of you, curse them. Marlborough is there, and Argyll and Sunderland, burn
+his foxy face. It might have gone amiss though the Queen armed you to her
+chair. Now she is dead, there is no hope for you. Go to the Council! Go
+to the Tower--go to the block."
+
+The Pretender turned to Harry with a smile and a shrug. "He trims his
+sails quickly."
+
+"That's unworthy, by God," Masham cried.
+
+"My lord is in the right, sir," Harry said. "It's true enough,
+Marlborough is here and he makes sure. You'll but extinguish yourself to
+try more now. The need is to bring you safe to your friends."
+
+"You also!" The Pretender shrugged again. "Faith, Mr. Boyce, you
+show yourself vastly anxious for my life. You are not much concerned
+for my honour."
+
+"Egad, sir, I should have thought your honour was to maintain your cause.
+You'll not do that from a prison or coffin."
+
+"Who knows?" the Pretender said. "My grandfather--"
+
+Masham was stamping with impatience. "Oh Lud, sir, must we gossip
+about your grandfather? Stay here, you cannot. It is not decent. The
+Queen's a corpse behind that door. Why, and if they take you in the
+palace, it's ruin for you and for us all. Oh, we shall not be spared
+if you are caught."
+
+"Yes. I am a curse to my friends." The Pretender laughed drearily. "Well,
+my lord, you shall be delivered at least. Lead the way." Masham hurried
+out on the word. As they followed the Pretender took Harry's arm. "I wish
+you may be right, Mr. Boyce," he said. "But my heart bids me stay."
+
+"Oh, sir, a king has no right to a heart," says Harry.
+
+They were suddenly thrown upon Masham as he checked and drew back without
+warning. He had come upon a woman who was leaving the Queen's apartments,
+a woman who had once been handsome, and was still proud of it. She
+stared haughtily at Masham and his companions, and swept on before them.
+He was much agitated.
+
+"What alarms you, my lord?" The Pretender sneered.
+
+"Carrots from Somerset, egad," Masham muttered, gazing after the
+disdainful lady's red head. "It's the Duchess of Somerset, sir, the
+damnedest Whig, and she came from the Queen. Now they will all know the
+Queen is gone. Come on, sir, come on for God's sake."
+
+They hurried after him through the palace. All was quiet enough.
+Afterwards, indeed, Harry could hardly believe that fancy had not played
+tricks with his memory; for the emptiness, the silence of the corridors
+must needs have been a dramatic invention of his own mind and no reality.
+But it is true that as they hurried their retreat he was haunted by the
+quiet of the place--the quiet of death, a quiet ominous of storm.
+
+They were down at the door by which they had entered, and Masham's
+servant-in-waiting there was dispatched for the horses. Masham fumed at
+the minutes of delay, ran out and in again, and then with some
+awkwardness apologized for himself. "Egad, sir, I warrant you we have
+done what we could. It is for you I fear, by God. I promise you, I doubt
+damnably how things may go. Pray, sir, put yourself in safety."
+
+"I am grateful for your emotions, my lord."
+
+Masham stared at him and then cried out, "Ods life, what now?" The horses
+were coming, but before the horses came two of the Guards at the double.
+They halted at the door, panting, and grounded their muskets. "What the
+devil's this, my lad?" says Masham.
+
+"None is to leave the palace, my lord."
+
+"Damme, sirrah, you know me?"
+
+"It won't do, my lord. That's the order. You must go speak with the
+captain at the main gate."
+
+"Come, sir, I have no time. Forget that you were here soon enough to stop
+me. You shall not lose by it."
+
+"It won't do, my lord. Nay, nay, don't force me to it." The corporal
+crossed muskets with his fellow as Masham was thrusting by. "Order is to
+spare none."
+
+"Damme, sir, what do your mean?"
+
+"Sure, my lord, you know better than that." The corporal grinned. "Ask
+the captain, if you please."
+
+Masham recoiled and drew the others back into the palace. They heard the
+corporal shout: "Put the nags up, my bully. My lord won't ride to-day."
+
+"They know you are here, sir," Masham said, with a very white face. "Damn
+the Somerset! She lost no time. What is to do now?"
+
+"It seems my own plan was the best, gentlemen. If I had gone into the
+Council we should at the worst have been in no worse case."
+
+"Oh Lud, sir, must we wrangle that out again?"
+
+"You are impudent, my lord. I will do without your company."
+
+"Good God, sir, it's no time for forms. What would you be at?"
+
+"I shall go to the main gate of your palace and see who will stand
+in my way."
+
+"That's ruin for certain," Masham groaned.
+
+"Be easy, my lord. I shall not boast myself your guest."
+
+"Oh, you are mad."
+
+"By your leave, sir," says Harry. "We need not so soon despair, I think,
+nor you run upon your death. There is something more to be tried. These
+sentries, they'll be on the watch for a gentleman of your distinction and
+in my lord's company or of some noble attendance. But a common fellow may
+pass them. If you would lend me your fine clothes and that great wig, and
+condescend to my subfuse and bob, there's no one would take so shabby a
+fellow for yourself. Maybe I might make a show to break out one way,
+while you slipped past by another."
+
+"And left you to bear the brunt for me? I complain of you again, Mr.
+Boyce--you do not much value my honour."
+
+"And I say again, sir, your honour is to maintain your cause. Nay, but
+what can they do to me? Faith, it's no sin to wear fine clothes. And
+I--well, I think the Whigs will never bring me into court. I know too
+much of my father."
+
+"Oh, you are specious, Mr. Boyce," the Pretender smiled at him. "Nay, if
+all my friends were such as you, I should not be in this queer plight."
+He put his hand on Harry's shoulder. "How am I to thank you, sirrah?"
+
+"Pray, sir, do as I advise."
+
+The hand pressed harder. "Be it so then."
+
+"Egad, I like it very well," says Masham heartily. The two exchanged a
+shrug and a sneer at him. "If Mr. Boyce will risk it, he may make a show
+of marching out by the garden entrance while you slip away by the
+servants' wicket beyond."
+
+"I believe I can trust you to get rid of me, my lord," the Pretender
+shrugged. "Pray, where may we exchange our characters--and our breeches?"
+
+"Oh, sir, follow me; we must be private about that."
+
+Harry burst out laughing. "Aye, faith, he is a gentleman of delicacy, our
+Masham," the Pretender said.
+
+But my lord had no ears or no understanding for irony. He brought them to
+his own quarters and, fervidly entreating them to lose no time, shut them
+in and mounted guard outside the door.
+
+They cut queer figures to their own eyes when they came out, and Masham
+was distressed by their laughter. "What ails you?" he protested
+nervously. "It does well enough, I swear."
+
+"I am flattered by your admiration, _pardieu_," says the Pretender, with
+a rueful grin down at the shabby clothes which were so tight upon him,
+and a clutch at the bob-wig's jauntiness.
+
+"Some are born great," says Harry, "and some have greatness thrust upon
+'em. I believe I can keep inside your periwig, sir, but damme if I am
+sure about your breeches. They disdain me, egad."
+
+"God's life, sir, if you make a jest of it you'll ruin us all," Masham
+cried. "I vow it's not seemly, neither. The Queen's dead but this
+half-hour, and--and, by God, our own heads are loose on our shoulders."
+
+"My lord's in the right, sir. It's no laughing matter," says Harry.
+
+"Aye, he's all noble feeling," the Pretender shrugged.
+
+"Come on, sir, in God's name," Masham groaned.
+
+"Look you, thus it goes. I'll bring you within sight of the garden
+entry. Then you make to go out, Mr. Boyce, with what parade you can. And
+you, sir, I'll take you to the head of the back stairs. You have but to
+go straight down and out, and I wish you God speed with all my heart.
+Come, come!"
+
+They marched along the corridor and must needs pass the end of that which
+led to the Queen's apartments. Masham was a little ahead of the others.
+He passed the corner. Then he checked and he turned sharp about and
+charged back on them, crowding them against the wall, trying to stand in
+front of both of them and hide them.
+
+It was Marlborough who alarmed my lord, Marlborough who came, alone,
+pacing slowly from the room where the Queen lay dead. No dismay, no
+emotion troubled his supreme grace. He disdained his splendours and his
+beauty with the wonted calm.
+
+He saw them, could not but see them, huddled together as they were and
+striving not to be seen. His face betrayed nothing. He paced slowly up to
+them. It seemed to Harry that from the first his placid eyes looked at
+none of them but the Pretender. "We have met before, sir, I think," he
+said gently.
+
+"On the field of battle," says the Pretender in French.
+
+Marlborough bowed. "Give me your company."
+
+"Oh, your family has always been too kind to mine."
+
+Marlborough pointed the way.
+
+The Pretender shrugged, and "_Enfin_," says he with a bitter laugh, and
+marched on with an air.
+
+Masham, leaning against the wall and very white, muttered to himself, "My
+God, my God!"
+
+Harry ran forward to look after them. He saw Marlborough glance over the
+Pretender's shabby clothes and then, making some ostentation of it, put
+on his hat. The Pretender with a stare of disdain put on his--or Harry's.
+They came to the head of the grand staircase and went down. The servants
+in the hall sprang up and ran to open the doors for His Grace. Harry
+heard a din and a clang and saw a flash of steel as the guard outside
+presented arms. The two passed out and out of sight. For a little while
+the servants stood staring after them, and then came back to their chairs
+whispering.
+
+Harry turned round to Masham. "What now?"
+
+"Now?" Masham stared. "Now we may go hang ourselves."
+
+"Like Judas? Damme, I don't feel the obligation. Do you, my lord?"
+
+Masham swore at him and began to walk off.
+
+"Can you lend me a humbler coat, my lord?" Harry cried. "I am no more
+use in this."
+
+"I'll do no more in it," Masham growled. "Look to yourself."
+
+"_Enfin,_ as His Majesty says," quoth Harry with a laugh, and went on to
+look for the garden entry or any other humble door. He found it soon
+enough and was going through it--to be instantly beset by a sergeant's
+party and a joyful shout, "Odso, 'tis himself, 'tis the Chevalier."
+
+"You flatter me," says Harry, and they marched him off.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+REVELATIONS
+
+
+Harry was kept a long time in a guard room. Once or twice an officer came
+in and looked him over, but he was asked no questions, and he asked none.
+He was ill at ease. Not, I believe, from any fear for himself. He knew,
+indeed, that he might hang for his pains. What he had done for the
+Pretender was surely treason, or would be adjudged treason, with the
+Whigs in power and the Hanoverian King. But death seemed no great matter.
+He was not a romantic hero, he had no faith, no cause to die for, and he
+saw the last scene as a mere horror of pain and shame. Only it must be
+some relief to come to the end. For he was beset by a hopeless, reckless
+distrust of himself. Everything that he did must needs go awry. He was
+born for failure and ignominy. Memories of his wild delight in Alison
+came stabbing at his heart, and he fought against them, and again they
+opened the wounds. Yes, for a little while he had been given the full
+zest of life, all the wonder and the glory--that he might know what it
+was to live maimed and starving. It was his own fault, faith. He should
+never have dared venture for her, he, a dull, blundering, graceless fool.
+How should he content her? Oh, forget her, forget all that and have done.
+She would be free of him soon, and so best. Best for himself, too; it was
+a dreary affair, this struggling from failure to failure. Whatever he put
+his hand to must needs go awry. Save the Pretender from the chance of a
+fight and deliver him into the hands of Marlborough! Marlborough, who
+would send him to the scaffold with the noblest air in the world! Why,
+but for that silly meddling at Kensington, the lad might have won free.
+Now he and his cause must die together before a jeering mob. So much for
+the endeavours of Mr. Harry Boyce to be a man of honour! Mr. Harry Boyce
+should have stayed in his garret with his small beer and his rind of
+cheese. He was fit for nothing better, born to be a servitor, an usher.
+And he must needs claim Alison Lambourne for his desires and rifle her
+beauty! Oh, it was good to make an end of life if only he could forget
+her, forget her as she lay in his arms.
+
+The door opened. The guard was beckoning to him. He was marched to a
+room in which one man sat at a table, a small man of a lean, sharp
+face. Unbidden, Harry flung himself into a chair. He must have been a
+ridiculous figure, overwhelmed by the black wig and the rich clothes
+too big for him. The sharp face opposite stared at him in
+contemptuous disgust.
+
+"Your name?"
+
+"La, you now!" Harry laughed. "I don't know you neither. And, egad, I can
+do without."
+
+"I am the Earl of Sunderland."
+
+"Then, damme, I am sorry for you."
+
+"Your name, I say?"
+
+"Why, didn't your fellows tell you? They told me."
+
+"Impudence will not serve you. I warn you, the one chance to save
+yourself is to be honest with me."
+
+Harry began to hum a song, and, between the bars, he said, "You may go to
+the devil. I care not a curse for anything you can do. So think of your
+dignity, my lord. And hold your silly tongue."
+
+Sunderland considered him keenly. A secretary came in and whispered. "I
+will see him," Sunderland said, and lay back in his chair.
+
+It was Colonel Boyce who broke in, Colonel Boyce something flushed and
+out of breath. "Egad, my lord," he began. Sunderland held up his hand.
+Colonel Boyce checked and stood staring at his son.
+
+Harry began to laugh. "Oh, sir, you're infinitely welcome. It only needed
+you to complete my happiness."
+
+"Od's life, sirrah." Colonel Boyce advanced upon him. "Are you crazy?
+What damned folly is this?"
+
+"You know him then?" says Sunderland.
+
+"Oh, my lord, it's a wise father knows his own son. And he is not
+wise, you know. Are you, most reverend? No, faith, or you would never
+have begot me. No, faith, nor enlist me to do murder neither. For I do
+but bungle it, you see. And make a fool of my Lord Sunderland, God
+bless him."
+
+"Is he mad?" says Sunderland.
+
+"I profess I begin to think so." Colonel Boyce frowned. "Lud, Harry,
+stop your ranting. What brought you here?"
+
+"You, sir, you. Your faithful striving to do my Lord Sunderland's murders
+for him. _Imprimis_, that work of grace. But, finally, some good soldiers
+who assured me I was the man my lord wanted to murder."
+
+"You came here with the Pretender?"
+
+Harry laughed and began to sing a catch:
+
+"'Tis nothing to you if I should do so,
+ And if nothing in it you find,
+Then thank me for nothing and that will be moe
+ Than ever I designed."
+
+"What a pox are you doing in his clothes, sirrah?" Colonel Boyce cried.
+
+"Faith, I try to keep them on me. Which is more difficult than you
+suppose. If I were to stand up in a hurry, my lord, we should all
+be shamed."
+
+"The lad is an idiot," said Sunderland, with a shrug.
+
+"Come, Harry, you have fooled it long enough. I had a guess of this mad
+fancy of yours. But the game is up now, lad. King George is king to-day,
+and his friends have all power in their grip. There's no more hope for
+your Jacobites. Tell me now--the Pretender is in your clothes, I
+see--where did you part from him?"
+
+"Why, don't you know?" Harry stared at him. "Oh, faith, that's bitter
+for you. You who always know everything! And your friends 'with all
+power in their grip,' Oh, my dear lord, I wonder if there's those who
+don't trust you?"
+
+Some voices made themselves heard from outside. Sunderland and Colonel
+Boyce looked at each other, and my lord bit his fingers. The Colonel
+muttered something in Sunderland's ear.
+
+Harry laughed. "Do you bite your thumb at me, my lord? No, sir, says he,
+but I bite my thumb. Odso, I bite my thumb."
+
+"Be silent, sirrah," Sunderland cried.
+
+The door opened. "Announce me," says a placid voice, and the secretary
+cried out in a hurry: "His Grace the Duke of Marlborough."
+
+Harry went on laughing. The contrast of Marlborough's assured calm and
+the agitation of the others was too impressive. "Oh, three merry men,
+three merry men, three merry men are ye," he chanted. "No, damme, it's
+more Shakespeare. The three witches, egad. And I suppose Duncan is
+murdered in the next act. When shall you three meet again? In--"
+
+"Oh, damn your tongue, Harry," his father exploded.
+
+Marlborough was not disturbed. His eye had picked out Sunderland. "Is
+this the whole conspiracy, my lord?" said he.
+
+"I beg your Grace's pardon," Sunderland started up. "You see, I am not
+private," and he called out: "Guard, guard."
+
+"No," Marlborough said, and, as the soldiers came in, dismissed them with
+"You are not needed."
+
+Sunderland fell back in his chair. "Oh, if you please," he cried
+peevishly. "At your Grace's command."
+
+"You have no secrets from Mr. Boyce, my lord." He turned to Harry. "Sir,
+we have met before," and he bowed.
+
+"Yes. The first time your wife was stuck in the mud. Now it's you."
+
+"Sir, you have obliged me on both occasions," Marlborough said. "Well, my
+lord? You had Mr. Boyce under examination. Pray go on."
+
+"I don't understand your Grace," Sunderland said sulkily. "I have done
+with the gentleman."
+
+Colonel Boyce thrust forward. "By your Grace's leave, I'll take the lad
+away. Time presses and--"
+
+"You may be silent," said Marlborough. For the first time in their
+acquaintance Harry saw his father look at a loss. It was an ugly,
+ignominious spectacle. Marlborough turned to Harry, smiling, and his
+voice lost its chill: "Well, Mr. Boyce, how far had it gone? Were they
+asking you what you had done with Prince James?"
+
+Harry stared at the bland, handsome condescension and hated it. "Oh,
+you have always had the devil's own luck," he cried. "Devil give you
+joy of it, now."
+
+"You mistake me, I believe. I can forgive you more easily than some
+others." He turned upon Sunderland. "I will tell you where Prince James
+is, my lord. Safe out of your reach. On his way to France."
+
+Sunderland made a petulant exclamation and spread out his hands. "Your
+Grace goes beyond me, I profess. Do you choose to be frank with me?"
+
+"Frank?" Marlborough laughed. "You know the word, then? By all means let
+us be frank. I found Prince James in the palace. He accepted my company.
+We had some conversation, my lord. I present to you the results. You have
+used my name to warrant a silly, knavish plot for murdering Prince James
+in France. You entered upon a silly, knavish plot to murder him on this
+mad visit to London, and while engaging me to aid your motions against
+the Jacobites you gave me no advice of this damning folly. To complete
+your blunders--but for the chance that I came upon him and took him
+through your guards you would have been silly enough to plant him on our
+hands in prison. I do not talk to you about honour, my lord, or your
+obligations. I advise you, I resent my name being confused with these
+imbecilities."
+
+Sunderland, who had been wriggling and become flushed, cried out: "I'll
+not submit to this. I don't choose to answer your Grace. You shall hear
+from me when you are cooler."
+
+"My compliments," Marlborough laughed. "I do not stand by my friends? I
+lose my temper? You will easily convince the world of that, my lord.
+Colonel Boyce!" Before Harry's wondering eyes his father came to
+attention and, with an expression much like a guilty dog's, waited his
+reward. "You have had some of my confidence and I think you have not lost
+by it. You have repaid me with an impudent treachery. I shall arrange
+that you have no more opportunity at home or abroad."
+
+"Pray leave to ask your Grace's pardon," Colonel Boyce muttered. "I
+swear--"
+
+"You may be silent," Marlborough said, and turned away from them. "Pray,
+Mr. Boyce, will you walk?" Something bewildered by this time, Harry stood
+up and they went out together. "I require a carriage for this gentleman,"
+said Marlborough to the sergeant of the guard, and with a smile to Harry,
+"That will be convenient, I think?"
+
+"Egad, sir, you might say, decent," says Harry with a wary hand on
+his breeches.
+
+"Spare me a moment while you wait," Marlborough turned into a recess of
+the corridor. "Prince James expressed himself much in your debt, Mr.
+Boyce. Consider me not less obliged. Thanks to you, I have freed myself
+of suspicions which I profess it had irked me to bear."
+
+"Your Grace owes me nothing. I never thought of you. Or if I did you were
+the villain of the piece."
+
+Marlborough laughed. "And now you are sorry to find I am not so
+distinguished. Why is it a pleasure to despise me, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+Harry had to laugh too. "It's a hit, sir. I suppose your Grace is so
+great a man that we all envy you and are eager for a chance to defame you
+and bring you down to our own level."
+
+"You're above that, Mr. Boyce," Marlborough said. "I make you my
+compliments on your conduct in the affair. And pray remember that I am in
+your debt. I don't know your situation. If I can serve you, do me the
+pleasure of commanding me."
+
+"Oh, your Grace does everything magnificently," says Harry, with a wry
+smile, and liked him none the better.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+VIRTUE IS ITS OWN REWARD
+
+
+There is reason to believe that the Earl of Sunderland and Colonel Boyce
+fell out. Sunderland, never an easy man, suspected that he had been
+ridiculous and was nervously eager to make some one smart for it. Colonel
+Boyce was in a despondent rage that any one should have heard Marlborough
+rate him so. They seem to have had some cat and dog business before they
+parted: each, I infer, blaming the other for their ignominy.
+
+But they took it in very different fashions. Colonel Boyce suffered in
+the more respectable part of his soul. Sunderland merely fumed and felt
+venomous. For it is certain (if absurd) that Colonel Boyce had a sincere
+reverence for Marlborough. He much desired (one of his few simple human
+emotions) that Marlborough should think well of him. If he had tacked
+Marlborough's name to a dirty business about which Marlborough knew
+nothing, he had honestly believed that His Grace would be very well
+content to know nothing of the means, and profit by the end. That his
+hero should retort upon him disgust and contempt wounded him painfully.
+Final proof of his devotion--he never thought of questioning
+Marlborough's judgment. He had no doubt that he had managed the affair
+with miserable stupidity, and bowed a humiliated head.
+
+Unfortunately, he was not ready to bow it before Sunderland. If there was
+to be scolding between him and Sunderland, he had a mind to give as much
+as he took. My lord had been art and part in the whole affair, and could
+have his share, too, in the disaster. But Sunderland had no notion of
+accepting Marlborough's opinion of him. Sunderland had no reverence for
+any of God's creatures, and with Marlborough safe out of the room,
+snarled something about an old fellow in his dotage. This much enlivened
+the quarrel, and they parted in some exhaustion, but still raging.
+
+The night brought counsel. Sunderland might tell himself and believe that
+Marlborough had become only the shadow of a great name. But the great
+name, he knew very well, was valuable to himself and his party, and he
+had no notion of throwing it away for the sake of his injured dignity. In
+his way, Colonel Boyce was quite as necessary to my lord. The fellow knew
+too much to be discarded. Moreover, he would still be valuable. His
+talents for intrigue and even that weakness of his, his fertility in
+multiplying intrigue, much appealed to Sunderland. So before noon on the
+next day, Colonel Boyce was reading a civil letter from my lord. He
+sneered over it, but it was welcome enough. He did not want to be idle,
+and could rely on Sunderland to find him agreeable occupation. He walked
+out to wait on my lord, and they made it up, which was perhaps
+unfortunate for Mr. Waverton.
+
+Later in the day my lord heard that a gentleman was asking to speak with
+him, a gentleman who professed to have information about the Pretender
+which he could give only to my lord's private ear. Thereupon my lord
+received a large and imposing young gentleman, who said: "My Lord
+Sunderland? My lord, I am Geoffrey Waverton of Tetherdown, a gentleman of
+family (as you may know) and sufficient estate. This is to advise you
+that I am in need of no private advantage and desire none, but only to do
+my duty against traitors."
+
+"You are benevolent, sir, but I am busy."
+
+"I believe you will be glad to postpone your business to mine, my lord,"
+says Mr. Waverton haughtily. "Let me tell you at this moment of anxious
+doubt," Mr. Waverton hesitated like one who forgets a bit of his prepared
+eloquence,--"let me tell you the Pretender has come to these shores. He
+has come to England, to London. He was in Kensington yesterday."
+
+"You amaze me, Mr. Waverton."
+
+"My lord, I can take you to the house."
+
+"You are very obliging. Is he there now?"
+
+"I believe not, my lord."
+
+"And I believe not too. Mr. Waverton, the world is full of gentlemen
+who know where the Pretender was the other day. You are tedious. Where
+is he now?"
+
+"My lord, I shall put in your power one who is in all his cunning
+secrets: one who is the treasonous mainspring of the plot."
+
+Sunderland, who was something of a purist, made a grimace: "A treasonous
+mainspring! You may keep it, sir."
+
+"You are pleased to be facetious, my lord. I warn you we have here no
+matter for levity. I shall deliver to your hands one who is deep in the
+most dangerous secrets of the Jacobites, art and part of the design
+which at this moment of peril and dismay brings the Pretender down upon
+our peace."
+
+"Mr. Waverton, you are as dull as a play. Who is he, this bogey of
+yours?"
+
+"He calls himself Boyce," said Mr. Waverton, with an intense sneer.
+"Harry Boyce, a shabby, scrubby trickster to the eye. You would take him
+for a starveling usher, a decayed footman. It's a lurker in holes and
+corners, indeed, a cringing, grovelling fellow. But with a heart full of
+treason and all the cunning of a base, low hypocrisy. Still a youth, but
+sodden in lying craft."
+
+Sunderland picked up a pen and played with it, and through the flutter of
+the feather he began to look keenly at Mr. Waverton. "Pray spare me the
+rhetoric," says he. "What has he done, your friend, Harry Boyce?"
+
+"He has this long time past been hand and glove with the Jacobites of
+Sam's. I have evidence of it. Now mark you what follows. Yesterday
+betimes he slunk out to Kensington, using much cunning secrecy. And there
+he made his way to a certain house--I wonder if you know it, my lord? It
+was close watched yesterday, and a coach that came from it was beset. I
+wonder if you have been asking yourself how the Pretender evaded that
+watch. I can dispel the mystery. This fellow Harry Boyce went in with
+news of the guard about the house. It was in his company that the
+Pretender rode away."
+
+"Why do you stop?" said Sunderland.
+
+"Where they went then I cannot tell you. You will please to observe, my
+lord, that I am precisely honest with you and even to this knave Boyce
+just. But it is certain that in the evening when Harry Boyce came back to
+the low tavern where he lodges--and he came, if you please, in a handsome
+coach--he was wearing the very clothes of the Pretender--aye, even to the
+hat and wig. I believe I have said enough, my lord. It will be plain to
+you that the fellow is very dangerous to the peace of the realm and our
+good and lawful king. If you lay hands on him, which I advise you to do
+swiftly, you will quench a treason which has us all in peril, and well
+deserve the favour of King George. For my own part I seek neither favour
+nor reward, desiring only to do my duty as a gentleman." Mr. Waverton
+concluded with a large bow in the flamboyant style.
+
+"Your name is Waverton?" Sunderland said coldly. Mr. Waverton was
+stupefied. That such eloquence should not raise a man's temperature! That
+he should not have made his name remembered! He remained dumb. "Pray when
+did you turn your coat?"
+
+"Turn my coat?" Mr. Waverton gasped.
+
+"You once professed yourself Jacobite. You went to France with a certain
+Colonel Boyce. You quarrelled with him because he was not Jacobite. Now
+you desire to get his son into trouble. You do not gain upon me, Mr.
+Waverton."
+
+"I can explain, my lord--"
+
+"Pray, spare me," says Sunderland. "You are not obscure. I see that you
+have a private grudge against the family of Boyce. Settle it in private,
+Mr. Waverton. It is more courageous."
+
+Mr. Waverton stared at him and began several repartees which were
+only begun.
+
+"I find you tiresome," Sunderland said. "I advise you, do not make me
+think of you again," and he struck his bell. But when Mr. Waverton was
+gone: "I fear he has not the spirit of a louse," my lord remarked to
+himself with a shrug.
+
+Thus Mr. Waverton's virtue was left to seek its own reward.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+IN THE TAP
+
+
+When Harry came back to his tavern, he was, you'll believe, not anxious
+to be seen. He made one step from the coach to the door, scurried through
+the tap and upstairs. But the coming of a coach, and a coach of some
+splendour, to the humble "Hand of Pork" had brought folks to the windows,
+and at the staircase window Harry bumped into his landlady, who gasped at
+him and began a "Save your lordship--" which ended in "God help us, it's
+Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Cook me a steak, Meg," Harry said, and went up the stairs three
+at a time.
+
+She screamed after him "Ha' you seen your letter? There's a letter for
+you in the tap."
+
+When Harry came down in his natural clothes, his best and one remaining
+suit, and shouted for his supper she was quarrelling with the potman and
+searching the shelves: "Meg, you villain--Meg, where's my steak?"
+
+"Lord love you, it's to the fire. I be looking for your letter. Ain't you
+had it now? Days it's been here, I swear, and I saw it again only this
+morning. By the black jar of usquebaugh it was, George, Od rot you."
+
+"Burn the letter," says Harry. "Go, bring me that steak, you slut."
+
+"Oh, God save you," Mrs. Meg cried in a pet, and so for Alison's letter
+there was no more search. But indeed they would not have found it.
+
+Harry, if he ever thought about it, supposed it one of the grumbling
+screeds of the bookseller for whom he scribbled and was glad to be rid of
+it so easily. But he was in no case to think usefully of anything. The
+amazement of his deliverance left him in a queer state of excited
+lassitude. His nerves were all tremulous, he must needs do everything
+vehemently, and felt the while as if he were being whirled along,
+passive, in the grip of some force outside himself One moment he was
+dreaming himself capable of miracles, the next he was limp with weariness
+and utterly impotent. And naturally, as soon as he had food inside him,
+weariness won and he was overwhelmed with great waves of languor. He
+hardly dragged himself up to his attic before he was asleep.
+
+When he woke, the world was grey. He could survey himself cynically and
+wonder why he had been such a fool as to be in a fluster overnight.
+Faith, it was a grand exploit to dabble in conspiracies and come out with
+your head still (for a while) on your shoulders. And that only by a turn
+of the luck, not any wit of his. Well! Neither winners nor losers would
+want more of the blundering offices of Mr. Harry Boyce. He was back again
+after his conversation with royalty--and royal breeches--a hack writer
+in his garret. And Alison as far away as ever. The wonderful Alison! The
+beauty of her flashed into his squalor. He felt her passionate life. Be
+hanged to Alison! Let the hack writer get to his writing.
+
+All that day he strove with the fluency of Ovid, and to this hour his
+labours, much flaccid verse, survive in a decent obscurity. It was late
+in the afternoon before he yielded to his growing disgust with the
+whinings of the Tristia and sought relief in the open air.
+
+There was not much movement in the air of Long Acre. The day had been
+warm and languorous, with heavy showers steaming up again in the sun.
+Clouds were darkening across the twilight for more rain. Harry turned off
+to stretch his legs and find some freer air across the fields by the
+Oxford road. But he was soon tired of them. The moist heat oppressed him
+still and lowering darkness across the sky threatened a storm. He had no
+desire for a wetting and an evening spent in the Pretender's clothes. He
+made for his tavern again by St. Martin's Lane and there came full upon
+his father.
+
+Colonel Boyce touched his hat. Harry touched his, gave him the wall
+and was going by. Then the Colonel laughed and caught his son's arm.
+"Well met, Harry. I was coming to seek you." (It's not known whether
+that was true.)
+
+"And I, sir--I had no notion of seeking you."
+
+"Fie, don't be haughty. I bear no malice."
+
+"Egad, sir, that's kind in you," Harry sneered and pushed on.
+
+Colonel Boyce linked arms with him. "Why, what's the matter? You
+went off with the honours. Od's heart, you left us like a pair of
+whipped dogs."
+
+"You've to thank yourself for that, sir. Not me."
+
+"No, zounds, you did very well. I profess I was proud of you, Harry."
+
+"Then I have to envy you."
+
+Colonel Boyce laughed. "You play that game well, you know. But sure, you
+need not play it all the time. No, but I never knew you could put on such
+an air, Harry. You carried it off _a merveille_. My lord was a
+whipper-snapper to you. I allow you were a thought too free of your wit.
+It's a young man's fault. But in the main you were admirable."
+
+"You make me uneasy," Harry said. "I hoped that I had quarrelled
+with you."
+
+"Oh Lud, Harry, why be so bitter? You have won, and sure you can afford
+to be civil. You have beat me and broken as pretty a plot as ever I knew.
+Why the devil should you snarl at me?"
+
+They were now turning into Long Acre and the coming storm had already
+brought darkness. Harry stopped and freed himself from his father's arm.
+"If you please, we'll have no more of this. I've no will to make an enemy
+of you. But if you seek to be friends, enemies we must be."
+
+"Why then? Harry, you are not so mad as to declare Jacobite now? It's a
+lost cause, boy. There's not a thing in it but noble hole-and-corner work
+and not a guinea for your pains. You--"
+
+"Aye, now we have it!" Harry laughed. "You want to be in my
+secrets. Sir, I'm obliged to you, and by your leave I'll
+discontinue your company."
+
+"I swear I wish you nothing but well," his father cried.
+
+"Dear sir, it's your good wishes that I dread. Pray cut me off without a
+blessing." He waved his hand to his father and strode off.
+
+For a moment Colonel Boyce looked after him--shrugged--went his way.
+
+So Harry walked alone upon his danger. He was near the tavern, he was
+passing the end of a court. From the blackness there men rushed upon him.
+They managed it well. He was almost borne down by the first onset, but
+hearing something in time, seeing a glimmer of steel, he swung aside and
+staggered back into the kennel slashing at them with his stick. They were
+borne past him by their vehemence, but he carried no sword and their
+swords were all about him. There was no hope. Two blades seared through
+his body and he fell.
+
+Colonel Boyce heard the clatter of ash and steel and turned at his
+leisure to look. It was a moment before he made out Harry in the midst
+of the melee. Then he shouted of help and threats and ran on with
+ready sword.
+
+He came too late. Harry was down and the dripping blades again at his
+body. Colonel Boyce had one fellow pinked before they were aware. The
+others bore upon him furiously and he was hard beset. He made a good
+fight--it's the best thing in his life--he understood the sword, and they
+were but hackers and hewers, they were in a mad hurry to finish him and
+he had a perfect calm. But he was hampered and overborne. He would not
+give ground for fear of more thrusts into the body at his feet, and they
+closed upon him and he could not break them.
+
+But now doors were opening and heads out of windows. From Harry's tavern
+a man came at a run. As Colonel Boyce reeled back with a point caught in
+his shoulder, gripping at the blade and thrusting at empty air, another
+sword shot into the fight. One man went down upon Harry's body. The other
+three broke off and bolted down the court by which they had come.
+
+"_Canaille_," says the deliverer mildly, and plucked at the cloak of the
+man he had overthrown to wipe his sword. "Is that a friend of yours
+underneath, sir?"
+
+"Egad, they have tickled me," quoth Colonel Boyce, feeling at his
+shoulder. "Pray, lend me your hand, sir."
+
+The deliverer looked him over without much sympathy: "And, egad, it's the
+ancient Boyce," he said. "Oh, you'll survive, _mon vieux_. Who is this in
+the mud?" He rolled his own victim, who groaned effusively, off Harry's
+body. "It's the boy, _mordieu_!" he cried.
+
+"In effect, Captain McBean, it's the boy," says Colonel Boyce, who was
+trying to fix a pad of handkerchief on his own wound.
+
+McBean was down on his knees beside Harry, handling him gently. "Twice
+through the body, by God," says he. "What does this mean, Boyce? Damme,
+did you set your fellows on him?"
+
+"I am not an imbecile," Colonel Boyce said fiercely, stared at McBean
+and laughed his contempt. Then with another manner, he turned to the
+little crowd which was mustered: "Bring me a shutter, good lads. We've a
+gentleman here much hurt. And some of you call the watch."
+
+McBean rose with bloody hands. "He has it I believe," he muttered.
+"Hark in your ear, Boyce. If this is your work, I'll see you dead, by
+God, I will."
+
+"Oh, damn your folly," says Colonel Boyce. "I struck in to help him. I
+know nothing who the knaves were. Your own tail, maybe."
+
+"Aye, aye," McBean looked at him queerly. "You would say that. Well,
+maybe this rogue can speak. He groans loud enough." Down he dropped again
+by his victim to cry out "Ben! You filthy rogue! Ben! Who a plague set
+you to this business?"
+
+"Oh, you've found a friend, then?" Colonel Boyce sneered.
+
+The man who groaned was Harry's old friend, Ben the fat highwayman of the
+North Road. He rolled his eyes and made hoarse, grievous noises.
+"Captain! Lord love you, captain, I didn't know you was in it. Oh, gad,
+and you ha' been the death o' me,'
+
+"I shall be if you lie," quoth McBean. "You rogue, who set you on
+Mr. Boyce?"
+
+"How would I know he was a friend of yours? 'Twas a squire out of
+Hornsey. Squire Waverton of Tetherdown. Paying handsome to have him
+downed. Oh, gad, captain, don't be hard. I ha' had no luck since you
+turned me off."
+
+Now the constables came running up and Colonel Boyce turned to them:
+"Secure that fellow. He and some others which have escaped stabbed my
+son who lies there. I am Colonel Boyce at the Blue House in St.
+Martin's Lane."
+
+The wretched Ben was haled off, groaning.
+
+Harry, lifeless still and bleeding, for all McBean's work, they lifted
+and carried away to his father's lodging.
+
+"What's your Waverton in this, sir?" says McBean.
+
+"The silly gentleman wanted Harry's wife. Egad, I never thought he had so
+much gall in him."
+
+"I believe I'll be letting some of it out," says McBean.
+
+"You'll be pleased to leave that to me," quoth Colonel Boyce.
+
+McBean looked up at him oddly. "_Ventrebleu_, I wonder if I'll make you
+my apologies. Have you bowels after all, sir?"
+
+"You're impertinent."
+
+"If you like." McBean cocked a wicked eye at him.
+
+"You concern yourself with the affairs of my family. I resent it,
+Captain McBean."
+
+"I believe you, _mon vieux_."
+
+"You have done me a notable service to-night and I am ready to forget
+the older injuries, your ill offices with my son. Let us call quits and
+part, sir."
+
+"It won't do," said McBean with a grin.
+
+"What now, sir?"
+
+"I must know how Harry does and make sure that he has the best there is
+for him. Surgery and friends--he will need both, sound and sure."
+
+"Be satisfied. I shall well provide him."
+
+Captain McBean shook his head.
+
+"Damn your infernal impudence." Colonel Boyce's temper gave way. "Od's
+life, sir, this is infamous. You put upon me that I would mishandle my
+own son as he lies wounded and near death! I shall murder him, I
+suppose. You had that against me before. Shall I rob him too, or
+torture him maybe? This is raving. Carry it where you will, I'll none
+of it. You may go."
+
+"Fie, what a heat!" says McBean placidly.
+
+They were now come to Colonel Boyce's lodging and he bade the bearers
+take Harry up to his own room.
+
+"I sent a brisk lad for Rolfe," says McBean. "I could but stop the blood.
+He'll be here soon enough. It's but a step to Chancery Lane. He knows
+more of wounds than any man in the town."
+
+Colonel Boyce was for a moment speechless. "I shall send for Dr.
+Radcliffe and Sir Samuel Garth," says he majestically. "I wish you good
+night, sir."
+
+"I believe they have sense enough to do no harm," said McBean. "And now,
+Boyce, a word with you. Not in the street."
+
+"I don't desire it, sir," which McBean answered by passing in front of
+him into the house. Colonel Boyce came after, fuming. "Egad, sir, you
+presume upon my wound," he cried. "You--"
+
+"Not I. Patch yourself up and I'll meet you at your convenience. There's
+more urgent matter. When the boy comes to himself--if ever he comes to
+himself--I must have speech of him."
+
+Colonel Boyce, who now completely commanded himself, had grown very pale.
+"You have gone too far, Captain McBean. I desired to forget that I have
+you in my power. You force me to use it. If you thrust yourself upon me I
+shall have you arrested as a traitor."
+
+McBean flushed. "Odso, then there is some villainy of yours in the
+affair! Devil take you, I have a mind to finish you now, a wounded man as
+you are." He had his hand on his sword.
+
+"Will you go, sir?"
+
+"Not I. If you ha' murdered him, you"--he slapped his sword home
+again--"no, _mordieu_, I can't touch you so. And you may meddle with me
+if you dare."
+
+"Oh, you have a great devotion to the boy," Colonel Boyce sneered with
+pallid lips. "You would have him deeper dipped in your mad treasons? I
+think you have done him harm enough." He struck his bell.
+
+"Harm?" McBean cried. "Is it harm? You that begat him for the heir to
+your damned infamy? You that soured him with your husk of a soul and your
+cold cunning? You that made a dirt-heap of his life to suit your muddling
+need? You--"
+
+But Colonel Boyce swayed in his seat and fell sideways fainting.
+
+A moment McBean surveyed him as if he thought this too a trick. Then,
+"_Ventrebleu_" says he, "here's Providence takes a hand," and he
+whistled, and it is not to be denied that he looked covetously at the
+cabinet which held Colonel Boyce's papers. "The poor old devil," he said
+with a shrug. "He grows old, in fact. I suppose there's more blood in his
+shirt now than his damned body," and he knelt down and began to feel
+about the wound.
+
+He was at that when a woman announced the surgeon. "Mr. Rolfe? Never more
+welcome. Here's old Colonel Boyce with a hole in his shoulder, and young
+Mr. Boyce with two holes through and through. A street brawl. Pray go up,
+sir, the lad's in bad case."
+
+"Faith, it's Captain McBean," says Rolfe, a brisk, big man, as they shook
+hands. "What have you to do with Noll Boyce?"
+
+"A friend of the family," says McBean. "Away with you to the lad;" and he
+knelt again and ministered to the unconscious Colonel. "A friend of the
+family, old gentleman," says he with a grin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+ALISON KNEELS
+
+
+So all this while Alison lacked an answer to her letter. She fretted at
+the delay, she grew angry soon, but it does not appear that she allowed
+herself any new pique against Harry. She was angry with circumstance,
+with herself, and something much more than angry with Mr. Waverton. It
+was detestable of Geoffrey to dare spy and plot against Harry,
+intolerable in him to suppose that she would favour the villainy. But she
+had been a fool and worse to give him any chance of insulting her so. And
+yet she might have hoped that her letter--sure, she had been humble
+enough in it--that her letter would bring Harry back in a hurry. It was
+maddening that some trick of circumstance should have kept it from him or
+him from her. For she had no notion that he would read the letter and
+toss it aside or delay to come. There was nothing petty about Mr. Harry,
+no spite. Nothing of the woman in him, thank God.
+
+What had happened that he gave her no answer? For certain the letter had
+gone safely to the tavern. She could be sure of her servant. Harry was
+living at the tavern. The people there gave assurance of that. It was
+strange that he made no sign. The servant, indeed, had waited for an
+answer late into the night and seen nothing of him. Perhaps he had
+discovered Geoffrey's spies and gone into hiding. It would be like
+Geoffrey to devise some mighty cunning villainy and so manage it that it
+was futile. Perhaps Harry really was at some secret politics, captured
+again by his father and sent off to France, or too deep in some matter of
+danger to show himself. Perhaps--perhaps a thousand things, so that she
+made no doubt of Harry. He would not deny her when she came seeking him.
+
+She had no fear either. Her nature could not imagine perils or disasters.
+There was too proud a force in her life for her to admit a dread of being
+defeated. Her man must live and be safe, because she needed him. Harry
+could not fail her. But she was desperately impatient. She wanted him
+every instant, and even more she wanted to stand before him and accuse
+herself, confess herself. For the truth is that Geoffrey Waverton had
+profoundly affected her. When she found Geoffrey daubing her with
+patronizing congratulations, when he dared to claim her as ally in mean
+tricks against her husband, she discovered that she must be miserably in
+the wrong. Approved by Geoffrey, annexed, used by Geoffrey--faith, she
+must have sunk very low before he could dare venture so with her. She
+received illumination. She saw herself in the wrong first and last, the
+sole sufficient cause of their catastrophe, a petty mean creature,
+snarling and spiteful and passionate for trivialities--just like
+Geoffrey, just such a creature as she hated most. Pride and honour
+instantly demanded that she must seek Harry, indict herself and read her
+recantation. She needed that, longed for it, and to satisfy herself, not
+him. It is possible that she then began to love.
+
+So monsieur must be found instantly, instantly. When she thought of all
+her tale of sins, she must needs think also of Mrs. Weston. Poor Weston
+had enough against her too--Weston--his mother. It still seemed almost
+incredible that poor, grey, puritan Weston should be mother to Harry. But
+if she was indeed, she might know something of him. At least, it would be
+good to make peace with her again; it was necessary. And so on the day
+that Harry fell, Mrs. Alison marched off to the little cottage behind the
+High Street.
+
+It was a room that opened straight from the path, and it seemed very
+full. Susan was sitting there, who was now Susan Hadley. Her fair
+placidity admitted no surprise. She smiled and said, "Alison!"
+
+Mrs. Weston stood up in a queer frozen fluster. "What do you need,
+ma'am?" says she.
+
+"Oh, Weston, dear, don't take me so," Alison cried, and she edged her way
+between the little table and the stiff chairs, holding out her hands.
+
+Mrs. Weston flushed. "Your servant, ma'am," says she with a curtsy, but
+she ignored the hands.
+
+Then Susan stood up. "I must go, I believe," she smiled, and bent to
+offer one fair cheek to Mrs. Weston. The other was then given to Alison.
+She smiled upon them both benignly and made for the door.
+
+"Susan! You'll dine with me to-morrow," Alison put in.
+
+"Oh. Mr. Hadley will be at home."
+
+"But of course you bring him."
+
+"Thank you then." The door shut behind her, and the room was larger.
+
+"I can't tell why you have come," says Mrs. Weston tremulously.
+
+"To say I was wrong and I'm sorry. Oh, Weston, dear, to say I have been a
+peevish wicked fool."
+
+Mrs. Weston sat down again. "Where is Harry?" she said.
+
+"I have writ to him to beg him come back to me."
+
+"I am asking you to come back to us."
+
+"You--"
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"Ah, you don't know then?"
+
+"I have not seen him since he left your house."
+
+"He has been living at a tavern in the Long Acre. I have made sure of
+that, and I wrote to him there. But he has not answered me. He does not
+answer me. I can't tell if he has gone away."
+
+"Where is his father?" Mrs. Weston asked quickly.
+
+"His father? Colonel Boyce? Oh, Weston! Colonel Boyce is his
+father, then?"
+
+"Did you come to pry?" Mrs. Weston flushed.
+
+"I do not deserve that," Alison said, and then very gently, "Oh, my dear,
+but I have been cruel enough to you."
+
+"It's very well," Mrs. Weston said faintly. "Where is Colonel Boyce?"
+
+"I know nothing. Does it matter, Weston, dear? He cannot help us
+to Harry."
+
+"I am afraid of him. Oh, it's all wrong maybe. I am so weak and stupid.
+But I am afraid what he may do with Harry."
+
+"Indeed, I think Mr. Harry can keep his head even against Colonel Boyce,"
+Alison smiled.
+
+"His head?" Mrs. Weston looked puzzled. "I don't mean that, I believe. I
+am afraid he may win Harry to be like himself. He is so clever and
+dazzling, and he is full of wickedness. He cares for nothing but his own
+will and to have power. When I saw him so friendly with Harry I thought I
+should have died."
+
+"My poor Weston," Alison said gently. "But I am not afraid of that. Mr.
+Harry won't be dazzled."
+
+"You dazzled him."
+
+"Oh, and am I full of wickedness too?" Alison laughed. "Dear,
+forgive me."
+
+"No, but you are strong and hard as his father was."
+
+Alison drew in her breath. "I shall teach you not to call me that,
+Weston," she said. "And Harry--well, Harry shall find me for him."
+
+There was silence for a while, and Alison watched with new emotions the
+tired, wistful face. "Weston, dear, I want you to come back to me. I want
+Mr. Harry to find you with me when he comes home."
+
+Mrs. Weston cried out, "He does not know who I am!" in anxious fear, and
+clutched at Alison's hand.
+
+"No, indeed. But he loves you already, I think."
+
+"But I do not want him to know," Mrs. Weston cried. "I--I was not married
+to Colonel Boyce."
+
+"Weston, dear," Alison pressed the hand.
+
+"I lived at Kingston. My father reared us strictly. He was harsh. I think
+that was because my mother died so young. Mr. Boyce--he was a gentleman
+in the Blues then, and very fine, much gayer than Harry and more
+handsome. He used to ride out to Hampton Court to an old cousin of his,
+who had a charge at the Palace. He met me one day by the river. I don't
+know why he set himself upon me. I was never much to his taste, I think.
+But I thought him the most wonderful man in the world. I let him do what
+he would with me. I don't blame him for that. He never promised me
+anything. In a while he grew tired. Then Harry came. My father could not
+forgive me. Afterwards they said that I had killed him. Harry was born. I
+lay very ill and they believed that I should die. I never knew whether it
+was my father or my brother sent for Mr. Boyce. My brother boasted
+afterwards that it was he made him relieve them of the baby. And I--I did
+not die, you know. When I began to be well again my baby was gone. My
+father lay dying then. He would not see me. My brother was the head of
+the family, and he--I could not stay there. I tried to find Mr. Boyce,
+but he had left the regiment. He had gone to Holland, they said, after
+the Duke of Monmouth. I could do nothing. And my brother had told me that
+Mr. Boyce would soon find a way to be rid of my baby. I--I believed that
+he had. I never saw Harry again till--you know. I never saw his father
+till that day at Lady Waverton's. He told me afterwards that they had
+said to him I was dying, and he supposed me dead. I believe that is
+true. He would not have troubled himself with the child else."
+
+"Oh, Weston, dear," Alison murmured, and caressed her.
+
+Mrs. Weston pushed back the hair from her wrinkled brow. "Mr. Boyce
+promised me that Harry need know nothing of me now. I do not know if he
+has kept his word about that."
+
+"There's nothing about Harry that is not safe with me," Alison said. "Oh,
+my dear, now I know where Harry has his strength from and his
+gentleness."
+
+Mrs. Weston looked at her in a puzzled fashion. "I wonder what he is
+doing now?" she said wearily. "I think I have told you everything,
+Alison. Oh! Your father. Your father was very kind to me. When I did not
+know what to do--I had no money left--they gave me five pounds--I went to
+him. He used to come to my father's house, you know, when he had business
+in Kingston. He used to go all over the country about his trading. My
+father said he was a godless man, but he was always kind to me. I told
+him everything. He took me into his house, and indeed I did not know
+where to go for food. I was your mother's servant while she lived, but I
+think she doubted me. Your father never told her anything, and she--but
+she let me be."
+
+"Oh, Weston, Weston," Alison said. "And you have spent all your life
+caring for me."
+
+"There was nothing else to do. But I was glad to do that." She looked
+at the girl with strange, puzzled, wistful eyes and saw Alison's eyes
+full of tears. She put out her hand shyly, awkwardly, and touched
+Alison's cheek.
+
+Alison smiled, laughed with a sob in her voice. "It is a long while since
+I cried," she said, and put her arms round Mrs. West on and laid her head
+on Mrs. Weston's bosom and cried indeed.
+
+Mrs. Weston held her close. "Alison! But this isn't like you."
+
+"Indeed it is," Alison sobbed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+EMOTIONS BY MR. WAVERTON
+
+
+You behold Mr. Waverton exhibiting a high impatience. He was alone in the
+best room of the "Peacock" at Islington, a well-looking place after its
+severe old oak fashion. Disordered food upon the table showed that Mr.
+Waverton had been trying to eat with little success. Mr. Waverton's hat
+upon one chair, his whip upon another, and his cloak tumbled inelegantly
+over a third proved that he was not himself. For he was born to treat his
+clothes with respect. Mr. Waverton would be jumping up to look out of the
+window, flounce down again in his chair to drink wine and stare with
+profound meaning at the table, start up and stride to the hearth and
+glower down at its emptiness--and repeat the motions in a different
+order. He must be theatrical even without an audience.
+
+But he had some excuse for his uneasiness. It was the evening of his
+conversation with my Lord Sunderland, and that fiasco had stimulated him,
+you know, to a grand exploit. He was waiting for news of it.
+
+The twilight darkened early. Mr. Waverton pushed the window open wider,
+and leaned out only to come in again in a hurry as if he were afraid of
+being seen. The room was close, and he wiped his large brow and flung
+himself down and drank. There was a dull sound of thunder rolling far
+away. In a little while came the beat of rain--slow, big drops. That was
+soon over. Then lightning stabbed into the room, and the storm broke.
+
+Candles were brought to Mr. Waverton's petulant appeal, and an excited
+maid-servant bustled and blundered over clearing his table with pious
+invocations at each thunder-clap. She fretted Mr. Waverton, who
+admonished her and made her worse.
+
+Upon him and her there came a man cloaked from heel to eye, streaming
+rain from every angle. He shook a shower from his hat. "Hell! What a
+night," says he, breathless. "Save you, squire!"
+
+"Begone, girl! Begone, I say. Od's life, leave us, do you hear?" says Mr.
+Waverton, in much agitation.
+
+"Bring us a noggin of rum, Sukey, darling," says the wet gentleman,
+dragging himself out of his sodden cloak. He flung it upon Mr.
+Waverton's.
+
+"Run, girl!" says Mr. Waverton, in a terrible voice. "Go, you fool." He
+advanced upon her, and she stopped gaping, and got herself out with a
+great clatter of crockery.
+
+"Od burn and blast it! I want it," says the wet gentleman, and collapsed
+into a chair. "I believe you, squire. I want it."
+
+"What is the news with you?" Mr. Waverton said.
+
+"Od's bones, ha' you got the megs? The megs, I say. Oh, rot you, the
+ready, the hundred guineas?"
+
+"Is it done then?" Mr. Waverton's voice dropped.
+
+"Out with the cole, burn you."
+
+Mr. Waverton put a bag of money down on the table. The man snatched at
+it, tore it open, and began to count. "Is it done, Ned, I say?" Mr.
+Waverton cried.
+
+Ned showed some broken teeth. "I believe you, by God. He has it. He's
+dead meat. Two irons through and through his guts."
+
+Mr. Waverton flung back in his chair. "How then?" he said, in a low
+voice. "Ned--was it in fight? You brought him into a fight?" Ned went
+on counting the guineas, and sometimes tried one in his yellow teeth.
+"Oh, have done with that!" Mr. Waverton cried. "They come straight
+from my goldsmith, man. Tell me--you said you would force a fight on
+him. Did he--"
+
+"Lay your life!" Ned grinned. "There was a fight, sure. Old Ben knows
+that, by God. Aye, aye, you're fond of fighting ain't you, squire?"
+
+"I fight with gentlemen, sirrah," says Mr. Waverton. "For such base
+rogues as this fellow, I must provide otherwise."
+
+"Provide my breeches!" says Ned coarsely, and swept up his money.
+"Where's that damned rum?"
+
+"You may take it in the tap." Mr. Waverton rose. "Nay, she'll bring it.
+Nay, but, Ned--how did he take it?"
+
+"Rot you, how would you take an iron in your gizzard?"
+
+"He said nothing?"
+
+"Now, stap me, do you think we waited for him to say his prayers?"
+
+"Prayers!" says Mr. Waverton grandly, "They would little avail him."
+
+"Well now, burn me, you're a saint yourself, ain't you?"
+
+The rum arrived, and the servant, with frightened eyes upon the
+bedraggled Ned, went stumbling out of the room again. "You are
+impertinent, sirrah," says Mr. Waverton. "The fellow well deserved his
+end. I may tell you that I was advised to deal with him thus privately by
+a noble lord in high place."
+
+"Then it's worth more than a hundred megs."
+
+"You have your pay, I believe. I am satisfied with you."
+
+"Damn your airs," says Ned, but something awed by this parade. "Well, I
+must quit."
+
+"It is better," Mr. Waverton agreed.
+
+"Oh! There was a letter for my gentleman at his tavern. We pouched that
+while we were waiting for him. D'ye care for it? It's a pretty, tender
+thing. I reckon it's cheap for another five pieces."
+
+"You are a scoundrel," said Mr. Waverton, and tossed another guinea on
+the table.
+
+"Pot to you," says Ned, but slapped down the letter. "Well, I'll march.
+Maybe you'll have some more in my way. I won't forget you, squire," and
+out he went.
+
+Mr. Waverton, left alone, fingered the letter contemptuously. His great
+mind was indeed possessed by thoughts of victory. He had hated Harry
+rarely with the chief count in his enmity that Harry was a low fellow,
+hireling, menial. He could have borne defeat with some grace, he might
+even have sought no revenge for being made ridiculous, if the offender
+had been of a higher station than his own. But such insolence from a
+pauper! The fellow must needs be crushed like an insect. Only such
+ignominious extinction could satisfy Mr. Waverton's dignity. He inclined
+to despise himself for a shadow of human concern about the manner of
+Harry's death. Faith, it was an extravagance of chivalry to desire that
+the rogue should have had a chance to fight--that generous chivalry which
+had ever been his bane. He felt nothing but exultation at the issue. The
+wretched creature had been properly punished--stamped out by knaves of
+his own class in a vulgar street brawl--a dirty hole-and-corner end.
+Egad, my lord was very right. These petty, shabby knaves should be dealt
+with privately. Mr. Waverton found revenge very sweet.
+
+So Mr. Harry Boyce had gone to his account, and Alison was happily
+delivered. Dear child! Mr. Waverton felt a pleasant warmth of heroism
+steal over him, felt himself a knight-errant rescuing his lady from the
+powers of darkness. Dear Alison! She was free now. To be sure, she need
+not be told the manner of the deliverance. That would be an outrage on
+her delicacy. Enough for her that the cunning wretch who had cozened her
+was dead, and she a happy widow. She had but to show a pretty penitence,
+and Mr. Waverton proposed to be magnanimous. The prospect much pleased
+him. He saw himself grandly accepting her; permitting her to be very
+tender; wittily, but with a touch of magnificence, restraining her from
+too much humility....
+
+He came out of this golden dream in the end, and was conscious again of
+the letter, and sneered at it. A nasty, infected thing, to be sure,
+damp and filthy from Ned's handling. What was it the fellow said? A
+tender composition? Pah, some blowsy paramour of the knave Boyce. But,
+perhaps it would be well that Alison should know the fellow had
+paramours in his own class. She ought to be made to feel how low she
+had sunk by yielding to him.
+
+Mr. Waverton opened the letter and saw Alison's writing:
+
+"MR. BOYCE,--I desire that you would come to me at Highgate. I have
+to-day heard from Geoffrey Waverton what you must instantly know. And the
+truth is, I cannot be content till I speak with you. But I would not have
+you come for this my asking. Pray, believe it is urgent for us both that
+we meet, and I do require it of you, not desiring of you what you may
+have no mind to, but to be honest with you, and lest that should befall
+which I hope you would not have me bear.
+
+"A."
+
+Mr. Waverton read with swelling eyes.
+
+It was a little while before the meaning came home to him. He was never
+quick. Then (a sin to which he was not prone) he used oaths. The
+treacherous, besotted woman! She was still craving for her shabby lover,
+then. She offered a fair face to her too generous, too faithful Mr.
+Waverton, only to obtain his confidence and betray him again. Egad, she
+was too base. Rotten at the very heart of her. Why, some women must lust
+after a low, common fellow, as dogs after dirt. So she would have saved
+her Boyce from his master's punishment? Mr. Waverton laughed. She would
+have had him back in her arms again? Mr. Waverton continued to laugh.
+
+But faith, she went too far when she tried to trick Mr. Waverton a second
+time. Much she had gained by her treachery. Her fine husband was out of
+her reach now. It would be a pleasure to advise her of his death. Nay,
+faith, a duty. The miserable creature had been saved from herself. She
+must be shown that--oh delicately, with something of a cold grandeur, a
+touch of irony maybe, but always in a lofty manner as became one who
+moved upon heights far above her grovelling soul. Mr. Waverton, for all
+his high irony, rode back home through the dregs of the storm very
+furiously.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+CAPTAIN McBEAN TAKES HORSE
+
+
+Captain McBean, healthily red and brown, showed no sign of having been
+out of bed all night. From cold water and a razor in his own lodgings he
+came back at a round pace to St. Martin's Lane. He found his aide, Mr.
+Mackenzie, taking the air on the doorstep of the Blue House, and rebuked
+him. "I bade ye bide with the lad, Donald."
+
+"The surgeon has him in hand, sir."
+
+"_Tiens_. He's a brisk fellow, that Rolfe."
+
+"I'm thinking Mr. Boyce will need him."
+
+"Eh, is there anything new?"
+
+"I would not say so. But he's sore hurt. And I'm thinking he takes it
+hard."
+
+"Aye, you're the devil of a thinker, Donald." Captain McBean grinned.
+"And the Colonel, has he made a noise?"
+
+"He's in the way of calling for liquors, but he's peaceable, the
+women say."
+
+"You'll go get your breakfast and be back again. And bring O'Connor with
+you. I'll hope to need the two of you." Captain McBean relieved guard on
+the doorstep till the surgeon came down. "I'm obliged to you, Mr. Rolfe.
+What do you make of him?"
+
+"Egad, Captain, you're devoted. Why, the old gentleman has put in for
+some fever, but I doubt he will do well enough."
+
+"Be sure of it. What of the young one?"
+
+Mr. Rolfe pursed his lip. "Faith, there's no more amiss. But--but--why,
+he was hard hit, I grant you--but you might take the young one for the
+old one. D'ye follow me? The lad hath no vigour in him."
+
+McBean nodded. "I'll be talking to him, by your leave."
+
+"Od's life, I would not talk long. I don't like it, Captain, and there's
+the truth. Go easy with him. I will be here again to-day."
+
+Captain McBean went up to the room where Harry lay as white as his
+pillows. A woman was feeding him out of a cup. "You made it damned salt,
+your broth," says Harry, in a feeble disgust.
+
+"'Tis what you lack, look you." Captain McBean sat himself on the bed and
+took the cup and waved the woman off. "'Tis the natural, hale salinity
+and the sanguineous part which you lose by a wound, and for lack of it
+you are thus faint. Therefore we do ever administer great possets of salt
+to the wounded, and--"
+
+"And pickle me before I be dead," says Harry. "Be hanged to your jargon."
+
+"You'll take another sup, my lad, if I hold your long nose to it. And you
+may suck your orange after."
+
+Harry made a wry face, swallowed a mouthful and lay back out of breath.
+After a while, "You were here all night, weren't you?" he said.
+
+"I am body physician to the family of Boyce, _mon brave_."
+
+"My father?"
+
+"Has a hole in his shoulder, praise God, and a damned paternal temper. He
+will do well enough."
+
+"How do you come into it?" McBean grinned. "Who were they?"
+
+"I am here to talk to you, _mon cher_. You will not talk to me, for it is
+disintegrating to your tissues. _Allons_, compose yourself and attend.
+Now I come into it, if you please, out of gratitude. Mr. Boyce--I have it
+in command from His Majesty to present you with his thanks for very
+gallant and faithful service."
+
+"Oh, the boy got off then?"
+
+"King James is returned to France, sir," says McBean with dignity.
+"Look 'e, tie up your tongue. His Majesty charged me to put this in
+your hands and to advise you that he would ever have in memory your
+resource and spirit and your loyalty. Which I do with a great
+satisfaction, Mr. Boyce."
+
+Harry fingered a pretty toy of a watch circled with diamonds, and wrought
+with a monogram in diamonds and sapphires. "Poor lad," says he.
+
+"It's his own piece and was his father's, I believe. _Pardieu_, sir,
+there's many will envy you."
+
+Harry's head went back on its pillows. "It's a queer taste."
+
+"Mr. Boyce, you may count upon it that when His Majesty is established in
+power, he--"
+
+"He will have as bad a memory as the rest of his family. Bah, what does
+it matter? You are talking of the millennium."
+
+"You will talk, will you?" says McBean. "I'll gag you, _mordieu_, if you
+answer me back again. Come, sirrah, you know the King better. It's a
+noble, generous lad. So leave the Whiggish sneers to your father. So much
+for that. Now, _mon ami_, you have put me under a great obligation. It
+was a rare piece of work, and to be frank, I did not think you had it in
+you. But I did count upon you as a gentleman of high honour, and,
+_pardieu_, I count myself very fortunate I applied to you. I speak for my
+party, Mr. Boyce, when I thank you and promise you any service of mine."
+
+Harry mumbled something like, "Damn your eloquence."
+
+But McBean was not to be put off. "You will like to know that the King
+when he was quit of Marlborough--egad, the old villain hath been a
+gentleman in this business--made straight for me and was instant that I
+should concern myself for you. I held it my first duty to get His Majesty
+out of the country. Between ourselves, I was never in love with this plan
+of palace trickery and Madame Anne. But the thing was offered us, and we
+could not show the white feather. _Bien_, His Majesty took assurance from
+Marlborough of your safety, so I had no great alarm for you. I could not
+be aware of your private feuds. But now, _mordieu_, I make them my own. I
+promise you, it touches me nearly that you should be hacked down, and
+egad, before my eyes."
+
+Harry tried to raise himself and said eagerly, "Who was in it? Who
+were they?"
+
+Captain McBean responded with some more of the salt broth. "Now I'll
+confess that I had some doubts of your father. As soon as I was back in
+London I made haste to find you. I was waiting at that tavern of yours
+when I heard the scuffle. You were down before I could reach you, and
+there was your father fighting across you most heroical. Faith, I did not
+know the old gentleman had it in him. He had pinked one, I believe, but
+he is slow, and they were too many for him. He took it badly in the
+shoulder as I came. But they were not workmen. I put one out at the first
+thrust, and the rogues would not stand. I tickled one in the ham as he
+ran, but missed the sinew in his fat. So it ended. Now I'll confess I did
+the old gentleman a wrong. I guessed the business might be one of his
+damned superfine plots. It would be like him to have you finished while
+he made a brag of fighting for you. But I was wrong. _Mordieu_, I believe
+he has a kindness for you, Harry."
+
+"What?" says Harry, startled by the name.
+
+"Oh, _mon ami_, you must let me be kindly too. Egad, you command my
+emotions, sir. No, the old gentleman hath his humanity. He would have
+died for you, Harry, and faith he is so rheumatic he nearly did. No, it
+was not he played this damned game. Who d'ye think it was that I put on
+his back? That rascal Ben--you remember Ben of the North Road? I put the
+villain to the question who set him on you. _Bien_ he was hired to it by
+that fine fellow Waverton."
+
+"Geoffrey!" Harry gasped.
+
+"Even so. Now, Harry, what has Master Geoffrey Waverton against you? If
+he wanted to murder your father I could understand it. That affair at
+Pontoise is matter enough for a life or two. Though he should take it
+gentlemanly. But why must he murder you?"
+
+"I am not dead yet," said Harry, and his mouth set.
+
+Captain McBean laughed. "Not by fifty year:" and he contemplated Harry's
+pale drawn face with benign approval. "But why does Mr. Waverton want you
+dead now?"
+
+"That's my affair," said Harry.
+
+"_Enfin_." Captain McBean shrugged, with a twist of the lip and a cock
+of the eye.
+
+"Is there more of that broth?" says Harry.
+
+Captain McBean administered it. "I go get another cup, Harry." He nodded
+and went out.
+
+His two aides, Mackenzie and O'Connor, were waiting below. "Donald, go
+up. The same orders. None but Rolfe is to come to him without you
+stand by. And shorten your damned long face, if you can. Patrick, we
+take horse."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+PERPLEXITIES OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+
+Captain McBean and Mr. O'Connor halted steaming horses before the door of
+Tetherdown. The butler announced that Mr. Waverton had gone out, and then
+impressed by the evidence of haste and the martial elegance of McBean,
+suggested that my lady might receive the gentleman.
+
+"How? The animal has a mother?" says Me Bean in French, and shrugged and
+beckoned the butler closer. "Now, my friend, could you make a guess where
+I should look for Mr. Waverton?" and money passed.
+
+"Sir, Mr. Waverton rides over sometimes to the Hall at Highgate. Miss
+Lam--Mrs. Boyce's house;" the butler looked knowing.
+
+"Mrs. Boyce? Eh, is that Colonel Boyce's lady?"
+
+The butler smiled discreetly. "No, sir, to be sure. Young Boyce--young
+Mr. Boyce, sir."
+
+Captain McBean wheeled round in such a hurry that the butler was almost
+overthrown. They clattered off.
+
+It was not till they were riding through the wood that McBean spoke:
+"Patrick, my man, would you say that Harry Boyce is the man to marry
+wisely and well?"
+
+"Faith, I believe he would not be doing anything wisely. That same is
+his charm."
+
+"_Tiens_, it begins now to be ugly. Why must the boy be married at all,
+_mordieu_?"
+
+"It will be in his nature," says O'Connor. "And likely to a shrew."
+
+"If that were all! Ah, bah, they shall have no satisfaction in it. But no
+more will I..."
+
+There were at the Hall two women who had almost become calm by mingling
+their distress and their tears. It's believed that they slept in each
+other's arms, and slept well enough. In the morning another messenger was
+sent off to the Long Acre tavern. If he came back with no news it was
+agreed they should move into town. They said no more of their fears. Each
+had some fancy that she was putting on a brave face for the other's sake.
+There is no doubt that they found the stress easier to bear for
+consciousness of each other's endurance.
+
+So Mr. Hadley and his Susan were received by an atmosphere of gentle
+peace. Much to Mr. Hadley's surprise, who would complain that venture
+into Alison's house was much like a post over against the Irish Brigade;
+for a man never knew how she would break out upon him, but could count
+upon it that she would be harassing.
+
+"We are so glad," says Susan.
+
+"She loves to march her prisoner through the town. It's a simple,
+brutish taste."
+
+"Oh. I am so, I believe," says Susan, and contemplated Mr. Hadley with
+placid satisfaction.
+
+"She is too honest for you, Mr. Hadley," Alison said.
+
+"Oh Lud, yes, ma'am. The mass of her overwhelms me, and it's all plain
+virtue--a heavy, solemn thing. Look you, Susan, you embarrass madame with
+your revelations."
+
+"It is curious. He is always ill at ease when I am with him."
+
+"Because you make me tedious, child."
+
+"That's your vanity, Mr. Hadley." Alison tried to keep in tune with them.
+
+"Look you, Susan, I am cashiered by marriage. Once I was Charles. Now I
+am without honour."
+
+"Mr. Geoffrey Waverton," quoth the butler.
+
+Alison's hand went to her breast and she was white.
+
+"Dear Geoffrey!" Mr. Hadley murmured. "I do not know when last I saw dear
+Geoffrey," and he turned a sardonic face to the door.
+
+Susan leaned forward. "Alison, dear--if you choose--" she began in
+a whisper.
+
+"Sit still," Alison muttered. "Stay, stay."
+
+Mr. Waverton came in with measured pomp, stopped short and surveyed the
+company and at last made his bow. "Madame, your most obedient. I fear
+that I come untimely."
+
+Alison could not find her voice, so it was Mr. Hadley who answered, "Lud,
+Geoffrey dear, you're never out of season: like mutton."
+
+"I give Mrs. Hadley joy," says Geoffrey. "Such wit must be rare company."
+
+Alison was staring at him. "You have something to say to me? You may
+speak out. There are no secrets here."
+
+"Is it so, faith? Egad, what friendship! But you have always been
+fortunate. And in fact I bring you news of more fortune. You are free
+of your Mr. Boyce, ma'am. You are done with him. He has been picked up
+dead." He smiled at Alison, Alison white and still and dumb. Mrs.
+Weston gave a cry and fell back in her chair and her fingers plucked at
+her dress.
+
+Mr. Hadley strode across and stood very close to Geoffrey. "Take care,"
+says he in a low voice.
+
+"Well. Tell all your story," Alison said.
+
+"They found him lying in the kennel in Long Acre," Geoffrey smiled. "Oh,
+there was some brawl, it seems. He was set upon by his tavern cronies in
+a quarrel about a wench he had. A very proper end."
+
+"Geoffrey, you are a cur," says Mr. Hadley in his ear.
+
+"You are lying," Alison cried.
+
+Mr. Waverton laughed and waved his hand. "Oh, ma'am, you are a chameleon.
+The other day you desired nothing better than monsieur's demise. Now at
+the news of it you grow venomous. I vow I cannot keep pace with your
+changes. I must withdraw from your intimacy. 'Tis too exacting for my
+poor vigour. Madame, your most humble."
+
+"Not yet," Alison cried.
+
+"Let him go, ma'am," Mr. Hadley broke in sharply. "Go home, sirrah.
+You'll not wait long before you hear from me."
+
+"From which hand?" Geoffrey flicked at the empty sleeve. "Nay, faith, it
+suits madame well, the left-handed champion."
+
+Mr. Hadley turned on his heel. "Pray, ma'am, leave us. This is become
+my affair."
+
+"I have not done with him yet," Alison said.
+
+But the door was opened for the servant to say: "Captain Hector McBean,
+Mr. Patrick O'Connor," and with a clank of spurs and something of a
+military swagger the little man and the long man marched in.
+
+Captain McBean swept a glance round the room.
+
+"So," says he with satisfaction and made a right guess at Alison. "Mrs.
+Boyce, I am necessitated to present myself. Captain McBean."
+
+"What, more champions!" Geoffrey laughed. "Oh, ma'am, you have too
+general a charity. My sympathy is in your way," and he made his bow and
+was going off.
+
+"_Mordieu_, you relieve me marvellously," says McBean, and O'Connor put
+his back against the door.
+
+Mr. Waverton waved O'Connor aside.
+
+"You'll be Mr. Waverton?" said O'Connor.
+
+"Od's life, sir, stand out of my way." But O'Connor laughed and McBean
+tapped the magnificent shoulder. Mr. Waverton swung round.
+
+"Hark in your ear," says McBean. "You're a lewd, cowardly scoundrel, Mr.
+Waverton."
+
+Mr. Waverton glared at him, stepped back and turned on Alison. "Pray,
+ma'am, control your bullies. I desire to leave your house!"
+
+"Let him be, sir," Alison stood up. "Leave us, if you please, I have to
+speak with him."
+
+"You have not," McBean frowned. "The affair is out of your hands. Come,
+sir, march. There's a pretty piece of turf beyond the gates. Your friend
+there may serve you."
+
+"Not I, sir," Mr. Hadley put in. "I have myself a meeting to require of
+Mr. Waverton."
+
+"So? I like the air here better and better, _pardieu_. Well, Mr.
+Waverton, we'll e'en walk out alone."
+
+"Your bluster won't serve you, sirrah. If you be a gentleman, which you
+make incredible, you may proceed in order and I'll consider if I may do
+you the honour to meet you."
+
+"Gentleman? Bah, I am Hector McBean, Captain in Bouffiers' regiment.
+Come, sir, now are you warmer?" He struck Mr. Waverton across the eyes.
+
+Mr. Waverton, drawing back, turned again upon Alison: "My God, did you
+bring your bullies here to murder me?"
+
+"I did not bid you here," Alison said.
+
+"_Lache_," says Mr. O'Connor with a shrug.
+
+"_En effet_," says McBean and sat down. "Observe, Waverton: I have given
+you the chance to take a clean death. You have not the courage for it.
+_Tant mieux_. You may now hang."
+
+Mr. Waverton again made a move for the door, but Mr. O'Connor stood
+solidly in the way. "Attention, Waverton. You have bungled your business,
+as usual. Your fellow Ned Boon hath been taken and lies in Newgate. He
+has confessed that he and his gang were hired for this murder by a
+certain Geoffrey Waverton."
+
+"It is a lie!"
+
+"Waverton--I have a whip as well as a sword."
+
+"I do not concern myself with you, sir," says Mr. Waverton with
+dignity. "You are repeating a lesson, I see. But I advise you, I shall
+not permit myself to be slandered. This fellow Ned Bone--Boon--what is
+his vulgar name? I know nothing of him. If he pretends to any knowledge
+of me, he lies."
+
+"You told me that you had hired men to spy upon Mr. Boyce," Alison said.
+
+Mr. Waverton laughed. "Oh, ma'am, I thank you for a flash of honesty.
+Here's the truth then. In madame's interest, I had arranged with her that
+a party of fellows should watch her scurvy husband. She suspected him of
+various villainies, infidelity, what you will. And, egad, I dare to say
+she was right. But I have no more concern in it. So you may his back to
+your employers, Captain Mac what's your name, and advise them that I am
+not to be bullied. I shall know how to defend myself."
+
+Alison came nearer Captain McBean. "Sir, this is a confection of lies. It
+is true the man told me he was planning a watch on Mr. Boyce. But not of
+my will. And when I knew I did instantly give Mr. Boyce warning."
+
+"I shall deal with you in good time," McBean frowned. "_Dieu de dieu!_ I
+do not excuse you. Attention, Waverton! You lie stupidly. Your bullies,
+_mordieu_, blunder in your own style. It would not content them to murder
+Mr. Boyce. They must have his father too. They could not do their
+business quietly nor finish it. The rogue Ben was caught and the Colonel
+has only a hole in his shoulder. You may know that he is not the man to
+forgive you for it. So, Waverton. You have suborned murder and furnished
+evidence to hang you for it. You must meddle with Colonel Boyce to make
+sure that his Whiggish party who hold the government shall not spare you.
+You set every Jacobite against you when you struck at Harry. However
+things go now there'll be those in power urgent to hang you. Go home and
+wait till the runners take you off to Newgate. March!"
+
+Mr. O'Connor opened the door with alacrity.
+
+"I am not afraid of you," Waverton cried. "And you, madame, you, the
+widow--be sure if I am attacked, your loose treachery shall not win you
+off. What I have done--you know well it was done for you and in commerce
+with you." Mr. O'Connor took him by the arm. "Don't presume to touch me!"
+he called out, trembling with rage. Mr. O'Connor propelled him out.
+
+"I believe Patrick will cut the coat off his back," said McBean pensively
+and then laughed a little. He brushed his hand over his face and stood up
+and marched on Alison. "Now for you," he said. "I beg leave of the
+company." He made them a bow and waved them out of the room.
+
+"Sir, Mr. Boyce?" Mrs. Weston said faintly.
+
+"Madame, Mr. Boyce is not dead. He lies wounded. I make no apology,
+_pardieu_! It is imperative to frighten the Waverton out of the
+country--since he would not stand up to be killed. You, madame," he
+turned frowning upon Alison, "you must have him no more in your
+neighbourhood."
+
+Alison bent her head. Mr. Hadley came forward. "Captain McBean, you take
+too much upon yourself."
+
+"I'll answer for it at my leisure, sir."
+
+"Pray go, Charles," Alison said gently. So they went out, Mrs.
+Weston upon Susan's arm, and Captain McBean and Alison were left
+alone, the fierce little lean man stretching every inch of him
+against her rich beauty.
+
+"You do me some wrong, sir," Alison said.
+
+"Is it possible?" McBean's chest swelled to the sneer.
+
+"Pray, sir, don't scold. It passes me by. Nay, I cannot answer you. I
+have no defence, I believe. Be sure that you can say nothing to make my
+hurt worse."
+
+"How long shall we go on talking about you, madame?"
+
+Alison flushed dark, and turned away and muttered something.
+
+"What now?" McBean said. In another moment he saw that she was crying.
+Some satisfaction perhaps, no pity, softened his stare....
+
+She turned, making no pretence to hide her tears. "I beg of you--take me
+to Mr. Boyce."
+
+"I said, madame, Mr. Boyce is not yet dead." The sharp, precise voice
+spared her nothing. "I do not know whether he will live." Alison gave a
+choking cry. "I do not now know whether he would desire to live."
+
+"What do you mean?" A madness of fear, of love perhaps, distorted her
+face.
+
+"You well know. When I rode out this morning, I had it in mind to kill
+the Waverton and conduct you to Mr. Boyce. But I did not guess that
+Waverton would refuse to be killed like a gentleman or that I should find
+you engaged in the rogue's infamy."
+
+"But that is his lie! Ah, you must know that it is a lie. You heard how
+he turned on me, and his vileness."
+
+"_Bien_, you have played fast and loose with him. I allow that. It does
+not commend you to me, madame."
+
+"I'll not bear it," Alison cried wildly. "Oh, sir, you have no right. Mr.
+Boyce would never endure you should treat me so."
+
+"_Dieu de dieu_! Would you trade upon Harry's gentleness now? Aye,
+madame, he would not treat you so, _mordieu_. He would see nothing, know
+nothing, believe nothing. And let you make a mock of him again. But if
+you please, I stand between him and you."
+
+"You have no right," Alison muttered.
+
+"It is you who have put me there. You, madame, when you played him false
+with this Waverton."
+
+"That is a lie--a lie," she cried.
+
+"Oh, content you. You are all chastity. I do not doubt it. But you drove
+Harry away from you. You admitted your Waverton to intimacy--you let him
+hope--believe--bah, what does it matter? You were in his secrets. You
+knew he put bullies upon Harry. Now he has failed and you are in a fright
+and want your Harry again. Permit me, madame, not to admire you."
+
+"What do you want of me?" Alison said miserably.
+
+"I cannot tell. I want to know what I am to do with Harry. And you--you
+are another wound."
+
+Alison shuddered. "For God's sake take me to him. I will content him."
+
+"Yes. For how long?"
+
+"Oh, I deserve it all. I cannot answer you. And yet you are wrong. I am
+not such as you think me. I have never had anything but contempt for Mr.
+Waverton. If he were not what he is, he must have known that. He came to
+me after I left Harry. He told me that he was having Harry spied upon.
+The moment he was gone I wrote to Harry and gave him warning and begged
+him come back to me. He has never answered me. And I--oh--am I to speak
+of Harry and me?"
+
+"If you could I should not much believe you. From the first, madame, I
+have believed you."
+
+"It was I who drove him away from me. I have been miserable for it ever
+since. I humbled myself."
+
+Captain McBean held up his hand. "I still believe you. Pray, order
+your coach."
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"He lies at his father's lodging. Observe, madame: I have said--he is
+not yet dead. Whether he lives rests, I believe to God, upon what you
+may be to him."
+
+"Then he will be well enough," she sobbed as she laughed.
+
+"Oh! I believe in your power," says McBean with a twist of a smile.
+
+She stayed a moment by the door and flung her arms wide. "What I am--it
+is all for him."
+
+Captain McBean left alone, took snuff. "A splendid wild cat--and that
+mouse of a Harry," says he.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+REMORSE OF COLONEL BOYCE
+
+
+Captain McBean was strutting to and fro for the benefit of his impatience
+when Mr. O'Connor returned to him. "Patrick, you look morose. Had he the
+legs of you?"
+
+"He had not," says O'Connor, nursing his hand. "But he had a
+beautiful nose. Sure, it was harder than you would think. And I have
+sprained my thumb."
+
+"What, did he fight?"
+
+"He did not--saving the tongue of him. But I had broke my whip upon him,
+so I broke his nose to be even. Egad, he was beautiful before and behind.
+He cannot show this long while. Neither behind nor before, faith. What
+will he do, d'ye think?"
+
+"Oh Lud, he'll not face it out. He would dream of hangmen. He'll take the
+waters. He'll go the grand tour. D'ye know, Patrick, there's a masterly
+touch in old Boyce. To choose that oaf for his decoy at Pontoise! Who
+could guess at danger in him? No wonder Charles Middleton saw no guile!
+Yet, you observe, the creature's full of venom."
+
+"He bleeds like a pig," says Mr. O'Connor. "What will we be waiting
+for, sir?"
+
+"The lady."
+
+"She goes to Harry? Oh, he's the lucky one. What a Venus it is!"
+
+"Aye, aye. She should have married you, Patrick. You would have
+ridden her."
+
+"Ah now, don't destroy me with envy and desires," says Mr. O'Connor.
+"But, sure, there was another, a noble fat girl. Will she be bespoke?"
+
+"She belongs to the one-armed hero."
+
+"Maybe she could do with another. There's enough of her for two. Oh, come
+away, sir, before I danger my soul."
+
+They heard the wheels of the coach and marched out. Alison was coming
+downstairs with Mrs. Weston. "What now?" says McBean glowering. "Do you
+need a duenna to watch you with your husband?"
+
+"Madame is Harry's mother, sir," Alison said.
+
+For once Captain McBean was disconcerted. "A thousand pardons," says he,
+and with much ceremony put Mrs. Weston into the coach.
+
+As they rode after it, "You fight too fast, sir," says O'Connor with a
+grin. "I have remarked it before."
+
+Captain McBean 'was still something out of countenance. "Who would have
+thought he had a mother here?" he growled.
+
+"Oh, faith, you did not suppose the old Colonel brought him forth--like
+Jove plucking Minerva out of his swollen head."
+
+"I did not, Patrick, you loon. But I did not guess his mother would be
+here with this gorgeous madame wife."
+
+"Fie now, is it the Lord God don't advise you of everything? 'Tis an
+indignity, faith."
+
+Captain Me Bean swore at him in a friendly way, and they jogged on
+through the Islington lanes....
+
+So after a while it happened that Colonel Boyce, raising a hot and angry
+head at the creature who dared open his bedroom door, found himself
+looking at Mrs. Weston. "Ods my life! Kate! What a pox do you want
+here?" says he.
+
+"You are hurt. I thought you would want nursing."
+
+"I do not want nursing, damme. How did you hear of the business?"
+
+"That Scotch captain rode out to tell us."
+
+"Od burn the fellow! Humph. No. Maybe he is no fool, neither. Us? Who is
+us, Kate? Mrs. Alison?"
+
+"She is gone up to Harry now."
+
+Colonel Boyce whistled. "Come up and we will show you a thing, eh? That
+is Scripture, Kate. You used to have your mouth full of Scripture."
+
+"You put me out of favour with that."
+
+"Let it be, can't you? What, they will make it up, then?"
+
+"Does that hurt you? Indeed, they would never have quarrelled but for
+you."
+
+"Oh, aye, blame it on me. I am the devil, faith. Come, ma'am, what have I
+done to the pretty dears? She's a warm piece and Harry's a milksop, and
+that's the whole of it."
+
+"With your tricks you made her think Harry was such as you are. And that
+wife you married came to Alison and told her that Harry was base-born."
+
+"Rot the shrew! She must meddle must she? Egad, she was always a blunder,
+Madame Rachel." He swore at her fully. "Bah, what though? Why should
+jolly Alison heed her?"
+
+"Alison knows everything now. I told her."
+
+"Egad, you go beyond me, Kate. You that made me swear none should ever
+know the boy was yours. You go and blab it out! Damn you for a woman."
+
+The woman looked at him strangely. "You have done that indeed," she said.
+
+"No, that's too bad. I vow it is." For once Colonel Boyce was stung. He
+fell silent and fidgeted, and made a long arm for the herb water by his
+bed. Mrs. Weston gave it him. "Let be, can't you?" he cried, and drank
+all the same. "Eh, Kate that came over my guard.... She has made you
+suffer, the shrew. Egad, I could whip her through the town for it."
+
+"Yes. Whip her."
+
+"Oh, what would you have?" Colonel Boyce shifted under a rueful air,
+strange in him. "I am what I am. I have had no luck in women. She was a
+blunder. And you--you have paid to say of me what you will. Egad, you
+have the chance now."
+
+"Are you in pain?"
+
+"Be hanged to pain! Don't gloat, Kate. That's not like you, at least."
+
+"Oh, I am sorry. I am sorry."
+
+"No, nor that neither. Damme, what should I be with you pitying me? Let
+it be. Come, you want something of me, I suppose. Something for your
+Harry, eh? What is it?"
+
+"I want nothing but that he should live. He has no need of you or me."
+
+"Oh Lud, he will live. But you were always full of fears."
+
+"Yes. You used to say that long ago."
+
+Colonel Boyce winced again. "Eh, you get in your thrusts, Kate, I swear I
+did what I could to save him."
+
+"I could not have borne to come to you else."
+
+"Humph. I see no good in your coming. There's little comfort for you or
+me in seeing each other. I suppose it's your damned duty."
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"Oh Lud, then begone and let's have done with it all."
+
+"I want to stay till you are well."
+
+"Aye, faith, it's comfortable to see me on my back and helpless."
+
+Mrs. Weston did not answer for a moment. She was busy with setting his
+table in order. "I want to have some right somewhere. She is with Harry."
+
+"By God, Kate, you're a good soul," Colonel Boyce cried.
+
+"I am not. I am jealous of her," Mrs. Weston said with a sob.
+
+"Does Harry know of you?"
+
+"What does it matter? He'll not care now."
+
+"Kate--come here, child."
+
+"No. No. I am not crying," Mrs. Weston said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+HARRY WAKES UP
+
+
+Harry lay asleep when Alison came into his room.
+
+She made sure of that and sat herself beside him to wait. It was not, you
+know, a thing which she did well. She looked down at him gravely.
+Afterwards Harry would accuse her that what first she felt was how little
+and miserable a man she had taken to herself.
+
+He lay there very still and his breath hardly stirred him. Indeed, the
+surgery of Mr. Rolfe had bound him up so tightly that he was in armour
+from waist to neck. After a moment, she started and trembled and bent
+over him and put her cheek close to his lips. She felt his breath and
+rose again slowly almost as pale as he. That cheating fear had stabbed
+cruelly, and still it would not let her be. His face was so thin, so
+white and utterly tired. The life was drained out of him....
+
+She sat beside him, still but for the beat of her bosom, and it seemed
+that the consciousness in her was falling from a height or galloping
+against the wind. She seemed to try to stop and could not.
+
+She tried to change the fashion of her thought and had no power in that
+either. It was a strange, half-angry, half-contemptuous pity that moved
+in her, and a fever of impatience. He was wicked to be struck down so,
+rent, impotent. Why must the wretch go plunging out into the world and
+measure himself against these swashbuckling conspirators? He had no
+equipment for it. He was fated to end it with disaster. Faith, it was a
+cruel folly to throw himself away and drag up her life by the roots as he
+fell. She needed him--needed him quick and eager, and there he lay, a
+shrunken thing that could use only gentleness, help, a tedious, trivial
+service like a child.
+
+He was humiliated, a condition not to be borne in her man. As she watched
+him, she saw Geoffrey Waverton rise between them, blusterous and
+menacing, and his lustiness mocked at the still, helpless body. But on
+that all other feeling was lost in a fever of hate of Mr. Waverton. He
+was branded with every contemptible sin that she knew, she ached to have
+him suffer, and (unaware of the contusions and extravasations
+administered by Mr. O'Connor) tried to console herself by recalling the
+ignominious condition of Geoffrey in the hands of the truculent gentlemen
+at Highgate. Bah, the coward was dishonoured for ever, at least. He would
+never dare show his face in town or country. How could he? Mr. Hadley
+would spit him like a joint. The good Charles! She found some consolation
+in the memory of Mr. Hadley's sardonic contempt. Nay, but the others,
+that fire-eating little Scotsman and his lank friend, they were of the
+same scornful mind about Mr. Waverton. His blusterous bullying went for
+nothing with them but to call for more disdain. They had no doubt that he
+cut a miserable figure, that it was he who was humiliated in the affair.
+And so all men would think, indeed. It was only a fool of a woman who
+could be imposed upon by his brag, only a mean, detestable woman who
+could suppose Harry defeated.
+
+Why, Harry must needs have done nobly to enlist these men on his side. He
+was nothing to Captain McBean, nothing but what he had done, and yet
+McBean took up his cause with a perfect devotion, cared for nothing but
+to punish his enemies, and to assure his safety. Faith, the little man
+would be as glad to thrash her as to overthrow Master Geoffrey. He had
+come near it, indeed. She smiled a little. The absurd imagination was not
+unpleasant. Monsieur was welcome to beat her if it would bring Harry any
+comfort. Aye, it would be very good for her. She would be glad to show
+Harry the stripes. Nay, but it was Harry who should beat her--only he
+never would. And these fantastics were swept away in a wave of
+tenderness.
+
+Mr. Harry was not good at making others suffer. He left it to his wife,
+poor lad, and she--she had done it greedily. Well. There was to be an end
+of that. Pray God he might ever be strong enough to hurt her. She bent
+over him in this queer mood, and her eyes were dim, and she kissed him,
+and whispered to herself--to him. Yes. She must make him hurt her. She
+must have pain of him to bear....
+
+Harry slept on. She began to caress his pillow, and crooned over him like
+a mother with her child, and found herself blushing and was still and
+silent again. Indeed, she was detestable. To make a show of fondling
+after having driven him to the edge of death! To chatter and flutter
+about him when he had no more than strength enough for sleep! Why, this
+was the very way for a light o' love. And, indeed, she was no better,
+wanting him only for her pleasure, for what he would give, watching
+greedily till he should be fit to serve her turn again. Yes, that was the
+only way of love Mrs. Alison understood.
+
+It was some satisfaction to scold herself, to make herself believe that
+she was vile. For she wanted to suffer, she wanted to be humbled. Not so
+much for the comfort of penance, not even for the luxury of sensation
+which makes self-torture pleasure, but that she might be sure of
+realizing her sins against the love which was now in command of all her
+being, and go on to serve it with a clean devotion. One thing only was
+worth doing, in one thing only could there be honour and joy, to make him
+welcome her and have delight in her... And so she fell among dreams....
+
+She saw something glitter on the table by the bed, and idly put out her
+hand for it. She found herself looking at the diamonds of the Pretender's
+watch. How did Harry come to such a gorgeous toy? J.R., the diamonds
+wrote. Who was J.R.?
+
+"Alison," Harry said.
+
+She started, stared at him, and stood up. His eyes were open, and he
+frowned a little.
+
+"Alison? It is you?" he said, and rubbed at his eyes.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Why have you come?"
+
+She fell on her knees by the bed. "Oh, Harry, Harry," she murmured, and
+hid her face.
+
+"Is it true?"
+
+"I will be true," she sobbed.
+
+"I want to see you."
+
+She showed him her face pale and wet with tears....
+
+After a while, "Why have you come?" he said again.
+
+"Harry, I knew about Geoffrey. He told me."
+
+"You--knew?"
+
+I wrote you warning. I begged you come back to me. Oh, Harry, Harry, you
+are proud."
+
+"I had no warning. Proud? Oh, yes, I am proud. What were you with
+Geoffrey?"
+
+"Harry! Oh, Harry! No, it's fair. Well. I tried to trick him for your
+sake to save you."
+
+"I am obliged for your care of me."
+
+She cried out "Ah, God," and hid her face again. Harry lay still and
+white as death.... "Oh, Harry, you torture me," she murmured. "You have
+the right. No man but you has ever had a thought of me. Harry--I want to
+pray you--oh, I want to lie at your feet. Only believe in me--use
+me--take me again."
+
+"I am a fool," Harry said, and she looked up and saw that he, too, was
+crying. "Oh, curse the wound," he said hoarsely. "Egad, I am damned
+feeble, child."
+
+"I love you, I love you," she sobbed, and pressed her face to his....
+"Oh, Harry, I am wicked."
+
+She raised herself. "You are hurt, and I wear you out."
+
+"That's a brag." Harry smiled faintly, "It takes more than you can give
+to kill me, ma'am."
+
+"Ah, don't."
+
+"Stand up and let me look at you." Which she did, and made parade of her
+beauty, smiling through tears. "Aye, you're a splendid woman," and his
+eyes brightened.
+
+She made him a curtsy. "It's at your will, sir." "Yes, and why? Why? What
+made you come back?"
+
+"My dear!" She held out her arms to him. "I have wanted you ever since I
+lost you. And now--now I am nothing unless you want me."
+
+"Oh, be easy. There is plenty of you, and I want it all."
+
+"Can you say so? Ah, Harry, you have known enough bad that's me, cruel
+and greedy and hard and cheating. I have always taken, and given
+nothing back."
+
+"Damn your humilities," Harry said.
+
+"Oh, sir, but I want them, my new humilities. I have nothing else to
+cover my nakedness."
+
+"You look better without them, ma'am."
+
+"Fie, I will stop your mouth." But it was a cup of herb water that she
+offered him instead of a kiss.
+
+"You are a cheat," Harry spluttered. "You presume on my infirmities."
+
+"No. No. I have made you talk too much. You must be still and rest
+again."
+
+"Burn your maternal care! I have hardly seen you yet a minute."
+
+"A minute! Oh!" She looked at the jewelled watch. "Aye, sir, an hour.
+And what's this pretty toy?"
+
+Harry laughed. "Why, now I have you. Sure, ma'am, it's a love token."
+
+"I shall go away, sir."
+
+"Not till you come by the secret. I know you."
+
+His ear was pinched. "J.R. Who is J.R., sir?"
+
+"Jemima Regina. A queen of beauty, ma'am. She fell in love with my nose.
+And offered me a thousand pound for it."
+
+"Harry! I am going to say good night."
+
+"Hear the truth, Alison. Do you remember--you told me I was born to be a
+highwayman--my stand-and-deliver stare--my--"
+
+"Oh! Don't play so. I was a fiend when I taunted you so."
+
+"Why, child, it's nothing. Come then--J.R., it's Jacobus Rex, the poor
+lad, Prince James, who will never be a king, God help him. He gave me
+that for the memory of some little service I did him. McBean brought the
+toy to-day."
+
+Alison nodded. "I will have that story from Captain McBean, sir. You tell
+stories mighty ill, do you know--highwayman. Yes, Harry, you are that.
+You pillage us all. Love, honour, you win it from all. And I--I am the
+last to know you."
+
+"Bah, you will never be a wife," Harry said. "You have too much
+imagination. But you make a mighty fine lover, my dear."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Highwayman, by H.C. Bailey
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Highwayman, by H.C. Bailey
+
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+*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!*****
+
+
+Title: The Highwayman
+
+Author: H.C. Bailey
+
+Release Date: January, 2006 [EBook #9749]
+[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule]
+[This file was first posted on October 15, 2003]
+
+Edition: 10
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE HIGHWAYMAN ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Juliet Sutherland, Mary Meehan
+and PG Distributed Proofreaders
+
+
+
+
+ THE HIGHWAYMAN
+
+ BY
+
+ H. C. BAILEY
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS
+
+
+ I. THE COMPLETE HERO
+
+ II. THE HOUSE OF WAVERTON
+
+ III. A MAN OF MANY WORLDS
+
+ IV. A GENTLEMAN'S PURSE
+
+ V. THE WORLD'S A MIRACLE
+
+ VI. HARRY IS NOT GRATEFUL
+
+ VII. GENEROSITY OF A FATHER
+
+ VIII. MISS LAMBOURNE LOOKS SIDEWAYS
+
+ IX. ANGER OF AN UNCLE
+
+ X. YOUNG BLOOD
+
+ XI. ABSENCE OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+ XII. IN HASTE
+
+ XIII. DISTRESS OF A MOTHER
+
+ XIV. SPECTATORS OF PARADISE
+
+ XV. MRS. BOYCE
+
+ XVI. THE AFFAIR OF SIR GEORGE
+
+ XVII. RETURN OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+ XVIII. HARRY IS DISMISSED
+
+ XIX. ALISON FINDS FRIENDS
+
+ XX. RETURN OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+ XXI. CONSOLATIONS BY A FATHER
+
+ XXII. TWO'S COMPANY
+
+ XXIII. THE HOUSE IN KENSINGTON
+
+ XXIV. QUEEN ANNE IS DEAD
+
+ XXV. SAUVE QUI PEUT
+
+ XXVI. REVELATIONS
+
+ XXVII. VIRTUE IS ITS OWN REWARD
+
+ XXVIII. IN THE TAP
+
+ XXIX. ALISON KNEELS
+
+ XXX. EMOTIONS BY MR. WAVERTON
+
+ XXXI. CAPTAIN McBEAN TAKES HORSE
+
+ XXXII. PERPLEXITIES OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+ XXXIII. REMORSE OF COLONEL BOYCE
+
+ XXXIV. HARRY WAKES UP
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+THE COMPLETE HERO
+
+
+Harry Boyce addressed Queen Anne in glittering verse. She was not
+present. She had, however, no cause to regret that, for he was tramping
+the Great North Road at four miles by the hour--a pace far beyond the
+capacity of Her Majesty's legs; and his verses were Latin--a language not
+within the capacity of Her Majesty's mind. Her absence gave him no grief.
+In all his twenty-four years he could not remember being grieved by
+anyone's absence. His general content was never diminished at finding
+himself alone. He chose the Queen as the subject of his verses merely
+because he did not admire her. She appeared to him then, as to later
+generations, a woman ineffectual and without interest; a dull woman
+physically, mentally, and perhaps morally; just the woman upon whom it
+would be hardest to make an encomium of any splendour. So he was heartily
+ingenious over his alcaics, and relished them.
+
+From this you may divine much that you have to know about the soul of
+Harry Boyce. It was more given to mockery than enthusiasms, apter to
+criticisms than devotion, not very gentle nor very kind, and so quite
+satisfied with itself and by itself. To be sure, it was yet only
+twenty-four.
+
+You discover also other things less fundamental. He was something of a
+scholar, as scholarship was reckoned in those placid days. He had even
+some Greek--more than Mr. Pope and quite as much as Mr. Addison. His
+Latin verses would have brought him a fellowship at Merton if he had
+been willing to take Holy Orders, "I may take them indeed; but how
+believe they have been given me?" quoth he to the Warden with a tilt of
+one eyebrow. Whereat the Warden, aghast, wrote him off as a youth
+unreasonable, impracticable, and impish. Many others had the same
+opinion of Harry Boyce before the world was done with him. Few of them
+saw in his antics the uncertain spasms of too tender a conscience. But
+you must judge.
+
+Of course he was poor. He could only boast a bob wig, a base thing,
+which, for all the show it made, might have been a man's own hair. He
+wore no sword. His hat lacked feather and lace. His coat and breeches
+were but black drugget, shiny at each corner of him and rusty everywhere.
+His stockings were worsted, and darned even on his excellent calves. His
+shoes had strings where buckles should have been, and mere black
+heels--and low heels at that. As you know, he could walk at a round pace
+with them--a preposterous, vulgar thing. There was nothing in him to give
+this poverty a romantical air. To be sure, he had admirable legs, but the
+rest was neither good nor bad. He was of the middle size and a wholesome
+complexion. You would look at him long and see nothing rare enough to be
+worth looking at. If you looked longer yet you might begin to be
+surprised: his so ordinary face was extraordinary in its lack of
+expression.
+
+The man who owned it must be either very dull of heart and mind, or
+self-contained and of self-control beyond the common. But whatever the
+heart might be, no one ever took the eyes for the eyes of a fool. They
+were keen, alert, perpetually on guard. There is a letter extant--it was
+indeed a dear friend who wrote it--which mocks at Harry for his "curst
+stand-and-deliver stare." But it is a queer thing that most men had to
+know Harry Boyce a long time before they remarked that his eyes were not
+quite of the same colour. The common English grey-green-blue was in both
+of them, but one had a bluer glint than the other. The oddity, when it
+was discovered, seemed to make the challenge of the eyes more defiant and
+more baffling, as though they gleamed from the shadow of a mask.
+
+Not that anyone cared yet whether he wore a mask or his soul in that
+placid, ordinary face. Who should care a pinch of snuff for "a scholar
+just from his college broke loose" with a penny farthing in his pocket,
+who had to pioneer young gentlemen through their Horace and their Tully
+for his bed and board? When you meet him, Harry Boyce was happy in having
+caught for his pupil a young fellow who had not merely money but brains,
+and so sublime a condescension that Harry was not sent away from table
+with the parson when the puddings came. Mr. Geoffrey Waverton was pleased
+to have a value for him, and defended him from his natural duty of being
+gentleman usher to Lady Waverton. So, Mr. Waverton having taken horse,
+Harry was free to go walking.
+
+It was late in a wet autumn, and all the clay of Middlesex slippery as
+butter and, withal, affectionate as warm glue. Harry kept to the highway.
+Though its miles of mud and water were, on the surface, even worse than
+the too green meadows or the gleaming brown furrows of plough land, a
+careful man could count upon its letting him go no further than knee
+deep. When he came to Whetstone, Harry's feet were brown, shapeless,
+weighty masses, but he had not lost either shoe, and he was still in
+hopes of reaching Barnet and a pint of small beer before it was time to
+struggle back. At the worst a dry throat and wet legs were a cheap price
+for escaping the voice of Lady Waverton, who, in the afternoons, read the
+romances of Mlle. de Scudéry aloud.
+
+He could see the tufts of smoke above Barnet and its church on the
+hill-top. He was winding down to the bottom of the valley from which that
+hill rises, when eloquence arrested him. He may at other times have heard
+profanity as copious, but never profanity so vehement or at such speed.
+The orator was a woman.
+
+Harry stood to listen with critical admiration. Madame mixed the ugly and
+the pleasant rarely; she made a charming grotesque. Her mind was very far
+from nice and provided her with amazing images; but she had a pretty,
+womanly voice, and hard though she drove it, it would not break to one
+ugly note. Disgusting epithets, mean threats, poured out in mellow
+music. Harry splashed on round the corner. He was eager to see her.
+
+In the morass at the cross-lanes by the green, a coach was stuck--a coach
+of splendour. It was a huge thing as big as a room, half glass, half gold
+and garter blue, and it swayed luxuriously on its great springs. Six
+horses heaved at it in vain with great splashing and squelching, and a
+whole company of servants, some mounted, some afoot, struggled with them.
+
+The profane woman had half her body and two gesticulating arms out of the
+coach window. She was plainly neither a drab nor in liquor. Harry halted
+out of range of the splashes to examine and enjoy her. She had been
+comely, and still could hold a man's eye with her curves of neck and
+bosom. The piquant features must have been adorable before they sharpened
+and her cheeks faded and the lines came. Her abundant hair must once have
+been gold, and was not yet altogether grey.
+
+"You filthy slug," said she. "Samuel! Stand to it, I say. Damme, I'll
+have a whip about that loose belly of yours! Now pull, you swine, pull.
+Odso, flog the black horse. You, devil broil your bones, lay on to him.
+What now? Od rot you, Antony, you'll see no money this month, you--" She
+became unprintable. As she took breath again, she saw Harry Boyce calmly
+contemplative. "You dog, who bade you stand and gape? Go, give a hand
+there, I say."
+
+Harry touched his hat. "By your leave, ma'am, I am too busy admiring
+you."
+
+"William, put that rogue into the ditch," said she.
+
+All this while a man in the coach had been writing, calmly intent upon
+his tablets as though there was not a sound or a rage within a mile. He
+now stood up, and, while his lady was still execrating through one door
+of the coach, he opened the other and came out. Two of the servants,
+obedient to the lady's oaths, were approaching Harry, who waited them
+with calm and a swinging stick. The man waved his hand at them and they
+turned tail. But he had no further interest in Harry. He stood to watch
+the struggles of his horses and his men. He was of some height, and,
+though past middle age, bore himself with singular grace and vigour. He
+had still a rarely handsome face--too handsome, by far, for Harry's
+taste. The features were of an impossible, absurd perfection. There was
+something superhuman or fatuous, at least something vastly irritating, in
+his assured calm, his air of blandly confident supremacy.
+
+He walked on to the leaders and, with a gesture and a word, set the whole
+team pulling at an angle. Meanwhile the lady had earnestly continued her
+abusive orders, but none of the servants now professed to heed her.
+Dragging the horses on, or labouring hand and shoulder at the wheels,
+they were now effective, and they watched the man's eye as though it were
+an inspiration. Wondering why he did, Harry, too, put his weight on a
+wheel. The horses found a footing in the mire, the coach was dragged on
+to the higher, firmer ground beyond.
+
+My lady subsided. The man came back to the coach and touched his hat to
+Harry. "I'm obliged for your help, sir," he said, and climbed in. They
+drove away towards London.
+
+As the servants swung to their saddles, "Who's your obscene lady?"
+said Harry.
+
+"What, don't you know him, bumpkin?"
+
+"She will never be him. Her shape is all provocative she."
+
+This humble wit was not remarked. His ignorance occupied them, "Oh Lud,
+not to know the Old Corporal!"
+
+One of Harry's eyebrows went up. "That the Old Corporal? Faith, I am
+sorry for him."
+
+He received a handful of mud in his face. With a cry of "Rot your
+impudence," they splashed off.
+
+While he wiped the mud out of his eyes, Harry felt a very comfortable
+self-satisfaction. It was agreeable to pity His Grace of Marlborough. For
+the Duke of Marlborough was still the greatest man in Europe, the
+greatest man in the world--credibly the greatest man that ever lived. A
+pleasant fool, to marry such a wife and to keep her.
+
+Harry Boyce at no time in his life had much admiration for human
+eminence. In this, his hungry youth, he was set upon despising rank and
+power, great fame and pure virtue, as no more than the luck of fools. He
+would always atone by finding sympathy and excuses for any rogue's
+roguery. Highly fortified in this faith by the exhibition of
+Marlborough's matrimonial happiness, he trudged back.
+
+The delay over the coach had left him no time for small ale at Barnet.
+Mr. Waverton, though amiably pleased to deliver Harry from attendance on
+his mother, required constant attendance on himself. He would be, in his
+superb way, disagreeable if Harry were not in waiting when he was wanted
+to take a hand at ombre. Harry liked Mr. Waverton well enough, as well as
+he liked anybody, but found him in the part of offended majesty
+intolerable. So there was some hard walking back to Whetstone. On the way
+his temper was not sweetened by two horsemen at the gallop who gave him a
+shower-bath of mud.
+
+As he came through the village, behold another coach labouring up to the
+high road from Totteridge lane. This had but four horses, no array of
+outriders, no gilt splendours. It was a sober, old-fashioned thing, and
+it rumbled on at a sober gait. "Some city ma'am," Harry sneered at it,
+"much the same shape as her horses."
+
+But half an hour after he saw it again. Where the road was dark through a
+thicket it had come to a stand. "Oh Lud," said Harry, "here's more fair
+madames in the mud. They may sit on it till they hatch it for me." But he
+wondered a little. It was indeed nothing very strange in such an autumn
+to find a coach stuck upon the highway. But two for one afternoon, two so
+near was a generous provision. And hereabouts, where the road ran level
+and high, was a strange place for a coach to choose to stick. "Madame
+seems to be a gross girl," quoth Harry.
+
+And then he saw what made him step out. There were two men on horseback
+by the halted coach--two men with black upon their faces which must be
+masks, and that in their hands which must be pistols.
+
+"Egad, the road's joyful to-night," said Harry. "And two and one make
+three," and he began to run, and arrived.
+
+Of the two highwaymen one was dismounted. The other, holding his friend's
+horse, held also a pistol at the coachman's head, muttering lurid threats
+of what he would do if the coachman drove on. The dismounted man was half
+inside the coach where two women shrank from him, and thence his
+blusterous voice proceeded, "Now, my blowens, hand over, or I'll rummage
+you. A skinny purse? Come, now, you've more than that. What's under your
+legs, fatty? Stand up, I say. Ay, hand out the jewel-box. Now, my tackle,
+what ha' you got aboard? What's under that pretty tucker?" He threw the
+jewel-case out into the mud and, leaning across one woman, reached with a
+fat, foul hand to the younger bosom beyond.
+
+He was prevented by a whistle and a cry, "Behind you, Ben." His companion
+announced the arrival of Harry.
+
+Ben came out of the coach with an oath and thrust his pistol into Harry's
+face. "Good e'en to you, bully. Now cut and run or I'll drill you. Via,
+my poppet."
+
+Harry looked along the pistol and stood fast. The highwayman was no
+bigger than he, and bloated. "I am studying arithmetic, Benjamin," said
+he.
+
+"Burn your eyes, be off with you; run while you may."
+
+Harry laughed and swung his stick at the mud. "But, I wonder, is it
+addition or subtraction? Is it two and one makes three, or--"
+
+"Kick the bumpkin into the ditch, Ben," the man on horseback advised.
+
+"Off with you," Benjamin thrust him back, and in the act the pistol
+wavered. Harry slashed with his stick at the pistol hand. A yell, an
+oath, and the shot came together--a shot which went into the mud and sent
+it spattering about them. Harry sprang away from Benjamin's rush and
+brought his stick down on the hindquarters of the horses. They plunged
+forward, and the man in the saddle, wrestling with them, let off another
+aimless shot. Harry dodged round them and lashed them again, and they
+bolted down the road. He returned to fling himself upon Benjamin, who was
+ramming another charge into his pistol. "It seems to be subtraction,
+Benjamin," said he, embracing the man fervently. "One from two leaves
+one," and they swayed together, and he found Benjamin's body soft.
+
+Benjamin, panting, cursed him. "Od rot you, why must you meddle, bully?
+What's your will, burn you? Ha' done now, and--" Benjamin went down on
+his back in the mud with Harry on top of him. "Ugh! What's the game,
+bully?"
+
+"I think you call it the high toby," said Harry delicately and began to
+sing to the tune of a catch:
+
+"Oh, three merry men, three merry men, three highwaymen were we.
+You in a quag and he on a nag and I on top of the three."
+
+"Lord love you, are you on the road?" Benjamin cried. "Why, rot you,
+did you want a share then? You should ha' said so, bully. Come on now, my
+dear, let's up. We do be gentlemen and share fair enough."
+
+"I warrant you I am having my share," Harry laughed; "and I like it very
+well. But oh, Benjamin, there would have been nought to share if I had
+not come up. No fun at all, Benjamin." He wrenched the pistol away. "'Tis
+I have made the business joyous. You are a dull fellow by yourself."
+
+"Rot you," said Benjamin frankly. "When Ned comes back he'll shoot you
+like vermin."
+
+On which they both heard horses, and both, according to their
+abilities--Benjamin in the mud, and Harry keeping a sure hold of
+him--wriggled to look for them.
+
+Harry laughed. It was certainly not a returning Ned. These horses came
+from the other way, and there were four of them and each had a rider. "I
+fear your Ned will come too late, Benjamin--if, by the grace of God, he
+comes at all." So said Harry, chuckling, and to his amazement Benjamin
+also laughed. Why should Benjamin find consolation in the coming of this
+_posse_? It was not credible that they could be allies of his. Highwaymen
+did not work in gangs of half a dozen.
+
+The four horsemen, urged by the shots or by what they saw, came at a
+gallop and reined up almost on top of Harry and Benjamin. One of them, a
+little man with a lean, brown face, called out, "By your leave, sir!
+What's this?"
+
+"It's a rude fellow, sir," Harry said. "I fear a lewd fellow. By trade a
+highwayman. The highway, indeed, is his life's love, his adored mistress.
+Observe how he cleaves to it." He compressed Benjamin, who squelched,
+into the mud, and rose, standing on Benjamin's chest and stomach.
+
+Benjamin groaned, and the eyes behind his mask rolled towards the little
+man.
+
+"Filthy dog," that little man said with sincere disgust. "Can I serve
+you, sir?" he touched his hat to the women in the coach.
+
+"Why, Benjamin has a friend, one Ned. Ned hath a pistol or so and two
+horses which have bolted with him. But he may yet persuade them to bring
+back his pistols and him. Now, if you would be so good, it would be
+convenient in you to ride on and destroy Ned."
+
+"It's a pleasure, sir," the little man showed his teeth. "And the fat
+rogue there, can I help you with him? Shall we take him on to the
+constables?"
+
+"Oh, I thank you, but my Benjamin is docile. I'll e'en tie him up with
+his garters, and all will be well."
+
+The little man scowled at Benjamin. "I shall hope to be at his hanging,"
+he said incisively. "Sir, your most obedient! Ladies!" he bobbed at them
+and rode off, his three companions close about him in eager talk.
+
+As they went, Benjamin let out a cry of anguish: "Captain!"
+
+The little man and his company used their spurs.
+
+Harry looked at their hurry and then down at Benjamin.
+
+"Now why did you call him that, my Benjamin?" said he. "Indeed, why did
+you call on him at all?"
+
+From behind the mask Benjamin's prominent eyes stared sullenly. He
+said nothing.
+
+Harry shook his head. "I feel that I do not know you, Benjamin. I must
+see more of you," With which he fell upon the man again and twitched
+off the mask. The wig came with it. Benjamin was revealed the owner of
+a big, bald, shiny head with a face which was puffed and purple. "You
+were right, Benjamin," said Harry sadly, "You were kind. To wear a mask
+was charity, nay, decency--what breeches are to other men. That obese
+and flaccid nose--pah, let us talk of something else." He lay upon
+Benjamin and tugged at his sword-belt. Benjamin writhed and groaned.
+His sword was caught underneath him, the hilt deep in the small of his
+back. Harry hauled the sword-belt off at last and gripped at Benjamin's
+wrists. He began to struggle again. "Do not be troublesome or I'll tap
+the beer on your brain. So." He hauled the belt taut about the fighting
+arms and made all fast. Then he sat himself on Benjamin's legs, which
+thus ceased to be turbulent, and, taking off the garters, therewith
+tied the ankles together.
+
+Sighing satisfaction, Harry picked up the pistol and sword, spoils of
+victory, and rose at his leisure. He contemplated the hapless highwayman
+with benign interest for a moment, and turned to the coach. "You are
+still there, ladies? Benjamin is flattered and so am I. But the play is
+over. He will not be amusing for some time, and at any moment he may be
+profane. I see him bursting with it. Pray drive on and remove your chaste
+ears." He restored to them the jewel-case.
+
+"Put him up on the box, sir," the younger woman cried.
+
+"I beg your pardon, madame?"
+
+"We will take him to the constables at Finchley."
+
+"But why? He is beautiful there, my Benjamin, and I doubt he was never
+beautiful before. And I have planted him so firmly. I think if we leave
+him there he may grow and blossom. Do not dig him up again yet. Imagine
+Benjamin in flower! A thing to dream of."
+
+"You are pleased to be witty, sir. Come, we have lost time enough. Put
+the rogue up, and do you mount with us."
+
+Harry became aware that this young woman had a brow of pride. It was
+ample and broad and, after the Greek manner, it rose almost in a line
+with her admirable nose. A noble head, to be sure, but alarming to a mere
+human man. So Harry thought, and he touched his hat and said: "Madame,
+your most humble. Pray what do you want with my Benjamin? Your gentle
+heart would never have him hanged."
+
+Her eyes made Harry feel that he was impudent, which, unhappily, amused
+him. "I desire the fellow should be given up to the law, sir," she said
+coldly. "Have you anything against it?"
+
+"Oh, ma'am, a thousand things, with which I'll not weary you. For I see
+that you would not understand. You are very young (as I hope). Perhaps
+you may soon grow older (which I pray for you). Let this suffice then.
+My Benjamin may deserve a hanging. Who knows? We are not God, ma'am,
+neither you nor I. Therefore I have no mind to be a hangman. And
+you--why, you are young enough to wait another occasion. And so I give
+you good-night. Home, coachman, home."
+
+The young woman stared at him as though he were grovelling stupidity, and
+then lay back on her cushions with a "You will drive on, Samuel."
+
+Harry made his bow, and then, as the coach began to move, there was a
+cry: "Alison! Alison! It is not right!" The older woman leaned forward,
+and for the first time he remarked a gentle, motherly face, much lined
+and worn. "Sure, sir, you will ride with us," she said, and he liked the
+voice. "We may carry you home."
+
+Harry smiled at her. "Nay, ma'am. I am too dirty for such fine company."
+
+"Drive on," said Mistress Alison. And the coach rolled away.
+
+Harry looked down at the wretched Benjamin, whose eyes answered with
+apprehension and anxiety. "What's the game?" said Benjamin hoarsely. "I
+say, master--what d'ye want with me?"
+
+Harry did not answer. He was finding that motherly face, that pleasant
+voice, curiously vivid still. This annoyed him, and he forced himself
+back with a jerk to the oddity of events. "A queer business, my
+Benjamin," he said. "Who was your captain, I wonder?"
+
+Benjamin scowled. "I know nought o' no captain."
+
+"Ah, I thought you did. But I fear you have annoyed the captain,
+Benjamin. Now what had you done--or what had you not done?"
+
+"It's not fair, master," Benjamin whined. "You do be making game of me,
+and me beat."
+
+"I am rebuked, Benjamin. Good-night."
+
+"Oons, ye won't leave me so?" Benjamin howled. "I ha' done you no harm,
+master. Come now, play fair. What d'ye want of me?"
+
+"Nothing, Benjamin, nothing. I like you very well. You are a beautiful
+mystery. Pleasant dreams."
+
+The hapless Benjamin howled after him long and loud. Thereby Harry, who
+had a musical ear, was spurred to his best pace. "It's a vile voice," he
+reflected; "like Lady Waverton's. The marmoreal Alison was right. He
+would be better hanged. But so also would Lady Waverton. She will
+acridly want to know why I am late. Well! It will be a melancholy
+satisfaction not to tell her. That will also annoy Geoffrey, who'll
+magnificently indicate that I owe him an apology. The poor Geoffrey! He
+is so fond of himself!"
+
+His evening was as pleasant as he had anticipated. He won two shillings
+from Lady Waverton at ombre, which made her angry; and lost them to
+Geoffrey, which made him melancholy. For Mr. Waverton loved (in small
+things) to be a martyr.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+THE HOUSE OF WAVERTON
+
+
+Mr. Waverton had an idea in his head. That was not the least unusual. It
+was, unhappily, a wrong one. That was not unusual either. We must have a
+trifle of Latin. Mr. Waverton, studying Horace, desired to translate,
+_Civium ardor prava jubentium_ "the wicked ardour of the overbearing
+citizens." In vain Harry urged that he was outraging grammar. Mr.
+Waverton did not believe him, did not want to believe him--the same
+thing. Mr. Waverton was convinced that he had an insight into the soul of
+Horace which Harry's pedantic eyes could not share. He explained, as one
+explains to a dull child, the rare poetic beauty of the sentiment which
+he had produced. The hero whom Horace was celebrating, you know, was the
+man superior to the common herd. Now common men (as even Harry might be
+aware) are all overbearing. It is this quality in the vulgar which most
+distresses fine souls (like Mr. Waverton) who desire nothing but their
+just rights.
+
+"I dare say it is," Harry yawned. "If Horace had wanted to mean that, he
+would have said so."
+
+"I often think, Harry, you dry scholars have no sense for the thought of
+a poet," said Mr. Waverton elegantly, and lay back in his chair and
+surveyed Harry.
+
+He was a handsome lad and knew how to set it off. He had height and
+bulk--almost too much of that indeed, and so made light of it by a
+careless, lounging ease. At this time he was only twenty-two, but of a
+precocious maturity. He had the self-possession--as well as the
+full-bottomed wig--of experience and worldly wisdom, and would have liked
+to hear you say so. In its dark aquiline style his face was finely
+moulded and imposing, and already it had a massive gravity. "A mighty
+grand fellow indeed," said Lady Dorchester once, "if only his mouth had
+grown since he was a baby." It has to be admitted that Mr. Waverton's
+mouth, a small, pretty feature, was oddly assorted with the haughty
+manner in which the rest of him was constructed. The ladies who lamented
+that were, for the most part, consoled by his eyes--large, dark eyes of a
+liquid melancholy. But my Lord Wharton complained that they looked at him
+like a hound's.
+
+Mr. Waverton was an only son, and fatherless. He had also great
+possessions. From his house of Tetherdown all the fields that he could
+see stretching away to the Essex border were of his inheritance. His
+mother was no wiser than she should have been. She consisted spiritually
+of admiration for herself, for the family into which she had married, and
+the son whom she had borne. "After all," said Harry Boyce in moments of
+geniality, "it's wonderful the boy has come out of it so well."
+
+Mr. Waverton, thanks to vacillation of himself and his mother, doubt as
+to what career, what manner of education, what university, could be
+worthy his talents, went up to Oxford at last and (for those days) very
+late. After doing nothing for another year or two, he decided (which was
+also unusual for a gentleman of means in those days) that he had a genius
+in pure literature. Therefore Harry was hired to decorate him with all
+the elegances of Greek and Latin.
+
+The appointment was considered a great prize for a lad so awkward as
+Harry Boyce. It might well end in a luxurious competence--a stewardship,
+for example, and marriage with my lady's maid. "That is, if you play your
+cards well, sirrah," the Sub-Warden felt it his duty to warn Harry's
+difficult temper.
+
+"Oh, sir, I could never play cards," said Harry, for the Sub-Warden was a
+master at picquet. "I am too honest."
+
+Yet he had not fallen out with Mr. Waverton. It is probable that he was
+careful to keep on good terms with his bread and butter. But he had
+always, I believe, a kindness for Geoffrey Waverton, and bore no ill will
+for his parade of supremacy. Tyranny in small things, indeed, Mr.
+Waverton did not affect. He had a desire to be magnificent. Those who did
+not cross him, those who were content to be his inferiors, found him
+amiable enough and, on occasion, generous....
+
+"Shall we try another line, Mr. Waverton?" said Harry wearily.
+
+"I have a mind to make an epigram," Mr. Waverton announced. "The
+arrogance of the vulgar, the--the uninstructed--perhaps I lack the _mot
+juste_, but _quand même_--the mansuetude of the loftier mind. A fine
+antithesis that, I think." He stood up, walked to the window, and looked
+out. Away down the hill the fields lay in a mellow mist, the kindly
+autumn sun made the copses glow golden; it was a benign scene, apt to
+encourage wit. Mr. Waverton lisped in numbers, but the numbers did not
+come. He turned to seek stimulus from Harry. "You relish the thought?"
+
+"It is a perfect subject for your style," said Harry.
+
+Mr. Waverton smiled, and turned again to the window for productive
+meditation.
+
+A third man came lounging in, unheard by Mr. Waverton's rapt mind. He
+opened his eyes at the back which Mr. Waverton turned upon Harry and the
+space between them. "Why, Geoffrey, have you been very stupid this
+morning? And has schoolmaster stood you in the corner? Well done, Mr.
+Boyce. I always told you, spare the rod and spoil the child. Shall I go
+cut a birch for you?"
+
+"I wonder you are not tired of that old jest, Charles," said Waverton
+with a dignity which did not permit him to turn round.
+
+"Never while it annoys you, child."
+
+"Mr. Waverton is in labour with a poem," Harry explained.
+
+"And it's indecent in me to be present at the ceremony? Well, Geoffrey,
+postpone the birth." He sat himself down at his ease in Geoffrey's chair.
+He was a compact man with only one arm. He looked ten years older than
+Geoffrey and was, in fact, five. The campaign in Flanders which had
+destroyed his right arm had set and hardened a frame and face by nature
+solid enough. That face was long and angular, with a heavy chin and an
+expression of sardonic complacency oddly increased by the jauntiness of
+its shabby brown wig.
+
+Waverton turned round wearily upon the unwelcome guest. "Well, Charles,
+what is it?"
+
+"It is nothing. My dear Geoffrey, if I had anything to do or anything to
+say why should I come to you?"
+
+"_Merci_, monsieur," Waverton smiled gracious indulgence.
+
+Mr. Hadley chuckled, and in French replied: "Yes, let's talk French; it
+embellishes our simple wit and elevates our souls above the vulgar."
+
+There is reason to believe that Waverton liked his French better in
+fragments than continuously. He still smiled condescension, but risked no
+other answer.
+
+"Come, Geoffrey, what's the news?" Mr. Hadley reverted to English.
+"Could you say your lessons this morning? And did you wear a new coat
+last night?"
+
+"You may go if you will, Harry. Mr. Hadley will be talking for some
+time," Waverton said. "Indeed, he may, perhaps, have something to say."
+
+Harry was used to being turned out for any reason or none. He well
+understood that Waverton was not fond of an audience when he was being
+laughed at. "If you please," he said, and made his bow to Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Why, what's the matter? I don't bite. You are too meek for this life,
+Mr. Boyce." He looked at Harry with some contempt in his grey eyes.
+"Oons, you're a man and a brother, ain't you? Sit down and be hearty.
+Lud, Geoffrey, why do you never have a pipe in the room?"
+
+"It's death to a clean taste, your tobacco smoking, and I value my wine."
+
+"Value it, quotha! Ay, by the spoonful. You ha' never known how to drink
+since they weaned you. And you, Mr. Boyce, d'ye never smoke a pipe over
+your Latin?"
+
+"I hope I know my place, Mr. Hadley," Harry said solemnly.
+
+Charles Hadley stared at him. "Hear the Scripture, Mr. Boyce: 'What shall
+it profit a man though he gain a pretty patron and lose his own soul?'"
+
+"You are very polite, sir," said Harry.
+
+"Upon my honour, Charles, this is too much," Mr. Waverton cried in noble
+indignation. "Mr. Boyce is my friend, and you'll be good enough to take
+him as yours if you come to my house."
+
+Charles Hadley was not out of countenance. He eyed them both, and his
+sardonic expression was more marked. "You make a pretty pair," said he.
+"When two men ride a horse, one must ride behind. Eh, Mr. Boyce? I
+wonder. Well, Geoffrey, it's a wicked world. Had you heard of that?"
+
+"The world is what you make it, I think," said Mr. Waverton with
+dignity.
+
+"Oons, I could sometimes believe you did make it. A simple, pompous
+place, Geoffrey, that is kind to you if you'll not laugh at it. And full
+of petty, pompous mysteries. Maybe you make the mysteries too, Geoffrey.
+Damme, it is so. It's perfectly in your manner," he chuckled abundantly.
+"Come, child, what were you doing on the highway yesterday?"
+
+Harry stared at him. "When you have finished laughing at your joke,
+perhaps you will make it," said Waverton. "Pray let us have it over
+before dinner."
+
+"My dear child, why be so touchy? Were you bitten? Well, you know, this
+morning one of my fellows brings in a miserable wretch he had found on
+the road by Black Horse Spinney. The thing was half-dead with wet and
+cold. He had been lying there all night--so he said, and it's the one
+thing I believe of him. He was found trussed as tight as a chicken in his
+own sword-belt and his own garters. Damme, it was a fellow of some humour
+had the handling of him. He had not been robbed, for there was a bag of
+money at his middle. He professed that he could tell nothing of who had
+trussed him or why he was set upon. He would have nought of law or hue
+and cry. Egad, empty and shivering as he was, he wanted nothing but to be
+let go. A perfect Christian, as you remark, Geoffrey. Now, you or I, if
+we had been tied up in the mud through one of these damned raw nights,
+would take some pains to catch the fellow who did the trussing. But my
+wretch was as meek as the Gospels. So here is a silly, teasing mystery.
+Who is the footpad that is at the pains of tying up a fellow and never
+looks for his purse? Odds fish, I did not know we had a gentleman of such
+humour in these parts. I suspect you, Geoffrey, I protest. There's a
+misty fatuousness about it which--"
+
+"By your leave, sir," a servant appeared, "my lady waits dinner."
+
+"Then I fear we shall pay for it," said Hadley, and stood up.
+
+"You dine with us, Charles?" Mr. Waverton was not hearty about it.
+
+"I'll give you that pleasure, child. Well, Mr. Boyce, what do you make of
+my mystery?"
+
+Harry had to say something. "Perhaps your friend was carrying more than
+guineas," he said.
+
+"What then? Papers and plots and the high political? I don't think it. If
+you saw him--a mere tub of beer--and a leaky tub this morning, for he had
+a vile cold in the head and dribbled damnably."
+
+"I give it up then. Have you let him go?" They were moving out in the
+corridor and Hadley did not answer. "Is he gone?" Harry said again.
+
+Hadley turned round upon him. "Why, yes. Does it signify?"
+
+"I wonder who he was," said Harry.
+
+Upon that they entered the drawing-room of Lady Waverton. It was
+congested and dim. The two oriel windows were so draped with curtains of
+pink and yellow that only a faint light as of the last of a sunset
+filtered through. The wide spaces were beset with screens in lacquer,
+odd chairs, Dutch tables, and very many cabinets,--cabinets inlaid with
+flowers and birds of many colours; cabinets full of shells, agates,
+corals, and any gaudy stone; cabinets and yet again more cabinets full of
+Eastern china. In the midst Lady Waverton reclined.
+
+She had been handsome in a large, bold style, and might still have been
+but for excessive decoration. Her dress was voluminous white satin
+embroidered in a big pattern of gold and set off with black. It was low
+at her opulent bosom, to the curves of which the eye was directed by
+black patches craftily fixed. There were many more patches on her face
+which, still only a little too full and too loose, had its colours laid
+on in sharp and vivid contrasts. Her black hair was erected in
+symmetrical waves high above her brow, and one ringlet was brought by
+glossy, frozen curls to caress her bosom. She held out the whitest of
+hands drooping from a large but still fine arm for Mr. Hadley to kiss.
+
+"You are a bad fellow, Charles Hadley," she pouted. "You make me
+feel old."
+
+"There's a common childish fancy, ma'am."
+
+"You never come to see me now. And when you do come, 'tis not to see me."
+
+"A thousand pardons. Mr. Boyce delayed me awhile with the beauties of his
+conversation."
+
+"Mr. Boyce?" she looked at Harry as if wondering that he dared exist. "Go
+and see why they do not bring in dinner."
+
+Having thus diminished Harry, she proceeded, without waiting for him to
+be gone, to criticize him. "You know, I would never have a chaplain in
+the house. This tutor fellow is of the same breed, Charles. They tease
+me, these men which are neither gentlemen nor servants. Faith, life's
+hard for the poor wretches. They are torn 'twixt their conceit and their
+poverty. They know not from minute to minute whether they will fawn or be
+insolent. So they do both indifferent ill."
+
+Harry, who chose not to hear, was opening the door. There came in upon
+him a woman--the young woman of the coach. Even as he recoiled, bowing,
+even as he collected his startled wits, he was aware of the singular
+beauty of her complexion. Its delicacy, its life, were nonpareil. The
+first clear process of his mind was to wonder how he had contrived not to
+remark that complexion when first he saw her.
+
+Lady Waverton lifted up her voice. "Alison! Dear child! And are you home
+at last? It's delicious in you. You seek us out first, do you not? My
+sweet girl!" Alison was engulfed. Conceive apple blossom in the embraces
+of a peony.
+
+The apple blossom emerged with a calm, "Dear Lady Waverton."
+
+"You are a sad bad thing. I writ you five letters, I think, and not one
+from you."
+
+"You are so much cleverer than I am. I had nothing to say." Alison's
+voice was sweet and low, but too sublimely calm for perfect comfort in
+her hearers. "So here I am to say it and make my excuses," she dropped
+a small curtsey, "my lady. Why, Geoffrey, I thought you had been back
+at Oxford!"
+
+Mr. Waverton came forward, smiling magnificence. "I am delighted to
+disappoint you, Alison."
+
+"Nay, never believe her, Geoffrey," Lady Waverton lifted up her voice
+and was arch. "I vow she counted on finding you here. Why else had she
+come? I know when I was a toast I wasted none of my time going to see old
+women," she languished affectionately at the girl.
+
+"Dear Lady Waverton,"--if it was possible, Alison's voice became calmer
+than ever--"how well you know me. And how cruel to expose me. If Geoffrey
+had his mother's wit, faith, I should never dare come here at all."
+
+"It is not my wit which you need ever fear, Alison," Geoffrey's eyes were
+ardent upon her.
+
+"Why, you are merciful. Or is it modest?"
+
+"I can be neither, Alison. I am a man."
+
+"My dear Geoffrey, I am sorry for all your misfortunes." She turned from
+him to Mr. Hadley, who was content in a corner. "Have we quarrelled?"
+
+"We never loved each other well enough."
+
+"Is that why I am always very glad to see Mr. Hadley?"
+
+"It is why he can tell Miss Lambourne that she looks divinely beautiful."
+
+"That means inhuman, sir."
+
+"Which is not my fault, ma'am."
+
+Geoffrey was visibly restive at his exclusion, "Charles never could pay a
+compliment without a sting in it."
+
+"That is why they are agreeable, sir," said she.
+
+"That is why they are true," said Hadley in the same breath, and they
+laughed together.
+
+Lady Waverton interfered imperiously. "Alison, dear, come sit by me and
+tell me all about yourself."
+
+"Faith, not with the gentlemen to listen," said she, and was saved by
+Harry and the butler, who came in together announcing dinner.
+
+Lady Waverton rose elaborately. "Give me your arm, Charles. My
+dear Alison--"
+
+"But who is this?" Alison said, and she stared with placid, candid
+interest at Harry. With equal composure Harry stared back. But there was
+no candour in his expressionless face. For he had become keenly aware of
+her beauty. It was waking in him desire and already something deeper and
+stronger, and he vehemently resented the disturbance. He had no wish to
+be troubled by any woman, and for this woman, judging her on her
+behaviour, he felt even a little more contempt than the store which he
+had for all her sex. It was cursedly impertinent in her to be such a joy
+to the blood. She stood there, her eyes level with his eyes, and dared to
+look as strong as he--slighter to be sure, but not too slight for a
+woman, and delectably deep bosomed. There was life and laughter in that
+calm Greek face, and the vivid, delicate colour of it maddened him. The
+great crown of black hair was just what her brow needed for its royalty.
+He could find no fault in the irksome wench. Even her dress, dark grey as
+her eyes, perfectly became her, perfectly pleased in its generous
+modesty. And she knew of her power too. There was a mocking confidence in
+every line of her.
+
+"But who is this, Lady Waverton?" she was saying again.
+
+Lady Waverton tried to draw her on. "'Tis but Geoffrey's new factotum."
+
+"My good friend, Harry Boyce, Alison," said Geoffrey with a patronly hand
+on Harry's shoulder.
+
+Harry made his bow.
+
+"Faith, sir, we have met before," she smiled.
+
+"No, ma'am," Harry bowed again. "I have never had an honour, which, sure,
+I could not forget."
+
+Her brow wrinkled. Lady Waverton swept her on, and Harry in the rear had
+the pleasure of hearing Lady Waverton say: "A poor, vulgar wretch, my
+dear. An out-at-elbows scholar which Geoffrey met at Oxford and keeps out
+of charity. He is too soft of heart, dear boy, and such creatures stick
+to him like burrs."
+
+The dinner-table was a blaze of silver, but otherwise not bountifully
+provided. Lady Waverton looked down it with pride. "I am of Mr. Addison's
+mind, my dear," she announced. "Do you remember? 'Two plain dishes with
+two good-natured, cheerful, ingenious friends make me more pleased and
+vain than all your luxury.'"
+
+"Why, then, you must now be sore out of countenance," Alison protested.
+"For I am not good-natured and I vow Mr. Hadley is not cheerful." Mr.
+Hadley's face, set in contemplation of the food, shed gloom and
+apprehension. "But perhaps Mr. Boyce is ingenious."
+
+"I hope so," said Hadley.
+
+It was Harry's task to carve, which dispensed him from answering the
+girl or even looking at her. One not abundant fowl and a calf's head
+smoked before him. Under a heavy fire of directions from Lady Waverton
+he did his duty.
+
+Miss Lambourne may have suddenly grown weary of Lady Waverton's eloquence
+upon the daintiest bits of these unexciting foods. She may have been
+waiting for the moment when Harry would have no occupation to prevent him
+listening to her. While my lady was still explaining the superiority of
+her calf, as bred and born in the house of Waverton, to all other calves,
+just when Harry had finished his work, Miss Lambourne broke out: "Faith,
+I was almost forgetting my splendid story. I wonder, now, have any of you
+met any ventures on the North Road?"
+
+Harry began to eat. Charles Hadley ceased an anxious examination of his
+plate and looked at her. Lady Waverton cried out: "Dear Alison! Don't
+tell me you have been stopped. Too terrible! I vow I could never bear it.
+I should die of shame. They tell me these rogues are vilely impudent to a
+fine woman."
+
+Geoffrey exhibited a tender agitation. "Why, Alison, what is it? Zounds,
+I cannot have you go travelling alone! You must give me news when you
+make a journey, and I'll ride with you."
+
+"Thank you for your agonies. But the virgin in distress found her
+knight-errant duly provided. He rose out of the mud romantically apropos.
+To be sure, I think he was mad. But that is all in the part. The complete
+hero. Geoffrey, could you be a little mad?"
+
+"More than a little," said he with proper ardour. "Pray don't torture us,
+Alison. Let us hear."
+
+"It's on my mind that I am going to hear news of my funny friend," said
+Hadley solemnly. "Don't you think so, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+Harry, who had been eating with the humble zeal appropriate to a poor
+scholar, looked up for a moment: "Why, sir, I can't tell at all. If you
+say so, indeed--" and he went on eating.
+
+"Come, are you in it too, Mr. Hadley?" Alison cried.
+
+"In it, odds life, I am bewilderingly out of it," quoth Hadley, and again
+told his tale of the mysterious man found tied up in the mud who knew
+nothing of his assailants and wanted no vengeance on them.
+
+"That's our Benjamin," Alison laughed. "Oh, but you did not let him go?"
+
+"Not let him go, quotha! For what I know, he was a poor, suffering
+martyr, though to look at his nose, I doubt it. And yet he was fool
+enough. Nay, how could I stay him?"
+
+"Why, send him to gaol for a rogue and a vagabond. Should he not?" she
+invited the suffrages of the table.
+
+"Dear Alison, to be sure, yes," Lady Waverton murmured. "These fellows
+must be put down."
+
+"You owed it to yourself to look deeper into the matter, Charles," said
+Geoffrey gravely.
+
+"Come, Mr. Boyce, your sentence too," Alison cried, wicked eyes
+intent upon him.
+
+He met them with bland meekness. "Indeed, ma'am, I can't tell. It's Mr.
+Hadley's affair."
+
+"From a virtuous woman, good Lord deliver us," Hadley groaned. "You would
+make a rare hanging judge, Alison. Now, i' God's name, let's have your
+tale. What's the rogue to you?"
+
+"Oh, sir, a great joy. Why, he gave me the only knight-errant ever I had.
+A vile muddy one, to be sure, but poor maids must not be choosers. We
+were driving home, Mrs. Weston and I, and by Black Horse Spinney we were
+stopped by two highwaymen. They had just begun to be rude, when out of
+the mud comes my knight-errant, bold as Don Quixote and as shabby withal,
+and with a pretty wit too--which is not much in the way of
+knight-errants, I think. He scared the highwaymen's horses and set them
+bolting with the one fellow which held them, then he knocked the other
+down, took his pistol, and tied the rogue up in his own garters. Oh, the
+neatest knight-errant ever you saw. Then we bade him put the fellow on
+the box and drive on with us. But monsieur was haughty, if you please. He
+wanted none of our company. Off he packed us, for me to cry my eyes out
+for love of him. Which I do heartily, I warrant you."
+
+"Alison!" Geoffrey cried, and laid his hand on hers.
+
+"Faith, yes, give me sympathy. I have loved and lost--in the mud. To be
+sure, I can ne'er be my own woman again till I find him and give him--a
+brush, I think, and maybe a pair of breeches too, for his own can never
+recover their youth. Dear Geoffrey, help me to find him."
+
+Geoffrey had taken his hand away in a hurry. He contemplated her with
+cold reproof. It did not trouble her. She was giving all her attention to
+Harry; gay, malicious eyes challenged him to declare himself, mocked him
+for his modesty, vaunted what she had to give.
+
+"Damme, this is madder and madder yet," Hadley broke in. "Who is your
+Orlando Furioso that's a champion of dames and too haughty to ride in
+their carriage; that ties up highwaymen and forgets to tell the constable
+where he left 'em? Odso, I thought I knew most of the fools in these
+parts, but there's one bigger than I know."
+
+"Dear Alison--I could never have survived it--but you are so strong--and
+what a person! My dear, I could not bear to think of him. A rude, low
+fellow, to be sure," Thus Lady Waverton coherently.
+
+Alison laughed. "I doubt I'm not so delicate," Then she leaned towards
+Harry. "Well, and you? Come, Mr. Boyce, why leave yourself out?"
+
+"I beg pardon, ma'am?"
+
+She made an impatient sound. "And what do you think of my hero?"
+
+"I wonder who the gentleman was, ma'am," Harry said.
+
+Her eyes fought a moment more with his bland, meaningless face. "Faith, I
+think he's a fool for his pains," said she.
+
+"Grateful woman," Hadley grunted. "Humph. _Spretae injuria formae_, ain't
+it, Mr. Boyce? Give miss a construe."
+
+Harry gave a deprecating cough instead.
+
+"Oh, be brave, sir," she jeered.
+
+"I am afraid it means 'the insult of slighting your beauty,' ma'am," said
+Harry meekly.
+
+Lady Waverton straightened her back and looked ice at him. But the
+butler was at her elbow, whispering. "Colonel Boyce?" she repeated. "What
+Colonel Boyce? Who is Colonel Boyce?
+
+"It might be my father," Harry suggested.
+
+"Why, Harry, I never knew you had a father," Waverton sneered amiably.
+
+"Is your father a colonel?" Lady Waverton was torn between incredulity of
+such presumption and rage at it.
+
+"Not that I know of, my lady. But he has always surprised me."
+
+"Shall we have him in, Geoffrey?" said Lady Waverton.
+
+"My dear mother!" Geoffrey waved his hand to the butler. "Ask the
+gentleman to be so good as to join us."
+
+Mr. Hadley turned in his chair, and over the remnants of the fowl and the
+calf's head directed a grim smile at Harry. "Thank you for a very
+pleasant dinner," said he.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+A MAN OF MANY WORLDS
+
+
+There came in a man of many colours. Dazzled eyes, recovering from their
+first dismay, might admit that his splendours were harmonious. A red coat
+with gold buttons, a waistcoat of gold satin embroidered in blue,
+breeches of blue velvet with golden garters were topped by a face burnt
+brown and a great jet-black periwig. He carried off all this with airy
+ease. "My lady, your most humble and devoted," he bowed to Lady Waverton.
+"Harry, dear lad," he held out his hands, and Harry, rising, found
+himself embraced and kissed on both cheeks.
+
+"Colonel Boyce is it?" said Lady Waverton with some emphasis on
+the title.
+
+"In the service of your ladyship," he laughed, and bowed to her again,
+and turned upon the company. "Pray present me, dear lady." She made
+some stumbling about it, but Colonel Boyce appeared to enjoy himself
+with an "I account myself fortunate, ma'am," for Miss Lambourne; with a
+"My boy's friends are mine, sir--and his debts too," for Geoffrey; and
+to Mr. Hadley, "You have served, sir?" with a look of respect at the
+empty sleeve.
+
+Hadley nodded. "Ay, ay. The red field of honour. Well, there's no
+life like it."
+
+"That's why I left it," Hadley grunted.
+
+"Come, sir, draw up a chair and join us," Geoffrey said. "Be sure you are
+very welcome."
+
+"Ten thousand thanks." Without enthusiasm Colonel Boyce looked at the
+calf's head. "But--egad, I am sorry for it now--but I have dined."
+
+"At least you'll drink a glass of wine with us?"
+
+"Oh, I can't deny myself the pleasure, sir." He drew up a chair, Geoffrey
+reached at a decanter, and so Lady Waverton rose and Alison after her.
+
+Colonel Boyce started up. "But no--not at that price. Damme, that would
+poison the Prince's own Tokay. Nay, you are too cruel, my lady. I come,
+and you desolate the table to receive me. Gad's life, ma'am, our friends
+here will be calling me out for my daring to exist."
+
+Lady Waverton was very well pleased. "Sir, you will let me give you a
+dish of tea. I warrant the men were already sighing to be rid of us."
+
+"Then I vow they be blind," quoth Colonel Boyce, and opened the door,
+from which he came back with a laugh to his glass of port. Over drinking
+it he went through all the tricks of the connoisseur and ended with a
+cultured ecstasy.
+
+"I see you are a man of the world, Colonel," Hadley sneered.
+
+"A man of many worlds, sir," the Colonel laughed easily.
+
+"I wonder which this is?"
+
+"Why, this is the world of good company and good fellowship--" he smiled
+and bowed to Geoffrey--"of sound wine and sound learning."
+
+"Sir, you are very good. But I hope my wine is better than my
+scholarship. This is our man of learning," he slapped Harry on the
+shoulder. "And Harry counts me a mere trifler, a literary exquisite, an
+amateur of elegances."
+
+"If your scholarship has the elegance of your wine, Mr. Waverton, you do
+very well. I doubt my Harry is no judge of the graces. He has always been
+something of a plodder."
+
+"Have I?" Harry found his tongue. "How did you know?"
+
+The Colonel laughed. "He has me there, the rogue. The truth is,
+gentlemen, I have not seen him in these six years. Damme, Harry, you are
+grown no fatter."
+
+"Servitors don't make flesh," said Harry.
+
+"And soldiers don't make money. Still; there's enough for two now, boy."
+
+"I am glad you have been fortunate," the tone suggested that though
+the father had quite enough for two; there would be none to spare
+for the son.
+
+"Why, sir," Waverton was grandly genial, "I hope you don't mean to rob me
+of Harry. He's the most useful fellow, and, I promise you; I value him."
+
+"Thank you very much," said Harry.
+
+"I'll take you into my confidence, Mr. Waverton," the Colonel leaned
+across the table.
+
+"Then I'll take my leave," said Hadley.
+
+"No need, sir. At this time, we all know, there are higher claims on a
+man than a friend's or a father's."
+
+"I feel like a pawn," Harry complained.
+
+"Egad, sir, a pawn may save a queen or check a king."
+
+"But do you suppose it enjoys it?"
+
+"Are you away to the war, sir?" Geoffrey smiled. "I doubt our Harry has
+no turn for soldiering."
+
+"You are always right, Mr. Waverton," Harry nodded at him.
+
+"It is not only soldiers who fight our battles, Mr. Waverton," said the
+Colonel with dignity. "There's danger enough for a quick wit and a cool
+judgment far behind the lines. And you need not go to Flanders to find
+the war. It's flaming all over England, all over--France," he dropped the
+last word in a lower tone, as if his heat had carried him away and it was
+a blunder. He flung himself back and emptied his glass, and looked
+gloomily at the empty decanter. "Why, Mr. Waverton, you have made me into
+a babbler. It's time you delivered me to the ladies."
+
+"Aye, aye," Hadley yawned. "Let's try another of the worlds."
+
+They marched out, but the Colonel and Waverton, waiting on each other,
+were some distance behind the other pair.
+
+"You must know I have often had some desire for the life of action," said
+Mr. Waverton.
+
+To which the Colonel earnestly, "I have never known a man more fit for
+it," and upon that they entered my lady's drawing-room.
+
+Miss Lambourne was singing Carey's song of the nightingale:
+
+"While in a Bow'r with beauty blest
+ The lov'd Amintor lies,
+While sinking on Lucinda's breast
+ He fondly kiss'd her Eyes.
+A wakeful nightingale who long
+ Had mourn'd within, the Shade
+Sweetly renewed her plaintive song
+ And warbled through the Glade."
+
+On the coming of the men the wakeful nightingale broke off her plaintive
+song abruptly.
+
+Lady Waverton, who was again at full length on her couch, then opened
+her eyes. "Delicious, delicately delicious," she sighed. "Why did you
+stop, dear?" she controlled a yawn. "Oh, the men! Odious creatures!" she
+rose on her elbow and looked at them, and looked down at her dress and
+patted it.
+
+Colonel Boyce accepted the challenge briskly, and marched upon her.
+"Egad, my lady, your name is cruelty."
+
+"Who--I, sir? I vow I never had the heart to see any creature suffer."
+
+"Nay, your very nature is cruelty. You exist but to torture us."
+
+"Good lack, sir," says my lady, well pleased, "and must I die to serve
+your pleasure?"
+
+"Why, there it is. We can neither bear to be with you nor to be without
+you. I protest, ma'am, your sex was made for our torture. 'Tis why you
+parade it and delight in it."
+
+"Lud, sir, you are mighty rude," my lady simpered. "I parade my sex?
+Alack, my modesty!"
+
+"Modesty--that's but another weapon to madden us. Fie, ma'am, why do you
+clothe yourself in such beauty but to flaunt upon our senses that sex of
+yours?" My lady was duly shocked and hid behind her fan. "Aye, there it
+is! We catch a whiff of paradise and straightway it is denied us. Our
+nightingale there is silent when we draw near. Our Venus here hides
+herself when our eyes would enjoy her. As His Grace said to me, you women
+are like heaven to a damned soul."
+
+"You are a wicked fellow," said Lady Waverton with relish.
+
+Geoffrey at his elbow put in, "'His Grace,' Colonel?"
+
+"The Old Corporal, Mr. Waverton. The Duke of Marlborough."
+
+"You have served with him, sir?"
+
+Colonel Boyce gave a laugh of genial condescension. "Why, yes, Mr.
+Waverton, I stand as close to His Grace as most men."
+
+After a moment of impressive silence, the Wavertons vigorously directed
+the conversation to the Duke of Marlborough. Colonel Boyce made no
+objection. In the most obliging manner he admitted them to a piquant
+intimacy with His Grace's manners and customs. He mingled things personal
+and high politics with a fascinating air of letting out secrets at every
+word; and, throughout, he maintained a tantalizing discretion about his
+own position. My lady and Mr. Waverton were more and more fascinated.
+
+So that Miss Lambourne had good opportunity to try her maiden steel upon
+Harry. As soon as he came in, he withdrew himself to a cabinet of medals
+in a remote corner. Mr. Hadley approached the harpsichord and reached it
+just before it fell silent. Miss Lambourne looked up into his face.
+
+"Yes, shall we lay our heads together?" said he.
+
+"But I doubt mine would turn yours."
+
+"If you'll risk it, ma'am, I will."
+
+"La, sir, is this an offer? I protest I am all one blush."
+
+"Then your imagination is bolder than mine, ma'am. I mean--"
+
+"Oh, fie for shame! To disgrace a poor maid so! To betray her weakness!
+It is unmanly, Mr. Hadley. Sure, my father (in the general resurrection)
+will have your blood. I leave you to your conscience, sir," which she
+did, making for Harry.
+
+Mr. Hadley, remaining by the harpsichord, contemplated them, and with his
+one hand caressed his chin. "It's a fascinating family, the family of
+Boyce," said he to himself.
+
+Miss Lambourne sat herself down beside Harry before he chose to be aware
+of her coming. He started up and obsequiously drew away.
+
+"You are very coy, Mr. Boyce," said the lady.
+
+Harry replied, with the servile laughter of a dependent, "Oh, ma'am, you
+are mocking me."
+
+"Tit for tat"--Alison's eyes had some fire in them.
+
+"Tat, ma'am?"
+
+"Lud, now, don't be tedious. Sir, the house of Waverton is entranced by
+your splendid father: and Charles Hadley (as usual) is entranced by
+himself. You have no audience Mr. Boyce. Stop acting, and tell me--what
+is wrong with me?"
+
+Harry considered her with calm criticism. "It's not for me to tell Miss
+Lambourne that she is too beautiful."
+
+"Indeed, I thought you had more sense."
+
+"Too beautiful," Harry persisted deliberately; "too beautiful to be
+good company."
+
+"That will not serve, sir. You are not so inflammable. Being more in the
+nature of a tortoise."
+
+"If you had a flaw or so: if your nose had a twist; if your cheeks had
+felt the weather; if--I fear, ma'am, I grow intimate. In fine, if you
+were less fine, you would be a comfort to a man. But as it is--permit the
+tortoise to keep in his shell."
+
+"I advise you, Mr. Boyce--I resent this."
+
+Harry bowed. "I dare to remind you, ma'am--I did not demand the
+conversation."
+
+"The conversation!" Her eyes flashed. "What do I care if a lad's
+impudent? Perhaps I like it well enough, Mr. Boyce. There is more than
+that between you and me. You have done me something of a service, and
+you'll not let me avow it nor pay you. Well?"
+
+"Well, ma'am, you're telling the truth," said Harry placidly.
+
+The lady made an exclamation. "I shall bear you a grudge for this, sir."
+
+"I am vastly obliged, ma'am."
+
+The lady drew back a little and looked at him full, which he bore
+calmly. "I suppose I am beneath Mr. Boyce's concernment."
+
+"Not beneath, ma'am. Above. Above. Do you admire the Italian medals?
+They are of a delicate restraint," He turned to the cabinet and began
+to lecture.
+
+Miss Lambourne was not repulsed. He maintained a steady flow of
+instruction. She waited, watching him.
+
+By this time Colonel Boyce was growing tired of his Duke of Marlborough
+and his State secrets, and seeking diversion. "Odds fish, it's a hard
+road that leads to fortune. You are happy, Mr. Waverton. You were born
+with yours."
+
+"I conceive, sir, that every man of high spirit must needs take the
+road to fame."
+
+"A dream of a shadow, Mr. Waverton," said the Colonel, with melancholy
+grandeur. "'Take the goods the gods provide you,'" he waved his hand at
+the crowded opulence of the room and then, smiling paternally, at Miss
+Lambourne.
+
+Lady Waverton simpered at her son. He chose to ignore the hint.
+"Why, Colonel, if a man is happily placed above vulgar needs, the
+more reason--"
+
+"Vulgar needs! Oh, fie, Mr. Waverton. A divine creature." Colonel
+Boyce looked wicked, and his easy hand designed in the air Miss
+Lambourne's shape.
+
+Lady Waverton tittered. Geoffrey blushed, and "You do me too much honour
+sir, indeed," he stammered.
+
+Colonel Boyce turned smiling upon Lady Waverton. "I vow, ma'am, a man
+hath twice the modesty of a maid."
+
+"You are a bad fellow," said Lady Waverton, very well pleased.
+
+"You go too fast, sir;" with so much mirth about him Geoffrey feared for
+his dignity. "There is nothing between me and Miss Lambourne."
+
+The Colonel shook his head. "I confess I thought better of you, sir.
+What, is miss her own mistress?"
+
+"Miss Lambourne has no father or mother, sir."
+
+"And her face is her fortune? Egad, 'tis the prettiest romance!"
+
+Geoffrey and his mother laughed together. "Not quite all her fortune,
+sir. She is the only child of Sir Thomas Lambourne."
+
+"What! old Tom Lambourne of the India House?" Colonel Boyce whistled. He
+looked with a new interest at her as she stood by Harry, absorbing the
+lecture on medals, and as he looked his face put on a queer air of
+mockery. This he presented to Geoffrey. "Something of a plum, sirrah.
+Well, well, some folks have but to open their mouths."
+
+Mr. Waverton, not quite certain whether the Colonel ought to be so
+familiar, concluded to be pleased, and laughed fatuously. During which
+music the butler announced "Mrs. Weston."
+
+Lady Waverton and Geoffrey exchanged a glance of disgust. Lady Waverton
+murmured, "What a person!" It escaped their notice that Colonel Boyce had
+stiffened at the name. His full face lost all its geniality, all
+expression. He was for the first time singularly like his son.
+
+Mrs. Weston was Alison's companion of the coach, a woman of middle age,
+inclining to be stout; but her face was thin and lined, belying her
+comfortable aspect,--a wistful face which had known much sorrow, and had
+still much tenderness to give.
+
+Lady Waverton put out a languid and supercilious hand. "I hope you
+are better."
+
+"Thank you. I have not been ill."
+
+"Oh, I always forget."
+
+"Your servant, ma'am." Geoffrey bowed.
+
+"Oh,"--Lady Waverton turned on her elbow. "Colonel Boyce--Mrs. Weston,
+Alison's companion. Faith, duenna, I think."
+
+"Your most obedient, ma'am." Colonel Boyce bowed low.
+
+Mrs. Weston stared at him, seemed to try to speak, said nothing, and
+hurried across the room.
+
+"Alison, dear, are you ready?" her voice sounded hoarse.
+
+"Am I ever ready?" Alison laughed. "Weston, dear, we are finding friends
+here;" she pointed to Harry.
+
+Colonel Boyce had followed. He laid his hand on Harry's shoulder: "My
+son, ma'am," said he.
+
+Mrs. Weston's eyes grew wide, and her face was white and drawn, and she
+swayed. As Harry bowed to her, a lacquered box was swept off the table
+with a great clatter, and Colonel Boyce cried, "Odds life, Harry, you are
+a clumsy fellow. Here, man, here," and made a great commotion over
+picking it up.
+
+Alison had her arm about Mrs. Weston: "Why, Weston, dear, what is it? Are
+you seeing a ghost?" She laughed. "Pray, Mr. Boyce, come to life."
+
+"I ask pardon, ma'am." Harry rose with the box.
+
+"'Bid me to live and I will live,'" said the Colonel, with a grand air.
+
+"Come away, dear, come," Mrs. Weston gasped, in much agitation.
+
+"Why, Weston, he is not our highwayman, you know," Alison was still
+laughing, and then seeing her distress real, took it in earnest. "You are
+shaken, poor thing. Come!" She mothered the woman away and, turning,
+called over her shoulder--
+
+"_Revanche_, Mr. Boyce." There was an explanation to Lady Waverton: poor
+Weston had been so alarmed by the highwaymen that she was not fit to be
+out of her bed, and anything alarmed her; even Mr. Boyce; so dear Lady
+Waverton must forgive them. And Geoffrey took them to their carriage.
+
+"What a person!" said Lady Waverton.
+
+Mr. Hadley came out of his corner and looked Harry up and down with
+dislike. "Let me know when you play the next act, Mr. Boyce," he
+said, and turned to Lady Waverton. "My lady, I beg leave to go with
+my friends."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+A GENTLEMAN'S PURSE
+
+
+In a small, bare room Colonel Boyce sat himself down on a pallet bed and
+made a wry face at his son. "My poor, dear boy," he said, and shifted
+uneasily, and looked round at the stained walls and shivered. "It's damp,
+I vow it's damp," he complained.
+
+"Oh yes. It's damp after rain, and it's hot after sun, and it's icy after
+frost. It's a very sympathetic room," said Harry.
+
+"They are barbarians, these Wavertons. I vow they give their horses
+better lodging."
+
+"Oh yes. I am not worth so much as a horse," said Harry.
+
+"Lud, Harry, don't whine,"--his father was irritated. "Have some spirit.
+I hate to hear a lad meek."
+
+"I thought you did," said Harry.
+
+The Colonel laughed. "Oh, I am bit, am I? _Tant mieux_. But why the devil
+do you stay here?"
+
+"Now why the devil do you want to know?" said Harry.
+
+"No, that is not kind, boy."
+
+"Oh, Oh, are we kind?"
+
+"My dear Harry, I have not seen you for six years, and I have not come
+now to quarrel."
+
+"Then why have you come?" said the affectionate son.
+
+"You are a gracious cub." Colonel Boyce would not be ruffled. "When I saw
+you last, Harry--"
+
+"You borrowed a shilling of me. I remember I was glad that I had
+not another."
+
+"You can have it back with interest now. There is plenty in the purse,
+Harry, and half of all mine is yours."
+
+"You have changed," Harry said. "Odds life, Harry, bear no grudges. I
+dare say I was hard in what you remember of me. Well, things were hard
+upon me and I lived hard. You shall find me mellow enough now."
+
+"Hard? I don't know that you were hard. I thought you were as cold as
+ice. I believe, sir, I am still frozen."
+
+"Egad, Harry, you must have had a curst childhood."
+
+"Oh, must we be sympathetic?" said Harry.
+
+"You're right, boy. The past is past. 'Tis your future which is the
+matter. So again--why do you stay here?"
+
+Harry laughed. "They give me bed and board, and a shilling or two by
+the month."
+
+"Bed?" His father shifted upon it. "A bag of stones, I think. And for the
+board--bread of affliction and water of affliction by what I saw of the
+remains. Egad, Harry, they are savages, these Wavertons."
+
+"I did not hear you say so to madame. And Geoffrey is not a bad fellow
+as far as he has understanding."
+
+"A dolt, eh? He might take a woman's eye, though. These big dreamy
+fellows, the women hanker after them queerly. Take care, Harry." He
+looked knowing. "Bed and board--bah, you can do better than that. Now
+what do you think I have been doing?"
+
+"Something profitable, to judge by your genial splendours. Have you
+turned highwayman?"
+
+"You all talk about highwaymen in this house," said the Colonel with a
+frown and a keen glance.
+
+"Damme, no."
+
+"Why, are you really a colonel?"
+
+"Faith, you may come see my commission,"--Colonel Boyce was not
+annoyed,--"and, egad, share my pay." He pulled out a fat purse and thrust
+some guineas upon Harry. "Don't deny me now, boy," he said, with some
+tenderness.
+
+"I never meant to," said Harry, and counted them. "But how long have you
+been a soldier? I never knew you were anything."
+
+"I have been with his Grace of Marlborough in every campaign since
+Blenheim. Do you think it's a good service, Harry?" he smiled at his
+own opulence.
+
+"For a versatile man," said Harry, and looked at his father curiously.
+
+"Why, I can take the field as well as another. Egad, when Vendome fell
+back from Oudenarde I was commanding a battalion. But it is not in the
+field that my best work is done."
+
+"Faith, I had guessed that," Harry said.
+
+"You have a sharp tongue, Harry. It's a dangerous weakness. Be careful
+to grow out of it. Then I think you may do well enough."
+
+"In your profession, sir? To be sure, you flatter me."
+
+"In my profession--" His father looked at him keenly. "I am not sure.
+Maybe you can do better, which will be well enough. Now, what can you do?
+You can use a sword, I suppose, though you wear none?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "I know the rigmarole, the salutes; I could begin a duel,
+_par exemple_. It's the other man who would end it."
+
+"Duels--bah, only dolts are troubled with them. You must learn to hold
+your own in a flurry. You can ride, I suppose?"
+
+"If the beast has a mane."
+
+"Humph. You speak French?"
+
+"As we speak it in England."
+
+"Yes." His father nodded. "When a man is no fool, he finds his profit in
+not doing things too well. Well, Harry, are you Whig or Tory--Jacobite or
+Hanoverian?"
+
+"Whichever you like, sir."
+
+"By the Lord, you take after me mightily. Now look 'e, thus it is. The
+Queen grows old. She eats too well and drinks too well, and she has the
+gout. It's common among all who know her ways that she cannot last long.
+The poor soul will not be wise at dinner. But even if she should last, we
+are in an odd case. For Anne hath a conscience as well as a stomach, and
+it seems they grow together. As the old lady gets fatter, she feels
+remorse. When she's tearful after dinner now she asks her women what
+right she has to be queen and keep a good cellar while her poor
+half-brother Prince James lives in exile on _vin ordinaire_."
+
+Harry shrugged his shoulders. "'Poor, dear lad,' says she, 'and to
+be sure I am a sad, bad woman. But I think I'll die a queen.' What
+then, sir?"
+
+"I don't say you are wrong, Harry. She's more like to drown the lad in
+tears than right him. And meanwhile our rightful king, James the
+Pretender, is left to his _vin ordinaire_. Faith, it's a proper liquor,
+for rightful heirs which can't right themselves. And yet there is a
+chance. The Queen has always been religious, and when a woman hath
+religion she may play the devil with your reason any minute. But here is
+what's more likely. You know when an old fellow hath played the knave
+with some wardship or some matter of trust, often he holds fast to it all
+his life and then seeks to commend himself to the day of judgment by
+bequeathing his spoils to those from whom he stole them. Well, it's
+whispered among them that know her that Madame Anne will do her possible
+to make Prince James King when she is gone."
+
+"A dead Queen is but a corpse," said Harry. "When she is gone 'twill not
+be for her to say who shall reign."
+
+"That's half a truth. You know the law is so that Prince George of
+Hanover should be the King. About him no man knows anything save that he
+hath a vile taste in women. I do suspect Marlborough is in the right--he
+has a nose for men--when he saith there is nought to know. Well, we
+tried a Dutchman once for our King and liked him ill enough. Who is to
+say that we shall like a German better? Now Prince James--he is half an
+Englishman at least, though they say he has his father's weakness for
+priests. I'll not hide from you, Harry, that I am in the confidence of
+some great men. It's laid upon me to go to France with an errand to
+Prince James."
+
+"I suppose that is high treason, sir."
+
+Colonel Boyce smiled queerly. "You see how I trust you, Harry. Bah, you
+are not frightened of words. Who is the worse for it, if I find out
+what's Monsieur's temper and how he would bear himself if he were King?"
+
+"And what he would pay any kind gentlemen who chose to turn
+Jacobites apropos."
+
+"If you like." Colonel Boyce laughed. I promise you, Harry, there are
+great men in this. Now I need a trusty fellow to my right hand: a fellow
+who can talk and say nothing: a fellow who is in no service but mine: and
+all the better if he hath some learning to play the secretary. So I
+thought of you. And since it may carry you to something of note, I chose
+you with right good will."
+
+"Do you wonder that you surprise me?"
+
+"I profess you're not generous, Harry. It's true enough, I have done
+little for you yet. But the truth is I could do nothing. As soon as I
+have it in my power, I come to you--"
+
+"And offer me--a game at hazard."
+
+"Why, Harry, you're not a coward?"
+
+"Faith, I can't tell. Perhaps I will go with you. But I have no
+expectation in it."
+
+"I suppose you have some here," his father sneered. "What do they call
+you? You seem to be something better than Master Geoffrey's valet and a
+good deal worse than my lady's footman."
+
+"Why, I believe you have lost your temper." Harry laughed. "Oh, admirable
+sight! Pray let me enjoy it! The father rages at his son's ingratitude!"
+
+But Colonel Boyce had quickly recovered his equanimity. "They used to
+tell me that I was a cold fellow. But I vow you are a very fish. So you
+have half a mind to stay here, have you? Well, I bear no malice."
+
+"It is only half a mind," Harry said. "Are you in a hurry?"
+
+"Oh, you may sleep on it. Damme, I suppose there is little to do here but
+sleep. What does Master Geoffrey want with you? He is old to keep a tame
+schoolmaster."
+
+"I listen to his poetry."
+
+"Oh Lud!" said Colonel Boyce, with sincere sympathy. "I suppose they are
+wealthy folk, your Wavertons. Do they keep much company?" Harry shrugged.
+"Who is this Mrs. Weston?"
+
+"I never saw her before." Harry paused, and then with a laugh
+added--"before yesterday."
+
+"That's a fine woman, her mistress. Do you do anything in that
+quarter, sirrah?"
+
+"Why should you think so?"
+
+"She was willing enough that you should try."
+
+"She is meat for my betters," said Harry meekly.
+
+"For Master Geoffrey?" The Colonel looked knowing. "Do you know, Harry, I
+think Master Geoffrey is a pigeon made to be plucked. Well. What was the
+pretty lady's talk about highwaymen?"
+
+Harry looked at his father for some time. "The truth is, I don't
+understand Benjamin," he said at last. "I wonder if you will. Faith, sir,
+here is a pretty piece of family life. The good son confides in his
+father alone of all the world."
+
+"Go on, sir," Colonel Boyce chuckled. "I play fair."
+
+So Harry told his tale of Benjamin and Benjamin's companion and their
+disaster. It was that appearance in the crisis of the fight of other
+gentlemen on horseback which most interested Colonel Boyce. "So they went
+in pursuit of the fellow who had fled and they never came back again." He
+looked quizzically at his son. "These be very honest gentlemen."
+
+"Why, sir, I thought nothing of that. They were plainly travelling at
+speed. I suppose they missed him, and had no time to waste in searching."
+
+"Then why o' God's name did he not come back to help his fellow? He was
+mounted, he was armed, and only you and your cudgel against him. Bah,
+Harry, do not be an innocent. Consider: these fellows went after him at
+speed. He cannot have been far away. It is any odds that he had his
+bolting horses in hand before he had gone two furlongs. Then--allow him
+some sense--then he must have turned and come back for his friend. And
+then these other honest gentlemen swept down on him. Well. Why have you
+heard no more of them or him?"
+
+"Faith, sir, you are right," Harry conceived for the first time some
+admiration for his father. "I had missed that: and, egad, it is the chief
+question of the puzzle. But--"
+
+"Puzzle! Oh Lud, there's no puzzle. They were all one gang, these
+fellows."
+
+Harry laughed. "Then there was not much honour among the thieves. They
+abandoned their Benjamin to me with delight."
+
+"Ah, bah, you do not suppose they were out for such small game as your
+pretty miss. They would not work in a gang to stop a simple, common
+coach, be it never so rich. Come, Harry, use your wits. Did you hear of
+any great folks on the road yesterday?"
+
+Harry made an exclamation. "Odds life, sir, you would make a great
+thief-catcher. You have hit it. There was your friend, the Duke of
+Marl-borough, stuck in the mud below Barnet Hill." And he told that part
+of the story.
+
+"Humph. So they came too late," his father said. "You see how it is. This
+gang was charged to stop his Grace, and was something slow about it. The
+two first, your Benjamin and his friend, I suppose they should have held
+the Duke's fellows in play till the others came up. They missed him, or
+they shirked it, and instead, tried to stay their stomachs with some
+common game. The rest of the gang would be well enough pleased that you
+should baste Benjamin while they hurried on after the Duke. Did you mark
+any of them, what like they were?"
+
+"Not I. I was too busy with Benjamin."
+
+"And your pretty miss, eh? A pity. But it's well enough for your
+first affair."
+
+"First? Why, am I to spend my life tumbling with gentlemen of the road?"
+
+"And a profitable, pleasant life too, if you use your wits."
+
+Harry opened his eyes. "Do you know it well, sir? Now, what I don't
+understand is why a gang of highwaymen should appoint to set upon the
+Duke of Marlborough. It's dangerous, to be sure--"
+
+"You will understand why, if you come to France," said Colonel Boyce,
+with a queer smile. "There be many would pay high for a sight of his
+Grace's private papers," and he laughed to himself over some joke. "Nay,
+but you have done very well, Harry," he condescended. "I like this
+business of leaving Benjamin tied up on the road. 'Tis damned nonsense,
+to be sure, but it has an air, a distinction. Your pretty miss will like
+that. And I judge you have not told the Wavertons you were the hero, nor
+let miss tell them. 'Tis your little secret for yourselves. A good touch,
+Harry. Odds life, I begin to be proud of you. I suppose you will soon go
+pay your respects--to Mrs. Weston." He laughed heartily.
+
+Harry was not amused. "Do you know, I think I like you much less than you
+like me," he said.
+
+Colonel Boyce seemed very well content.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+THE WORLD'S A MIRACLE
+
+
+Colonel Boyce was established in the house, a guest of high honour.
+
+Harry, dazed at the mere fact, could not be very sure how it had happened
+or why. The Wavertons, mother and son, had assaulted the Colonel with
+hospitality--for a night--for another--for longer and longer--and he,
+appearing at first honestly dubious, remained with a benign
+condescension.
+
+There is no doubt that, in an honourable way, Lady Waverton was
+fascinated by Colonel Boyce. She saw nothing coarse in his
+highly-coloured manners, suspected no guile in his flattery or his parade
+of importance. Harry, who had never supposed her a wise woman, was
+surprised by her complete surrender. He had credited her with too much
+pride to succumb to flattery, which was to his taste impudently gross.
+But he was not yet old enough to allow that other folks might have tastes
+wholly unlike his own, and he had himself--it is perhaps the only trait
+of much delicacy in him--a shrinking discomfort under praise.
+
+Colonel Boyce took his victory with a complacency which Harry thought
+oddly fatuous in a man so acute.
+
+"Egad, the old lady would go to church with me to-morrow if I asked her;"
+he laughed, and seemed to think that in that at least my lady showed
+sense.
+
+"You had better take her, sir," said Harry, with a sneer. "I know she has
+a good dower. And a fool and her money are soon parted."
+
+"Damme, Harry, you are venomous!" For the first time in their
+acquaintance Colonel Boyce showed some signs of smarting. "What harm have
+I done you? No, sir, you have a nasty tongue. I intend the old lady no
+harm, neither. What if she has a tenderness for me? I suppose that does
+not make me a fool."
+
+"To be sure, sir, I did not know your affection was serious." Harry
+laughed disagreeably.
+
+"I believe you would not miss a chance to say a bitter thing though it
+ruined you, Lud, Harry, if you can't be grateful, don't be a fool too.
+What a pox are your Wavertons to me? I don't value them a pinch of snuff.
+What I am doing, I am doing for you. You know what you were when I found
+you--no better than a footman out of livery. Now, they treat you like a
+gentleman."
+
+"And all for the _beaux yeux_ of my father. Well, it's true, sir. But I
+don't know that I like any of us much the better for it."
+
+To his great surprise his father looked at him with affectionate
+admiration. "Egad, you take that tone very well," said he. "It's a good
+card. Maybe it's the best with the women."
+
+Harry had to laugh. "I think you have the easiest temper in the
+world, sir."
+
+"Aye, aye. It has been the ruin of me."
+
+And so they parted the best of friends. Indeed Harry had never liked his
+father so well or felt so much his superior. Thus from age to age is
+filial affection confirmed.
+
+But he had to allow some adroitness in his father. Not only Lady
+Waverton, but Geoffrey too, succumbed to the paternal charms. That was
+the more surprising. Geoffrey, behind his vanity and his affectation, was
+no fool. He had also a temper apt to dislike any man who made a show of
+position or achievement beyond his own. Yet he hung upon the lips of
+Colonel Boyce. What they gave him was indeed a pleasing mixture--secrets
+about great affairs flavoured with deference to his ingenious criticisms.
+There was something solid about it, too. The Colonel, displaying himself
+as a man of much importance, perpetually hinted that only the occasion
+was needed for Mr. Waverton to surpass him by far, and to that occasion
+he could point the way. It appeared to Harry that his father had in mind
+to enlist Geoffrey for the proposed mission to France, or some other
+scheme unrevealed. And being unable to see any reason for wanting
+Geoffrey as a man, he suspected that his father wanted money.
+
+He saw clearly that nobody wanted him, and was therewith very well
+content. At this time in his life he asked nothing better than to be left
+alone with his whims and the open air. He covered many a mile of sticky
+clay in these autumn days, placidly vacant of mind, and afterwards
+accounted them the most comfortable of his life.
+
+Mr. Waverton's house was set upon a hill, at one end of a line of hills
+which now look over the wilderness of London, falling steeply thereto,
+and upon the other side, to northward and the open country, more gently.
+In the epoch of Harry Boyce those hills were all woodland--pleasant
+patches still remain,--and if the need of great walking was not upon him
+he was often pleased to loiter through their thickets. It was on a wild
+south-westerly day when the naked trees were at a loud chorus that Alison
+came to him.
+
+The dainty colours of her face laughed from a russet hood, russet cloak
+and green skirt wind-borne against her gave him the delight of her shape.
+
+"'Stand, sir, and throw us that you have about you,'" she cried.
+
+"You're poetical, ma'am."
+
+"I vow not I. I say what I mean. There's an unmaidenly trick. And, faith,
+I am here to rifle you, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Wish you joy, ma'am. What of?"
+
+"Of your conceit, to be sure. Have you anything else?"
+
+"I have nothing which could be of any use to Miss Lambourne. So God knows
+why she runs after me."
+
+"Oh, brave!" Miss Lambourne was not out of countenance. "'Tis a shameless
+maid indeed which runs after a man"--she made him a curtsy. "But what is
+the man who runs away from a maid?"
+
+Harry Boyce cursed her in his heart. She was by far too desirable. The
+rain-fraught wind had made the dawn tints of her clearer, lucent and yet
+more delicate. Her grey eyes danced like the sunlight ripples of deep
+water. Her lips were purely, brilliantly red. She fronted him and the
+wind, flaunting the richness of her bosom, poised and strong. She seemed
+the very body of life. For the first time he felt unsure of himself. "Did
+you come to call names, ma'am?" he growled.
+
+"I allow you the privileges of a gentleman, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Gentleman? Oh Lud, no, ma'am. I am an upper servant. Rather better than
+the butler. Not so good as the steward."
+
+"It won't serve you, sir. You have insulted me, and I demand
+satisfaction." She drew off her gauntleted glove and flicked him in the
+face with it. "Now will you fight?"
+
+"Oh, must we slap and scratch then?" Harry flushed darker than the mark
+of the glove. "I thought we had been fighting."
+
+Miss Lambourne laughed. "You can lose your temper then? It's something,
+in fact. Yes, we have been fighting, sir, and you don't fight fair."
+
+"Who does with a woman?" Harry sneered. "I cry you mercy, ma'am. You are
+vastly too strong for me. Let me alone and I ask no more of you."
+
+To which Miss Lambourne said, very innocently, "Why?" Harry looked up and
+saw her beautiful face meek and appealing, with something of a demure
+smile in the eyes. "Come, sir, what have I asked of you? You have done
+me something of a great service. There was a man handling me--do you know
+what that means? "--she made a wry face and gave herself a shaking
+shudder--"You rid me of him, and with some risk to your precious skin.
+Well, sir, I am grateful, and I want to show it. Odds life, I should be a
+beast did I not. I want to thank you and to sing your praises--to
+yourself also perhaps. And you are pleased to be a churl and a boor."
+
+"In effect," said Harry coolly. "Egad, ma'am, let me have the luxury of
+hating you. For I am the Wavertons' gentleman usher and you are the
+nonpareil Miss Lambourne, vastly rich and--" he ended with a shrug and
+a rueful grin.
+
+"And--?" Miss Lambourne softly insisted.
+
+"And damnably lovely. Lord, you know that."
+
+"I thank God," said Miss Lambourne devoutly.
+
+"Is it true, Mr. Boyce--do the meek inherit the earth?" She held out her
+hands to him, one bare, one gloved, she swayed a little towards him, and
+her face was gentle and wistful. "Nay, sir, I ask your pardon. Call
+friends if you please and will please me."
+
+Harry lost hold of himself at last. The blood surged in him, and he
+caught at her and kissed her fiercely.
+
+It was he who was embarrassed. As he stood away from her, eyeing her with
+a queer defiant shame, she smiled through a small matter of a blush, and
+breathing quickly said: "What does it feel like, sir?"
+
+"The world's a miracle," Harry said unsteadily and would have caught
+her again.
+
+She turned, she was away light of foot, and in a moment through the wind
+he heard her singing to a tune of her own the child's rhyme:
+
+"Fly away, Jack,
+ Fly away, Jill,
+Come again, Jack,
+ Come again, Jill."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+HARRY IS NOT GRATEFUL
+
+
+Where the lane from Fortis Green crosses the high road there stood an
+ale-house. On the wettest days, and some others, the place was Harry's
+resort. Not that he had a liking for ale-house company--or indeed any
+company. But within the precincts of the Wavertons' house tobacco was
+forbidden and--all the more for that--tobacco he loved with a solid
+devotion. The alehouse of the cross roads offered a clean floor, a clean
+fire, air not too foul, a tolerable chair, a landlord who did not talk,
+and until evening, sufficient solitude. There Harry smoked many pipes in
+tranquillity until the day when on his entry he found Mr. Hadley's
+sardonic face waiting for him. He liked Charles Hadley less than many men
+whom he more despised. Nobody in a position just better than menial can
+be expected to like the condescending mockery which was Mr. Hadley's
+_metier_. But Harry--it is one of his most noble qualities--bore being
+laughed at well enough. What most annoyed him was Mr. Hadley's parade of
+a surly, austere virtue. He did not doubt that it was sincere. He could
+more easily have forgiven it if it had been hypocritical. A man had no
+business to be so mighty honest.
+
+Mr. Hadley nodded at Harry, who said it was a dirty day, and called for
+his pot of small ale and his pennyworth of Spanish tobacco. Mr. Hadley
+was civil enough to pass him a pipe from the box. Both gentlemen smoked
+in grave silence.
+
+"So you are still with us," said Mr. Hadley.
+
+"By your good leave, sir."
+
+"I had an apprehension the Colonel was going to ravish you away."
+
+"I hope I am still of some use to Mr. Waverton."
+
+"Damme, you might be the old family retainer. 'Faithful service of the
+antique world,' egad. I suppose you will end your days with Geoffrey, and
+be buried at his feet like a trusty hound."
+
+"If you please, sir."
+
+They looked at each other. "Well, Mr. Boyce, I beg your pardon," Hadley
+said. "But you'll allow you are irritating to a plain man."
+
+"I do not desire it, sir."
+
+"I may hold my tongue and mind my own business, eh? Why not take me
+friendly?"
+
+"I intend you no harm, Mr. Hadley."
+
+"That's devilish good of you, Mr. Boyce. To be plain with you, what do
+you want here?"
+
+"Here? Oh Lord, sir, I come to smoke my pipe!"
+
+"And what if I come to smoke you? Odds life, I know you are no fool. Do
+me the honour to take me for none. And tell me, if you please, why do you
+choose to be Master Geoffrey's gentleman in waiting? You are good for
+better than that, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"No doubt, sir. But it brings me bread and butter."
+
+"You could earn that fighting in Flanders."
+
+Harry shrugged. "I am not very brave, Mr. Hadley."
+
+"You count upon staying here, do you?"
+
+"If I can satisfy Mr. Waverton," said Harry meekly.
+
+Hadley's face grew harder. "I vow I do my best to wish you well,
+Mr. Boyce. I should be glad to hear that you'll give up walking in
+the woods."
+
+There was a moment of silence. "I did not know that I had asked for your
+advice, sir." Harry said. "I am not grateful for it."
+
+"Damme, that's the first honest answer you have made," Hadley cried.
+"Look 'e, Mr. Boyce, I am as much your friend as I may be. I have an
+uncle which was the lady's guardian. If I said a word to him he would
+carry it to Lady Waverton in a gouty rage. There would be a swift end of
+Mr. Boyce the tutor. Well, I would not desire that. For all your airs,
+I'll believe you a man of honour. And I ask you what's to become of Mr.
+Boyce the tutor seeking private meetings with the Lambourne heiress?
+Egad, sir, you were made for better things than such a mean business."
+
+"Honour!" Harry sneered. "Were you talking of men of honour? I suppose
+there is good cover in the woods, Mr. Hadley."
+
+Hadley stared at him. "It was not good enough, you see, sir." He knocked
+out his pipe and stood up. "Bah, this is childish. You don't think me a
+knave, nor I you. I have said my say, and I mean you well."
+
+"I believe that, Mr. Hadley"--Harry met him with level eyes--"and I am
+not grateful."
+
+"You know who she is meant for."
+
+"I know that the lady might call us both impudent."
+
+"Would that break your bones? Come, sir, the lady hath been destined for
+Master Geoffrey since she had hair and never has rebelled."
+
+"Lord, Mr. Hadley, are you destiny?"
+
+Mr. Hadley let that by with an impatient shrug. "So if you be fool enough
+to have ambitions after her, you would wear a better face in eating no
+more of Master Geoffrey's bread."
+
+"It's a good day for walking, Mr. Hadley. Which way do you go? For I go
+the other."
+
+"I hope so," Mr. Hadley agreed, and on that the two gentlemen parted,
+both something warm.
+
+We should flatter him in supposing Harry Boyce of a chivalrous delicacy.
+Whether the lady's fair fame might be the worse for him was a question of
+which he never thought. It is certain that he did not blame himself for
+using his place as Geoffrey's paid servant to damage Geoffrey in his
+affections. And indeed you will agree that he was innocent of any
+designed attack upon the lady. Yet Mr. Hadley succeeded in making him
+very uncomfortable.
+
+What most troubled him, I conceive, was the fear of being ridiculous. The
+position of a poor tutor aspiring to the favours of the heiress destined
+for his master invites the unkind gibe. And Harry could not be sure that
+Alison herself was free from the desire to make him a figure of scorn.
+Such a suspicion might disconcert the most ardent of lovers. Harry
+Boyce, whatever his abilities in the profession, was not that yet. But
+the very fact that he had come to feel an ache of longing for Alison made
+him for once dread laughter. If he had been manoeuvring for what he could
+get by her, or if he had been merely taken by her good looks, he might
+have met jeering with a brazen face. But she had engaged his most private
+emotions, and to have them made ludicrous would be of all possible
+punishments most intolerable. The precise truth of what he felt for her
+then was, I suppose, that he wanted to make her his own--wanted to have
+all of her in his power; and a gentleman whom the world--and the
+lady--are laughing at for an aspiring menial cannot comfortably think
+about his right to possess her.
+
+There was something else. He was not meticulously delicate, but he had a
+complete practical sanity. He saw very well that even if Alison, by the
+chance of circumstance, had some infatuation for him, she might soon
+repent: he saw that even if the affair went with romantic success--a
+thing hardly possible--his position and hers might be awkward enough.
+Her friends would be long in forgiving either of them, and find ways
+enough to hurt them both. Mr. Hadley, confound him, spoke the common
+sense of mankind.
+
+There was one solution--that estimable father. By the time he came back
+to the house on Tether-down, Harry was resolved to enlist under the
+ambiguous banner of Colonel Boyce.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+GENEROSITY OF A FATHER
+
+
+With grim irony Harry congratulated himself on his decision. When first
+he came into the house he heard Alison singing. There was indeed (as he
+told himself clearly) nothing wonderful about her voice--it resembled
+the divine only in being still and small. Yet he could not (he called
+himself still more clearly a fool) keep away from it, and so he slunk
+into Lady Waverton's drawing-room. Only duty and stated hours were wont
+to drag him there. Lady Waverton showed her appreciation of his unusual
+attendance by staring at him across the massed trifles of the room with
+sleepy and insolent amazement. But it was not the glassy eyes of Lady
+Waverton which convinced Harry that flight was the true wisdom. Over
+Alison at the harpsichord, Geoffrey hung tenderly: their shoulders
+touched, eyes answered eyes, and miss was radiant. She sang at him with a
+naughty archness that song of Mr. Congreve's:
+
+"Thus to a ripe consenting maid,
+Poor old repenting Delia said,
+Would you long preserve your lover?
+ Would you still his goddess reign?
+Never let him all discover,
+ Never let him much obtain.
+
+Men will admire, adore and die
+While wishing at your feet they lie;
+But admitting their embraces
+ Wakes 'em from the golden dream:
+Nothing's new besides our faces,
+ Every woman is the same."
+
+She contorted her own face into smug folly by way of illustration. Then
+she and Geoffrey laughed together. "I vow you're the most deliciously
+wicked creature that ever was born a maid."
+
+"D'ye regret it, sir? Faith, I could not well be born a wife."
+
+"No, ma'am, that's an honour to be won by care and pains."
+
+"Pains! Lud, yes, I believe that. But, dear sir, I reckon it the
+punishment for folly. Why,"--she chose to see Harry--"why, here is our
+knight of the rueful countenance!"
+
+Mr. Waverton laughed. "It is related of the Egyptians--"
+
+"God help us," Alison murmured.
+
+He went on, giggling. "It is related of the Ancient Egyptians that they
+ever had a corpse among the guests at their feasts."
+
+"Were their cooks so bad?" said Alison.
+
+"To remind them that all men are mortal. Now you see why we keep Harry."
+
+"I wonder if he looked as happy when he was alive," said Alison,
+surveying his wooden face.
+
+"_De mortuis nil nisi bonum_," Geoffrey laughed. "No jests about the
+dead, Alison. But to tell you a secret, he never was alive. He doesn't
+like it known."
+
+Colonel Boyce, who had listened to the song and the first
+coruscations of wit with the condescending smile of a connoisseur,
+now exhibited some impatience. "Egad, Harry, why will you dress like
+a parson out at elbows?"
+
+"His customary suit of solemn black," said Geoffrey.
+
+"He is in mourning for himself, of course," Alison laughed.
+
+"I have two suits of clothes, ma'am," said Harry meekly. "This is
+the better."
+
+"Poor Harry!" Geoffrey granted him a look of protective affection. "I vow
+we are too hard on him, Alison." And then in a lower voice for her
+private ear. "A dear, worthy fellow, but--well, what would you have?--of
+no spirit." Alison bit her lip.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Waverton," Harry protested, "indeed, I am proud to be the cause
+of such wit."
+
+Colonel Boyce stared at his son with an enigmatic frown. Alison's eyes
+brightened. But Geoffrey suspected no guile. "Not witty thyself, dear
+lad, but the cause of wit in others, eh? Odds life, Harry, you are
+invaluable."
+
+"'Tis your kindness for me makes you think so, Mr. Waverton. And, to be
+sure, I could ask no more than to amuse your lady."
+
+Alison said tartly, "Oh, it takes little to amuse me, sir."
+
+"I am sure, ma'am," Harry agreed meekly.
+
+"It's a happy nature." and he bowed to Geoffrey, humbly congratulating
+him on a lady of such simple tastes.
+
+Geoffrey, who had now had enough of his good tutor, eliminated him by a
+compliment or so on Alison's voice and the demand that she should sing
+again. He found her in an awkward temper. She would not sing this, she
+would not sing that, she found faults in every song known to Mr.
+Waverton. Yet in a fashion she was encouraging. For this new method of
+keeping him off was governed by a queer adulation of him: no song in the
+world could be worth his distinguished attention; her little voice must
+be to his accomplished ear vain and ludicrous; the kind things he was so
+good as to say were vastly gratifying, to be sure, but they were merely
+his kind condescension. And, oh Lud, it was time she was gone, or poor,
+dear Weston would be imagining her slaughtered on the highway.
+
+Geoffrey could not make much of this, but was pleased to take it as
+flattering feminine homage to his magnificence. By way of reward, he
+announced an intention of riding home with her carriage. "Faith, you are
+too good"--her eyes were modestly hidden--"but then you are too good to
+everybody. Is he not, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+"Oh, ma'am, we all practise on his kindness," Harry said.
+
+"A good night to your mourning," she said sharply, "dear Lady Waverton."
+They kissed. "Colonel Boyce, I hold you to your promise."
+
+"With all my heart, ma'am. Your devoted."
+
+She was gone, and Harry, with a look of significance at his father, went
+off too....
+
+In that shabby upper chamber of his, Harry again offered the Colonel a
+choice between the bed and the one chair. Colonel Boyce made a gesture
+and an exclamation of impatience, and remained standing. "Now, what the
+devil do you want with me?" he complained.
+
+"I want to be very grateful. I want to enlist with you. When shall
+we start?"
+
+His father frowned, and in a little while made a crooked answer, "Do you
+know, Harry, you are too mighty subtle. I was so at your years. It's very
+pretty sport, but--well, it won't butter your parsnips. The women can't
+tell what to make of it. Having, in general, no humour, pretty
+creatures."
+
+"I am obliged for the sermon, sir. Shall we leave to-morrow?"
+
+"Egad, you are in a fluster," his father smiled. "Well, to be sure, he is
+a teasing fellow, the beautiful Geoffrey."
+
+Harry made an exclamation. "You'll forgive me, sir, if I say you are
+talking nonsense."
+
+"Oh Lud, yes," his father chuckled.
+
+"Whether I am agreeable to women, whether Mr. Waverton is agreeable to
+me--odds life, sir, I don't trouble my head about such things. Pray,
+why should you? As well sit down and cry because my eyes are not the
+same colour."
+
+"No. No. There is something taking about that, Harry," his father
+remonstrated placidly.
+
+"When you please to be in earnest, sir," Harry cried, "if this affair of
+yours is in earnest--" "Oh, you may count on that." Colonel Boyce was
+still enjoying himself.
+
+"Then I am ready for it. And the sooner the better."
+
+"Hurry is a bad horse. The truth is, something more hangs on this affair
+than Mr. Harry's whims. Oh, damme, I don't blame you, though. He is
+tiresome, our Geoffrey."
+
+"Why, sir, if we have to waste time, we might waste it more comfortably
+than with the Waverton family. Shall we say to-morrow?"
+
+Colonel Boyce tapped his still excellent teeth. "Patience, patience," he
+said, and considered his son gravely. "As for to-morrow, I have friends
+to see, and so have you. Your pretty miss engaged me to ride over with
+you to her house. And behind the brave Geoffrey's back, if you please.
+She is a sly puss, Harry." He expected so obviously an angry answer that
+Harry chose to disappoint him.
+
+"I shall be happy to take leave of Miss Lambourne. And shall I ride
+pillion with you, sir? For I have no horse of my own."
+
+"Bah, dear Geoffrey will lend me the best in the stable."
+
+"I give you joy of the progress in his affections."
+
+Colonel Boyce laughed. "You are pledged for the forenoon then," he
+paused. "And as to that little affair of mine--you shall know your part
+soon enough."
+
+"It cannot be too soon, sir."
+
+"No." Colonel Boyce nodded. "I think it's full time."
+
+He took leave of his son with what the son thought superfluous
+affection.
+
+Half an hour afterwards he was in Mr. Waverton's room--a place very
+precious. Everything in it--and there were many things--had an air of
+being strange. Mr. Waverton slept behind curtains of black and silver.
+His floor was covered with some stuff like scarlet velvet. There was a
+skull in the place of honour on the walls, flanked by two Venetian
+pictures of the Virgin, and faced by a blowsy Bacchus and Ariadne from
+Flanders. The chairs were of the newest Italian mode, designed rather to
+carry as much gilding as possible than to comfort the human form. Colonel
+Boyce, regarding them with some apprehension, stood himself before the
+fire and waved off Geoffrey's effusive courtesy.
+
+"I hope you have good news for me, Mr. Waverton?" So he opened the
+attack.
+
+"Why, sir, I have considered my engagements," Geoffrey said
+magnificently. "I believe I could hold myself free for some months--if
+the enterprise were of weight."
+
+"You relieve me vastly. I'll not disguise from you, Mr. Waverton, that I
+am something anxious to secure you. I could not find a gentleman so well
+equipped for this delicate business. You'll observe, 'tis of the first
+importance that we should have presence, an air, the _je ne sais quoi_ of
+dignity and family."
+
+"Sir, you are very obliging." Geoffrey swallowed it whole.
+
+"When I came here I confess I was at my wit's end. Indeed, I had a mind
+to go alone. The gentlemen of my acquaintance--either they could not be
+trusted with an affair of such value, or they had too much of our English
+coarseness to be at ease with it. Faith, when I came to see my poor, dear
+Harry, little I thought that in his neighbourhood I should find the very
+man for my embassy." The two gentlemen laughed together over the
+incompatibility of Harry with gentlemanly diplomacy.
+
+"Not but what Harry is a faithful, trusty fellow," said Mr. Waverton,
+with magnificent condescension.
+
+"You are very good to say so. A dolt, sir, a dolt; so much the worse for
+me. Now, Mr. Waverton, to you I have no need of a word more on the
+secrecy of the affair. Though, to be sure, this very morning I had
+another note from Cadogan--Marlborough's _âme damnée_ you know--pressing
+it on me that nothing should get abroad. So when we go, we'll be off
+without a good-bye, and if you must leave a word behind for the anxieties
+of my lady, let her know that you are off with me to see the army in
+Flanders."
+
+"I profess, Colonel, you are mighty cautious."
+
+"Dear sir, we cannot be too cautious in this affair. There's many a
+handsome scheme gone awry for the sake of some affectionate farewell.
+Mothers, wives, lady-loves--sweet luxuries, Mr. Waverton, but damned
+dangerous. Now here's my plan. We'll go riding on an afternoon and not
+come back again. Trust my servant to get away quietly with your baggage
+and mine. We must travel light, to be sure. We'll go round London. I have
+too many friends there, and I want none of them asking where old Noll
+Boyce is off to now. Newhaven is the port for us. There is a trusty
+fellow there has his orders already. I look to land at Le Havre. Now, the
+Prince, by our latest news, is back at St. Germain. As you can guess, Mr.
+Waverton, to be seen in Paris would suit my health even less than to be
+seen in London. Too many honest Frenchmen have met me in the wars, and,
+what's worse, too many of them know me deep in Marlborough's business. I
+could not show my face without all King Louis's court talking of some
+great matter afoot. What I have in mind is to halt on the road--at
+Pontoise maybe--while you ride on with letters to Prince James. I warrant
+you they are such, and with such names to them, as will assure you a
+noble welcome. It's intended that he should quit St. Germain privately
+with you to conduct him to me. Then I warrant you we shall know how to
+deal with the lad." He paused and stared at Geoffrey intently, and
+gradually a grim humour stole into his eyes. He began to laugh. "Egad, I
+envy you, Mr. Waverton. To be in such an affair at your years--bah, I
+should have been crazy with pride."
+
+"You need not doubt that I value the occasion, sir," Geoffrey said
+grandly. "Pray, believe that I shall do honour to your confidence."
+
+"To be sure you will. Odds life, to chaffer with a king's son about
+kingdoms, to offer a realm to a prince in exile (if only he will be a
+good boy)--it's a fine, stately affair, sir, and you are the very man to
+take it in the right vein."
+
+"Sir, you are most obliging. I profess I vaunt myself very happy in your
+kindness. Be sure that I shall know how to justify you."
+
+"Egad, you do already," Colonel Boyce smiled, still with some touch of
+cruelty in his eyes.
+
+"Pray, sir, when must we start?"
+
+"When I know, maybe I shall need to start in an hour."
+
+"I shall not fail you. I shall want, I suppose, some funds in hand?"
+
+Colonel Boyce shrugged. "Oh Lud, yes, we'll want some money. A matter of
+five hundred pounds should serve."
+
+"I will arrange for it in the morning," said Mr. Waverton, too
+magnificent to be startled. "Pray, what clothes shall we be able
+to carry?"
+
+"Damme, that's a grave matter," said Colonel Boyce, and with becoming
+gravity discussed it.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+MISS LAMBOURNE LOOKS SIDEWAYS
+
+
+Thus Colonel Boyce blandly arranged the lives of his young friends. It is
+believed that he had a peculiar pleasure in manoeuvring his
+fellow-creatures from behind a veil of secrecy. For in this he sought not
+merely his private profit (though it was never out of his calculations);
+he enjoyed his operations for their own sake; he liked his trickery as
+trickery; to push and pull people to the place in which he wanted them
+without their knowing how or why or to what end they were impelled was to
+him a pleasure second to none in life. And on a survey of his whole
+career he is to be accounted successful. Though I cannot find that he
+ever achieved anything of signal importance even for himself, at one time
+or another he brought a great number of people, some of them powerful,
+and some of them honourable, under his direction, he had his complete
+will of many of them, and was rewarded by the bitter hostility of the
+majority. He contrived, in fact, to live just such a life as he liked
+best. What more can any man have?
+
+So he told Harry nothing of his engagement of Mr. Waverton, and Harry,
+you have seen, was not likely to guess that anyone would enlist his
+Geoffrey for a serious enterprise. On the next morning, indeed, Harry did
+remark that Geoffrey was more portentous than usual, but thought nothing
+of it. He was embarrassed by thinking about himself.
+
+There was, as Colonel Boyce predicted, no difficulty about a horse for
+Harry. When the Colonel suggested it, Geoffrey showed some satirical
+surprise at Harry's daring, but (advising one of the older carriage
+horses) bade him take what he would. Colonel Boyce spoke only of riding
+with his son. He said nothing of where they were going. Harry wondered
+whether Geoffrey would have been so gracious if he had known that Alison
+was their destination, and, a new experience for him, felt some qualms of
+conscience. It was uncomfortable to use a favour from Geoffrey, even a
+trifling favour granted with a sneer, for meeting his lady; still more
+uncomfortable to go seek the lady out secretly. But if he announced what
+he was doing, there would be instantly something ridiculous about it, and
+he would have to swallow much of Geoffrey's humour. Geoffrey might even
+come with them, and Alison and he be humorous together--a fate
+intolerable. There was indeed an easy way of escape. He had but to stay
+away from the lady. But, though he despised himself for it, he desired
+infinitely to see her again. She compelled him, as he had never believed
+anything outside his own will could compel. After all, it was no such
+matter, for he would soon be gone with his father to France. He might
+well hope never to see her again.
+
+So on that ride through the steep wooded lanes to Highgate, his father
+found him morose, and complained of it. "Damme, for a young fellow that's
+off to his lady-love you are a mighty poor thing, Harry."
+
+"My lady-love! I have no taste for rich food. I thought it was your lady
+we were going to see."
+
+"What the devil do you mean by that?" Colonel Boyce stared.
+
+"Oh, fie, sir! Why be ashamed of her?"
+
+"God knows what you are talking about." Colonel Boyce was extraordinarily
+irritated. "Ashamed of whom?"
+
+"Of the peerless Miss Lambourne, to be sure. Oh, sir, why be so innocent?
+How could she resist your charms? And indeed--"
+
+"Miss Lambourne! What damned nonsense you talk, Harry."
+
+"I followed your lead, sir," said Harry meekly. "But if we are to talk
+sense--when shall we start for France?"
+
+"You shall know when I know."
+
+And on that they came to the top of the hill and the gates of the Hall.
+The wet weather had yielded to St. Martin's summer. It was a day of
+gentle silver-gold sunlight and benign air. With her companion, Mrs.
+Weston, Miss Lambourne was walking in the garden. She met the gentlemen
+at a turn of the drive by rampant sweetbriers. "Here's our knight of the
+rueful countenance, and faith, on Rosinante, poor jade," she patted
+Harry's aged carriage horse. "Oh, and he has brought with him Solomon in
+all his glory," she made a wonderful curtsy to the splendours of Colonel
+Boyce. "Now, who would have dreamt Don Quixote's father was Solomon?"
+
+"I suppose I take after my mother, ma'am," Harry said meekly. "It's a
+hope which often consoles me."
+
+"Why, they say Solomon had something of a variety in wives, and
+among them--"
+
+Colonel Boyce dismounted with so much noise that the jest was hardly
+heard and the end of it altogether lost.
+
+"You did not tell me"--Mrs. Weston was speaking and seemed to find it
+difficult--"Alison, you did not tell me the gentlemen were coming." It
+occurred to Harry that she looked very pale and ill.
+
+"Why, Weston; dear, I could not tell if they would keep troth." She
+began to hum:
+
+"Men were deceivers ever,
+ One foot on sea, and one on shore,
+To one thing constant never."
+
+"Nay, ma'am, sigh no more for here are we," Colonel Boyce said brusquely.
+
+"Oh Lud, he overwhelms us with the honour." She laughed. "How can we
+entertain him worthily? Sir, will you walk? My poor house and I await
+your pleasure."
+
+"I am vastly honoured, ma'am. I have never had a lady-in-waiting."
+
+"Oh, celibate virtue!" quoth Miss Lambourne. And so to the house Colonel
+Boyce led her and his horse, and a little way behind Harry followed with
+his and Mrs. Weston.
+
+She had nothing to say for herself. She looked so wan, she walked so
+slowly, and with such an air of pain that Harry had to say something
+about fearing she was not well. Then he felt a fool for his pains; as she
+turned in answer and shook her head he saw such a sad, wistful dignity in
+her eyes that the small coin of courtesy seemed an absurd offering. A
+fancy, to be sure, in itself absurd. Yet he could not make the woman out.
+There was something odd and baffling in the way she looked at him.
+
+She led off with an odd question, "Pray, have you lived much with
+Colonel Boyce?"
+
+"Not I, ma'am." Harry laughed. "If I were not a very wise child I should
+hardly know my own father. Lived with him? Not much more than with my
+mother, whom I never saw."
+
+"Oh, did you not?" Her eyes dwelt upon him. After a little while, "Who
+brought you up then?"
+
+"Schools. Half a dozen schools between Taunton and London, and
+Westminster at last."
+
+"Were you happy?"
+
+"When I had sixpence."
+
+"But Colonel Boyce is rich!" she cried.
+
+"I have no evidence of it, ma'am."
+
+"I cannot understand. You hardly know him. But he comes to you at Lady
+Waverton's; he stays with you; he brings you here. I believe you are
+closer with him than you say."
+
+"Why, ma'am, it's mighty kind in you to concern yourself so with my
+affairs. And if you can't understand them, faith, no more can I."
+
+She showed no shame at this rebuke of impertinence. In a minute Harry was
+sorry he had amused himself by giving it. There was something strangely
+affecting in the woman. Middle-aged, stout, faded, bound in manner and
+speech by a shy clumsiness, she refused to be insignificant, she made an
+appeal to him which he puzzled over in vain. Her simplicity was with
+power, as of a nature which had cared only for the greater things. He
+felt himself meeting one who had more than he of human quality, richer in
+suffering, richer in all emotion, and (what was vastly surprising) under
+her dullness, her feebleness, of fuller and deeper life.
+
+From vague, intriguing, bewildering fancies, her voice brought him back
+with a start. "He brought you here?" she was asking.
+
+To be sure, she was wonderfully maladroit. This buzzing, futile curiosity
+irritated him again into a sneer. "He is no doubt captivated by the
+beautiful eyes of Miss Lambourne."
+
+"He! Mr. Boyce?"--she corrected herself with a stammer and a
+blush--"Colonel Boyce? Oh no. Indeed, he is old enough to be her father."
+
+"I think we ought to tell him so." Harry chuckled. "It would do
+him good."
+
+"I think this is not very delicate, sir." Mrs. Weston was still blushing.
+
+"Egad, ma'am, if you ask questions, you must expect answers," Harry
+snapped at her.
+
+"Why do you sneer at her? Why should you speak coarsely of her? I suppose
+you come to the house of your own choice? Or does he make you come?"
+
+Harry saw no occasion for such excitement. "Why, you take away my breath
+with your pronouns. He and she--she and he--pray, let's leave him and
+her out of the question. Here's a very pretty garden."
+
+"Indeed, we need not quarrel, I think." She laughed nervously, and gave
+him an odd, shy look. "Pray, do you stay with the Wavertons?"
+
+"Alas, ma'am, I make your acquaintance and bid you farewell all in one
+day."
+
+"Make my acquaintance!" Again came a nervous laugh, and it was a moment
+before she went on. "We have met before to-day."
+
+"Oh Lud, ma'am, I would desire you forget it."
+
+"I am to forget it!" she echoed. "Oh ... Oh, you are very proud."
+
+"Not I, indeed. The truth is, ma'am, that silly affair with our
+highwayman, it embarrasses me mightily. I want to live it down. Pray,
+help me, and think no more about it."
+
+"I suppose that is what you say to Alison?" For the first time there was
+a touch of fun in her eyes.
+
+"Word for word, ma'am."
+
+"Why do you come here then?"
+
+"As I have the honour to tell you--to say good-bye."
+
+She checked and stared at him. She was very pale. But now they were at
+the steps of the house, and Colonel Boyce, who had resigned his horse to
+a groom, turned with Alison to meet them.
+
+"I am hot with the Colonel's compliments, Weston, dear," she announced.
+"I must take a turn with Mr. Boyce to cool me. 'Tis his role. A
+convenient family, faith. One makes you uncomfortably hot and t'other
+freezes you. You go get warm, my Weston. Though I vow 'tis dangerous to
+trust you to the Colonel. He has made very shameless love to me, and you
+have a tender heart."
+
+It occurred to Harry that Mrs. Weston and his father, thus forced to look
+at each other, wore each an air of defiance. They amused him.
+
+"I am not afraid," Mrs. Weston said.
+
+"I profess I am abashed," said Colonel Boyce. "Pray, ma'am, be gentle to
+my disgrace," and he offered his arm. She bowed and moved away, and he
+followed her.
+
+Harry and Alison, face to face, and sufficiently close, eyed each other
+with some amusement.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Boyce," said she, and shook her head.
+
+"Oh, Miss Lambourne," Harry exhorted in his turn.
+
+"You have fallen. You have walked into my parlour."
+
+"I am the best of sons, ma'am. I endure all things at my father's
+orders--even spiders."
+
+She still eyed him steadily, searching him, and was still amused. She
+moved a little so that the admirable flowing lines of her shape were more
+marked. Then she said, "Why are you afraid of me?"
+
+Harry shook his head, smiling. "Vainly is the net spread in the sight of
+the bird, ma'am. But, faith, it was a pretty question, and I make you my
+compliments."
+
+"So. Will you walk, sir?" She turned into a narrow path in the shadow of
+arches, clothed by a great Austrian brier, on which here and there a
+yellow flame still glowed. "Mr. Boyce--when I meet you in company you
+shrink and cower detestably; when I meet you alone, you fence with me
+impudently enough and shrewdly; and always you avoid me while you can. I
+suppose there's in all this something more than the freaks of a fool.
+Then it's fear. Prithee, sir, why in God's name are you afraid of me?"
+
+"Miss Lambourne got out of bed very earnest this morning," Harry grinned.
+"But oh, let's be grave and honest with all my heart. Why, then, ma'am,
+I've to say that a penniless fellow has the right to be afraid of Miss
+Lambourne's money bags."
+
+"Fie, you are no such fool. If one is good company to t'other, which is
+rich and which is poor is no more matter than which fair and which dark."
+
+"In a better world, ma'am, I would believe you."
+
+"And here you believe kind folks would sneer at Harry Boyce for scenting
+an heiress. So you tuck your tail between your legs and go to ground. I
+suppose that is called honour, sir."
+
+"Oh no, ma'am. Taste."
+
+"La, I offend monsieur's fine taste, do I?"
+
+"Not often, ma'am. But by all means let us be earnest. I believe I mind
+being sneered at no more than my betters. _Par exemple_, ma'am, when you
+laugh at me for being shabby, I am not much disturbed."
+
+She blushed furiously. "I never did."
+
+"Oh, I must have read your thoughts then," Harry laughed. "Well, what
+matters to me is not that folks laugh at me but why they laugh. That they
+mock me for being out at elbows I swallow well enough. That they should
+sneer at me for making love to a woman's purse would give me a nausea."
+
+Miss Lambourne was pleased to look modest. "Indeed, sir, I did not know
+that you had made love to me."
+
+"I am obliged by your honesty, ma'am."
+
+Miss Lambourne looked up and spoke with some vehemence. "It comes
+to this, then, you would be beaten by what folks may say about you.
+Oh, brave!"
+
+"Lud, we are all beaten by what folks might say. Would you ride into
+London in your shift?"
+
+"I don't want to ride in my shift," she cried fiercely.
+
+"Perhaps not, ma'am. But perhaps I don't want to make love to your
+purse."
+
+"Od burn it, sir, am I nothing but a purse?"
+
+"I leave it to your husband to find out, ma'am, and beg leave to take my
+leave. My kind father offers me occupation at a distance, and I embrace
+it ardently. Who knows? It may provide me with a coat."
+
+"You are going away?"
+
+"I have had the honour to say so."
+
+"And why, if you please?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "Because, ma'am, without my assistance, Mr. Waverton can
+very well translate Horace into his own sublime verse and Miss Lambourne
+into his own proud wife."
+
+He intended her to rage. What she did was to say softly: "You do not want
+to see me that?"
+
+"I have no ambition to amuse you, ma'am." Miss Lambourne looked
+sideways. "What if I don't want you to go away?"
+
+"Egad, ma'am, I know you don't." Harry laughed. "You amuse yourself
+vastly (God knows why) with baiting me."
+
+"Why, it amuses me." Alison still looked at him sideways. "Don't you
+know why?"
+
+He did not choose to answer.
+
+"Indeed, then, if I am nought to you why do you care what folks say of
+you and me?"
+
+Harry made a step towards her. "You mean to have it again, do you?"
+he muttered.
+
+"Pray, sir, what?" and still she looked sideways.
+
+"What you dragged out of me in the wood."
+
+"Dragged out of--oh!" She blushed, she drew back, and so had occasion to
+do something with her cloak which let a glimpse of white neck and bosom
+come into the light. "You flatter us both indeed."
+
+"I'll tell you the truth of us both"--he, too, was flushed: "you are a
+curst coquette and I am a curst fool."
+
+Now she met his eyes fairly, and in hers there was no more laughter,
+but she smiled with her lips: "I think you know yourself better than
+you know me."
+
+Harry gripped her hands. "You go about to make me mad with desire for
+you, you--"
+
+"I want you so," she breathed, and leaned back, away from him, her eyes
+half veiled.
+
+He had his arms about her body, held her close. The red lips curved in a
+riddle of a smile. He saw dark depths in the shadowed eyes.
+
+"_Malbrouck s'en va t'en guerre_" she murmured.
+
+Harry exclaimed something, felt her against him, was aware of all her
+form--and heard footsteps.
+
+Alison was out of his grasp, her back to him, plucking a rose. "You will
+see me again--you shall see me again. I ride in the wood to-morrow
+morning," she muttered.
+
+"You'll pay for it," Harry growled.
+
+His father arrived, Mrs. Weston, a servant at their heels.
+
+Alison came round with a swirl of skirts. "Dear sir, I doubt you have
+burnt up dinner by your long passages with my Weston. Come in, come in,"
+and she led the way.
+
+For once Colonel Boyce was without an answer. Harry, who was dreading
+witticisms, looked at him in surprise, and with more surprise saw that he
+looked angry. Mrs. Weston hurried on before them all. Her eyes were red.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+ANGER OF AN UNCLE
+
+
+It seems certain that on this day Alison wore a dress of a blue like
+peacock's feathers. That colour--as you may see, she wears it in both the
+Kneller and the Thornhill portraits--was much a favourite of hers, and
+indeed it set off well the rare beauty of her own hues. The clarity, the
+delicacy, of her cheeks were such as you may see on one of those roses
+which, white in full flower, have a rosy flush on the outer petals of the
+bud, and the same rose open may serve for the likeness of a neck and
+bosom which she guarded no more prudishly than her day's fashion
+demanded. For all the daintiness, her lips, a proud pair, were richly red
+(stained of raspberries, in Charles Hadley's sneer), and with the black
+masses of her hair and grey eyes almost as dark, gave her an aspect of,
+what neither man nor woman ever denied her, eager and passionate life.
+All this was flowering out of her peacock blue velvet, and Harry, I
+infer, went mad.
+
+She never expanded into the larger extravagances of the hoop, preferring
+to trust to her own shape. Her waist made no pretence of fine-ladyship,
+but the bodice was close laced _à la mode_ to parade the riches of her
+bosom. Strong and gloriously alive, and abundantly a woman--so she smiled
+at the world.
+
+It was a delirious hour for Harry, that dinner. He knew that Alison was
+pleased to be in the gayest spirits, and his father, in his father's own
+flamboyant style, seconded her heartily. He joined in, too, and seemed to
+himself loud and vapid, yet had no power of restraint. It was as though
+his usual placid, critical mind were detached and watched himself in the
+happy exuberance of drunkenness--which was a state unknown to him, for
+excess of liquor could only move him with drowsy gloom. And in the midst
+of the noise Mrs. Weston sat, pale and silent, a ghost at the feast.
+
+He was glad when his father spoke of going, though he found himself
+talking some folly against it, on Alison's side, who jovially mocked the
+Colonel for shyness. But Colonel Boyce, it appeared, had made up his
+mind, and Harry was surprised at the masterful ease with which, keeping
+the empty fun still loud, he extricated himself and his unwilling son.
+
+They were all at the door, a noisy, laughing company, and the
+horses waited.
+
+"It's no use, ma'am," Harry cried, "he knows how to get his way,
+_monsieur mon père_."
+
+"Pray heaven he hath not taught his son the art!"
+
+"Oh Lud, no, I am the very humble servant of any petticoat."
+
+"Fie, that's far worse, sir. I see you would still be forgetting which
+covered your wife."
+
+"Never believe him, Madame Alison." quoth the Colonel. "It's a strong
+rogue and a masterless man,"
+
+"Why, that's better again. And yet it's not so well if he'll be
+mistressless too."
+
+"Fight it out, child," the Colonel cried. "'Lay on, Macduff, and curst be
+she that first cries hold, enough!' Come, Harry, to horse."
+
+"See, Weston, he deserts me, and merrily!"
+
+There came upon the scene two other horsemen--Mr. Hadley's gaunt,
+one-armed frame and a big, lumbering elder with a rosy face.
+
+Harry bowed over Alison's hand. It was she who put it to his lips, and
+nodding a roguish smile at the other gentlemen, "So you run away,
+sir?" she said.
+
+Harry looked at her and "Give me back my head," he said in a low voice.
+"I have lost it somewhere here."
+
+"Oh, your head!" She laughed. "Well, maybe it's the best part of you."
+
+He mounted, and Colonel Boyce, already in the saddle, kissed his hand to
+her. They rode off, compelled to single file by the plump old gentleman
+who held the middle of the road and glowered at them. Mr. Hadley made an
+elaborate bow.
+
+The old gentleman watched them out of sight round the curve of the drive,
+then sent his horse on with an oath and, dismounting heavily at Alison's
+toes, roared out: "What the devil's this folly, miss?" He made angry
+puffing noises. "I vow I heard you laughing at Finchley. Might have heard
+him kissing too."
+
+"Kissing? Oh la, sir, my hand, and so may you." She held it out and made
+an impudent little curtsy. "I protest the gentleman is all maidenly. That
+is why he and I make so good a match."
+
+The old gentleman spluttered and was still redder. "Match, miss? What,
+the devil!"
+
+"Oh no, sir. Pray come in, sir. I see you are in a heat, and I fear for a
+chill on your gout."
+
+"You are mighty civil, miss. You are too civil by half," the old
+gentleman puffed, and stalked past her.
+
+Alison stood in the way of Charles Hadley as he made to follow. There was
+some pugnacity on her fair face. "It's mighty kind of Mr. Hadley to
+concern himself with me."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, if I come untimely it's pure happy chance."
+
+She whirled round on that and they went in. "Will you please to drink a
+dish of tea, Sir John?"
+
+"You know I won't, miss." The old gentleman let himself down with a grunt
+into the largest chair in her drawing-room. "Now who the plague is this
+kissing fellow?"
+
+"Sure, sir, it's the gentleman Mr. Hadley told you of," said Alison
+meekly. She hit both her birds. Mr. Hadley and his uncle looked at each
+other. Sir John snorted. Mr. Hadley shrugged and gave an acid laugh.
+
+"What, what, that fellow of Waverton's? Od burn it, miss, he's a
+starveling usher."
+
+"Oh, sir, don't be hasty. I dare say he'll be fat when he's old."
+
+"Don't be pert, miss. D'ye know all the county's talking of you and
+this fellow?"
+
+Alison paled a little. She spoke in a still small voice. "I did not know
+how much I was in Mr. Hadley's debt. I advise you, Sir John, don't be one
+of those who talk."
+
+"You advise me, miss! Damme, ain't I your guardian?"
+
+"I am trying to remember that you once were, sir. But you make it
+very hard."
+
+"What the devil do you mean?"
+
+"I mean--"
+
+"I vow neither of you knows what you mean," Mr. Hadley drowned her in a
+drawl. "I never saw such fire-eaters. Look 'e, Alison, we come riding
+over in a civil way and--"
+
+"Tell me you have been planning a scandal about me. Oh, I vow I am
+obliged to you."
+
+Mr. Hadley laughed. "Lud, child, you ha' known me long enough. Do I deal
+in tattle? And if we have seen what we should not ha' seen, if you're hot
+at being caught, prithee, whose fault is it? Egad, you know well enough
+there's things beneath Miss Lambourne's dignity."
+
+"Yes, indeed, and I see Mr. Hadley is one of them."
+
+"You're a fool for your pains, Charles," John shouted. "What's sense to a
+wench? Now, miss, I'll have an end of this. You're old Tom Lambourne's
+daughter for all your folly, and I'll not have his flesh and blood the
+sport of any greedy rogue from the kennel."
+
+There was a moment of silence. Then Alison, whose colour was grown high,
+said quietly, "Pray, Sir John, will you go or shall I? I do not desire to
+see you again in my house."
+
+"Go?" The old gentleman struggled to his feet. "Damme, Charles, the
+girl's mad. Yes, miss, I'll go--and go straight to my Lady Waverton. Od
+burn it, we'll have your fellow out of the county in an hour. Egad, miss,
+you're besotted. Why, what is he?--a trickster, a knight of the road.
+'Stand and deliver,' that's my gentleman's trade. He's for your father's
+money, you fool."
+
+"Good-bye, Sir John," Alison said, and turned away.
+
+With unwonted agility, Mr. Hadley came between her and the door. "You are
+not fair to us, Alison," he said. "Prithee, be fair to yourself." She
+passed him without a word. Mr. Hadley turned and showed Sir John a rueful
+face. "We have made a bad business of it, sir."
+
+Sir John swore. "Brazen impudence, damme, brazen, I say."
+
+"Oh Lord! Don't make bad worse."
+
+Sir John swore again. Upon his rage came Alison's voice singing:
+
+"When daffodils begin to peer
+ With heigh! the doxy, over the dale,
+Why, then comes in the sweet o' the year,
+ For the red blood reigns in the winter's pale."
+
+Sir John spluttered, and went out roaring for his horse.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+YOUNG BLOOD
+
+
+There is reason to believe that from the first Mr. Hadley suspected he
+was making a fool of himself. This sensation, the common accompaniment of
+an attempt to do your duty, was just of the right strength to ensure that
+all his actions should be disastrous. It was, as you see, not strong
+enough to restrain him from exciting the dull and choleric mind of Sir
+John Burford; it did not avail to direct the ensuing storm. And then,
+having first failed to be sufficient check, it developed into a very
+paralysis.
+
+Startled by the furies he had roused in Alison, Mr. Hadley found that
+suspicion of his own folly develop into a gruesome conviction. It
+compelled him to labour with Sir John vehemently until that blundering
+knight consented to wait before exploding his alarms upon Lady Waverton.
+Even as the first blundering remonstrances had irritated Alison's wanton
+will into passionate resolution, so this ensuing vacillation and delay
+gave it opportunity.
+
+If the tale had been told to Lady Waverton, no doubt but Harry would have
+been banished from Tetherdown that night. It is likely, indeed, that the
+ultimate fates of Alison and Harry would have been the same. But many
+antecedent adventures must have been different or superfluous.
+
+Mr. Hadley was now full of common sense. Mr. Hadley sagely argued with
+his uncle that they would do more harm than good by carrying their tale
+to Lady Waverton. The woman was a fool in grain, and whatever she did
+would surely do it in the silliest way. Tell her a word, and she would
+swiftly give birth to a scandal which the world would not willingly let
+die, in which Mr. Harry Boyce, if he were indeed the knave of their
+hypothesis, might easily find a means to strengthen his grip of Alison.
+It was better to wait and (so Mr. Hadley with a sour smile) "see which
+way the cat jumped."
+
+Perhaps Madame Alison, who was no kitten, might not be altogether
+infatuated. The shock of the afternoon, for all her heroics, might have
+waked in her some doubt of the charms of Mr. Boyce. The girl was shrewd
+enough. She had dealt with fortune-hunters before--remember the Scottish
+lord's son--and shown a humorous appreciation of the tribe. She was not a
+chit with the green sickness; she was neither so young nor so old that
+she must needs fall into the arms of any man who made eyes at her. After
+all, likely enough she was but amusing herself with Mr. Boyce. Not a very
+delicate business, but they were full-blooded folk, the Lambournes.
+Remember old Tom, her father: there was a jolly bluff rogue. Well, if
+miss was but having her fling, it would do no good to tease her.
+
+Thus Mr. Hadley, cautiously recoiling, doubting or hoping he was making
+the best of things, brought Sir John, in spite of some boilings over,
+safe back to his home and his jovial daughter.
+
+When Harry and his father rode away from Alison, for once in a while
+Harry found his father's mood in tune with his own. Colonel Boyce
+suddenly relapsed from hilarity into a perfect silence. He soon reined
+his horse to a walk, and his wonted alert, soldierly bearing suffered
+eclipse. He gave at the back, he was thoughtful, he was melancholy--a
+very comfortable companion.
+
+"Pray, sir, when do we start for France?" said Harry at length.
+
+"What's that? Egad, you're in a hurry, ain't you? Not to-night nor yet
+to-morrow. Time enough, time enough. Make the best of it, Harry." It
+occurred to Harry that his father was preoccupied.
+
+But with that he did not concern himself. He was in too much tumult. It
+appeared that he would be able to meet Alison in the morning. He did
+not know whether he was glad. He had been telling himself that he would
+have snatched at the excuse to fail her, and yet was not sure that if
+his father had announced instant departure he would not have bidden his
+father to the devil. But still in a fashion he was angry, in a degree
+he was frightened. He knew that he would go meet the girl now; he could
+not help himself--an exasperating state. And when he was with her--her
+presence now set all his nature rioting--with other folk by, it was
+hard enough to be sane; when he was alone with her in the wood, what
+would the wild wench be to him before they parted? There was no love in
+him. He had no tenderness for her, he did not want to cherish her,
+serve her, glorify her. Only she made him mad with passion. But,
+according to his private lights, he was honest, and wished to be, and
+was therefore commanded to try to save the girl from his wicked will
+and hers. He despised himself for the gleam of cautious duty. What in
+the world was worth so much as the rose petals of her face, the round
+swell of her breast?
+
+"Damme, Harry, a man's a fool to be ambitious," so his father broke in
+upon this tumult. "Why do we fret and trick after a place, or a purse, or
+a trifle of power?"
+
+Harry stared at him. "Lord, sir, why are you so moral?"
+
+And then Colonel Boyce began to laugh. "I grow old, I think. Oh, the
+devil, I never had regrets worse than the morning's headache for last
+night's wine. I suppose if you live long enough, life's a procession of
+morning headaches. Well, I vow I've not lived long enough yet, Harry."
+
+"I dare say you are the best judge," Harry admitted.
+
+"There's a higher court, eh? Who knows? Maybe we are all the toys of
+chance." He shrugged. "Why then, damme, I have never been afraid to take
+what I chose and wait for the bill. Dodge it, or pay it. Odso, there is
+no other way for a hungry man."
+
+"Lord, sir, now you are philosophical! What's the matter?"
+
+"Humph, I suppose my stomach is weakening," said Colonel Boyce. "I don't
+digest things as I did."
+
+In this pensive temper they came back to Tetherdown. The Colonel's
+servant was waiting for him with letters, and he was seen no more that
+night. Harry did not know till afterwards that Mr. Waverton, as well as
+letters, was taken to the Colonel's room.
+
+Madame Alison was left by the exhortations of her anxious friends feeling
+defiant of all the world. It is a comfortable condition, but, for a
+passionate girl of twenty-two, fruitful of delusions.
+
+Alison was so far happier than Harry in that she knew what she wanted.
+You may wonder if you will how Harry Boyce, with nothing handsome about
+him but his legs, could rouse in the girl just such a wild longing as her
+beauty set ablaze in him. These problems, comforting to the conceit of
+man, are numerous. And, as usual, madame had dreamed her gentleman into a
+wonderful fellow. The overthrow of the highwayman became from the first a
+splendid achievement. Sure, Mr. Boyce must be of rare courage and
+strength, even as he was deliciously adroit, and that insolent air with
+which he did his devoir gave one a sweet thrill.
+
+Afterwards, he progressed in her imagination from victory to victory.
+What served him best was his capacity for puzzling her. That its hero
+should want to keep such a gallant affair secret proved him of amazing
+modesty or amazing pride--perhaps both--a titillating combination. It
+surprised her more that he should dare rebuff the advances of Miss
+Lambourne. Madame knew very well the power of her beauty over men. If she
+gave one half an inch she expected that he should be instantly mad to get
+an ell of her. But here was Mr. Boyce, though she gave him a good many
+inches, as supercilious about her as if he were a woman. It was
+incredible that the creature had no warm blood in him. Indeed, she had
+proof--she could still make herself feel the ache of his grasp in the
+wood--that he was on occasion as fierce as any woman need want a man.
+Why, then, monsieur must be defying her out of wanton pride. A marvellous
+fellow, who dared think himself too good for her.
+
+She made no account of all his wise, honest talk about being poor while
+she was rich. To her temper it was impossible that a man who wanted her
+in his arms should stop to weigh his purse and hers, or to consider what
+the world would say of him for wooing her. All that must be mere fencing,
+mere mockery.
+
+To be sure, he fenced mighty cleverly. The smug meekness which he put on
+when she attacked him before others was bewildering. If she had never
+seen him in action she must have been deceived. And, faith, it seemed
+certain that he wanted to deceive her, to put her off, to put her aside.
+The haughty gentleman dared believe that he could be very comfortable
+without Miss Lambourne. It must not be allowed. He was by far too fine a
+fellow to be let go his way. Faith, it was mighty noble, this
+self-sufficient power of his, capable of anything, caring for nothing,
+hiding itself behind an impenetrable mask, and living a secret life of
+its own. She was on fire to enter into him and take possession, and use
+him for herself.
+
+So she was driven by a double need, knew it, and was not the least
+ashamed. She longed to have Harry Boyce in her arms and his grip cruel
+upon her. But also she wanted to conquer him and hold his mind at her
+order. She imagined him under her direction winning all manner of fame.
+And she believed herself mightily in love....
+
+There is a moss on the birch trunks which makes a colour of singular
+charm, a soft, delicate, grey green. A hood of that colour embraced
+Alison's black hair and the glow of the dark eyes and her raspberry lips.
+The cloak of the same colour she drew close about her with one gauntleted
+hand, so that it confessed her shape.
+
+The birches could still show a few golden leaves, though each moment
+another went whirling away as the crests bowed and tossed before the
+wind. In the brown bracken beneath Harry Boyce stood waiting. His graces
+were set off with his customary rusty black. His hat was well down upon
+his bobwig, and he hunched his shoulders against the wind, making a
+picture of melancholy discomfort. He rocked to and fro a little,
+according to a habit of his when he was excited.
+
+Alison was very close to him before she stopped.
+
+"What have you come for?" he growled.
+
+She drew a breath, and then, very quietly, "For you," she said.
+
+"You have had enough fun with me, ma'am."
+
+Her breast was touching him, and he did not draw back.
+
+"Then why did you come?" She laughed.
+
+"Because I'm a fool."
+
+"A fool to want me?"
+
+"By God, yes. You know that, you slut."
+
+"No. You would be a fool if you didn't, you--man."
+
+"Be careful." Harry flushed.
+
+"Oh Lud, was I made to be careful?"
+
+He gripped her hand, and, after a moment, "Take off your hood," he
+muttered.
+
+"Is that all?" She laughed, and let it fall from hair and neck, and
+looked as though sunlight had flashed out at her. "Honest gentleman, you
+are lightly satisfied."
+
+"So are not you, I vow."
+
+She was pleased to answer that with a scrap of a song:
+
+"Jog on, jog on the footpath way,
+ And merrily hent the stile-a!
+A merry heart goes all the way,
+ A sad one tires in a mile-a."
+
+"Faith, yours is a mighty sad one, Harry. Pray, what are you the better
+for stripping me of this?" She flirted the hood.
+
+"I can see those wicked colours of yours. Lord, what a fool is a man to
+go mad for a show of pink and white!"
+
+"And is that all I am?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "Item--a pair of eyes that look sideways; item--a woman's
+body with arms and sufficient legs."
+
+"Lud, it's an inventory! I'm for sale, then. Well, what's your bid?"
+
+"I've a shilling in my pocket ma'am and want it to buy tobacco."
+
+"Oh, silly, what does a man pay for a woman?"
+
+Harry laughed. "Why, nothing, if she's worth buying."
+
+Then Alison said softly, "Going--going--gone," and clapped her hands
+and laughed.
+
+"You go beyond me at least," Harry said in a moment.
+
+She put her hands behind her and leaned forward till her bosom pressed
+upon him lightly, and then, with her head tilted back so that he saw the
+white curve from under her chin, and the line of the blue vein in it,
+"You want me, Harry," she said.
+
+"You know that too well, by God."
+
+"Too well for what, sir?"
+
+"Too well for my peace, ma'am." He flushed.
+
+"His peace!" She laughed. "Oh Lud, the dear man wants peace!"
+
+He flung himself upon her, holding her to him as she staggered back, and
+kissed her till she was gasping for breath, gripped her head to hold it
+against his kisses, buried his face in the fragrance of her neck. She
+gave herself, her arms still behind her, offering the swell of her
+breasts to him, her eyes gay....
+
+"You are mine, now. You're mine, do you hear?" he said unsteadily.
+
+"I want you," she smiled, and was crushed again.
+
+When he let her go, it was to step back and look at her, wondering and
+intent. She stood something less than her full height, her bosom beating
+fast. She was all flushed and smiling, but now her eyes were dim and they
+met his shyly.
+
+"Egad, you're exalting," he said with a wry smile.
+
+"I feel all power when you grasp at me so--power--just power."
+
+"No, faith, you are not. When I hold you to me, when you yield for me, I
+am all the power there is. Damme, the very life of the world."
+
+"So then," she looked at him through her eyelashes, "and have it so. For
+it's I who give you all."
+
+"In effect," Harry said: and then, "go to, you make us both mad."
+
+"I am content."
+
+"Yes, and for how long?"
+
+She made an exclamation. "Have I worn out the poor gentleman already?"
+
+"Would you keep yourself for me? Will you wait?"
+
+"Why, what have we to wait for now?"
+
+"Till I am something more than this shabby usher."
+
+"I despise you when you talk so." Her face flamed. "Fie, what's a word
+and a coat? You have lived with me in your arms. You are what I make of
+you then. Is it enough, Harry, is it not enough?"
+
+"I'll come to your arms something better before I come again. I am off
+to France."
+
+"Ah!" Then she studied him for a little while. "You meant to run away,
+then. Oh, brave Harry! Oh, wise! Pray, are you not ashamed?"
+
+"Yes, shame's the only wear."
+
+"I'll not spare you, I vow."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, mercy never was a virtue of yours."
+
+"Is it mercy you want in a woman?"
+
+"I'll take what I want, not ask for it."
+
+"Why, now you brag! And if there is not in me what monsieur wants?"
+
+"So much the worse for us both. But you should have thought of
+that before."
+
+"Faith, Harry, you take it sombrely." She made a wry mouth at him. "Pluck
+up heart. I vow I'll satisfy you."
+
+"You'll not deny me anything you have."
+
+She paused a moment. "Amen, so be it. And must we never smile again?"
+
+"I wonder"--he took her hands; "I wonder, will you be smiling to-morrow
+when I am away to France."
+
+"Oh, are you still set on that fancy?" She gave a contemptuous laugh.
+"Prithee, Harry, shall I like you the better for waiting till you have
+French lace at your neck and a frenchified air?"
+
+"You'll please to wait till I bring Miss Lambourne a fellow who has done
+something more than snuffle over a servitor's books. I want to prove
+myself, Alison."
+
+"You have proved yourself on me, sir. What, am I a lean wench in despair
+to hunger for a snuffling servitor? If you were that, I were not for you.
+But I know you better, God help me, my Lord Lucifer. Why then, take the
+goods the gods provide you and say grace over me." Harry shook his head,
+smiling. "Lord, it's a mule! Pray what do you look to do in France?"
+
+"I am pledged to my father and his policies--to go poking behind the
+curtains of the war and deal with the go-betweens of princes."
+
+"So. You talk big. Well, I like to hear it. What is the business?"
+
+"My father, if you believe him, has Marlborough's secrets in his pocket
+and is sent to chaffer for him. You may guess where and why. Queen Anne
+hath a brother."
+
+Her eyes sparkled. "You like the adventure, Harry?"
+
+"Egad, I begin to think so."
+
+"I love you for that!" she cried, and it was the first time she spoke the
+word. "Why then, first go with me to church and call me wife!"
+
+He drew in his breath. "By God, do you mean that?"
+
+"Why, don't you mean me honourably?" She gave an unsteady laugh, her eyes
+mistily kind.
+
+He sprang at her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+ABSENCE OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+
+It was always in after life alleged by Mr. Hadley that his steady
+interest in the family of his uncle was nothing but a desire to keep the
+old gentleman out of mischief. Sir John Burford was indeed of a temper
+too irascible to be safe with his bucolically English mind: a man who in
+throwing tankards at his servants and challenges at his friends was a
+source of continuous anxiety to his reasonable kinsfolk. But he had also
+a daughter.
+
+She received the benevolent Mr. Hadley when on the morning after the
+explosions in Alison's house he came to see whether Sir John was still
+dangerous or his daughter any thinner. It was the latter purpose which he
+professed to Susan Burford. She was not annoyed. In her cradle she had
+been instructed that she was a jolly, fat girl, and through life she
+accepted the status, like every other which was given her, with great
+good humour. She was, in fact, no fatter than serves to give a tall woman
+an air of genial well-being. It was conjectured by her friends that her
+father, needing all his irascibility for himself, had allowed her to
+inherit only his physical qualities. She had indeed the largeness of Sir
+John and his open countenance. Her supreme equanimity perhaps came from
+her mother. She was by a dozen years at least younger than Mr. Hadley,
+and always thought him a very clever boy.
+
+"Sir John is gone out to the pigs, Mr. Hadley. Perhaps you'll go too,"
+she said, and looked innocent.
+
+"Well, they are peaceful company, Susan. And you're so surly."
+
+"I thought you would find some joke in that," said Susan, with kindly
+satisfaction.
+
+"Damme, don't be so maternal. It's cloying to the male. Be discreet,
+Susan. You will talk as though you had weaned me but a year or two, and
+still wanted me at the breast."
+
+Susan was not disconcerted. "Will you drink a tankard?" said she. "Or Sir
+John has some Spanish wine which he makes much of."
+
+"Susan, you despise men. It is a vile infidel habit." He paused, and
+Susan dutifully smiled. "Why now, what are you laughing at? You! You
+don't know what I mean."
+
+"To be sure, no," said Susan. "Does it matter?"
+
+"Oh Lud, your repartees! Bludgeons and broadswords! I mean, ma'am, you
+think men are nought but casks--things to fill with drink and victuals.
+Is it not true?" Susan considered this, her head a little on one side and
+smiling. She wore a dress of dark blue velvet cut low about the neck, and
+so, nature having made her sumptuous, was very well suited. "Egad, now I
+know what you're like," Mr. Hadley cried. "You're one of Rubens' women,
+Susan; just one of those plump, spacious dames as healthy as milk and
+peaches, and blandly jolly about it."
+
+Susan looked down at herself with her usual amiable satisfaction and
+patted the heavy coils of her yellow hair and said: "Sir John often
+talks of having me painted. But that's after dinner. Will you stay
+dinner, Mr. Hadley?"
+
+"Damme, Susan, what should I say after dinner, if I say so much now?"
+
+Susan smiled upon him with perfect calm. "Why, I never can tell what you
+will say. Can you?"
+
+"You're a hypocrite, Susan. You look as simple as a baby, and the truth
+is you're deep, devilish deep. Here!" He fumbled in his pocket. "Here's a
+guinea for your thoughts if you tell them true. Now what are you
+thinking, ma'am?"
+
+"Why, I am thinking that you came to see my father, and yet you stay here
+talking to me;" she gurgled pleasant laughter and held out her hand for
+the guinea.
+
+Mr. Hadley still retained it. "That pleases you, does it?"
+
+"Yes, indeed. You're so comical."
+
+Mr. Hadley surrendered the guinea, looked at his empty left sleeve and
+made a wry face. "Lord, yes, I am comical enough. A lop-sided grotesque."
+
+"That's not fair!" He had at last made her blush. "You know well I did
+not mean that. I think it makes you look--noble."
+
+"It makes me feel a fool," said Mr. Hadley. "Lord, Susan, one arm's not
+enough to go round you."
+
+"So we'll kill the Elstree hog for Christmas;" that apposite
+interruption came in her father's robust voice. Sir John strode rolling
+in. "What, Charles! In very good time, egad. You can come with me."
+
+"What, sir, back to the swine? I profess Susan makes as pretty company."
+
+Sir John was pleased to laugh. "Ay, the wench pays for her victuals, too.
+Damme, Sue, you look good enough to eat." He chucked her chin paternally.
+"Well, my lad, I ha' thought over that business and I'm taking horse to
+ride over to Tetherdown."
+
+"Oh Lord," said Mr. Hadley. "And what then, sir?"
+
+"I'll talk to Master Geoffrey."
+
+"Oh Lord," said Mr. Hadley again. "Do it delicately."
+
+"Delicate be damned," said Sir John.
+
+"I had better ride with you," said Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Good boy. Here, Roger--Mr. Hadley's horse."
+
+Susan stood up. "Lud, sir, you will not be here to dinner then?"
+
+Sir John shook his head. Mr. Hadley scratched his chin. "I am not so sure
+that Geoffrey will give us a dinner," said he.
+
+"Why, sir," Susan was interested, "what's your business with Mr.
+Waverton?"
+
+"To tell him he's a fool, wench," quoth Sir John.
+
+"Oh. And will Mr. Waverton like that?"
+
+"Like it! Odso, he'll like it well enough if he has sense."
+
+Mr. Hadley grinned. "That's logic, faith. Well, sir, have with you."
+
+So off they rode. On the way Sir John was pleased to expound to Mr.
+Hadley the profound sagacity of his new plan. He would rally Geoffrey on
+his flaccidity; accuse him of being an oaf; and, describing all the while
+in an inflammatory manner the charms of Alison, hint that Geoffrey's
+tutor had ambitions after them. "And if that don't wake up my gentleman,
+he may go to the devil for me and deserve it."
+
+It crossed Mr. Hadley's lucid mind that a gentleman who required so much
+waking up did not deserve Miss Lambourne. But she was quite capable of
+discovering that for herself, if indeed she had not already. And
+certainly it would do Geoffrey no harm to be made uncomfortable. So Mr.
+Hadley rode on with right good will.
+
+But when they came to Tetherdown it was announced that Mr. Waverton had
+gone riding. "Why, then we'll wait for him." Sir John strode in. The
+butler looked dubious. Mr. Waverton had said nothing of when he would
+come back.
+
+"Why the devil should he?" Sir John stretched his legs before the fire.
+"He'll dine, won't he?"
+
+The butler bowed.
+
+"Prithee, William," says Mr. Hadley, "is Mr. Boyce in the house?"
+
+"Mr. Boyce, sir, is gone walking."
+
+Mr. Hadley shrugged. "Odso, away with you," Sir John waved the man off.
+"Let my lady know we are here."
+
+The butler coughed. "My lady is in bed, Sir John."
+
+"What, still?" quoth Sir John, for it was close upon noon.
+
+"Hath been afoot, Sir John. But took to her bed half an hour since."
+
+"What, what? Is she ailing?"
+
+The butler could not say, but looked a volume of secrets, so that Sir
+John swore him out of the room.
+
+"Vaporous old wench, Charles," Sir John snorted. And a second time Mr.
+Hadley shrugged.
+
+In a little while the butler came back even more puffed up. Her ladyship
+hoped to receive the gentlemen in half an hour.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+IN HASTE
+
+
+Oh, Harry, Harry, I give in. I am the weaker vessel. At least, I have the
+shorter legs."
+
+"What, you're asking me to spare you already? Lord, how will you bear me
+as a husband?"
+
+They were under the great beeches in Hampstead Lane, breasting the rise
+to the heath, on their march for that kindly chapel, where, if you dined
+in the tavern annexed, the incumbent would marry you for nothing, charge
+but the five shillings, cost price of the Queen's licence, and ask no
+questions.
+
+Harry shortened his stride, and looked down with grim amusement at
+Alison's breathless bosom.
+
+"I believe you mean to make an end of me before you have begun with me,"
+she panted. "Lord, sir, what a figure you'll cut if you bring me to
+church too faint to say, 'I will.'"
+
+"Why, the Levite would but take it for maiden modesty. Not knowing you."
+
+"You are trying to play the brute. It won't save you, Harry. I shan't be
+frightened."
+
+"You! No, faith, it's I. I am beside myself with terror."
+
+"I do believe that's true!" She laughed at him. "But, oh, dear
+sir, why?"
+
+"Lest I should not fulfil the heroical expectations of Miss Lambourne.
+Confess it, ma'am; you count on me to exalt you into heavens of ecstasy,
+to bewilder the world with my glories, and be shaved by breakfast-time."
+
+"To be sure, I'll always expect the impossible of you."
+
+"There it is. I suppose you expect me to begin by creating a
+wedding-ring."
+
+"Why, you have created me."
+
+"Oh, no, no, no. You're a splendid iniquity, but not mine, I vow."
+
+"This woman of yours never lived till you made her. I profess Miss
+Lambourne was ever known for a dull cold thing born 'to suckle fools and
+chronicle small beer.'"
+
+"So she wrote me down her property. Egad, ma'am, it was very natural."
+
+"You know what you have made of me," Alison said.
+
+"God knows what you'll make of me. And now in the matter of the ring--"
+
+"Oh Lud, what a trivial thing is a man!" She drew off her glove and held
+out a hand with two rings on it. "Marry me with which you will." One was
+a plain piece of gold, paler than the common, carved into an odd device
+of a snake biting its tail.
+
+"With thine own ring I thee wed," Harry said, and took it off. "I
+take you to witness, Mrs. Alison, the snake was in your paradise
+before I came."
+
+They were across the heath now and going down the steep, narrow lane
+beyond. The chapel of the Hampstead marriages stood raw red beside a
+garden with lawns and arbours shaggy in winter's untidiness. Even the
+tavern at the gate, a spreading one-story place of timber, looked dead
+and desolate.
+
+Harry forced open the sticking door and strode in, Madame Alison
+loitering behind. He was met by a dirty lad whose gaping clothes were
+half hidden by a leather apron, and whose shoes protruded straw--a lad
+who smelt of the stable and small beer.
+
+"Where's the priest?" said Harry.
+
+"In the tap," said the boy, and shuffled off.
+
+There came out into the passage, wheezing and wiping his chops, a little
+bloated man in a cassock, with his bands under his right ear. He leered
+at Harry and tried to look round him at Alison.
+
+"You're out of season, my lord," said he. "These chill rains, they play
+the mischief with lusty blood. Go to, you'll not be denied, won't you? Do
+you dine here?"
+
+"We have no time for it."
+
+"What, you're hasty, ain't you?" He gave a hoarse laugh. "There's my fee
+to pay then."
+
+"Here's a guinea to pay for all," said Harry.
+
+The dirty fist took it, the little red eyes peered at it closely, the
+dirty mouth bit it and was satisfied. "Go you round to the chapel door
+and wait. Lord, but man and wench never had to wait for me." He
+waddled off.
+
+Harry turned upon Alison. "So with all my worldly goods I thee endow," he
+said, with a crooked smile. "God give you joy of them. I vow I was never
+so frightened of spending a guinea."
+
+"Why, d'ye doubt if I'm worth it? Nay, sir, I'm honest stuff and
+challenge any trial."
+
+Harry looked down at her and was met by eyes as bold as his own.
+
+The chapel door opened, and the little priest beckoned them in. A pair of
+witnesses were already posted by the altar, the dirty lad of the tavern
+and a shock-headed wench.
+
+"Licence first, licence first." The parson bustled off to a table in a
+corner. "I warrant you we do things decently in Sion. Aye, and tightly,
+my pretty. Never a lawyer can undo my knots, never fear."
+
+He scratched laboriously over their names, while the dank smell of the
+place sank into them.
+
+They were marched to the altar. A hoarse muttering poured from the
+priest. He made no pretence of solemnity or even of meaning. He was
+concerned only to make an end and have done with them. Of all the service
+they heard nothing clearly but what they said themselves, and while they
+were deliberate over that the little priest grunted and puffed at them.
+
+He ended with a leer and drove them before him back to the table. There
+was more scratching in his register. The two uncouth witnesses scrawled
+something for their names and shambled off.
+
+"Let's breathe some free air," said Harry, and laid hold of his wife.
+
+The parson chuckled. "Free? You'll never be free again, my lord. I can
+see that in madame's eye. What, you ha' sold your birthright for a mess
+of pottage, ain't you? And mighty savoury pottage, too, says you." He
+rolled his eyes and smacked his lips. "Softly now, softly, madame wants
+her certificate. Madame wants to warrant herself a lawful married wife,
+if you don't ... There, my lady. And happy to marry you again any day at
+the same price."
+
+They were away from him at last and in clean air stretching their legs up
+the hill again.
+
+"Poor Harry!" Alison laughed. "Before you looked like a man fighting
+for his life. Now you look like a man going to be hanged. Dear lad!
+Pray how much would you give to escape me now?" She put her arm into
+his. He let her shorten his stride a little, but made no other
+confession of her existence. "Fie, Harry, it's over early to repent. In
+all reason you should first be sure of your sin. Who knows? I may not
+be deadly after all. 'Alack,' says he, 'I will not be comforted. Egad,
+the world's a cheat. A fool and his folly are soon parted they told me,
+and here am I tied to her till death us do part. So, a halter, gratis,
+for God's sake.'"
+
+"You're full of other folks' nonsense, Mrs. Boyce," said Harry with a
+grim look at her.
+
+"Oh, noble name!" She bobbed a curtsy. "Full? I am full of nothing but
+fasting, aye," she sighed, and turned up her eyes--"fasting from all but
+our sacrament."
+
+They were upon the ridge of the heath and Harry checked her, and stood
+looking away over the wide prospect of mist-veiled meadow and dim blue
+woods. She was beginning her mocking chatter again when he broke in
+with, "Ods life, ha' done!" and turned to look deep into her eyes.
+"There's mystery in this, and I think you see nothing of it."
+
+"Why, yes, faith. If you were no mystery, should I want you? If you had
+discovered all of me, would you want me?"
+
+"Bah, what do we know of living, you and I, or--or of love?"
+
+She laughed, with a scrap of twisted song:
+
+"Most living is feigning.
+Most loving mere folly,
+Then heigho the holly,
+This life is most jolly."
+
+He shrugged and marched her on again.
+
+"Pray, sir, will you dine at home?" she said demurely.
+
+Harry flushed. "I must go tell my father and all," he growled. "I'll be
+with you soon enough, madame wife."
+
+"Oh brave! Dear sir, have with you. I must see Geoffrey's face."
+
+"Egad, let's be decent!" Harry cried.
+
+"Decent! For shame, sir! What's more decent than man and wife?"
+
+"Man and wife!" Harry echoed it with a sour laugh. "Do you feel a wife? I
+never felt less of a man."
+
+"You shall be satisfied," she said, and looked at him gravely. "And I--I
+am not afraid, Harry."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+DISTRESS OF A MOTHER
+
+
+Mr. Hadley and Sir John Burford in the hall at Tetherdown looked at each
+other across the fire. "Would you call for a pipe now, Charles?" says Sir
+John, fidgeting.
+
+"There'll be none in the house, sir. Geoffrey has no stomach for
+tobacco."
+
+"Damme, if I know what he hath a stomach for," Sir John grumbled, and
+kicked at the burning logs. "He don't eat no more than an old woman, nor
+drink so much as a young miss. Ain't the half-hour gone, Charles?"
+
+"That's a poetic phrase, sir. It means a year or so--while she's tiring
+her hair."
+
+"What and painting her face, too? Same as Jezebel."
+
+My lady's waiting-woman, Arabella, came in. She minced in the manner of
+her mistress, but, being a foot shorter, with different effect. She stood
+before Sir John, who had the largest chair, and stared at him, with
+languid insolence. "Ods my life, don't ogle me, woman," says he.
+
+"At your leisure, sir, if you please." She tossed her head.
+
+"Leisure! Oh Lord, I'm at leisure, thank 'e."
+
+Arabella sniffed.
+
+"I think you are in madame's chair, sir," Mr. Hadley explained.
+
+"What, then? She ain't here, nor I don't carry the plague."
+
+"The lady-in-waiting wants to compose it for madame."
+
+"Compose!" Sir John exploded an oath, and jumped up. "I ha'n't
+decomposed it."
+
+Arabella dusted the chair, wheeled it a little this way and that, put two
+footstools before it, and three cushions into it, contemplated them for
+some time, and then shifted them a little. After which she minced out
+with a great sigh.
+
+"Good God!" says Sir John.
+
+"I wonder," says Mr. Hadley--"I wonder if we've come to take the breeks
+off a Highlander?"
+
+"What's your will?" Sir John gasped.
+
+"I wonder if my lady knows all we can tell her. It might have made her
+hypochondriac."
+
+"Hip who? Odso, I am hipped myself."
+
+My lady came. She had so much flowing drapery about her that she seemed
+all robes. She moved very slowly, she was bowed, and she leaned upon the
+shoulder of Arabella. With care she deposited herself in the big chair.
+Arabella arranged her draperies, arranged the cushion, and stood aside.
+My lady lay back, put back the lace about her head, and showed them her
+large pale face and sighed. "You are welcome, gentlemen," said she. "You
+are vastly kind."
+
+"Odso, ma'am, what's the matter?" Sir John cried.
+
+"Why, have you not heard? Arabella, he has not heard!" My lady was
+convulsed, and clutched at the maid, who comforted her with a
+scent-bottle. "He has gone!" she sighed. "He has gone."
+
+"What the devil! Who the devil?"
+
+My lady recovered herself. From somewhere in her voluminous folds she
+produced a letter. "If it would please you, be patient with me. My
+unhappy eyes." She dabbed at them with a handful of lace, and read:
+
+"My lady, my mother,--I have but time for these few unkempt lines,
+wherein to bid you for a while farewell. My good friend, Colonel Boyce,
+has favoured me with an occasion to go see something of the warring world
+beyond the sea. And I, since the inglorious leisure of the hearth irks my
+blood, heartily company with him. It needs not that you indulge in tears,
+save such as must fall for my absence. I seek honour. So, with a son's
+kiss, I leave you, my mother. G.W."
+
+On which his mother's voice broke, and she wept.
+
+"Lord, what a fop!" said Sir John. My lady swelled in her draperies. "So
+he's gone to the war, has he? Odso, I didn't think he had it in him."
+
+"Sir, if you jeer at my bereavement!" my lady sobbed.
+
+"And where's Harry Boyce?" says Mr. Hadley.
+
+Sir John stared at him. "Why, seeking honour too, ain't he? What's in
+your head, Charles?"
+
+"This is rude," my lady sobbed; "this is brutal. The tutor! Oh, heaven,
+what is the tutor to me? I would to God I had never seen him--him nor his
+wicked father."
+
+Sir John tugged at Mr. Hadley's empty sleeve and drew him aside. "What
+are you pointing at, Charles? D'ye mean the two rogues have took Geoffrey
+off to make away with him between 'em?"
+
+"Lord, sir, you've a villainous imagination." Mr. Hadley grinned. "I mean
+no such matter. Nay, I'll lay a guinea, Harry Boyce is not gone at all."
+
+"Sir John"--my lady raised herself and was shrill--"what are you
+whispering there?"
+
+"What, what? You mean the old fellow took Geoffrey off to leave the young
+fellow a clear field with Ally Lambourne? Odso, that's devilish deep,
+ain't it? But we can set the young fellow packing, my lad. We--"
+
+"Sir John!" my lady's voice rose higher yet.
+
+"Coming, ma'am, coming. Od burn my heart and soul!" That last invocation
+was not directed at her but an invading tumult.
+
+The butler entered backwards, protesting, between two men who did not
+take off their hats. They were in riding-boots and cloaks, and splashed
+from the road. They had pistol butts ostentatious in their side pockets,
+and one carried some papers in his hand.
+
+"Stand back, my bully, stand back, or you'll smell Newgate," says he to
+the butler.
+
+"Burn your impudence," Sir John roared, and strode forward.
+
+"In the Queen's name. Messengers of the Secretary of State, with his
+warrant." The man waved his papers under Sir John's nose. "Master of the
+house, are you?"
+
+"I am Sir John Burford of Finchley, and be hanged to you."
+
+"There is the mistress of the house, sirrah," says Mr. Hadley
+
+"Thank'e. In the Queen's name, ma'am. Warrants to take Oliver Boyce,
+Colonel, and Geoffrey Waverton, Esquire."
+
+My lady shrieked, fell back, and was understood to be fainting.
+
+"You come too late, sirrah," says Mr. Hadley. "Your foxes be gone away."
+
+The man tapped his nose and grinned. "That won't do, sir. Set about it,
+Joe," and he nudged his fellow.
+
+"What's the charge against them?" says Mr. Hadley.
+
+The man laughed. "Come, sir, you know better than that. I ain't here to
+answer questions." Mr. Hadley put his hand in his pocket. The man grinned
+and shook his head, and went out pushing his comrade in front of him. Mr.
+Hadley followed them. As soon as they were out in the corridor and the
+door was shut behind them, the man turned and held out his hand to Mr.
+Hadley, who dropped into it a couple of guineas. "Lord, now, what did you
+think it was?" says the messenger genially. "Treasonable
+correspondence--Pretender--Lewis le Grand and so forth. Quite
+gentleman-like, d'ye smoke me?"
+
+"Prithee, who set you on?" says Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Now you go too far, ecod, you do. I don't mind obliging a gentleman,
+but you want to lose me my place. We'll be searching the house, by
+your leave."
+
+Off they went, and Mr. Hadley went back to my lady. She had been revived,
+and the air was heavy with scent. She fluttered her hands at the
+ministering Arabella and said faintly, "What is it, Charles?"
+
+"It seems there's some talk of their having dealings with the Pretender."
+
+"Lord bless my soul," Sir John puffed.
+
+"The Pretender?" Lady Waverton smiled through her powder. "La, now,
+Geoffrey's father always had a kindness for the young Prince."
+
+"I vow, ma'am, you take it with a fine spirit," says Mr. Hadley in
+some surprise.
+
+"You'll find, Mr. Hadley, that such families as ours, the older families,
+know how to bear themselves in this cause."
+
+Sir John stared at her and puffed the louder, and muttered very audibly,
+"Here's a turnabout!"
+
+"Oh, ma'am, to be sure it's a well-born party," Mr. Hadley shrugged.
+"D'ye give us leave to remain and see that these fellows show no
+impudence?"
+
+"Oh, sir, you are very obliging," says my lady superciliously.
+
+Mr. Hadley bowed, and withdrew to the recess of a window with Sir John
+following. "Here's a queer thing, Charles. Did ever you know Master
+Geoffrey was a Jacobite?" Mr. Hadley shook his head. "Nor this Colonel
+Boyce neither?"
+
+"I never saw a Jacobite in so good a coat, and I never thought Geoffrey
+would risk his coat for any king. And thirdly and lastly, I never knew
+Whitehall put itself out in these days whether a man was Jacobite or no.
+Why, damme, they be all half Jacobites themselves, from the Queen down."
+
+"Aye, aye," says Sir John sagely. "A devilish queer thing indeed."
+
+And on that came Alison and Harry--Alison rosy and smiling, Harry a
+pale and deliberate appendage. "Dear Lady Waverton, let me present
+my husband."
+
+Lady Waverton sat up straight. Lady Waverton embraced the pair of them
+with a bewildered glare.
+
+"I married him this morning," Alison laughed.
+
+"Alison, this is unmaidenly jesting," said my lady feebly.
+
+"Why, if it were, so it might be. But the truth is, it's unmaidenly
+truth. For I am Mrs. Harry Boyce. Give me joy."
+
+"Joy!" my lady gasped. "It's unworthy! It's cruel! Oh, Geoffrey,
+Geoffrey! How dare you?" She was again understood to faint.
+
+Through the rustle of Arabella and the odours of scent came the
+explosions of Sir John, swearing.
+
+Mr. Hadley moved forward, and, ignoring Alison, addressed himself to
+Harry. "Pray, sir, did you know that Mr. Waverton this morning left
+Tetherdown in your father's company, your father taking him, as he says
+in a letter, to the wars?"
+
+"Knew?" Lady Waverton chose to speak out of her swoon. "To be sure they
+knew. They would not have dared else. Dear Geoffrey! A villain! And you,
+miss--you whom he trusted! Oh!" She again took scent.
+
+"La, ma'am, he trusted me no more than I him. You are not well, I think."
+
+"You give me news, Mr. Hadley," Harry said. "I knew that my father meant
+to go abroad, and understood that I was to go with him."
+
+"Perhaps you'll go after him." Mr. Hadley shrugged and turned away.
+
+"Why, what's all this, Harry?" Alison laughed. "Your wise father hath
+chosen to take Geoffrey instead of you?"
+
+"In spite of my modesty, I'm surprised, ma'am," says Harry.
+
+"Burn your impudent face," quoth Sir John from the background.
+
+"Well, sir, if you were in your father's plans, maybe you'll pay your
+father's debts," quoth Mr. Hadley.
+
+"What do I owe you, Mr. Hadley?" says Harry, bristling.
+
+The two messengers came back again. "Right enough, sir, gone away." The
+spokesman nodded at Mr. Hadley. "We'll be riding. Trust no offence?" He
+looked hopeful.
+
+"Here's Colonel Boyce's son, wishing to answer for his father."
+
+The man looked Harry up and down and chuckled.
+
+"Lord, and mighty like. Servant, sir," he winked at Harry. "Tell the
+Colonel, sorry we missed him," He winked again and laughed.
+
+"What's this comedy of yours, Mr. Hadley?" says Harry.
+
+"Your friends have warrants to arrest your father and Mr. Waverton for
+treasonable correspondence with the Pretender. But none for you, I fear,
+Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Devil a one," the man laughed. "Come, Ned, we'll be jogging," Out
+they swung.
+
+A bewildered company, full of suspicions, stared at one another.
+
+"Come, Harry, let us go home," Alison said.
+
+"Home!" Lady Waverton gasped with an hysterical laugh. "Hear her!"
+
+"My lady"--Alison made her a curtsy--"gentlemen--all the friends of Mr.
+Boyce will be very welcome to me."
+
+Sir John swore. "You for a fool and he for a knave, damme, you're
+well matched."
+
+"When you were younger, sir, I suppose you were less of a boor," says
+Harry. "Mr. Hadley--my lady--" he made two stiff bows and gave his arm
+to Alison.
+
+"Humph, they go off with the honours." Mr. Hadley shrugged, and held out
+his arm in front of Sir John, who was plunging after them.
+
+"Be hanged to you. What did the rogue mean, telling me I was old?"
+
+"Why, he meant that a man who is too old to fight should be civil."
+
+"Too old?" Sir John fumed. "Burn him for a coward."
+
+"I think not," says Mr. Hadley. "But for the rest--God be with you. My
+lady--sincerely your servant."
+
+My lady was now weeping. "You never loved him," she complained. "You were
+never his friend," and she became speechless.
+
+The two men looked at each other. "Well, Charles, we'll to horse," Sir
+John concluded. "Servant, ma'am." They left her in the scented embraces
+of Arabella.
+
+To Harry as he went out came the butler, who, with something of a furtive
+manner, produced and gave him a letter. Harry looked at the writing and
+thrust it into his coat. Alison saw and took no notice.
+
+They walked on for some way before silence was broken. Then Harry said:
+"Well, madame wife, so you feel you've been bit."
+
+"Who--I? What do you know of what I feel?"
+
+"Oh, I can tell hot from cold. I know when you are thinking you ought to
+have thought twice. Egad, I agree with you. You've been badly bit. Here
+you were told that I was just off out of the country; that you must catch
+me at once if you wanted to catch me; that if you took me you would soon
+have me off your hands. And now we're tied up, you find I'm not going at
+all. I vow it's disheartening. But if you'll believe me, I did honestly
+believe my old rogue of a father. I did think he meant to take me."
+
+"And now you can't be comforted because you have to stay with me. Oh,
+Harry, you're a gloomy fellow to own a new wife. But why did the good man
+take Geoffrey when he might have had you? I should have thought he knew a
+goose when he saw one."
+
+"I can't tell. I never saw much meaning in the old gentleman."
+
+"You might as well look at his letter."
+
+Harry stared. "How did you know that was his?"
+
+"You like doing things mysteriously, the family of Boyce."
+
+The letter said this:
+
+"MR. HARRY,--I flatter myself that you will be offended. But 'tis all for
+your good. When I came after you I did not know that you were so clever a
+fellow. No more did I expect that I should have to like you. But since I
+do, I prefer that I should do without you. And since you have some of my
+wits, you may very well do without me. But I believe you will do the
+better without friend Geoffrey. Therefore I take him, who will indeed do
+my business much more sincerely than your worthy self. With the dear
+fellow safe out of the way, I count upon you to push on bravely with Mrs.
+Alison. You'll not find two such chances in one life. If you were master
+of her you could promise yourself anything in decent reason you please to
+want. For all your wits you are not the man to make his own way out of
+nothing. So don't be haughty. Why should you? It's a mighty pretty thing,
+Harry, and (trust an old fellow who hath made some use of the sex in his
+day) as tender as you may hope for in an heiress. She has looked your way
+already, and in her pique at the good Geoffrey deserting her, you'll find
+her warmer for you. If you don't make her warm enough for wiving, you're
+an oaf, which is not in my blood--nor your mother's, to be honest. Nor if
+I was young again and played your hand, I wouldn't let her grow cold when
+I had her safe.... So be a man, and I give you my blessing.
+
+"O. BOYCE"
+
+Harry held it out to Alison. "We're a noble family--the family of
+Boyce," said he.
+
+But Alison read it without a blush or a sneer, and when she gave it back
+she was laughing. "Oh, he's more cunning than any beast of the field! Oh,
+he knows the world! Poor, dear fellow."
+
+"Oh Lud, yes, he's a fool for his wisdom. But he's my father."
+
+"Well, sir?" Harry scowled at the ground. "Oh, what does he matter?
+Harry, what does anything matter to-day--or to-morrow, or to-morrow's
+to-morrow?"
+
+"I had no guess of all this." Harry crushed the paper. "You
+believe that?"
+
+"Oh, silly, silly."
+
+"You're still content?"
+
+"Not yet," Alison said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV
+
+SPECTATORS OF PARADISE
+
+
+In the old house on the hill Mrs. Weston sat alone. She was looking out
+of the oriel window at a garden of wintry emptiness and wind swept. The
+westerly gale roared and moaned, the heavy earth was sodden and beaten
+into hollows and pools through which broke tiny pale points of snowdrops.
+Away beyond the first terrace of lawn the roses bowed and tossed wild
+arms. A silvery gleam of sunlight fell on the turf, glistened, and was
+gone. Mrs. Weston sat with her hands in her lap and her needle at rest in
+a half-worked piece of linen. A veil of languor had fallen upon the
+wistfulness of her face. Her bosom hardly stirred. The sound of the
+opening door broke her dream, and she picked up her work and began to sew
+eagerly. It was Susan Burford who came in, royally neat in her
+riding-habit, for all the storm. She walked in her leisurely, spacious
+fashion to Mrs. Weston, who started and stood up, laughing nervously.
+"Indeed Alison will be pleased. You are kind. I know she has been longing
+to see you."
+
+Susan laughed and, a large young goddess of health, stooped to kiss the
+worn face. "You always talk about somebody else. Are you pleased?"
+
+"My dear!" Mrs. Weston protested. "You know I am."
+
+"We match very well. You never want to talk, and I never have anything to
+say." Susan sat down, and for some time the only sound was from Mrs.
+Weston's needle. At last, "You are still here, then," Susan said.
+
+"My dear! Why not, indeed?"
+
+"Oh. But you would always stay by Alison if she needed you."
+
+"Why, she never has needed me. And now less than ever."
+
+"Oh." Susan considered that. "And is he kind to you?"
+
+Mrs. Weston flushed. "Indeed he has been very good to me."
+
+"That is all I wanted to ask you," said Susan, and again there was
+silence.
+
+After a little while Mrs. Weston dropped her sewing and looked anxiously
+at Susan. "Have you ever seen him?"
+
+"Only his back. He used to keep in the corners at Tetherdown."
+
+"I suppose people--talk about him."
+
+"I don't listen," said Susan, "People are always in such a hurry. I
+can't keep up."
+
+"I suppose you think Alison was in a great hurry."
+
+"Only Alison knows about that."
+
+"Yes." Mrs. Weston looked at her with affectionate admiration, as though
+she had been endowed with rare understanding of the human heart. "Do you
+know you are the only one of the people Alison liked who has come
+here--since?"
+
+"Oh." (Susan's favourite eloquent reply.) "I don't mind about people."
+
+"He doesn't mind at all. She doesn't mind yet."
+
+"What is that you are working?" said Susan.
+
+"But indeed they are most perfectly happy," said Mrs. Weston, in a hurry.
+
+"Is it for a tucker?" said Susan.
+
+In a greater hurry, Mrs. Weston began to explain. She was still at it
+when Alison and Harry came back.
+
+They too had been riding. The storm had granted Alison none of Susan's
+majestic neatness. She looked a wild creature of the hills, her wet habit
+clinging about her, black ringlets broken loose curling about her, brown
+eyes fierce with life, and all the dainty colours of her face very clear
+and bright. She saw Susan and cried out, "Oh, my child, I love you."
+
+Susan rose leisurely to her majestic height and smiled down upon her. "I
+think you are the loveliest thing that ever was made," said she. Alison
+laughed, and they kissed.
+
+"I am quite of your mind, ma'am," said Harry. "Or I was," he made Susan a
+bow, "till this moment."
+
+"I was going to ask her if she was happy, sir," Susan said. "I shan't ask
+her." She held out her hand.
+
+"But I want you to ask me a thousand things." Alison put an arm round
+her, "Come away, come. At least I am going to tell you"--she shot a
+wicked glance at Harry--"everything." Off they went.
+
+"What's this mean, ma'am?" Harry stood over Mrs. Weston. "Is our wise
+Sir John sending to spy out the land?"
+
+"I wish you would not talk so." Mrs. Weston shivered. "It is like your
+father. Oh, sure, you have no need to be suspicious of every one."
+
+"Suspicious? Faith, I don't trouble myself." Harry laughed. "All the
+world may go hang for me. But you'll not expect me to believe in it."
+
+"I think you need fear no one's ill will. You are fortunate enough now."
+
+"Miraculously beyond my deserts, ma'am. As you say. But there's the
+wisdom of twenty years' shabbiness in me. And I wonder if the good Sir
+John wants to be meddling."
+
+"You need not be shabby now."
+
+"Lord, I bear him no malice. For he can do nought. Only I would not have
+him plague Alison."
+
+At last Mrs. Weston smiled upon him. "Aye, you are very careful of her."
+
+"I vow I would not so insult her." Harry laughed.
+
+"But you need not be afraid. Susan is here for herself. She is like that.
+She is the most independent woman ever I knew. She has come because she
+loves Alison."
+
+"Why, then, I love her. And egad it will be easy. She's a splendid
+piece."
+
+Mrs. Weston gave him an anxious glance. "She is very loyal," said she,
+with some emphasis.
+
+"It's a virtue. To be sure it's a virtue of the stupid." Harry cocked a
+teasing eye at her. "And I--well, ma'am, you wouldn't call me stupid."
+
+"I don't think it clever to jeer at what's good--and true--and noble."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, you are very parental!" Harry grinned. "You will be talking
+to me like a mother--and a stern mother, I protest."
+
+"Am I stern?" Mrs. Weston looked at him with eyes penitent and tender.
+
+"Only to yourself, I think. Lud, ma'am, why take me to heart?"
+
+"What now, Harry?" Alison and Susan close linked came back again. "Whose
+heart are you taking?"
+
+"Why, madame's," said Harry, with a flourish. "You see, ma'am," he turned
+to Susan, "I've a gift for making folks cry."
+
+"Oh. Like an onion," says she, in her slow, grave fashion.
+
+"Susan dear! How perfect," Alison laughed. "Now I know why I am growing
+tired of him. A little, you know, was piquant. But a whole onion to
+myself--God help us!"
+
+"Yet your onion goes well with a goose," Harry said.
+
+"Alack, Harry, but there's nothing sage about you and me."
+
+"Oh, fie! See there she sits, our domestic sage"--he waved at Mrs.
+Weston.
+
+"To be sure we couldn't do without her." Alison caressed the grey hair.
+
+"I must be riding, Alison," Susan said.
+
+Alison began to protest affectionate hospitality. Harry shook his head.
+"I have warned you of this, Alison. We are too conjugal. It embarasses
+the polite."
+
+"I am not embarassed," said Susan, with her placid gravity. "I want to
+come again."
+
+"By the fifth or sixth time, ma'am, I may feel that I am forgiven."
+
+"I have nothing to forgive you, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Then you can do it the more heartily." Harry smiled and held out his
+hand.
+
+"Oh." There was a faint shadow of a blush. "I did not think I should like
+you." She turned. "I beg your pardon, Alison."
+
+"I beg, ma'am, you'll come teach my wife to be kind. She also is frank.
+But for kindness--well, we are all sinners."
+
+"There it is, Mr. Boyce," said Susan, holding out her hand.
+
+And when she was gone. "Now, why did I not marry her first?" said Harry
+pensively.
+
+"Because she would never have married you, child. Being of those who like
+the man to ask."
+
+As Susan rode down the north slope of the hill, she was met by Mr.
+Hadley, gaunt upon a white horse, like death in the Revelation. The
+comparison did not occur to Susan, who had a fresh mind, but she did
+think white unbecoming to Mr. Hadley, and said, gurgling, "Where did you
+find that horse? Or why did you find it?"
+
+"He was a bad debt. But he has a great soul. And don't prevaricate,
+Susan. Where have you been?" Mr. Hadley bent his sardonic brows.
+
+"To gossip with Alison."
+
+"Odso, I guessed you would turn traitor."
+
+"No. I haven't turned at all, Mr. Hadley."
+
+"She has declared war on us. Your dear father fizzes and fumes like a
+grenade all day. And you go gossip with her. It's flat treason, miss.
+Come, did you tell Sir John you were going?"
+
+"No. But he would guess. He is so clever about me. Like you."
+
+"Humph. If he guesses you're a woman, it's all he does. And, damme, I
+suppose it's enough. So your curious sex bade you go and pry. Well, and
+what did you see in Mr. Harry Boyce?"
+
+"I suppose you are scolding me," said Susan placidly.
+
+"With all my heart."
+
+"Oh. Why do you ride that horse?"
+
+"Damme, miss, don't wriggle. You had no business at Highgate!"
+
+"He looks as if he had the gout."
+
+Mr. Hadley grinned. "But as you went, let's hear what you saw."
+
+"I always loved Alison."
+
+"Your business is to love your father, Susan--till some other man
+asks you."
+
+"I love her better now. She is so happy."
+
+"Damn her impudence," said Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Why did you lose your temper with her?"
+
+"I never lose my temper with any one but you."
+
+"Well. You made my father lose his."
+
+"Ods life, Susan, don't you know it's a man's right to tell women how
+they ought to live? Dear Alison wouldn't listen."
+
+Susan laughed. "She has made you look very foolish."
+
+"If she has I'll forgive her."
+
+"Oh. You do then," said Susan.
+
+"On your honour, miss, what did you think of Mr. Harry Boyce?"
+
+"I wondered Alison should love him."
+
+"Ods life, yes. But what's this you're saying?"
+
+"He is so quiet and simple."
+
+"Simple! Damme, the fellow's an incarnate mask."
+
+"Oh. I think I know all about him. I never thought I knew all about
+Alison. She wants so much."
+
+"And she hasn't got all she wants, eh?"
+
+"Yes, I believe," said Susan, after a moment.
+
+"Pray God you're right."
+
+"Oh. I like to hear you say that. You have been so"--for once her placid
+words stumbled--"so sordid about this."
+
+"Damme, Susan, don't be a saint." Mr. Hadley grinned. "They die virgins."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV
+
+MRS. BOYCE
+
+
+It was a time of wild plots. The long war of Marlborough had left England
+impregnably triumphant, and France ambitious of nothing but peace. No
+fear remained that foreign arms would carry James, the Pretender by right
+divine, to his sister's throne. Who should reign when Anne's growing
+weakness ended in death was for England alone to decide, and English law
+gave the succession to Prince George of Hanover. But there was a party,
+or at least the leaders of a party, who saw more profit to themselves in
+importing the Pretender.
+
+Harley and Bolingbroke, they had thrust out of the Queen's confidence and
+the government the friends of Hanover. They had undermined the authority
+of Marlborough at home and abroad, and were now ready, honourably or
+dishonourably, to put an end to the war which made him necessary. If he
+were dispatched into ignominy or exile, there could be no one strong
+enough, they believed, to prevent them driving England the way they
+chose. What that way would be no one clearly knew, themselves, perhaps,
+least of all. But together and singly they set going many strange secret
+schemes which were to make a new king, a new England, and new
+magnificence for themselves, singly or together. All which the mass of
+England watched with shrewd, incurious eyes. It could not long be a
+secret that plots were afoot. To shoulder out of power all who were
+committed friends of the lawful order was a confession of designs against
+it. As if that were not enough, Bolingbroke and Harley so managed their
+business that everything they did was wrapped in a mist of trickery and
+intrigue. And yet, though they were vastly mysterious over what could
+have borne the light without much shame, they contrived to let the agents
+of their deeper treachery blunder into notice and fill the air with
+rumours of untimely truth. Still England gave no sign.
+
+"Under which King"--Hanoverian or Pretender--perhaps there were few in
+England who cared. If the Pretender was bred French and a Papist, Prince
+George was a German born. Some of those who had joined heartily in
+driving out his father began to put it about that the son would be a
+better king for that lesson. George of Hanover had the right of law, but
+the Parliament of to-morrow might undo what the Parliament of yesterday
+had done. Who could be ardent for the right of an unknown foreigner over
+England? And few were ardent, but there were many who, caring nothing for
+Pretender or Hanoverian, had a solid resolution that England should not
+be torn in the cause of either. Whatever was done, must be done quietly
+and in good order. Since it seemed that the Hanoverian had no need to
+change anything in law or State or Church, best that he should be king.
+As for the devious politics, the tricks, and the mystery of Harley and
+Bolingbroke, they were of no account to plain men.
+
+There was yet another party not content to watch and wait till the
+plotters lost themselves in their own mysteries. The men whom Harley and
+Bolingbroke had driven from power had no mind to submit to impotence.
+They well knew what they wanted: the Hanoverian, the lawful, limited king
+upon the throne and themselves as his ministers. They were not delicate
+about the means they used. Since there were treason and plots, they too
+turned their hands to plotting and with a vigour and ruthless resolution
+of which the other camp was innocent.
+
+So the wise and eminent were busy while Harry Boyce and his Alison made
+trial of their marriage. Harry lived in a dream of bewildered happiness.
+He had counted on nothing but the need of his passion, hoped for nothing
+but its ecstasy in her beauty, and at its wildest the strain of gloom in
+him had bade him dread what lay beyond. She gave him a miracle of mad
+delight. A new force of life was born in him while he enjoyed her joy. It
+was a discovery of intoxicating power that he could wake that rare,
+consummate creature to such eager exultation as his own. In those
+wonderful hours it seemed that they passed out of themselves into a world
+where every part of their being was one and in the happiness of unbounded
+strength. So passion and she kept faith with him and something more. But
+the miracle of passion in her arms had less enchantment than the joy of
+the quiet hours. It was with this that she bewildered him. Before she
+yielded to him, he would have jeered at the hope that she might bring the
+gift of peace in her bosom. As the first days of marriage passed he
+learnt that all his placid loneliness had been the mere endurance of
+hunger. He had stayed himself with the husk of life. She satisfied him
+with the fruit. For she too could be calm, delighting in the little daily
+things, utterly happy with nonsense. To share all that with her was to
+find in it a strange, lulling enchantment of content.
+
+His fortune seemed too good to be real. For he possessed all that ever
+fancy had pretended was worth coveting: his life was a perfect happiness.
+No doubts from within, no troubles from without, had power to assail him.
+All the old, reasonable, practical fears were become ludicrous cowardice,
+only remembered for Alison to tease with. As for other people, and what
+they said and thought and did, some folks were kind and were welcome, no
+folks were of account. He and she deliciously sufficed themselves. And
+there was no dread of change, save in age and death, infinitely distant
+and insignificant--no matter but to glorify the power of life. Sometimes
+he was aware that the wonder of passion must grow faint and fail, but he
+saw nothing which could take from him the quiet, exquisite, daily joys.
+Was it real, or a charmed dream, this perfect fortune of content? Indeed,
+nothing was real in those days but the delight in being with her.
+
+Alison had her share. He did not deceive himself. She had her ecstasies
+and her exultations, she thought herself even madder than he was. And in
+these days, perhaps, her passion was deeper and stronger than his. She
+was satisfied, she felt herself accomplished, and gloried in her new
+power with a more profound, a more secret delight than his. She had given
+him eagerly all that she had, and in the giving found herself more than
+ever her own. For all the union, the deepest, truest self in her stood
+aloof in a mystery. It was not of her will, for she desired to deny him
+nothing. She did not reckon him weak in failing to take all of her. This
+must needs be the way of life. No man's passion could be stronger than
+his. Doubtless he too had his secret soul apart. And indeed it was
+glorious not to lose self in love, to stay always, through the ecstasies,
+aloof, to give always anew of will and choice--never to merge helpless in
+some unknown double being and become only half a body, half a soul,
+capitulating always to the rest, to the other.
+
+This self-glorious pride of hers gave her for a while that zest in all
+the trivial common things which made her a companion so delightful to
+Harry's temper. But she enjoyed them in a spirit different from his. All
+the bread-and-butter business of living was to him delightful in itself
+and for itself. He was born to want no better bread than is made of
+wheat. She played with it, made a dainty mock of it, amused herself with
+it, and at the back of her mind despised it.
+
+So they lived, and you imagine Mrs. Weston's dim, wistful eyes watching
+them with a great tenderness. For she understood them no better than
+they themselves.
+
+It was Alison who first grew tired. Not of love or passion, but of the
+trivialities and the quiet life at Highgate. She had ambitions, or
+thought she had. It had been just rediscovered that women could be
+leaders in the world--at least in politics and the tricks of statecraft.
+Women were the fiercest partisans and their voices powerful in the
+warring parties. It was a woman, his termagant duchess, who had given
+Marlborough his ascendancy in England, made him dominate all Europe. It
+was a clever woman who had contrived Marlborough's downfall and given his
+enemies the government of England. It was a woman--another duchess--who
+beat Swift. You need not suspect Alison, who had some humour, of
+imagining Harry Boyce a Marlborough. But he did believe him able to make
+a noise in the world, and coveted much the sensation of owning him while
+the world listened. She did not see herself controlling queens and kings
+and parties, but she was well aware of her beauty and its power, and had
+a mind to use it widely. She was hungry for excitement.
+
+So Mrs. Alison determined to set her man upon a larger, busier stage. The
+decree went forth that old Tom Lambourne's house in the Lincoln's Inn
+Fields was again to be inhabited. Harry was asked for his advice
+afterwards. Perhaps he would have been wiser if he had begun their first
+quarrel then. But he was enjoying her too much to deny her her ways or
+her whims, and he only laughed at her. He was not pleased, to be sure. He
+had a taste, which cannot have come from his father, for copse and
+field. He never found anything in the town which was worth the living in
+other folk's smoke. He disliked crowds and in particular crowds of fine
+ladies and gentlemen. So with some horror he saw before him a vista of
+polite splendours, and said so.
+
+"Oh Lud, sir," says she, "if I had wanted to sleep my life away I should
+not have married you. And if you wanted to sleep out yours you should not
+have married me."
+
+"I was born for innocence and green fields. You'll make me a bull in a
+china shop."
+
+"I'll love you the better, child. Faith, Harry, I would be very glad to
+have you break something."
+
+"Madame's heart, _par exemple_?"
+
+"That would be an adventure."
+
+So you find them arrived in the Lincoln's Inn Fields as the first step
+to the conquest of the world. The world was not as excited as Alison
+thought fit. Her father, old Tom Lambourne, had commanded reverence in
+the City and some respect even as far west as St. James's by sheer
+weight of wealth. A rare capacity for living hard had won him an army of
+diverse friends. But neither his business nor his pleasures provided him
+with many who could be bequeathed to his daughter. Her mother, born a
+baker's daughter in Shoe Lane, having died in giving Alison birth, had
+left her nothing besides her admirable body but some grumbling objects
+of charity. It remained for Alison to make her own way in the world of
+fine ladies and gentlemen. Since she was by certain fame an heiress of
+great possessions, her way might have been easy if she had not found
+herself a husband. The taint of the city, if she had borne herself
+humbly, need not have made her quite intolerable to people of birth. But
+since her money was already married she could only be reckoned as a city
+goodwife; pretty enough, indeed, to be game for fine gentlemen, but to
+fine ladies a nobody.
+
+Folks were slow in coming to the grand house in Lincoln's Inn Fields;
+slower still, if they had houses of elegance, to ask Mrs. Alison back. It
+suited Harry very well. He would, as his wife complained, go mooning
+across the fields to Islington almost as happily as through the woods at
+Highgate. His books had almost as good a savour in town as in the
+country. When she dragged him to hear Nicolini or Wilks or the
+Bracegirdle, he could console himself by gentle jeering over the fact
+that in a playhouse where everybody knew everybody not a creature had a
+bow for him or her. Of course she smarted. Day by day he chose to affect
+astonishment over her failures, believing with infatuated content that he
+was slowly driving her back to the country and sanity, though he was but
+driving her away from him. And she, choosing to feel humiliated, blamed
+him for the shame of it.
+
+"Why, child," says he in his supercilious way, "'tis not failing to be in
+the _beau monde_ that's ridiculous, but wanting to be."
+
+To such monitions she began not to answer back--a symptom very dangerous.
+
+She set up a basset table. That, if anything could, must proclaim her a
+woman of fashion--a woman, indeed, who had a fancy to be a trifle
+daring. There's no doubt that Alison about this time and afterwards did
+want to dabble in danger. She was not her father's daughter for nothing.
+She encouraged high play. For herself, she enjoyed the excitement of it,
+having no need to care if she lost. She wanted to have about her people
+who affected heavy stakes, believing in the innocence of her heart that
+they were exhilarating company. So she made for herself a queer society,
+which Harry to her angry disgust defined as a mixture of sheep and
+wolves. There were good wives and lads from the city anxious to make a
+jingling show with the funds of the family counting-house, there were
+hungry beaux and madames from the other end of the town seeking their
+fortune impudently wherever it might be found.
+
+To one of these happy parties there was introduced a Mrs. Boyce. She
+was a faded, handsome creature much jewelled about lean shoulders.
+Alison, who hardly heard her name in the rout, took no account of it
+and little of her. But on the next day this Mrs. Boyce came early and
+caught Alison alone.
+
+She began with such a fuss about apologizing for her earliness that
+Alison set her down for an ill-bred, tiresome creature. She had a high
+voice which, like the rest of her, was a trifle faded. "I protest, ma'am,
+I have long desired to know you better." Alison languidly muttered
+something civil. "Let me make myself known first, I beg. I am the niece
+of Sir Gilbert Heathcote."
+
+Alison, of course, had heard of Sir Gilly--one of the chiefs of high
+finance--but cared nothing about him. "I am vastly honoured, ma'am. I was
+only born Thomas Lambourne's daughter."
+
+"There is no need; ma'am." A long, lean hand was waved. "I wonder if we
+are in some fashion connected. We are both called Mrs. Boyce. The Boyces
+of Oxfordshire, ma'am?"
+
+Alison's laugh had something of a sneer in it, "Of nowhere that I know,
+ma'am. My husband is Mr. Harry Boyce, son of Colonel Oliver Boyce."
+
+The lady fluttered her fan, settled herself afresh in her chair,
+rearranged her close-fitting lips. Alison was reminded of a hen preening
+itself. "I had heard so, ma'am. And my husband is Colonel Oliver Boyce."
+
+"La, ma'am, do you mean the same?" Alison cried.
+
+Mrs. Oliver Boyce gave a lifeless smile. "That is why I did myself the
+honour of giving you my confidence, ma'am. I think there are not two
+Colonel Oliver Boyces. The younger son of one of the Oxfordshire family."
+
+"Oh Lud, how should I know? I never looked into the grandfathers."
+
+"No, ma'am?" The tone was patronizing contempt. "You might have been the
+wiser of it. Colonel Oliver Boyce--he has taken the title lately--when I
+knew him he was something in the service of the Duke of Marlborough. Oh,
+a fine man to the eye, ma'am, and very splendid in his talk."
+
+"Why, that's his likeness," Alison laughed. "And what then, ma'am? Have
+you come seeking the Colonel? He is the Lord knows where. Or is
+it--faith, you don't tell me Harry is your son?"
+
+"No, ma'am. At least I was spared bearing children."
+
+"Oh--why, give you joy if you would have it so. But how can I serve you?
+Maybe your Colonel is not my Colonel after all. At least he and Harry are
+father and son heartily enough."
+
+"It may be so, ma'am," said the lady heavily, and here Harry came in.
+
+Alison looked up laughing and then frowned. Harry would not ever dress
+fine. His wig was still unfashionably small, he wore some sombre stuff,
+and to her eye (as she said) looked like a mole. "Here's Mr. Boyce,
+ma'am. Harry, Mrs. Oliver Boyce, who is come to say that you never had
+father nor mother."
+
+"Your obliged servant, ma'am." Harry opened his eyes. "Pray, has my
+father married again?"
+
+"You'll find, sir, that Colonel Boyce has only been married once."
+
+"If you please, ma'am," said Harry blandly. "Pray, are you blaming him?
+Or--" a gesture expressed his complete ignorance of what she was doing.
+
+The lady seemed to force herself to laugh. "Oh, fie, sir. Sure it is not
+for me to blame him."
+
+"No, ma'am?" Harry was first interrogative then acquiescent. "No, ma'am.
+I wonder if you could give me the Colonel's direction."
+
+"I, sir? You are pleased to amuse yourself."
+
+"I vow, ma'am, I was never less amused."
+
+"Colonel Boyce was pleased to leave me five years ago. I have not
+forgotten it, if you have."
+
+"Faith, this is very distressing," Harry protested in bewilderment. "But
+you do me injustice, ma'am. I have forgotten nothing about my father. For
+I never knew anything."
+
+"As you please, sir," the lady drawled. "I was talking, by your leave, to
+Mrs. Boyce."
+
+"Oh, ma'am, a hundred pardons," Harry took himself off in a hurry. His
+chief emotion over the lady seems to have been satisfaction that she
+wanted nothing to do with him. As for her story of being his father's
+deserted wife, he had long supposed his father capable of anything. As
+for the lady herself, he wrote her down a tiresome busybody and perhaps
+he was not far wrong.
+
+Alison too was much of the same opinion, but it was unfortunately
+hampered by a natural curiosity to hear what the lady could tell
+about the mystery of Harry and his father. "You had something to say
+to me, ma'am?"
+
+"I count it my duty, ma'am, to give you warning of Colonel Boyce."
+
+Alison stood up. "Duty? I know nothing of your duty, ma'am. But I think
+it is mine not to listen to you."
+
+"I protest, I should have said the same," the lady drawled. "I too had
+spirit once, child. That was before I suffered. I would I had known you
+earlier. And yet perhaps I may do something to save you even now."
+
+"I cannot tell how, ma'am."
+
+"Listen, if you please!" the lady said dramatically. "I was something of
+an heiress as you are and maybe something of a toast too. The worse for
+me. I choose to believe it was not only my money which brought Oliver
+Boyce upon me. He took all I could give him and very soon gave me
+nothing, not even common courtesy. When I began to be careful he began to
+be brutal. But for my family--I told you that Sir Gilbert Heathcote was
+my uncle--he would have stripped me of every penny. When they stepped in
+to save me some rag of my fortune, my good Mr. Boyce left me. I have
+never had a word from him since. Pray, child, take warning."
+
+"If it is so, I am sorry for it," said Alison coldly, "I believe I hear
+company." She began to walk to the outer room.
+
+Behind her, "As for your Harry Boyce," said the lady, "oh, I make no
+doubt he's Oliver's son, though certainly he is none of mine."
+
+Alison made as if she did not hear, and she was spared more by the coming
+of some of her guests. The card tables filled. There was no more danger
+of being private with Mrs. Oliver Boyce. Indeed, the lady, as if she had
+done all she wanted, took her leave early. She was affectionate about it,
+for which Alison liked her none the better. Through most of that evening,
+amid the flutter of cards and the clatter--"Spadillio, on my life! What,
+it's Basto, is it? Did you hear of Mrs. Prue? She'll not show for a
+month. We win the Codille, ma'am. They say the Duchess and she pulled
+caps"--Alison was telling herself over and over that the creature was a
+detestable low thing who only wanted to make mischief. It should, you
+think, have needed no effort to believe that. But the obvious malice had
+power to annoy a mind already discontented. Alison could not stop
+wondering what the mystery was about Harry's birth and his father.
+Perhaps Harry knew more than the little he professed. Perhaps he was not
+the careless, indolent fellow he chose to seem, but something more
+cunning and less lofty. What if he were just such another as the woman
+painted his father--a fellow on the hunt for an heiress, who, once he had
+her and her money, cared no more about her? To be sure there was some
+evidence for that. Since they had come to town, he was always off by
+himself. If she wanted him with her, she had to plead and plague him. A
+proud office! Why, that very night monsieur did not please to appear at
+the card tables. He was too fine for her and her company. So she fretted
+and rubbed the poison in. And naturally, she fared ill at the card table.
+Her cards were bad and she made the worst of them. She was not a good
+loser and it was a wife much inflamed who, when her guests were gone,
+sought out her husband.
+
+Harry sat with Mrs. Weston, who was at needlework and, if Alison had been
+able to see, looked very benign. But it was he who demanded all the
+wife's angry eyes. His wig was on the table beside him. He had a pipe in
+his mouth. He was lolling in the deeps of a chair and smiling to himself
+over a book. "You might be in an ale-house, you look so slovenly."
+
+Harry grinned up at her. "Oh, madame wife hasn't been winning to-night.
+Tell me all about it."
+
+"Faugh! Your pipe," Alison coughed. "For God's sake keep it to the
+tavern. It's enough that you reek of it without making my house
+reek too."
+
+Harry gave a great sigh and put the pipe down. "We were so comfortable
+till you came. I am glad to see you, dear."
+
+"I was comfortable till you came." Alison snapped.
+
+"Pray, mother Weston," says Harry, "forgive our public caresses. We have
+not long been married."
+
+Alison looked ice at him. "Weston dear, would you leave us? I have
+something to say to Harry." Harry opened his eyes. Mrs. Weston looked at
+her anxiously, bade them a nervous good-night, and hurried out.
+
+"Harry--who was your mother?" Alison stood stern over the lolling
+husband.
+
+"Egad, what's this? Have you been brooding over your bony friend?
+Who is she?"
+
+"She says she is your father's wife; and says he left her."
+
+"Well, if she is his wife, I wager he did leave her. Faith, she was made
+to be deserted."
+
+"What do you know of her?"
+
+"Nothing, by the grace of God. Why should I? If my father got drunk and
+married her, he would not want to talk about it when he was sober."
+
+"I despise you when you talk so," Alison cried.
+
+"And yet you listened to her, child."
+
+"She says that he took all her money before he left her."
+
+"Oh! Pray, why has she so much to say, and to you?"
+
+"She wanted to warn me against Colonel Boyce."
+
+"And against his son, I think. And you were so kind as to listen. Egad,
+ma'am, I am obliged to you. Well, now you know what to do. You have the
+money and I have none. Pray, lock up your purse to-night."
+
+"You are childish," said Alison with lofty scorn. "Harry--who was
+your mother?"
+
+"Oh, I thought your kind friend told you I had none. I dare say it's as
+true as the rest."
+
+"You don't know?"
+
+"I never saw her."
+
+"She said--" Alison hesitated.
+
+"Oh Lud, don't be squeamish now."
+
+"She said your father had never been married except to her."
+
+"Odso! That is what you had to tell me. I am a bastard, am I?" He laughed
+and turned in his chair. "Give you good-night, madame wife."
+
+"Harry--"
+
+"Oh, God save you!" He took up his pipe. "I am no company for you. And,
+by God, you are no company for me."
+
+She looked at him a moment, hesitated, went slowly out.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI
+
+THE AFFAIR OF SIR GEORGE
+
+
+The irruption of Mrs. Oliver Boyce could not easily have been foretold.
+That the past life of Colonel Boyce was likely to throw shadows over his
+son Harry might have considered, but the nature of the lady and her care
+and the successful opportunity of her malice were hardly to be
+calculated. There is less excuse for him in the affair of Sir George
+Anville. Given the conditions of that hasty marriage and the state into
+which it had brought them and the society about them, some Sir George or
+other was a natural consequence.
+
+The ugly quarrel which Mrs. Oliver Boyce had made for them was never
+composed. When they met again in the morning they were coldly and
+haughtily civil, and so they chose to remain. Mrs. Weston, not being
+blind, saw that something was amiss and tried with blundering motherly
+affection to push them back into one another's arms. She hardened, as is
+usual, their hostility. Each was mortally afraid of weakening, each
+suspected the other at once of softness and of guile and so held aloof
+and fed upon scorn. They had both enough of that pride of sex which gives
+one pleasure in the sufferings of the other. And of course the quarrel
+was poisoned with a sordid taint. The colder, the haughtier Harry was,
+the more Alison inclined to believe that he had wanted nothing of her but
+her money. The haughtier, the colder Alison was, the more Harry raged
+against her for a mean creature who desired to make him feel his
+dependence upon her money bags.
+
+In himself Sir George Anville was of no importance. If Harry had been
+comfortable he could never have taken the trouble to be angry over the
+man. It is certain that Alison never thought him worth any thought of
+hers, still less worth one finger's surrender. And yet Sir George
+contrived to be disastrous to the pair of them.
+
+That was not, as Lady Mary Wortley Montagu said of him in another matter,
+altogether his fault. "The fool has excuses," quoth she, "which others
+have not. He is so great a fool that you hardly believe his folly is but
+folly." Sir George was a man born without impulse or capacity for
+anything. Lady Mary, who was fond of using him for her wit, made a
+grammarian's jest on him, "The creature's an anomaly: active in form,
+passive in meaning." He was bred in a society which made it a fashion to
+be vicious. He affected to follow the fashion. If vice must needs be
+something active, or at least, something of the will, Sir George Anville
+must escape punishment. But he was to a wholesome taste more offensive
+than sinners who did more damage. It was Harry's worst blunder in the
+affair that he treated Alison as if she did not feel that.
+
+Sir George knew no other way of passing his life than in dangling about
+women. He was generally tolerated as a butt, and being impervious to
+contempt, supposed that his fascinations procured him immunity. He
+did--it must be reckoned the first of his two accomplishments--he did
+know a pretty woman from a plain one, and therefore as soon as he knew
+Alison much resorted to her. His other accomplishment was to dress well.
+He was lean and had an air of languor which was not affected, but a
+natural lack of vigour. It may be believed that Alison tolerated him
+because he made a not disagreeable decoration to her rooms. But at this
+era she was cynical, and perhaps told herself that Sir George was as good
+a man as another.
+
+He began to come at hours when she could be found alone and was sometimes
+admitted. So Harry caught him once or twice, was ironically obsequious to
+him (which Sir George took for solemn earnest), and afterwards amused
+himself by congratulating Mrs. Alison on the power of her charms. "Odds
+fish, I can't tell where you'll stop, ma'am. You'll have a corpse on his
+knees to you yet. Maybe the corpse of a lord. I vow I'm proud of you."
+Which was not likely to get the door shut on Sir George.
+
+So that dangling gentleman became convinced that Alison was yielding to
+his embraces. He was, in a limp way, gratified. A devilish fine woman to
+be sure. She might be a trifle exhausting to a man of _ton_. But what
+would you? Women were greedy and must be satisfied with what one could
+spare them. And it was pleasant to see the pretty creatures pining. He
+would lure madame on with a few tit-bits. In this kindly mood he went to
+her on a wet April day when Alison was fretting for a wild walk or a
+wilder ride in wind and rain. But even to herself she would not confess
+that she was tired of the town. It would have assimilated her to Harry.
+
+Sir George sat himself down by Alison's side, simpered at her, sniffed,
+put his thin hands on his thin knees and ogled them. Alison held out to
+him a cup of tea. He arranged his rings before he took it and then again
+simpered at her. After some humming and hawing, "D'ye go to the play
+to-night, ma'am?" he drawled.
+
+"What play is it?"
+
+"Ah--some curst play or other," said Sir George; and exhausted by that
+effort relapsed for a while into silence.
+
+Alison did not help him out. It is possible that she was wondering how a
+creature so vapid could go on existing. She looked Sir George over with
+an odd, close inspection. Sir George, who had some perceptions, became
+aware of it and according to his nature misunderstood it. He sniffed
+again, and "Pray, ma'am, what perfume do you use?" Alison stared at him.
+"I am delicate in such things," said he, and smelt his own handkerchief.
+
+Alison hesitated between disgust and amusement. To be sure the creature
+was such a fool that it was not fair to think of him save as a buffoon.
+So unfortunately she chose amusement. "Oh, I vow, Sir George, your
+delicacy is rare," she laughed.
+
+The poor creature took it for a compliment. He leered at her: "But you
+are exquisite, my Indamora."
+
+"Who?"
+
+"It's an amorous lady in a play," Sir George explained. "Pretty
+creature," he patted Alison's arm, and leaned upon her to kiss her neck.
+
+She was so surprised that his lips had almost time to reach her. "Lord,
+sir, are you mad?" she cried, as she thrust him off.
+
+"Pretty creature," Sir George giggled, and clung to her.
+
+"Your carriage is at the door, Sir George." Harry stood over them. His
+face was as much a mask as ever, his voice placid.
+
+Alison started up and stood to face him with a lowering brow. He did not
+appear to see her. Sir George shook down his ruffles. "Carriage? What
+d'ye mean?" says he. "I ha' had no carriage this year. I came in a
+hackney coach."
+
+Harry turned away from him and opened the door.
+
+"Eh? Oh, stap me!" Sir George giggled and got on to his feet, "Madame,
+your eternally devoted." He went out with a strut, waving his scented
+handkerchief in the direction of Harry.
+
+Then Alison spoke. Her eyes were furious. "You--oh, you boor! How
+dare you?"
+
+"Egad, that's very good!" Harry laughed.
+
+She beat her foot on the floor. "Oh, you are not to be borne! To make a
+noise of it! To make a scandal of me and that--that creature!"
+
+"To be sure, I came untimely. Well, ma'am, if you wanted to be quiet
+about it, I had rather it made a noise."
+
+"My God!" she was white. "You dare say that to me! Be careful, Harry."
+
+"Pray, ma'am, no heroics."
+
+"I warn you, there are things I'll not bear."
+
+"Is it possible?" Harry sneered.
+
+She swept past him and away.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII
+
+RETURN OF MR. WAVERTON
+
+
+It seems that, years afterwards, Harry and Alison were afflicted with a
+dreary and remorseful wonder at these wars. Both, as they grew older, had
+something of a turn for moralising, and in their copious letters to their
+several children is evidence of much penitence and puzzling over the
+disasters of their youth. Each plainly took all the blame. Each is
+eloquent about the sins of pride and hardness. Harry preaches the duty of
+trust; Alison the folly of easy intimacies. Both of them, in those latter
+days when they could calmly estimate what they had lost, still wondered
+with a gloomy scorn how they had come to let the ugly, ridiculous affair
+of Sir George set them against each other. You find them both trying to
+recall (or guess) what exactly it was that, in the time of crisis, they
+felt and believed.
+
+When it was all part of their history, Harry could hardly persuade
+himself that ever he had fancied Alison untrue, even disloyal; or Alison
+believe that she had stormed against him for driving out of the house a
+man who had been impudent to her. Yet it is not to be doubted that Harry
+did let suspicions of her honesty poison him. He could not, at the worst
+of his anger, believe that she would play false with such a husk of a
+fop; but he told himself that she wanted to make the fellow into a
+waiting gentleman, a servant, and a toy at once--a thing more nauseous
+than a lover. And Alison, though at the back of her brain she was aware
+that Harry had excuse for what he had done, raged the more against him
+for the intolerable things he had said. His suspicions made her despise
+him. For his assumption of authority she hated him.
+
+There were almost from the first the usual sage and kindly friends to
+tell them that it was all a misunderstanding, that they had only to be
+frank with each other and commonly reasonable and there would be no
+quarrel left. But it is doubtful whether this sagacious advice could
+have done them much good if they had taken it. "Talk things over like
+rational creatures," was (as usual) the prescription. But if they had
+really been rational, they would only have come to the conclusion that
+they ought not to be married. The force of their passion, to be sure,
+was real enough and still moved in them. To hold them together they had
+nothing else. There was no consciousness of other need, no longing for a
+common life, no desire to help or give. If they had been most calmly
+wise and wisely calm in a dozen conversations, they would but have made
+this all the clearer.
+
+Still it is true, as the sagacious friends guessed, that they did not
+try to compose the quarrel. Each was by far too proud. Harry was
+pleased to consider that he had done his duty by a flighty wife, and
+would take no more account of her unless she were penitent--or provoked
+him again. Alison, reckoning herself meanly insulted, was resolved that
+he could never again be more than an unwelcome guest in her house. They
+were, to be sure, ridiculous. In private they avoided each other. In
+public they continued to meet, for each was too proud to confess to the
+world the failure of their marriage. You imagine how poor Mrs. Weston
+enjoyed life in an icy atmosphere, the temperature of which she was not
+permitted to notice.
+
+Such were their relations when the final blow fell upon them. They dined
+late in the Lincoln Inn Fields. It was as much as six o'clock and they
+were still at table--as jovial as usual. The butler came to Alison with
+an elaborate whispering. "Pray him come up," she said aloud, and looked
+defiance down the table at Harry. "It is Mr. Waverton."
+
+"Lord, Lord, is he still alive?" Harry grinned. "That's heroic."
+
+"Back from France? Is Colonel Boyce come back?" Mrs. Weston cried.
+
+"I know nothing of Colonel Boyce," said Alison coldly.
+
+"You couldn't please him better," Harry laughed. "Dear Geoffrey! I wonder
+if he knows anything? Well I It would be a new experience."
+
+Mr. Waverton came. He was more stately than ever--browner also, but not
+changed otherwise. His large and handsome face affected all the old
+melancholy.
+
+"Oh, Mr. Waverton!" Harry grinned. "You do honour me. Pray let me present
+you to my poor wife."
+
+Geoffrey took no notice of him. "Madame, your obedient," he bowed to
+Alison. "I beg leave to have some speech with you."
+
+"There's still some dinner. Draw up a chair," said Harry.
+
+"I did not come to dine, sir."
+
+"Oh, that's a sad stomach of yours. A glass of wine, then?"
+
+"I do not take wine with you, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"I wonder if you have made a mistake. For you have come into my house."
+
+"I will answer for all my mistakes, sir, with hearty goodwill."
+
+"Egad, you'll be busy."
+
+"Oh, be silent!" Alison cried. "You are welcome, Mr. Waverton. How can I
+serve you?"
+
+"I understand the gentleman's desire to hurry me into a quarrel, ma'am.
+Be sure that I shall not permit it." Harry laughed disagreeably. "It's
+very well, sir. But I choose first that you should listen to what I
+have to say."
+
+"Listen I Oh Lud, is it a poem?"
+
+Mr. Waverton flushed. "You are impertinent, sir. It shall not serve
+you. I intend that madame shall know the truth of your father's
+treachery and yours."
+
+Harry stood up. "Are we to stay for more of this, ma'am?"
+
+"I shall stay," Alison said.
+
+"You remark the gentleman's impatience to silence me, ma'am. I promise
+you that I shall tell you nothing which he or any man can deny."
+
+"It's a dull tale, then," Harry muttered.
+
+"I think it will excite you enough, ma'am. You are advised that I went to
+France with Colonel Boyce. The office which he offered me was to
+negotiate with Prince James. This I undertook readily, for to his party
+my family hath ever had an inclination, nay, an affection, and I saw in
+the affair duties of honour and moment."
+
+"To the greater glory of Geoffrey, first Duke of Waverton, whom God
+preserve," quoth Harry.
+
+"I did not, I will avow, foresee that the thing was but a trick to take
+me away from my house and out of the country. Though I may regret,
+ma'am"--he bowed magnificently to Alison--"I do not even now blame myself
+for my blindness, for I have ever accounted it unworthy of a man of
+honour to fear treachery in his servants"--he glared at Harry--"or
+weakness--ah--weakness in those to whom he gives his devotion"--he made
+melancholy eyes at Alison. "No more of that. In fine, I did not suspect
+that a fellow who was taking wages from my hand had plotted to rob me of
+what was my dearest hope, or that another--another--would surrender
+herself a prey to his crafty greed."
+
+"Damme, it is a poem after all," Harry groaned.
+
+"You said you had something to tell me, sir," said Alison coldly.
+
+"Nay, ma'am, be patient. I give you no reproaches. But what is, is. If it
+irks you that I remind you of it, do not give the blame to me."
+
+"I shall blame you for being tedious, by your leave." Alison yawned.
+
+"Wait till all's told. Well, ma'am, I left Tetherdown with Colonel
+Boyce, and we rode posthaste to Newhaven. He was there joined by some
+half-dozen fellows, low fellows to my eye. This much surprised me, and I
+took occasion to tell him so, for he had given out that his was a very
+secret errand of Marlborough's privy policy, into which he would admit
+none but me. He made out that these fellows were but messengers and
+escort, and I permitted myself to be satisfied, though I remarked that
+he was on familiar terms with them. But that gave me little concern, for
+I had from the first remarked in Colonel Boyce a coarse habit of
+intimacy with the vulgar."
+
+"Aye, aye, you and he took to each other famously," says Harry.
+
+"Lud, sir, must you be so wordy?" Alison cried.
+
+"You will find that every word has its import, ma'am. From some of these
+fellows Colonel Boyce learnt that there was a warrant out against him for
+treasonable practices with the Pretender. This affected him to great
+indignation, in which, as I frankly told him, I found matter for
+bewilderment. Since he was, as he professed, about to deal with the
+Pretender, it was but fair that the Government should arraign him on that
+charge. Over which he was pleased to laugh at me, and then, to explain
+his mirth, averred that the Government, and in particular Mr. Secretary
+St. John, was much more Jacobite than he, and so had no title to meddle
+with him. Then he said that what irked him was that they should have
+heard of his dealings with France, which must be done secretly or fail.
+So we went in a hurry aboard the schooner which was ready for him, and
+crossed to Dieppe, landing by night beyond the town. I make no doubt from
+his adroitness that Colonel Boyce hath done business in France before,
+but of what kind I leave you to guess when you have heard all. We were
+well furnished with horses and upon the road to Paris before noon. He
+gave out to some officers which questioned him that we were of Prince
+James's service upon our way to St. Germain. We rode to Pontoise, and
+there, as it had been planned from the first, Colonel Boyce stayed while
+I rode on to the Prince. He dared not, as he said, go himself to Paris,
+for fear that some of the French officers should recognize him as
+Marlborough's man and denounce him for a spy. Therefore was I to go with
+letters to the Prince, and messages which should persuade him to ride out
+to Pontoise and come to business with Colonel Boyce. I went on then
+alone, save that Colonel Boyce gave me one of his fellows to be my guide
+and servant, and he stayed with the rest at Pontoise. Thus far, I beg you
+remark, I had no cause to apprehend treachery. Upon the face, the scheme
+was fair enough, and all had been done even as Colonel Boyce proposed to
+me in England. I will maintain myself honourably free of any blame in the
+affair against any man whomsoever."
+
+"God bless you," said Harry heartily.
+
+Mr. Waverton visibly laboured with a repartee.
+
+"Oh, sir, a prayer from you is a rare honour," he said at length.
+"You're to understand, ma'am, that I was furnished with letters of
+credence from certain of the Jacobite agents in England--John Rogers and
+Mrs. White, I remember. How they were come by, I cannot now tell, though
+I may guess, for it is plain that there was no stint of money in the
+affair. So I came easily to speech with the Prince and his secretary, my
+Lord Middleton. And I will ever maintain that His Royal Highness is
+altogether such as a prince should be. Being of a dark complexion and a
+melancholy dignity, there is in him no lightness of thought or word. To
+me he was, I profess, very flattering, showing me courtesies beyond my
+rights or expectations. He received me, in a word, most favourably, and
+being influenced, as I regret I cannot doubt, by my person and address,
+was easily inclined to ride out to Pontoise. Only my Lord Middleton made
+difficulties. He is of a sardonic turn, and permits his wit to outrun his
+civility. He set me questions in a fashion which my honour could not
+brook. Yet I can relate that in the end I prevailed over my Lord
+Middleton's jealousy. For he said to the Prince: '_Enfin_, sir, I can
+tell no reason why you should not go see this Colonel if you choose. If
+there were any guile in the business, faith, they would never have
+trusted it to this fellow!'
+
+"So the thing was agreed. In the morning we rode for Pontoise, the
+Prince, my Lord Middleton, myself. His Royal Highness was pleased to
+limit himself to one servant. The man with whom Colonel Boyce had
+provided me went on to carry advice of our coming. We came to Pontoise
+towards evening. Colonel Boyce had put up at the Lion d'Or. He was
+waiting for us in the courtyard and received us, as I thought, something
+shortly, hurrying us into the house. But once inside, he made ceremony
+enough, with endless speeches about the condescension of His Royal
+Highness. All this too obsequious, in a boorish taste, so that the Prince
+bade him have done and come to business. Therewith Colonel Boyce was as
+full of apologies as he had been of servilities. I vow I never heard him
+so copious as that night.
+
+"He took us, you are to understand, to an upper room. And what first
+moved my suspicion was that he bade me be gone. Then my Lord Middleton
+countered him with, 'I believe, sir, the gentleman had best stay.'
+Immediately Colonel Boyce was all smiles over his blunder, and we sat
+down about the table in that upper room and came to the substance of his
+negotiation. He kept, I'll allow, to the purposes which, from the first,
+he had pretended to me: whether Prince James, if assured of support from
+Marlborough and his friends, would choose to avow himself Protestant; but
+he made so many conditions over it, he was so vague and wary that 'twas
+hard to tell what he would be at. When my Lord Middleton tried to pin him
+to something plain and certain he would ever evade, till it began to grow
+late and the Prince talked of supper and bed. This Colonel Boyce took up
+very heartily, and was indeed giving his orders when there came a noise
+in the courtyard and he ran to the window and looked out.
+
+"My Lord Middleton was behind him, with a 'What's your anxiety, sir?'
+
+"'Why, my lord, I would not have these roysterers break upon the Prince's
+incognito. Pray, sir, this way and you'll be secure'; he points to an
+inner door.
+
+"'I believe we are as safe here, sir,' says my Lord Middleton.
+
+"'Egad, sir, come away,' says Colonel Boyce; and he was in fact dragging
+the Prince across the room when the door bursts open and in comes a
+stranger, a little man. He flung himself across the room upon Colonel
+Boyce, making some play with a pistol. There was some grappling and
+wrestling. I recall that they gasped and breathed hard. But it's odd, I
+believe, that there was no word spoken. Then Colonel Boyce freed himself
+and bolted through that inner door. The stranger fired a shot after him,
+and while we were all deaf and sneezing with it and utterly amazed he
+turns on us. 'That's a miss,' says he. 'Please God they'll bag him below.
+Eh, Charles,' he wags his head at my Lord Middleton, 'I thought you had
+more sense,'
+
+"'Damme,' says my lord, 'it's Hector McBean. And prithee what's all this
+ruffling, Mac?'
+
+"'Why, you have let His Majesty walk into a stinking trap. That fellow
+Boyce, he hath been Marlborough's spy, Sunderland's spy, the devil's spy
+this twenty year.'
+
+"'Why, I thought he had something the smack of it,' says my lord.
+'And yet--'
+
+"'Who's this now?' Captain McBean turned on me. 'Yours or his?'
+
+"'His ambassador in fact,' My lord looked me over and took snuff. 'You
+won't tell me that hath any guile in it. Prithee, what is it you have
+against the man Boyce?'
+
+"'Eh, did ye see him run?' says Captain McBean. 'A man's not in that
+hurry if he hath a good conscience. If ye'll please to have him up, maybe
+we'll hear a tale.'
+
+"But as he spoke there came into the room a French officer of dragoons,
+who, saluting the Prince, asked Captain McBean if he had found his rogue.
+On which 'Have I found him?' Captain McBean cries out, 'Eh, sir, did he
+not run into your arms?' But it appeared that Colonel Boyce had not been
+caught, and they determined at last that he must have made his way out by
+a door at the back of the inn and won clear away. But I am sorry to tell
+you, ma'am, that he hath not yet been found. For if they catch him in
+France, he may count on a hanging."
+
+"Pray, sir, how did you dodge the rope?" Harry said. "Did you talk them
+to death, your Pretender and his tail?"
+
+"You're too eloquent for me, Mr. Waverton," Alison yawned. "I can't tell
+what you want to say. What is this mighty crime which you and Colonel
+Boyce were compassing?"
+
+"Sneers become you ill, ma'am," says Mr. Waverton magnificently. "I
+repudiate any charge whatsoever; and tell my story my own way. Some hot
+words passed between Captain McBean and the Frenchman, each blaming the
+other for Colonel Boyce's escape. Then Captain McBean says 'The fellows
+that were drinking in the tap, I suppose you've let them dodge you too?
+No? Well, that's a wonder. Tie this rogue up with them and have them in
+guard.' So he mocked at me, but the Prince brought him up roundly.
+
+"'You go too fast for me, my good captain,' quoth he. 'What's your charge
+against the gentleman?--who is to my mind a very simple gentleman.' So
+His Royal Highness was pleased to honour me."
+
+"Egad, he was right, Waverton," Harry laughed.
+
+"I think I know how to value your fair words now, sir," says Mr. Waverton
+grandly. "Be pleased to spare them. Upon that, as I was saying, Captain
+McBean lost command of himself and was grossly violent. Roaring that I
+was none the less a knave because I was so natural a fool, and the like
+empty insolence. Accusing me of being art and part in a vile plot with
+Colonel Boyce to kidnap and murder His Royal Highness."
+
+"Now we have it," Alison murmured and looked at Harry strangely.
+
+"Aye, ma'am. Now, perhaps (though late enough) your eyes are opened,"
+said Mr. Waverton with relish. "Well, I let the man run on. He was indeed
+not to be stopped. A rude, vehement fellow. When he was exhausted, I
+addressed His Royal Highness."
+
+"Lack a day, I believe you," says Harry.
+
+"I made it clear to him, sir, that my birth and position must warrant me
+innocent of any treachery, and though I might well disdain to answer
+these reckless charges I owed it to myself to remark to His Royal
+Highness that, but for my desire to serve him, I had never meddled in the
+affair. So that when I had done, my Lord Middleton says, laughing, 'Egad,
+sir, it seems you owe this fine gentleman thanks for his kindly
+condescension to you'; and the Prince was pleased to answer, 'We are too
+small for his notice, faith. But is he finished yet?' Then I bowed to His
+Royal Highness and sat down, well enough pleased, as you may believe.
+
+"But this Captain McBean called out in his rude fashion, 'Eh, sir, he may
+e'en be the booby he pretends. The better decoy, I allow. But by your
+leave, we'll look into it more narrowly. Would Your Majesty please to
+permit me have up the other rogues?'
+
+"This, in a word, they did, and Captain McBean and my Lord Middleton (who
+is to my mind something more of the attorney than becomes a man of rank)
+questioning the fellows shrewdly, it was made put--I crave your
+attention, madam--it was made out that Colonel Boyce had undertaken for
+the service of the Hanoverian junto here to kidnap or kill Prince James.
+And the plan was to bring the Prince out to Pontoise and so drag out
+affairs that he passed the night there. Then in the night they were to
+invade his room and command him to follow them. They pretended indeed
+that they meant only to carry him off. But 'tis not to be doubted that
+they looked for resistance and a bloody issue to the affair. So, ma'am,
+here is the trade of the family of Boyce--to procure murder, and the
+murder of a prince of the blood royal, of our lawful king. I give you joy
+of the name you bear."
+
+Alison bent her head. "You may well be proud of your part, Mr.
+Waverton."
+
+"They let you go, did they?" says Harry; "your captain and your lord and
+your prince?"
+
+"Let me go, sir? There is nothing against me. I defy your impudence. Nay,
+I thank you, I thank you. You lead me gracefully to the end of my story."
+
+"Good God! It has an end!"
+
+"When these rogues were questioned about me, not a man of them could
+pretend to have anything against me. They openly confessed that Colonel
+Boyce had warned them that I must be kept in innocence of the affair lest
+I should thwart it. For he said that he had brought me into it to show a
+good face to the Prince as one beyond suspicion of treachery. Nay and
+moreover--and here's my last word to you, ma'am--he avowed that he chose
+me because he wanted me out of England where I stood between his own son
+and a pretty heiress. At which, as I remember, my Lord Middleton chose to
+be amused."
+
+"Damme, I like that man," says Harry.
+
+"So, ma'am," Mr. Waverton tossed his head. "Here you have it. I am drawn
+into a murderous, vile, base treason that I may be kept out of the way
+while Mr. Boyce prosecutes his designs upon you. I give you joy of the
+loyal fidelity which yielded to him. I leave you to enjoy him with what
+appetite you may."
+
+He made a majestic bow, he turned and was gone.
+
+Harry and Alison were left staring at each other.
+
+From behind came a small strained voice: "Colonel Boyce--he--he is safe,
+then?" It was Mrs. Weston.
+
+The two turned with a start, surprised by her existence.
+
+Harry laughed. "Oh aye, he is safe. He would be."
+
+Mrs. Weston rose slowly and then made a rush for the door.
+
+The husband and wife were left alone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII
+
+HARRY IS DISMISSED
+
+
+Alison turned and stared into the fire. Harry filled himself a glass of
+port and drank it and laughed. She looked round at him. "Faith, Mr.
+Waverton is mighty good entertainment," he explained.
+
+"Is that all you want to say?"
+
+Harry would not be awed by that ominous voice. "Oh Lud, how could I dare
+talk after him? Our poetic orator!" He made flourishes in the air after
+Mr. Waverton's manner. "Nay, but I would give my new wig to have been in
+that upper chamber at Pontoise. Dear Geoffrey on his defence booming
+noble periods--and the Prince, poor gentleman, with his fingers in his
+ears! If dear Geoffrey was telling the truth. I wonder."
+
+"Oh, is that what you'll pretend?"
+
+"Pretend? I pretend nothing, ma'am. Why, to be sure, our Geoffrey always
+means to tell the truth--having, God bless him, no imagination. But
+you'll remark what when he tells a tale, it's Mr. Waverton has always the
+_beau rôle_. He sees the world like that, dear lad. So I should be glad
+to hear the Caledonian gentleman's notion of what happened."
+
+"I see. You'll make that your defence. Geoffrey imagined it all."
+
+"Egad, ma'am, you may lower your tone. I have nothing to defend, nor are
+you set in judgment."
+
+Alison started up. "Do you suppose all this is to make no change?"
+she cried.
+
+"You're a splendid creature, by heaven," says Harry, tilting his chair
+back and watching her with a little epicurean smile, the proud vigour of
+her, the blood in her cheeks, the flash of her eyes, and the sweep of the
+white arm.
+
+"I could hate you for that," she said, and her lips set.
+
+"Yes. I think you're in a fair way to it," says Harry. "I wonder if you
+know why."
+
+"Because I have come to despise you," she cried sharply.
+
+"You will be solemn, will you?" says Harry. "Much good may it do you. And
+so, egad, have at you heartily. For you have said things which both of us
+will find it hard to forget."
+
+"Oh, you can feel that?"
+
+"Look 'e, ma'am, if we are to be in earnest, we had best not snap at each
+other like a pair of puppies. Now, what's happened?"
+
+"You have to ask that? My God, if you have to ask, there's no use in
+words between you and me."
+
+"Oh Lud, don't be mystical. Mr. Waverton comes here to do his poor
+possible to make mischief between us. I suppose you saw that. He tells us
+that he went blundering with my father into a muddle of a plot."
+
+"He tells us that your father planned a vile base murder and sought to
+make him, a man of honour, part in it. Pray, sir, is that not infamous?"
+
+"Egad, if you haven't caught his style! You believe all that, do you?"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"We shall go far to-night, I think," Harry shrugged. "And shall I tell
+you why you believe it, ma'am? It's because you are looking about to find
+matter for blackening me."
+
+Alison hesitated a moment. "You cannot deny it. It is proved. Your father
+would not stay to face them."
+
+"Face a pistol and a furious Scot? Well, I never said he was a hero."
+
+"Do you pretend it was only a fight he feared? Do you dare tell me it was
+an honest, honourable plan? Nay, come, let me see if there's anything you
+think shameful."
+
+Harry shrugged. "I know my father not much better than you do, ma'am. I
+never thought him a Bayard. Some plot there was, I think, and these
+political plots are all dirty enough. But, Lord, who is clean of them?
+And I'm not ready to write my father off a murderer because Mr. Waverton
+went blundering into a business which, on his own confession, he does not
+understand."
+
+"He went in your place. You should have gone with your father."
+
+"Should have gone? D'ye wish I had, ma'am?"
+
+"Perhaps."
+
+Harry started up. "Oh, say it out. I knew we should go far to-night."
+
+They stood close, fronting each other fiercely. "My God, is it strange
+if I wish you had gone? Your father is a base wretch who should be on the
+gallows, and I am to be his son's wife and bear the name, and the while
+he goes bragging that he took Geoffrey Waverton off so that you should be
+free to come at me."
+
+"Aye, that. To be sure, that rankles. But you have known it long. I
+showed you the letter he left me which said he had taken Geoffrey out of
+my way and bade me snatch my chance of you. And you made light of that,
+ma'am. Oh, it was a base thing, if you will, but you know well enough it
+went for nought. We had done our work before. By God, Alison, Geoffrey
+there or Geoffrey here, you would have come to me."
+
+"Ah!" It was like a cry of pain. "You brag of it. I forced myself on you,
+I suppose." Harry exclaimed something, made a gesture. "Oh yes, you were
+all cold virtue and chastity and honour, and I--what was I?" She
+shuddered and drew back from him. "Yes, you would turn on me. You would
+taunt me with that."
+
+"Egad, you're in a frenzy," says Harry. "You cry aloud and cut yourself
+with knives. You will be hurting yourself."
+
+"I loathe you for that calm way of yours," she cried. "You mock me till
+I am mad, and then you please to be grave and lofty. You--I took you out
+of the gutter."
+
+"What now, ma'am?" Harry stiffened.
+
+"It's all a mask!" she cried. "Nothing of you shows in your voice or your
+face--your face, bah, it's always the same, when you kiss and when you
+strike. A mask! You're always in a mask. That's how you took me. I was a
+fool, and thought there must be something fine behind it." She laughed.
+"You were clever enough. You knew the trick and the mystery of it would
+take a woman. A mask! Yes, faith, that is the wear for a highwayman. I
+remember how Charles Hadley used to laugh at your 'Curst
+stand-and-deliver stare.' I liked it, I liked the challenge of it. But he
+knew you better. That's your trade, the highwayman, faith, the
+highwayman! You trick us all and prey upon us, as you dare. So you marked
+me down, who was rich and a girl, and you have caught me, and you have
+rifled me, and, for what you care I may now go hang. I ask you for my
+pride again, my honour, and you mock at me. Oh, I am ashamed for a fool
+and worse, and you know it, God help me, but you--you--"
+
+Harry shrugged. "I suppose we have come to the end now," he said coolly.
+"Well, ma'am, to be sure we married in haste, and it seems we have both
+come to repentance. As for wrong that I have done you--why, I can't make
+you a maid again, and, if you please, more's the pity. My apologies and
+regrets. For the rest, all of your money that hath been spent on me will
+go in a small purse, and, I promise you, you shall spend no more. So you
+may sleep sound, and I wish you good night."
+
+She watched him cross the room, and, as he was opening the door, cried
+out, "What do you mean?"
+
+He turned. "Why, would you still be talking?" Their eyes met in
+defiance. "You can go," she said.
+
+"I have had the honour to tell you so," he said, and was gone.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX
+
+ALISON FINDS FRIENDS
+
+
+It was on the second day after that Susan Burford and Mr. Hadley rode in
+to the Lincoln's Inn Fields. They found Alison and Mrs. Weston together,
+and both sewing--a fact which failed to interest Mr. Hadley, but
+surprised Susan, who knew Alison, without a taste for needlework.
+
+"My dear," says Susan, embracing Alison physically and spiritually in her
+large, buxom, genial way.
+
+"You have been a long time finding me," says Alison and put her off. "I
+suppose I know why you kindly come to me now."
+
+"B-r-r-r-r!" Mr. Hadley made the sound of one who comes into a cold
+draught. "The truth is, Susan has been so busy improving herself that she
+has had no time for her friends. In fine, she has been trying to make
+herself worthy the honour of my affections and large enough to support
+the burden of my dignity. I don't say she satisfies me, but she does her
+best." He propelled Susan forward with his one hand. "'A poor thing,
+ma'am, but mine own.'"
+
+"Oh, he is amusing himself, you see," says Susan, in her leisurely
+fashion.
+
+"Damme, Susan, you're so mighty innocent that sometimes I believe you
+are innocent."
+
+"But you have known me so long," Susan protested.
+
+Alison stood up with an air of ceremony. Her pale face constrained itself
+at last to smile at them. "My dear, I wish you may be very happy," says
+she, and gave Susan a matronly kiss. "Mr. Hadley, you're a fortunate
+man." She put out a stately hand.
+
+Having bowed over it. "B-r-r-r," says Mr. Hadley.
+
+"Damn these east winds. Susan, you're a plague with your affections. You
+will have me talk about you, and I can't make you interesting, I hope,
+ma'am, we find Mr. Boyce well?"
+
+Alison drew back. "Why do you ask that? You have seen Mr. Waverton,
+of course."
+
+Mrs. Weston put down her work and folded her hands upon it.
+
+"Why, yes, I have seen Geoffrey; and what's worse, heard him. I hope he
+did not plague you too long."
+
+"Pray, Mr. Hadley, don't be ironical. You can spare me that. Mr. Waverton
+told us his story the night before last. Thereupon Mr. Boyce and I parted
+company. He left my house immediately and I do not know where he is."
+
+Mr. Hadley distinguished himself by containing an oath. Susan said, "Oh,
+my dear," in that slow, calm way which might mean anything.
+
+It was Mrs. Weston who cried out, "Alison, you never told me."
+
+"You asked once or twice where he was, and I told you I did not know.
+What does it matter?"
+
+"You quarrelled with him?"
+
+"Quarrelled!"
+
+"Because of what this Mr. Waverton said?"
+
+"Do you think it could make no difference?"
+
+Mrs. Weston clasped her hands and swayed in her chair.
+
+"Alison; we had no guess of this. I am sorry. I am so sorry," Susan said.
+
+"There is no need." Alison held her head high.
+
+"If we have, in some sort, forced your confidence, I beg you believe,
+ma'am, it was not meant," So Mr. Hadley in the grand style. "For I
+protest it never came into my head that Geoffrey would make mischief
+between you and Mr. Boyce."
+
+"You say that?" Alison stared at him. "Oh, you mean I was so besotted
+with him."
+
+Mr. Hadley relapsed to his ordinary manner. "Damme, d'ye think we came
+for nothing but to jeer at you? I promise you we have pleasanter matter
+to hand. Neither to jeer at you, nor to meddle with you, Alison, but
+friendly. So take us friendly in God's name. If you will go about to find
+a sneer in every word, why, a sneer you'll find, but not of my making. We
+bring you nothing but goodwill, and want nothing more of you. But if we
+irk you, why, let us go and we'll see you again in good time."
+
+"That's a pretty speech to begin with an oath," Alison said, through the
+flicker of a smile. "And, faith, I should be slow to take offence at you.
+For we quarrelled before, because you were at pains to warn me. Well,
+sir, I humble myself before your wisdom."
+
+There was a pause. "Oh. Now we are all ill at ease," says Susan.
+
+"Odso, ma'am, it's not fair," Mr. Hadley cried. "I am not here to say, 'I
+told you so,' I am not so proud of it. Well, damme, I have no temptation
+to be meddling in your affairs. But I think you will have to know. It is
+with Mr. Waverton I have fallen out now."
+
+"With Mr. Waverton?" Alison repeated. "What is there between you and
+him?"
+
+"I believe he had the impertinence to expect my sympathetic admiration.
+While I was thinking him a low fellow. Which I took occasion to tell him.
+Without result." Mr. Hadley shrugged. "But I believe he did not feel it.
+It's a thick hide."
+
+"And what was your difference?"
+
+"Why, this precious story of his."
+
+There was some little time of silence. "You don't believe it," Alison
+said slowly. "Come, you must say more than that."
+
+"I profess, ma'am, I have no will to say anything. Whatever I say, I'll
+be impertinent."
+
+"Oh. Shall we mark it in you?" Susan said.
+
+"Well, sir, you were not always so shy of scolding me," says Alison, and
+again with a faint smile.
+
+"Scold you! God warn us, I have no commission. I can tell you what I
+thought of Waverton and his tale. Did I believe it? Ods fish, I never
+remember believing Geoffrey. If he had to tell you two and two was four,
+he would pretend that his genius first discovered it. So I don't know
+what happened at Pontoise. Likely the old Colonel did mix him up in some
+plot which some other fellows smoked. Maybe it was even such as Geoffrey
+said, kidnapping and murder to follow. These plots, they grow nastier and
+nastier the longer they are afoot. And Colonel Boyce--well, by your
+leave, I don't think him delicate. But for the rest of it, I'll wager
+that's Geoffrey's sprightly invention. You know very well, ma'am, I have
+no kindness for your Mr. Boyce. But, damme, he never thought of tricking
+Geoffrey out of the way to give himself a free hand with you. And it's a
+low trick in Geoffrey to go about with that tale."
+
+"Oh! But he is stupid," Susan said.
+
+"What if Colonel Boyce thought of the trick?" says Alison.
+
+"Egad, Mr. Boyce is unfortunate in his father. Maybe he knows that as
+well as we. But--damme, ma'am, you will have it--I believe there was not
+much trick in his affair with you."
+
+"I believe you once warned me of his tricks," Alison said coldly. "It's
+no matter now. I tease you with my affairs."
+
+"If I can serve you, I'm heartily at your command."
+
+"Oh, you have worked hard to make the best of a bad business. But I can
+do that for myself, and I like my own way of it."
+
+Mr. Hadley bowed.
+
+"Oh! Let us go home," Susan said.
+
+Alison looked at her in some surprise, and, as she stood up, came quickly
+to kiss her. "Have I been rude?" she whispered.
+
+"That would be no matter," Susan said, "You choose to be angry with me?"
+Alison stiffened.
+
+"Oh! One isn't angry. One is sorry," Susan said.
+
+Alison let her go, and Mr. Hadley, ceremonious but with visible relief,
+went after her.
+
+Then Mrs. Weston said suddenly, quickly, "Where is he?"
+
+"He?" Alison chose to be slow. "Mr. Boyce? I have no notion."
+
+"You drove him out?"
+
+"I could not endure him longer. Or he could endure me no longer. He went
+heartily enough. I think we were both glad it was over."
+
+"You taunted him till he had to go?"
+
+"Weston, dear!" Alison laughed at the sudden fierceness of the meek.
+"What's the matter?"
+
+"I have heard you mocking him."
+
+"Maybe. We both have sharp enough tongues."
+
+"You used to jeer at him for being poor."
+
+"Good lack, are you calling me to account, ma'am?"
+
+"Yes, you may well be ashamed! Where is he?"
+
+"Ashamed? What do you mean, Weston? What is the man to you?"
+
+"I am his mother," Mrs. Weston said.
+
+"You!... You! Oh, but this is mad!"
+
+"I am not mad."
+
+"But, Weston, dear, you knew nothing about him till he came; nor he of
+you. How could he be your son?"
+
+"I had never seen him since he was a baby. I was not married."
+
+"That is why you would not tell me? Oh, Weston, dear!"
+
+"I did not mean to tell you now. I knew it would hurt him with you. But I
+suppose it's no matter now. But these are my affairs, not yours."
+
+"My dear--"
+
+"You need not pity me."
+
+"What am I to say?" Alison held out her arms.
+
+"You have nothing to say now. You are not his wife now. You have never
+been anything but a bad wife." She gathered up her work with unsteady
+hands and turned away.
+
+"Where are you going?"
+
+"I am going out of your house. Away from you."
+
+"But, Weston--not now, not to-night. Where can you go? What can you do?"
+
+"I can do well enough without you, as he can.... Why don't you tell me
+that I have been living on your money? You told him so often enough."
+
+"Oh ... you're cruel," Alison said.
+
+"What does it matter? You'll not be hurt. You are too hard." She hurried
+to the door.
+
+"Ah, don't go like this," Alison cried. "Weston, let's part kindly. I
+could not know. I have done nothing against you." Mrs. Weston laughed.
+"Stay a moment at least. I want to know. Harry's father--is Colonel
+Boyce--?"
+
+"Yes, there it is. That is all you want--to pry into all the story. It is
+nothing to you. He is nothing to you now."
+
+The door closed behind her.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX
+
+RETURN OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+
+Harry was not gone far. In Long Acre stood a tavern calling itself 'The
+Hand of Pork.' This had always tempted Harry, whose tastes were of the
+people. While still a domesticated husband, he had tried its ale with
+satisfaction. When he left Alison it was to 'The Hand of Pork' that he
+brought his small, battered box.
+
+He had a few guineas in his pocket, and made a wry face over them.
+"Ill-gotten gains," says he, for some were the scraped savings of
+Geoffrey Waverton's tutor and some the pocket money of Alison's husband.
+But he was in no case to be delicate. Beef and bread had to be paid for,
+and, in fact, his scruples were little more than a joke. It is not to be
+concealed that in minor things Harry Boyce was not nicely honest. If you
+can imagine him seriously arguing over that money--a thing impossible--he
+would have said that the guineas were of consequence to him and none to
+Geoffrey and Alison, that whether he had dealt honestly by them or not,
+it would not better his case to pay them back a few shillings. You have
+seen that he had qualms of conscience over the rights of Geoffrey's
+service and Alison's arms. But the ugly, awkward details gave him no
+trouble. He may, if you please, have swallowed a camel or so, but he
+never strained at a gnat.
+
+Now that he was done with Geoffrey and Alison, both, his first feeling
+was comfort. It was a huge relief to be his own man again. He told
+himself indeed that he was mighty grateful to Geoffrey for bringing on
+the final explosion. For one thing, it wiped off all Geoffrey's score. If
+Master Geoffrey had been treated shabbily, Master Geoffrey had played a
+shabby trick. They could call quits--a pleasant sensation. It would have
+been awkward if Geoffrey had chosen to be magnanimous nobility. But he
+was never intelligent, the poor Geoffrey.
+
+He had done his best to be damaging, bless him, and in all ways had been
+a benefactor. For, in fact, it was a great relief to be done with Alison.
+What with her fretful discontent, her rages, her industrious hate, she
+had made herself intolerable. I do not suppose that he forgot, even in
+the heat of the divorce, the exquisite pleasure which for a while she had
+given him. I think he was always ready to acknowledge that to himself,
+for it is certain that he bore her no malice, and if he blamed her for
+their catastrophe, blamed himself as much. He might make the most or more
+of all the taunts, of her zeal to find occasions for despising him. He
+forgot nothing and forgave her nothing; he wrote her down a cruel enemy.
+But he did not pay her back with equal hate; he dismissed all the warfare
+and the wounds with a shrug of sagacious cynicism.
+
+She hated him? She had the right, she was his wife. And perhaps she was
+in the right too. He must fairly be reckoned a very poor match for her
+beauty and her wealth and her not insignificant brains. After all, he was
+essentially a nobody--a nobody in every department, body, mind, and soul.
+She might even claim that she had been cheated, for if she ought to have
+known that she was marrying a nobody, she could not guess that he had a
+bar-sinister or a disreputable father. Certainly Madame Alison could
+plead something of a case.
+
+You are not to suppose Harry in an ecstasy of meek devotion. He was quite
+sure that she had behaved to him very badly. He admitted no excuse for
+her eagerness to hurt him as soon as she was tired of him. She might hate
+him; but after all there were obligations of courtesy, of decency, of
+womanhood, and her venomous temper had broken them all. He was well rid
+of her. In fine, she and he could call quits as well as he and Geoffrey.
+There was no occasion to rage against her. She had treated him badly,
+but, first, he had brought her into an awkward mess. Faith, she ought not
+to have hurried into a marriage for passion if passion was so soon to
+sate her. But then, what man would blame a woman for marrying for
+passion? Not the man she married, who might rather humble himself because
+he had not been able to keep her passion alive. Well, it was over, and
+since it was over, nothing for it but to part. God be with her! She had
+given him his hour. And he--why, at least she had lived with him moments
+she would not forget. A glorious woman. It is probable that in these
+first hours of their parting he began to love her.
+
+So much for his emotions. But you will not suppose that Harry Boyce was
+wholly occupied with emotions. He could not indeed afford it. He had to
+make some provision for keeping alive. Perhaps you will be surprised to
+hear that he had a friend or two. There was an usher at Westminster, and
+a hack writer of Lintot's in Little Britain. He did not propose to live
+on them, who had hardly enough to feed themselves. But he looked for them
+to put him in the way of some pittance, and they did. The usher had news
+that, after Ascension-Day, Westminster would be wanting a writing master,
+for the man in possession hoped by then to marry the dean's cook and set
+up an ale-house. The author procured a commission to write two lampoons
+and a pamphlet against French wines. In the intervals of this occupation,
+Harry looked for his father.
+
+It would be hard to guess--Harry himself could not have told--what he
+hoped to gain by that. He wanted, of course, to find out the truth of the
+mission to France. Whether his father was likely to tell it, he could not
+make up his mind. What he would do with the truth if ever he learnt it,
+he did not know in the least. Suppose the best event: suppose his father
+could declare excellent intentions and Geoffrey a liar. Harry imagined
+himself going to Alison with the news and demanding to be taken on again.
+A nightmare joke.
+
+Yet to come at the truth seemed the most important task in life. The
+first step, though you think it impossibly difficult, did not dismay
+him. He had no doubt of discovering his father. That Colonel Boyce should
+have been killed or even caught was incredible. He was not the man so to
+oblige his enemies. It was incredible, too, that he would go long into
+hiding. Away from the importance of bustle and intrigue he could not
+exist. Therefore he would certainly come back to London: therefore sooner
+or later he would be found at one of the coffee-houses favoured by the
+brisk fellows in the underworld of politics--at Tom's, or the British, or
+Diggory's by the Seven Dials. He might be heard of among the fire-eating
+Jacobites of Sam's. There were not so many likely places, but Harry laid
+down more pennies than he could spare at the bars, and all in vain.
+
+He sat in Sam's on an afternoon chopping Greek tags with a jolly,
+fanatical old parson. The days were fast lengthening, and for one reason
+or another--the company at Sam's were not too fond of light--only a
+candle here and there was burning. A little man came in with a party very
+obsequious to him. As he walked up to the bar Harry had a glimpse of a
+lean, brown face. He remembered it and yet no more than faintly, and
+could not tell where he had seen it. It did not much engage him, and he
+went on with his Greek and his parson. The little man made some noise
+with the pretty girl behind the bar, claiming the privileges of an old
+friend and a good deal of liquor, and it was a little while before he was
+established at a table with his party. Harry chose to mouth out something
+Homeric and sounding. The little man stopped in the middle of lighting
+his pipe. "I know that roll, _pardieu_!" he muttered, and in a florid
+fashion declaimed, "Fol de rol de row," and laughed alcoholically. "Who's
+talking Hebrew here?"
+
+One of his party pointed out Harry and the parson. The little man blinked
+through the smoky twilight. He stood up, took his candle and lurched
+across the room to Harry. Down under Harry's nose he put the candle with
+a bang. Harry jerked back and glared at him, and he, rocking a little and
+blinking, said thickly, "It's a filthy likeness, after all, it is."
+
+"No, sir, there's only one of me," said Harry. "If you see two, give God
+the glory and go to bed."
+
+"I'm saying, bully, I'm saying," the little man's accent became more
+Caledonian and he clutched at Harry's shoulder. "I'm saying, my
+laddie--"
+
+"Damme, that's what I complain of."
+
+"I'm saying I do not like your complexion. It's yellow, my jo, it's a
+wee rotten orange, it is so." His company, a faithful tail, shook
+with laughter.
+
+"Sleep it off, sir," says Harry, with a shrug.
+
+"What's your will? Clip it off, do ye say so? Losh, you would have a face
+or two to spare. Eh, but I'm doubting you know too much o' clipping.
+There's clippit ears, and maybe you have a pair." He twitched Harry's bob
+wig awry; and with singular luck reeled out of the reach of Harry's
+answering blow. "Ay, and there's clippit shillings and maybe ye make your
+filthy living by their parings and shavings. Well a well, and there's
+clippit wings; and I'll clip yours, my bonny goose, the night." He
+clutched at the wig again and tossed it into the fire.
+
+Harry sprang up and struck at him. He flung himself backwards into the
+arms of his friends and with a surprising adroitness plucked out his
+sword. "Have at ye, my man;" he giggled and made a pass.
+
+"Easy, Captain," says one of his company. "The boy hath no sword."
+
+"Oh ay, 'tis the Lord that's a man of war. The devil was aye for peace.
+Well, what ails ye not to lend the imp a bodkin?"
+
+The fat old keeper of the coffee-house waddled into the midst. "Sure,
+Captain, you don't mean it. I would need to set my lads upon you. 'Tis
+disorderly homicide, indeed. Ye can't mean it. Not downstairs. I'll not
+deny there's the elegant parlour on the first floor."
+
+"Ye're a canting old devil, Sam," says the little man. "But I'll oblige
+you. Come up, my bully, and I'll show you a thing."
+
+"Here's for you, cully." One of the company thrust upon Harry a sword.
+
+"Oh, by your leave,"--Harry waved it oft--"I don't fight a drunken man."
+
+"Drunk!" the little man screamed. "Ods blades, there's a naughty way to
+mock a gentleman. I'll school you, bully; fou or fasting, I'll school
+you. What, you'll not lug out, like a bonny lad should? I jaloused it.
+I'm thinking you would take a beating like a lamb, laddie. Well a well.
+I'll be blithe to rub you down with an oaken towel. Here, Patrick, give
+us your staff."
+
+"Oh, I see you must be let blood." Harry shrugged. "Well, sir, do I
+fight the whole platoon?"
+
+"You're peevish, do you know, you're peevish. Here, Fraser, give him your
+hanger. Do you second the bairn, Donald? Come, Patrick, I'll have you.
+There's one for you and one for me, my man, and damn all favours."
+
+It seemed to Harry that the little man's company were something surprised
+at this turn, but they took it in a disciplined silence. So the party of
+four marched up the stairs. You will believe that Harry liked the
+business ill enough. He shot glances at the two chosen for seconds. There
+was nothing sottish about them. They were very soberly alert, they had
+the tan and the vigour of open-air life. They looked anything but the fit
+comrades for a swashbuckling tavern hero. They were as stiff as pokers,
+they said not a word, they showed not a sign of interest in the
+affair--rather like two soldiers on guard than ready seconds in a drunken
+brawl. Once in the upper room they made their arrangements with solemn
+care, locking the door, clearing a sufficient space, and setting the
+candles so that the light fell fairly. Harry was taken aside, helped out
+of his coat, asked if he needed anything, gravely advised to risk nothing
+and play close.
+
+"We are at your service, Mr. O'Connor," says Donald.
+
+"At your pleasure, Mr. Mackenzie," says the other.
+
+Harry was set against the little man and the swords crossed. It then
+occurred to him that the little man was very suddenly recovered from his
+liquor. The blustering chatter had been cut off as soon as they started
+up the stairs. Since then the little man had spoken not one word. Of the
+unsteadiness, the blinking, the rocking to and fro, nothing remained. He
+had marched to his place with a formal precision. There was the same
+manner, a correctness exact and staccato, about this sword play.
+
+The knave can never have been drunk, Harry said to himself as he
+sweated and was the more embarrassed by bewilderment. But he dared not
+let himself think. The little man was urgently dangerous, and Harry
+knew enough to know it. Harry had no pretensions to science. All he
+could use was the rudiments. He had kept his head at singlestick, held
+his own with the foil against other lads, and never before faced a
+point. The little man had the speed and certainty of a _maître
+d'armes_. So Harry fought, breathing hard, every muscle aching, mind
+numb and dazed under the strain, expecting--hoping--every moment the
+thrust that would make an end.
+
+It did not come. The ache and fever of the fight went on and on. Still
+the little man was masterful and precise. Still he demanded all Harry's
+vigour and more than all, kept him struggling desperately, beset by fear
+on the edge of death. Harry felt himself weakening, faltering, and still
+the opposing blade searched his defence sharply, still the little man was
+an exemplar of easy precision. And yet Harry's maladroitness always
+sufficed to save his skin. He was puzzled, and blundered and fumbled the
+more. The play grew slower and slower, and he was the more tortured,
+enduring many times the shame and the pain of defeat.
+
+At last he had hit upon the truth. He was wondering in a dazed fashion
+why that other sword seemed always to wait on him when he made a gross
+mistake. Visibly, palpably, the little man's blade halted to give him
+time for a parry. Harry dropped his point and gasped out, "Damme, sir,
+you are playing with me."
+
+"What's your will? I fight my own way. At your convenience, sir."
+
+"The Captain's within his right, sir," says Harry's solemn second.
+
+"Damn you, for a pack of mountebanks!" Harry cried.
+
+"On guard, sir," says the little man.
+
+Harry gave him an oath and dashed at him. There was a moment's wild
+fighting and then the little man forced it back to order. They were at
+the old game again, precise scientific thrust, pause, and blundering
+parry, when to Harry's amazement the little man's sword wavered and flew
+from his hand.
+
+Through a long minute Harry stood staring at him, and he waiting unarmed
+for Harry's thrust. Again Harry lowered his sword. At once the little
+man stooped and picked up his. "Do you demand to continue, Captain?"
+says his second.
+
+"You're a fool, Patrick," quoth the little man.
+
+The impenetrable second saluted and turned to his fellow. "Another bout,
+if you please, Mr. Mackenzie."
+
+"Would you grant it, sir?" says Harry's solemn Scot.
+
+"Egad, we are all mad here," Harry wiped his brow. "Oh, play it
+out to hell."
+
+The little man saluted formally and again they engaged. And now Harry was
+enveloped in another kind of fighting. Scientific it might be, but
+science far beyond his understanding. The little man's point was
+everywhere upon him and he thrusting blindly at the air. He might have
+been pinked a score times over, he was for all he knew. And then on a
+sudden his own point touched something. Next moment it was struck up to
+the ceiling. Some one called out "A hit." He saw the two seconds standing
+between the swords and a red scratch on the little man's cheek.
+
+"_Touché_," says he with a bow. "My compliments, if you please. It's some
+while since a man marked me. I am glad to know you, sir. Pray, what's
+your name?"
+
+"Harry Boyce, sir."
+
+"Egad, it's wonderful!" says the little man, with a laugh which appealed
+to Harry. "Hector McBean, at your service." Harry stared. "Aye, aye, I'm
+thinking we'll explain ourselves. Will you walk, sir?"
+
+"If you please."
+
+Captain McBean took his arm, said over his shoulder to the two seconds
+"To-morrow," and marched off with him. Once they were out in the
+street, "So you are Colonel Noll Boyce's son," says Captain McBean with
+an odd look.
+
+"He has often told me so."
+
+"If you had not such a look of him I wouldn't believe it. Oh, pardon,
+monsieur, _mille pardons_, _ma foi._ I have been insolent to you in all
+this affair. You'll please to observe that the whole of it, and the
+issue, is to your honour. Will I have to say more?"
+
+"Oh Lud, no. Pray, let's talk sense."
+
+"I take to you marvellously, _mon enfant_. Well now, have you
+heard of me?"
+
+"Enough to want much more."
+
+"What, has father been talking?"
+
+"D'ye know where he is, Captain McBean?"
+
+"I wish I did."
+
+"So do I. It was Mr. Waverton who told the tale. Now you know why I am
+eager to hear what you can say of my father or my father of you."
+
+"Are you a good son, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+"I pay my debts."
+
+"There's a crooked answer. Are you in the Colonel's secrets?"
+
+"I have no reason to think so."
+
+"I guess he did not trust you. I guess he was right. Do you remember
+where you met me first?"
+
+"I remember that I can't remember."
+
+"And me that thought I was a beauty! Well, but you were busy. You were
+making mud pies with Ben."
+
+"I have it. You were his captain on the horse. Pray, sir, what was my
+Benjamin's mystery?"
+
+"I am going to trust you, Mr. Boyce. I shall not require you to trust me
+unless you choose. I tell you frankly I hope for it. And so--come in
+with you."
+
+They turned out of the Strand into Bow Street. Captain McBean let
+himself into a house, and took Harry up to a room very neat and cosy.
+"D'ye drink usquebaugh? A pity. It's the cleanest liquor. Well, draw up."
+He pushed a tobacco-box across the table. "That's right Spanish. Now,
+_mon cher_, are you Jacobite or Hanoverian?"
+
+"I never could tell."
+
+"Oh, look you, I ask no confidences. And I make no doubt of your honour.
+If you had a mind to play tricks you would have tried one on me to-night.
+Well, I have proved you. Your pardon again. But when I saw Noll Boyce's
+son lurking in Sam's, how could I know he was without guile? Now there is
+something I must say to you. But how much I say is a question. I have no
+desire to embarrass you with awkward knowledge. So which is your king,
+_mon enfant_, James or George?"
+
+"I care not a puff of smoke for either."
+
+"So. I suppose there is something you care for. Well--you asked about
+Ben's mystery. It's a good beginning. The rascal should have stopped the
+Duke of Marlborough's coach and held it till I came up with my fellows.
+Instead of which he went about some private thieving. I am your debtor
+for giving the knave his gruel. What's Marlborough to me? It's not his
+dirty guineas I was after, but his papers. He was then pretending to
+negotiate with St. Germain. There were those of us who doubted the old
+villain had some black design in his head again, and it was thought that
+if we could turn over his private papers, we should know where to have
+him. It was certified that he had with him something from his agents
+abroad. Well, we missed him, and how deep he is dipped in this business,
+I know no more than you.
+
+"Now I come to your father, _mon enfant_, and I promise you I will be as
+delicate as I may. Do you know, _par exemple_, how Colonel Boyce is in
+the mouths of gentlemen?"
+
+"Oh, sir, that's another of the matters for which I care nothing."
+
+"_Tenez donc_. You were born old, I think. Well, Colonel Boyce has been
+in some few plots, devices, and manoeuvres. No man ever denied him wit,
+nor will I, _mordieu_. But it's his virtue that neither his friends nor
+his enemies were ever sure of him. I believe, Mr. Boyce, that if he heard
+me he would thank me for a compliment. _Bien_--I come back to my tale.
+
+"It was known to us poor Jacobites in England that Colonel Boyce was
+making salutes to St. Germain. Which much intrigued us, for we would not,
+by your leave, have him of our side. They don't know him there as we do,
+and King James, God save him! is young and honourable and sanguine."
+
+"Poor lad," says Harry with a shrug.
+
+"You may keep your pity, Mr. Boyce," McBean said stiffly. "I would have
+him so, by your leave. Now we heard that letters went to St. Germain from
+Colonel Boyce full of windy promises--_verbosa et grandis epistola_. D'ye
+keep up your humanities?--in the name of my Lord Sunderland and my Lord
+Stair. Black names both. But they were vastly intrigued at St. Germain.
+If Sunderland and Stair were ready to turn honest, then _pardieu_, there
+was hope of the devil himself. Oh, I don't blame the King nor even
+Charles Middleton, though he is old enough to be slow. The times are
+changing, and maybe Stair and Sunderland they see it as well as we, and
+mean to find salvation. I can't tell. But the thing looked ill. Stair and
+Sunderland--there is no treachery too foul for those names. And if they
+meant honestly, why--saving your presence, _mon enfant_--why did they
+choose Colonel Boyce for their agent? It was no good warranty. So we
+adventured a counter. We have friends enough now in the Government, _mon
+cher_, and it was arranged that the Colonel should be arrested as a
+Jacobite. A good stroke, I think. It was mine. Only the old gentleman
+dodged it."
+
+"Pray, what did you know of Mr. Waverton?"
+
+"That sheep's-head!" McBean laughed. "Why, a letter came to hand in which
+the Colonel talked of taking the pretty gentleman to France. So he was
+joined in the warrant. _D'ailleurs_--it made a good appearance. However,
+we missed him; but we found something in his papers which made me queasy.
+So I e'en was off to France after him.
+
+"The Colonel stayed at Pontoise and sent your Waverton off to St. Germain
+with a mighty plausible letter about secret proposals from the chiefs of
+the Whigs, which brought the King out to hear them secretly. _Ma foi_! I
+think Charles Middleton should have smelt a rat. But it was a clever
+trick, and to choose your Waverton to play it was masterly. For who could
+think that peacock would be in anything crafty? At Pontoise I tumbled in
+upon them, and your father, _mon cher_, he ran off on sight of me.
+Observe, I press nothing against him. I allow that the best evidence I
+have against him is just that--he ran away when he saw me. Secondly, he
+had with him some three-four rascals whose faces would hang them. And
+thirdly and lastly, beloved brethren, these fellows, when put to it and
+charged with a plot to murder King James, were frightened for their lives
+and babbled wildly, of which the sum was that they had been brought but
+to kidnap him. I grant ye, they may have lied, and I would not hang a dog
+(who was not a Whig) upon their word. But confess, _mon cher_, the thing
+is black enough. What did the Colonel want with King James alone? Why did
+he need his bullies? Why did he run away? I leave it with you."
+
+Harry knocked out his pipe. "I am obliged for the story, sir. Why did
+you tell it?"
+
+"You have a cold blood in you, _mon enfant_" says Captain MacBean.
+"Observe, I look for nothing wonderful from you. I allow your position is
+very difficult to a man of honour. And with all my heart--"
+
+"Oh Lud, sir, let's have nothing pathetic."
+
+"Aye, aye," McBean bowed. "Mr. Boyce! I do profess I feel the delicacy of
+the affair, and I detest it, _pardieu_. But I dare not absolve ye from
+your duty."
+
+"Oh, sir, you are very sublime."
+
+"Hear me out, Mr. Boyce. I have shown you cause to fear that your
+father has it in mind to compass a vile treachery, perhaps a murder.
+Would you deny it?"
+
+"Damme, sir, I am not the day of judgment."
+
+"_Bien_. I believe that is an answer. I declare to you there is yet a
+chance that he may succeed, aye, here in London."
+
+Harry swore. "If your friends must go walking into traps what is
+it to me?"
+
+"Well, sir, though you will own no loyalty to king or queen or country,
+I'll not be deceived. I call on you for your aid. It's believed your
+father is in London. It is likely he will seek you out, as he did before.
+Maybe at this hour you know where he is."
+
+"If I did, should I betray him to you, sir?"
+
+"I ask no treachery. But I do call on you, discover his purpose if you
+can, and if he intends violence to the King, prevent it. Lord, sir, it's
+to save your father from infamy, and your own name."
+
+"The King? The Pretender is in London?" Harry cried.
+
+"I told you that I should trust you far, Mr. Boyce."
+
+Harry stared at him, and after a moment stood up. "I can do nothing," he
+said. "It is of all things most unlikely that I should do anything. For
+what I know, my father is dead. He has been nothing else to me all my
+life. But I believe I should thank you."
+
+"Well!" quoth McBean. "God help you. I ha' drawn a bow at a venture. I
+think I have hit something, Mr. Boyce."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI
+
+CONSOLATIONS BY A FATHER
+
+
+Do you remember how frightened Swift was of the Mohocks? How he came
+home early, and even (that was bitter) spent some pence on being carried
+in a sedan chair to avoid the "race of rakes that play the devil about
+this town every night, slit people's noses," and so forth? He had some
+reason to fear.
+
+"Was there a Watchman took his hourly rounds
+Safe from their blows or new invented wounds"
+
+in these last days of Queen Anne? Their way was to gather and take
+plenty of liquor, "then make a general sally and attack all that are
+so unfortunate as to walk the streets through which they patrol. Some
+are knocked down, others stabbed, others cut and carbonadoed." The
+women would be turned upside down or clapped into barrels and rolled
+over the stones.
+
+It was a dark night with but a glimpse of the new moon when Harry left
+Captain McBean. From Bow Street to the "Hand of Pork" in Long Acre was
+only a few hundred yards, but murky enough, and Harry took Mr. Gay's
+advice for such night walking:
+
+"Let constant Vigilance thy footsteps guide,
+And wary Circumspection guard thy side."
+
+Nevertheless, as he was coming by the corner into Long Acre, he was
+surprised by a sound at his heels. He stepped quickly aside and turned
+upon it, felt a blow upon his head, saw flashes of light and the street,
+whirling round, rose up to meet him, and he knew no more.
+
+When he came to himself he was in a room with fire and lights. He raised
+himself and heard voices. Then some one was standing over him. He looked
+up into his father's face. "Who was that?" he said feebly.
+
+"Don't you see yet, Harry? It will soon pass off."
+
+"Lord, I know you. Who are the others?"
+
+"There is none here but me," said Colonel Boyce.
+
+Harry looked painfully round the room and saw that it had become empty.
+"What was it? A pistol?" said he, and began to feel his head.
+
+"Egad, nothing so gentlemanly. A cudgel, by the look of the bruise. A
+Mohock's club, I suppose. I found you lying in the kennel as I was
+coming home."
+
+"Oh, you're at home are you?" Harry laughed stupidly. "And where is
+home?"
+
+"These are my lodgings in Martin's Lane, Harry, and you are welcome. But
+what have you to do in town? Young husbands should not be night walkers."
+
+Harry stared at him for a moment. "I thought you knew everything," he
+said. Then, beginning to scramble up, he became aware that his clothes
+were all undone--coat, shirt, even breeches. "Odso, why were you
+stripping me?"
+
+"I found you so. They shave you close, the Mohocks."
+
+"They are a queer crew, your Mohocks." Harry looked at his father. "What
+should I carry inside my shirt?" Then he thrust his hands into his
+pockets. "Well, I had not much, but all's gone."
+
+"Damned rogues," said his father with honest indignation. "How much have
+you lost, Harry?"
+
+"Five guineas or so."
+
+"I can make that good at least. But what is it to you? You are a warm
+fellow now. What, you've made no hole in Madame Alison's money bags yet."
+
+"You're offensive, do you know?" Harry said. "I have been itching to
+tell you so."
+
+Colonel Boyce's face set. "What now? Are you against me, sirrah?"
+
+"Ods fish, you're a martyr, ain't you?" Harry laughed. But we are
+beginning at the end, I think. If you remember, sir, you promised to take
+me to France and went off without me."
+
+"D'ye quarrel with that? Why, you had a fatter fish to fry than you could
+catch with me. So I left you at her and you ha' dined upon her. What's
+the matter then?"
+
+"You were not honest with me--"
+
+Colonel Boyce laughed, "Ah, bah, you will be a Puritan. It must be your
+mother in you."
+
+"My mother! Thank you. We'll come to her. But one tale at a time. You let
+me think I was to go with you till you were gone without me. You took
+Waverton and told me nothing of that till you had him safe away."
+
+"Egad, boy, it was all for your good."
+
+"Perhaps you did think so," said Harry after a moment. "In fact it's what
+I complain of. You want to play Providence to me. Pray, sir, go about
+your business."
+
+Colonel Boyce shrugged. "You're a proper grateful son. So be it. You have
+your wealthy wench and want no more of me. Well, go to the devil your own
+way, Harry."
+
+"By your leave, I prefer it. But there's more, sir. Now comes Mr.
+Waverton and declares to my wife and me that you enticed him into a vile
+plot: for your pretence of a mission to the Pretender was nothing but a
+device for murder."
+
+"Mr. Waverton said that to Mrs. Harry Boyce? Egad, it wasn't civil of Mr.
+Waverton. And what did the lady say to him?"
+
+"That's no matter. What do you say to him, sir? Did you intend murder?"
+
+"Lud, Harry, you talk like a ranting parson. It was not your way. Who has
+put this buzz of morality into your head? I suppose your pretty wife
+would have you break with your father. He's a low, coarse fellow, faith,
+who might want some of her money."
+
+"We will leave my wife out, if you please. She will not trouble you. She
+and I have parted."
+
+"God's my life! What's the quarrel?"
+
+Harry shrugged. "Does one ever know? I was not good enough for her, I
+believe. And perhaps she was not good enough for me."
+
+"Damn you for a prig," says his father.
+
+"If you like. But you'll remark that I do not complain of her."
+
+"Bah, you make me sick, sir! Not complain of her! That luscious piece!
+Egad, you should be drunk with her. But you're not a man, Harry, you're
+a parson."
+
+"Oh, command your emotions! She rebelled against being wed to a man whose
+father ran about the world compassing murder, to a man who was withal a
+low fellow, a bastard. So far, it is your affair."
+
+"I see you are no hand with a woman."
+
+"Do I take after you, sir? We came upon a woman who said she was Mrs.
+Oliver Boyce and could not live with him, and boasted vehemently that she
+was no mother of mine."
+
+Colonel Boyce plucked at his mouth. "So dear Rachel has got her finger
+into the pie. Why, Harry, you have had no luck."
+
+"She is your wife, then. Oh, I admire your taste, sir. And pray, who was
+my mother?"
+
+Colonel Boyce began to say something and stopped. "It's no matter. I
+believe she would not wish you to know. Why, Harry, I profess I am sorry.
+If we had been married, better for us all."
+
+"Oh, you will be mysterious still. I suppose you are as tender of her
+honour as of mine or your own. And this matter of murdering the
+Pretender, pray, is that a mystery too?"
+
+Colonel Boyce became restless. "Ods life, sirrah, there is no matter
+of murder. Who told you so? The fool Waverton. And where did he get
+the tale?"
+
+"A gentleman who runs away tells his own tale."
+
+"Now mark, Harry. The plan was but to bring Prince James to England--"
+
+"Dead or alive," Harry laughed.
+
+"Pshaw. I had him at Pontoise and was doing well with him. Then in comes
+a swashbuckling Scots Jacobite which is my private enemy, and a dozen
+bullies at his tail. Well, I had no mind to have him stick me or turn me
+over to the French as a spy of Marlborough's, so I went off. The fool
+Waverton let himself be taken. I make no doubt the Scot filled him to the
+brim with slanders of me. But is that my fault?"
+
+"So you're done with the Pretender?"
+
+Colonel Boyce gave his son a queer look. "Why, there's not much to be
+done with him in Martin's Lane, boy."
+
+"Then what are you doing?"
+
+"Egad, Harry, I should think you want to lay an information against
+me. Waiting for better times is all my business now. My bolt's shot.
+And pray, sirrah, what may be your business now you've cut loose from
+Mrs. Alison?"
+
+Harry laughed. "Living on my means."
+
+"Why, does she settle something on you?"
+
+Harry looked at his father without affection. "Do you know, sir, I am not
+always proud of your name."
+
+"Egad, but you must have money somehow."
+
+"The family motto, I suppose. Well, sir, I write for the Press."
+
+"Good God, not for the newspapers? You have not fallen to that?"
+
+"Oh, sir, the shillings are clean by comparison."
+
+They looked at each other for a minute or two. "You walk abroad late, Mr.
+Author," says Colonel Boyce. "Do you make friends in your profession?"
+
+"I believe I have two in the town--a hack writer for Lintot and an usher
+at Westminster. And what then, pray?"
+
+"You were with them to-night?"
+
+"You are paternal on a sudden, sir. Do you think of putting me out to
+nurse again?"
+
+"So." Colonel Boyce stood up as if he had finished and then forced a
+laugh and slapped his son's shoulder, "Come, Harry, why quarrel? There's
+room enough for you here. I allow I owe you something. Join in with me."
+
+"I have no luck in mysteries, sir. I'll wish you goodnight."
+
+"Now you bear me a grudge," his father protested.
+
+"What, for getting me born? Sometimes, perhaps."
+
+"Egad, Harry, I should like to do something for you."
+
+"Then give me a sword."
+
+"A sword? And what for i' God's name?"
+
+"In case I meet any more of your Mohocks."
+
+Colonel Boyce was taken aback for a moment. Then he cried out heartily:
+"Damme, the rogues took five guineas from you too. Here, fill your purse,
+child." He shot out gold on the table.
+
+"I'll take back my five guineas," said Harry, and counted them, while
+his father watched with a frown.
+
+"There are swords of mine below," said Colonel Boyce.
+
+They went down and from a rack of arms Harry chose a plain black hanger
+with an agate hilt. As he did it on he saw below it some heavy staves
+loaded with lead--just such as the Mohocks used.
+
+"And where do you lodge?" says Colonel Boyce.
+
+"At the 'Hand of Pork' in Long Acre. Goodbye, sir."
+
+Colonel Boyce nodded, and for some time after he had gone stood at the
+door, watching.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII
+
+TWO'S COMPANY
+
+
+Alison was gone back to her house at Highgate--and immediately regretted
+it. She took her adventures in a youthful, egoistic fashion: saw herself
+as a lovely woman made the prey of man and robbed of her right to her
+own life, a tender, confiding soul deceived and tortured into despair.
+The Lincoln's Inn Fields became the abomination of desolation, her fine
+society was dust and ashes and mankind in general all mocking villainy.
+So it was natural that she should retire from the world and become a
+recluse of tragic dignity. What other part is there for the deserted
+wife to play?
+
+But she came upon awkward difficulties. The world would not be left
+behind. It was much more closely about her among the woods and meadows of
+Highgate than in her London drawing-room. The would-be fine ladies and
+gentlemen of her routs and her card parties, so the sweetmeats and the
+wines and strong waters were good enough, cared nothing whether she had a
+husband upstairs or somewhere else. Out in the country every one, gentle
+and simple, had a curious eye upon her. The very woods and meadows must
+be jogging her memory and putting her questions. Every one had known Miss
+Lambourne of the Hall and gone whispering about her strange, passionate
+marriage. Each pleasant path and lane had seen something of that first
+wild happiness. All day long she was driven back upon herself and what
+she had lost.
+
+There is no doubt that she suffered. Of course she still told her heart
+wonderful tales about the shame that she had to bear and her torturing
+wrongs, and beyond doubt she believed most of them. For she could still
+profess to herself a miserable degradation in being married to a man of
+no name: she would be gloomily convinced that Harry was by his father's
+villainy a proven knave. But what hurt her most was the growing suspicion
+that she was much to blame for her own plight. Alison Lambourne, who
+acknowledged no law but her own will, who had never dreamed that she
+could be wrong in her desires, driven to confess a ruinous blunder!
+Imagine her distress. At first she chose to pretend that she had been
+overthrown by passion. The more she tried to despise Harry, the more that
+fancy shamed her. But there was in her a strength which refused to be
+content with that. She would still boast to herself that she was not the
+woman to be swept away by a gust of longing for the man who chanced to
+take her eye. And so she brought down on herself the inexorable
+question--if Harry were man enough to wake passion in her and deserve her
+magnificence, why had she driven him off? For all her selfishness and her
+insolent pride, she had a vehement desire, a part perhaps of her very
+pride in her womanhood, to owe him nothing, to play him fair, to give
+him all that a man could ask. Little by little she forced herself to
+believe that she had failed of that. After all, he had offered her
+nothing but himself, poor, friendless, of no repute, indolent, careless
+of all the world--and she had professed content. What his father might do
+was no matter to that. He had offered her what he was and given it
+faithfully. And she had not played fair. When she found herself
+confessing that, she discovered a new power of being wretched. All the
+romantic, egoistic melancholy went down the wind. The finest, proudest of
+her, her own honour, told of a torturing wound.
+
+"I'll satisfy you"--that had been the boast before the wild marriage was
+done. And after all she had chosen to deny him. Nothing else could
+matter. There could be no excuse. It was he that she had taken, not his
+name or what he might be, and he had not changed. It was herself that she
+had promised--what other honour for woman or man than to give like for
+like?--and she had broken faith. She was humiliated--a state of all
+others the most dolorous for Alison.
+
+To it came on a merry spring day Mr. Waverton. She was in two minds
+whether to let him see her, and then--too proud to hide from him or
+greedy of a chance to hurt him--had him in.
+
+Mr. Waverton had decorated himself for a house of mourning. His large
+form was all black and silver and drooped sympathetically. His handsome
+face was set in a chastened melancholy as of one who grieves for
+another's trouble with a modest satisfaction. "Dear lady," says he
+tenderly, and bowed over her hand.
+
+"Dear Geoffrey," says she. "Here's a new song."
+
+"Madame?"
+
+"'Vengeance is mine' was the refrain last time. Now it's weeping over the
+penitent prodigal. How I love you, Geoffrey."
+
+Mr. Waverton made a gesture of emotion, an exclamation. "I wronged you,
+Alison," he said in a deep voice. "Nay, but you must forgive me. I have
+suffered too. Remember! I had lost all."
+
+"Ah, no," says Alison tragically, "you had still yourself, Geoffrey."
+
+His emotion was understood to be too much for Mr. Waverton. In a little
+while, "We have both been the sport of villainy," he said. "Forgive me,
+Alison. I remember that I spoke bitterly. Can you wonder? I had dreamed
+of you in his arms. To see you there in that knave's power--ah, I was
+beside myself. And he laughed, do you remember, he laughed!"
+
+"He never would take you to heart, in fact."
+
+"A treacherous hound!" said Mr. Waverton with startling vehemence.
+
+"Oh, he was honest when he laughed."
+
+Mr. Waverton swept Harry out of the conversation. "Forgive me, Alison, I
+should have known. My heart should have told me."
+
+"Oh Lud, and is your heart to give tongue now?"
+
+"My heart," said Mr. Waverton with dignity, "my heart is always crying to
+you. And now--now that the first agony is past, I know all."
+
+"I wish I did," said Alison and looked in his eyes.
+
+"But even then--ah, Alison, I have blamed myself cruelly--even then I
+should have known that when your eyes were opened, when you knew the
+truth, you would have no more of him."
+
+"You might have known," Alison said slowly. "You might have judged me by
+yourself."
+
+"Aye, that indeed," says Mr. Waverton heartily. "For we are very like,
+Alison, we are of the same spirit, you and I."
+
+"You make me proud."
+
+"It's our tragedy: we so like, so made to answer each other, should be
+betrayed to our ruin by this same vile trickster. Oh, I blame you no more
+than myself."
+
+"This is too generous."
+
+"No," says Mr. Waverton. "No. When I came on that woman of yours, that
+Mrs. Weston--faith, I am glad that you have cut her off too. I never
+liked that woman."
+
+"Yes, she is poor."
+
+"There it is! I doubt she was in Boyce's pay."
+
+Alison opened her eyes at him. "Oh, Geoffrey, you surpass yourself
+to-day. Go on, go on."
+
+"If you please," says Mr. Waverton, something ruffled. "I believe he
+hired her to play his game with you. Had you a suspicion of it when you
+sent her packing?"
+
+"By God, Geoffrey, I could suspect anyone when you talk to me."
+
+"She is bitter against you. When I heard from her that you had driven
+the fellow away from you, I was on fire to come to you."
+
+"To forgive the prodigal! Oh, your nobility, Geoffrey. And pray where did
+you meet Mrs. Weston?"
+
+"Why, in the High Street here. She lodges in one of those wretched
+cottages behind the street."
+
+"She is here?" Alison shivered a little.
+
+"Perhaps she has some game to play yet. She may be his spy. Be warned
+against her."
+
+Alison leant forward in her chair. Her face was hidden from him. "You are
+giving me a lesson, Geoffrey. I'll profit by it, I promise you!"
+
+"Alison!" Mr. Waverton gave a laugh of triumph. "I fight for us both. And
+I promise you I am eager enough. As soon as I learnt that you had left
+him, why, he was delivered into my hand. By heaven, he shall find no
+mercy now. Already I have him watched. I went to an attorney much
+practised in these treasonous cheating plots, and of him I have hired
+trusty fellows who know all the rogues in London and their hiding-holes.
+You said something?"
+
+But Alison was laughing.
+
+"I believe there is some humour in it," Mr. Waverton conceded grandly.
+"Well, they have tracked him down. Our gentleman lies at a filthy tavern
+in the Long Acre. The 'Leg of Pork,' or some such lewd name. He haunts
+Jacobite coffeehouses and the like low places. They believe that he makes
+some dirty money by scribbling for the Press. A writer in the newspapers!
+He is sunk almost to his right depth. They make no doubt that before
+long we shall catch him dabbling in some new treasonous matter. And
+then--" he made gestures of doom.
+
+"Well? And then?"
+
+"The law may revenge us on the treacherous rogue," said Mr. Waverton
+with majesty.
+
+Alison stood up. Mr. Waverton, always polite, started up too. "I give you
+joy, Geoffrey," she said very quietly.
+
+"Not yet! Not yet!" Mr. Waverton put up a modest hand.
+
+"I believe there is nothing you could feel." Mr. Waverton recoiled
+and stared his bewilderment. "You carry a sword, Geoffrey. Oh, that I
+were a man!"
+
+"To use it upon him! Bah, such rogues are not worth the honour of steel."
+
+"Oh! Honour! Honour!" she cried and flung out her arms, trembling. "The
+honour of you and me!"
+
+What was Mr. Waverton to make of that? "I believe I have excited
+you," says he.
+
+"By God, it is the first time," Alison cried and turned on him so
+fiercely that he started back.
+
+There was a servant at the door saying something which went unheard. Then
+Susan Burford came into the room, an odd contrast in her placid
+simplicity to the amazed magnificence of Mr. Waverton or Alison's
+tremulous, furious beauty. Alison was turned away from her and too much
+engaged to hear or be aware of her.
+
+"Here is Miss Burford," said Waverton in a hurry.
+
+Alison whirled upon her. "You! You have nothing to do here."
+
+"My dear Alison!" Waverton protested. "Miss Burford, your very obedient."
+
+Susan made him a small leisurely curtsy and sat down. "Oh, please give me
+a dish of tea," she said.
+
+"We have not seen you at Tetherdown in this long while," Mr. Waverton
+complained genially.
+
+"I believe not," says Susan.
+
+Alison stared at her. "Why do you come here? You know you despise me."
+
+"I do not come to people I despise," says Susan placidly.
+
+"Well. I am private with dear Geoffrey, if you please."
+
+"My dear Alison! I must be riding. We have finished our business, I
+think. I'll not fail to be with you again soon. I hope to have news for
+you. Miss Burford, your most obedient." Susan bent her head. "Alison--"
+he held out his hand and smiled at her protective affection.
+
+"Geoffrey," said Alison, and looked in his eyes. She did not take the
+hand. She was very pale.
+
+Mr. Waverton's smile was withered. He took himself out with a jauntiness
+that sat upon him awkwardly.
+
+Then Alison turned again upon Susan. "You want to know what I have to do
+with him?" she said fiercely.
+
+"No," says Susan.
+
+Alison stared at the fair, placid face and cried out: "You are a fool."
+
+"Oh, my dear," says Susan.
+
+"I hate that cold, flabby way of yours. You think it is all good and
+wise and kind. It's like a silly mother with a spoilt child. You've not
+spirit enough to scold, and all the while you are thinking me vile and
+base and mean."
+
+"But that is ridiculous. Nobody could think you mean," Susan said.
+
+"There it is again. You believe it is kind to talk so, and it drives me
+mad. I am shameful--do you hear? I am shameful and perhaps I want to be,
+and I loathe myself. Now, go. I shall not stay with you. Go."
+
+Susan stood up. "Alison, oh, Alison," she said. Alison flung out
+of the room.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII
+
+THE HOUSE IN KENSINGTON
+
+
+Late in that evening one of Alison's servants rode up to the "Hand of
+Pork" and inquired for Mr. Boyce. After some parley, he was told that Mr.
+Boyce had not been in the tavern that day. So he left a letter in the tap
+and rode back to Highgate.
+
+That letter, which was not heard of till long afterwards, ran thus:
+
+"Mr. Boyce,--I desire that you would come to me at Highgate. I have
+to-day heard from Geoffrey Waverton what you must instantly know. And the
+truth is, I cannot be content till I speak with you. But I would not have
+you come for this my asking. Pray believe it is urgent for us both that
+we meet, and I do require it of you, not desiring of you what you may
+have no mind to, but to be honest with you, and lest that should befall
+which I hope you would not have me bear.--A."
+
+An ungainly, confused composition, as you see, but it set forth very
+clearly the state of Alison's unhappy mind. She was revolted, of course,
+by Geoffrey's scheme of spying and trapping, loathed him for
+propounding it to her, and was eager to warn Harry against it and clear
+herself of any part in the vile business. But she would not have Harry
+suppose that she was praying him to come back to her. This time, at
+least, there should be no wooing on her side. If she wanted him
+hungrily, shamefully, he should not know till he chose to take her. But
+he must come to her and be told all the tale, and hold her free of any
+part in Geoffrey's baseness.
+
+So she fought with herself and wrote of her strife, and, as things
+went, it mattered nothing to Harry, for he never knew of it till much
+else had happened.
+
+When he woke on the morning after his affairs with Captain McBean and the
+Mohocks and his father--woke with a sore head and a very stiff shoulder,
+he was a prey to puzzled excitement. There is no doubt that McBean had
+engaged his affections. He was not, indeed, very grateful for the
+fantastic duel. Of all men, Harry Boyce was the least likely to be
+pleased by oddity or an extravagance of chivalry. He always thought, I
+believe, that Captain McBean was a little mad, and liked him none the
+better for it. But he confessed that with the madness there was allied a
+most persuasive mind, a very reasonable reason. The combination may not
+be so surprising to you as to Harry Boyce. He thought that McBean's
+exposition of the affair of his father, and his consequent duty, was
+exactly and delicately true--which means, of course, that it agreed with
+his own temper. He had no more doubt than McBean that his father had
+planned, was planning, treachery which, win or lose, would disgrace him.
+He admitted that it was his own wretched duty to do what he might to make
+an end of these plans.
+
+You smile, perhaps, at Harry Boyce claiming for himself the commands of
+duty. He was eminently not a saint. He was not delicate. And yet, thrust
+upon an awkward choice, it is certain that he chose what must be
+difficult, hazardous, and distressing, rather than stand aloof and let
+his father's villainy go its way.
+
+I make no pretence of exalting him into a tragic fellow. He had no
+affection for his father, no respect. Merely to work against his father's
+will, to smash his father's schemes, would certainly not have cost him
+one twinge. He had no hate for his father either, not the least ambition
+to ruin him or make him suffer. But he would heartily have liked to bring
+these murderous plots to nothing and yet save his father from vengeance.
+Harry had his share of the common human instinct to keep one's family out
+of mischief--or at least out of the newspapers.
+
+And it is not to be denied that there was also active in him a simple
+human animosity. He bore his father a grudge for being publicly a knave:
+a man who had received nothing from his parents but the gift of birth
+might fairly demand that they should not bother him with their rogueries.
+He did not extenuate his father's share in the catastrophe of the
+marriage. Perhaps it was in itself fated to miscarry, but if Colonel
+Boyce had not mixed up his affairs with it, the end need not have been
+ignominious. Harry vigorously condemned the old gentleman's meddling. It
+was an impertinence at the best to manipulate other folks, and a father
+who did it so stupidly as Colonel Boyce was a pestilent nuisance. But all
+this, I believe, rankled less than the behaviour of Colonel Boyce on the
+night before. If the old gentleman had acknowledged his offences, if he
+had even been content to talk of them frankly, man to man, he might have
+been forgiven. But his affectation of profound wisdom, his patronage, and
+above all, his parade of mystery infuriated Harry's lucid mind.
+
+It sought further causes of offence and had no difficulty in finding
+them. Everything about that conversation was suspicious. For how did it
+begin? With a broken head, with every button of his clothes torn open as
+though he had just been searched to the skin, he woke up in his father's
+presence. The father might pose as a good Samaritan who had come upon a
+sufferer by the wayside, but he should not have shown so nervous an
+anxiety to know what the sufferer had been about. The father talked of
+Mohocks; but what Mohocks were these who knocked a man down before making
+sport of him and, not content with taking his money, went through all his
+clothes? Why was a Mohock's club lying there beneath the father's swords?
+Harry made a ready guess at the riddle. His father must have fellows
+watching McBean's house. They had knocked him down to search him for
+papers. Then the father must have known that he had been with McBean, and
+those anxious questions were to discover how much he was McBean's friend.
+Colonel Boyce must have a lively interest in the affairs of McBean--and
+yet he professed that he had now nothing in hand. What if he knew of the
+secret of the Pretender's coming to London? What if he was still seeking
+a chance to accomplish his plot of murder?
+
+Well, Captain McBean expected no less of him. Captain McBean was in the
+right of it. It became a good son's duty to confound his father's
+politics. There's no denying that Harry went into the business with zest.
+
+While he ate his breakfast in the taproom, he caught sight of a fellow
+lurking about outside. Whose spy this was is, in fact, not certain.
+Afterwards Colonel Boyce vehemently denied that he had commissioned any
+man against Harry. Though you may not believe him, it is possible that
+the fellow was one of those in Waverton's pay. Harry made no doubt that
+his father was the offender.
+
+He went upstairs again and put a book in his pocket. (He had been
+commissioned for a translation of Ovid, which, let us be thankful, never
+came into print.) Thus characteristically provided, he went out to
+baffle the spy and the father. In the courts between Drury Lane and Bow
+Street he did some ingenious marching and counter-marching whereby--he
+was always confident and we cannot be quite sure--the spy was shaken
+off. He then came into St. Martin's Lane by the north end, and dodging
+in and out of it more than once, made for a tavern close to his father's
+lodging. He planted himself inside by a window, called for a tankard and
+a pipe, and divided his attention between the Tristia and his father's
+door across the lane.
+
+It soon appeared that Colonel Boyce was to have a busy morning. By ones
+and twos a dozen men went into his house. They were not, even to Harry's
+hostile eye, brazenly ruffians. Something of the bully they might have
+about them, for they ran to brawn and swagger, but they were trim enough
+and brisk, and had no smack of debauch--a company of old soldiers, by the
+look of them, and still not past their prime. They were with Colonel
+Boyce a long time, and Harry grew very sick of the Tristia, and had to
+drink more beer over it than was his habit of a morning.
+
+They came out at last singly, and yet with very short intervals between
+them. They all turned the same way--across Leicester Fields. There seemed
+to Harry something so uncommon in this that he was moved to follow. He
+made his way out by the back door and the tavern yard. As he came into
+Leicester Fields, he saw that the units had already amalgamated into
+three companies. They were all steadily marching westward. Keeping behind
+a cart he followed them, and after a while bought for twopence a lift in
+an empty hay wagon. I record all this because he seems to have been very
+proud of it, which is characteristic of his simple nature. The hay wagon
+rumbled him past two companies of them halted and coalescing at an inn.
+The first still headed him at a good round pace all the way to
+Kensington.
+
+The wagon was going through Kensington village when he saw that this
+vanguard too had found an inn. A little farther on he abandoned his
+wagon and, buying bread and cheese at a farm, made his dinner under
+the hedge. It was a long while before he saw anything more of the
+gentlemen of the inn, and lying among primroses and cowslips he nearly
+forgot all about them and his excitement and his wonderful tactics. He
+was, in fact, becoming sentimental, and had made three neat
+hendecasyllabics to the cowslips when the gentlemen came out again.
+They split into pairs and marched on briskly. Harry went through the
+hedge, and from behind it he watched them pass. Then, as now, the road
+ran straight, and it was not safe to come out and follow them till they
+were far ahead. While he waited he heard more tramping, and in a little
+while the rest of the company went by. He peeped out after them and saw
+an odd thing: though the road ran straight for a mile or more, the
+first party had vanished already.
+
+Harry climbed a tree. It was some little time before he discovered the
+lost party. They had scattered, they had taken to the fields and, under
+hedges, they were making southward. The rest of the company did likewise.
+Soon he saw what they were after. There was a lane running from the high
+road towards Fulham. A little way back from it, in a good garden, stood a
+house of modest comfort, doubtless the place to which some gentleman
+about town came for his pleasures or a breath of fresh air. About its
+grounds the company went into hiding.
+
+Harry came down from his tree in a hurry and, like an honest man, took to
+the high road. It was, you know, his one uncommon capacity to go easily
+at a round pace. He did his best along the road and down the lane and,
+though he caught a glimpse of a coat here and there, unchallenged he came
+up the drive and across the garden to the door of the house. He had
+hardly knocked before he was being inspected through a peep-hole. The
+door was opened and instantly shut behind him. He was in darkness dimly
+lit by one candle. The windows had their shutters closed and barred.
+
+"What's your will, sir?" says the man who let him in.
+
+"The master of the house, if you please," Two other men lounged
+into the hall.
+
+"And your name, sir?"
+
+"You may say that I came from Captain McBean."
+
+The man appeared to think it over. "That's true enough, faith," says
+another, advancing out of the shadow. Harry recognised one of the solemn
+seconds of the duel, Patrick O'Connor. "Will I serve your turn, sir?"
+
+"If you're master here."
+
+"I am not. Come on now." He led the way to a room where a cadaverous man,
+richly dressed, sat huddled over a fire. "'Tis a gentleman from the
+captain, my lord. Mr. Boyce, my Lord Sale."
+
+Harry bowed. My lord yawned. "You've a devil of a name, Mr.
+Boyce," says he.
+
+"I deplore it, and hope to disgrace it."
+
+"Is it possible?" said my lord, and yawned again.
+
+"I had the honour to tell you, my lord, that I answer for the gentleman,"
+says Mr. O'Connor.
+
+"You may endorse the devil, if you please," my lord sneered.
+
+Harry struck in, "I came to tell you, my lord, that your house is
+watched, and by now surrounded."
+
+"Damn them, they have found it out, have they?" says my lord, and spread
+out his lean hands to the fire.
+
+"How many, if you please?" says O'Connor.
+
+"A dozen or so. They marched out this morning, scattered, and met again
+in the village and came here across country. They are well-armed, I
+believe, and look men who would fight."
+
+"Ods fish, that nets this hole," says my lord. "Pray, Mr. Boyce, when
+will they put the ferret in?" Harry shrugged. "Oh, there's a limit to
+your kindness, is there? Do you choose to tell us who sent them?"
+
+Harry was silent a moment and then blurted out: "They came from Colonel
+Boyce's lodging."
+
+My lord laughed.
+
+"Sure, 'tis an honour to know you, sir," says O'Connor, and bowed to
+Harry.
+
+"Damned filial, indeed," my lord chuckled.
+
+O'Connor turned upon him. "They have you beat easily, my lord," he said
+fiercely. "Damned courageous indeed." But my lord only nodded at him.
+"What, we be six--to count Mr. Boyce. Sure, we could hold the house
+against the devil's christening."
+
+There came in briskly a tall fellow crying: "Come, Sale, it's full time,
+I believe."
+
+My Lord Sale got on his feet, "Stap me, sir, I believe not," he drawled.
+"We must stay at home. They have smoked us. Here's a gracious youth come
+to tell us that his Whiggish friends beset the house."
+
+The Pretender frowned and seemed slow to understand. Harry looked him
+over. He was certainly a fine figure of a man, and bore himself gallantly
+enough. His face was darkly handsome in a melancholy fashion, not unlike
+the youth of his uncle, Charles II. He turned upon Harry. "What is all
+this, sir?"
+
+"Oh, sir, it's that old rogue Noll Boyce," my lord put in. "And here's
+his son betraying the father."
+
+"Faith, my lord, I'll remind you of that," O'Connor said. "Sir, the
+gentleman is an honest gentleman."
+
+"Colonel Boyce--he is your father, sir?" the Pretender bent his black
+brows over Harry.
+
+"He begot me, he says." Harry shrugged. "I desire to defend you from him.
+He has surrounded your house here with a dozen sturdy knaves who intend
+you, I believe, the worst."
+
+"I am obliged by your service, sir," says the Pretender coldly. "Pray, my
+lord, is the coach ready?"
+
+My lord shook his head. "I don't advise it, sir. The good Mr. Boyce
+cannot be lying. Or allow the knaves mean but to frighten you. I dare not
+risk your person."
+
+"Dare? You dare too much, my lord, who command neither my person nor my
+honour. I do not thank you for your advice. You will have the coach
+brought instantly."
+
+"I ask your pardon, sir, and beg you to consider. What will the world
+say of me if I let you run into a gang of murderers? We can maintain
+the house against them till our friends come seeking us. In the open
+we are outnumbered desperately. Nay, sir, be advised; what is to lose
+by waiting? If you go, you grasp at a shadow and may throw away your
+life for it."
+
+"I say, my lord, I do not thank you for your care of me, which is
+careless of my honour and your own. I am promised to our friends. Do you
+desire me to go afoot, my lord?"
+
+"I have done, sir." My lord bowed and went out.
+
+"Sir, I believe they will not spare you," says Harry.
+
+"I have heard you," the Pretender said haughtily, and waved him away.
+
+"I'll not be put off so." The Pretender turned upon him. "Sir, I have
+done what I could to save your life from a base plot. If it succeeds, the
+shame of it must fall upon me and my name, for it's my cursed father that
+planned it. And you choose to run upon the danger. I entreat you, do me
+right. Your blood should not be upon my head."
+
+"You have done your duty, Mr. Boyce," the Pretender bowed. "I thank you.
+But I must do mine."
+
+"Why, faith, sir, 'tis the right principle of war to wait the rogues
+here," says O'Connor. "You will not?"
+
+"Go to, man, I say it again and again."
+
+For the first time in their acquaintance, Harry saw Mr. O'Connor smile.
+"I have the honour to take your orders, sir. But sure, we are not at the
+end of our tactics. I'll presume to advise you. Let the coach come to the
+door, and me and the other gentlemen will make some display of mounting
+her and guarding her; she moves off slowly; it's any odds the rogues will
+believe we have you with us and deliver their main attack, while you'll
+be mounting quietly in the yard with my lord and ride off with him to
+Kensington."
+
+"The plan is well enough. Have it so," said the Pretender carelessly.
+
+O'Connor went out in a hurry and Harry followed him. "I'll join you, if
+you please, Mr. O'Connor."
+
+O'Connor laughed. "Oh, your servant, your servant. No offence, Mr.
+Boyce. I profess I have an admiration for you. But, faith, you are not a
+man of war. Do you go round to the stable-yard, now, and watch there to
+see they prepare nothing against us from the back." He bustled off,
+calling up his fellows.
+
+So Harry, with a long face, I suppose, drifted away to the back of the
+house. The coach was already moving out of the yard, and he saw no sign
+of his father's legion. In a moment the groom, with one of O'Connor's
+men to help him, was busy again in the stable. Still the legion did not
+reveal themselves. O'Connor's man ran back into the house, leaving two
+horses saddled in the stable. Then the Pretender and my lord hurried
+out, and the horses were brought to meet them. As they mounted, Harry
+heard the clatter of the coach and then pistols and shouts, and the
+clash of fighting.
+
+The Pretender spurred off, my lord taking the lead of him through the
+gate. As they passed, a shot was fired out of the hedge. My lord swayed,
+fumbling at his holsters, and crying out: "Ride on, sir, ride," fell from
+the saddle. His foot was caught in the stirrup, and the frightened horse
+dragged him along the ground.
+
+Harry ran up and snatched the bridle. "How is it with you, my lord?"
+
+"I have enough, I believe," my lord gasped. "Damme, sir, don't fumble at
+me. Mount and after him."
+
+So Harry went bumping in the saddle after the Pretender.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV
+
+QUEEN ANNE IS DEAD
+
+
+The Pretender looked over his shoulder as Harry came up. "Where is he
+hit?"
+
+"He has it in the body and he suffers."
+
+The Pretender muttered something. "I bring ill-luck to my friends, you
+see. Best ride off, Mr. Boyce."
+
+"You can do me no harm, sir. God knows if I can do you any good."
+
+The Pretender looked at him curiously. "I think you are something of my
+own temper. In effect, there is little to hope with me."
+
+"Who knows?" Harry shrugged. "_Par exemple,_ sir, do you know where we
+are going now?"
+
+"This is a parable, _mordieu_! I leave my friends to be shot for me and
+die, perhaps, while I ride off and know not the least of my way."
+
+"Egad, sir, you were in enough of a hurry to go somewhere." Harry reined
+up. "Am I to be trusted in the affair?"
+
+The Pretender amazed Harry by laughing--a laugh so hearty and boyish that
+he seemed another man from the creature of stiff, pedantic melancholy.
+
+"Oh Lud, Mr. Boyce, don't scold. You might be a politician. Tell me,
+where is this damned palace?"
+
+"Kensington, sir? Bear to the left, if you please."
+
+So they swung round, and soon hitting upon a lane saw the village and the
+trees about the palace. In a little while, "Mr. Boyce: how much do you
+know?" the Pretender said; and still he was more the boy than the
+disinherited king.
+
+"Egad, sir, no more than I told you: that my father had bullies
+watching for you."
+
+"And I believe I have not thanked you."
+
+It was Harry's turn to laugh. "Faith, sir, you ought to be grateful to
+the family of Boyce."
+
+"I shall not forget."
+
+"He takes care that you shall remember him, my honourable father."
+
+"I do not desire repartees, Mr. Boyce. Come, sir, you carry yourself too
+proudly. You are not to disdain what you have done, or yourself."
+
+Harry bowed,--permitted himself, I suppose, some inward ironic smile,--he
+was not born with reverence, and the royal airs of this haughty, gloomy
+lad had no authority over him. Then and always the pretensions of the
+Pretender appeared to him pathetically ridiculous. But for the man he
+would sometimes profess a greater liking than he had learnt to feel for
+any other in the world.
+
+Harry was careful to avoid most of the village. As they came into it on
+the eastward side a horseman galloped up to them. "From my Lord Masham,
+sir. Pray you follow me at speed." He led them on to the palace, but not
+by the straight approach, and brought them to a little door in the garden
+wall upon the London side.
+
+There a handsome fellow stood waiting for them, and bowed them in with a
+"Sir, sir, we have been much anxious for you. I trust to God nothing has
+fallen out amiss?"
+
+"There was a watch set for me, my lord, and I fear some of our friends
+are down. But for this gentleman I had hardly been here."
+
+Masham swore and cried out, "They have news of the design! I profess I
+feared it. Pray, sir, come on quickly. The Queen is weaker, and my lady
+much troubled for her. By God, we have left it late. And the ministers
+must still be wrangling, and my Lord Bolingbroke like a man mazed. We
+must be swift and downright with the Council."
+
+Then at last Harry understood. The Pretender was to be brought face to
+face with his sister, the weakening weak Queen, and a Privy Council was
+to be in waiting. Suppose she declared him her heir; suppose she
+presented him to a Council all high Tories and good Jacobites! A good
+plot, a very excellent plot, if there were a man with the courage and the
+will to make it work.
+
+Within the palace it was now twilight. They were hurried up privy
+stairways and along corridors, and Harry fancied behind the gloom a
+hundred watching eyes, and could not be sure they were only fancy. As
+they crossed the head of the grand staircase Masham made an exclamation
+and checked and peered down. The Pretender turned and Harry, but Masham
+plunged after them and wildly waved them on.
+
+"What is it, my lord? Have you seen a ghost?" The Pretender smiled.
+
+"Oh God, sir, go on!" Masham gasped. "We can but challenge the hazard
+now," and he muttered to himself.
+
+"You are inconvenient, my lord," says the Pretender with a shrug. "Go
+before. Conduct me, if you please," Masham brushed by him and hurried on.
+
+Harry understood my lord's alarm. He, too, had seen a little company
+below by the grand entry, and among them one of singular grace, a rare
+nobility of form and feature, a strange placidity. There was no
+forgetting, no mistaking him. It was the gentleman of the bogged coach,
+the Old Corporal, the Duke of Marlborough.. Marlborough, who was in
+disgrace, who should be in exile, back at the palace when the Tories were
+staking their all on a desperate, splendid throw: Marlborough, who had
+betrayed and ruined James II, come back to baffle his son! No wonder
+Lord Masham was uneasy for his head.
+
+They were brought to a small room, blatantly an antechamber, and Masham,
+brusquely bidding them wait, broke through the inner door. He was back in
+a moment as pale as he had been red. "Come in, sir," he muttered. "I
+believe we had best be short." And through the open door Harry heard
+another voice. It was thin and strained, and seemed to make no words,
+like a baby's cry or an animal's.
+
+Across another antechamber, they came into a big room of some prim
+splendour, and as they passed the door Harry made out what that feeble
+voice was saying: "The Council, Abbie: we must go to the Council: we keep
+the Council waiting, Abbie:" that came over and over again, and he knew
+why he had not understood. The words were run together and slurred as if
+they were shaped by a mind drowsy or fuddled.
+
+A great fire was burning though the day was warm enough, and by the fire
+sat a mound of a woman. She could be of no great height, perhaps she was
+not very stout, but she sat heaped together and shapeless, a flaccid
+mass. She had a table by her, and on it some warm drink that steamed.
+Through the drifting vapour Harry saw her face, and seemed to see it
+change and vanish like the vapour. For it was all bloated and loose, and
+it trembled, and it had no colour in it but a pallid grey. And as he
+looked there came to him a sense of death.
+
+Yet she was pompously dressed, in a dress cut very low, a dress of rich
+stuff and colour, and there was an array of jewels sparkling about her
+neck and at her bosom, and her hands lay heavy with rings.
+
+There hung about her a woman buxom and pleasant enough, yet with
+something sly in her plump face. "Fie, ma'am, fie," she was saying, "the
+Council is here but for your pleasure:" she looked up and nodded
+imperiously at Masham.
+
+"The Prince James, ma'am," Masham cried.
+
+The Queen, who had seemed to see nothing of their coming, started and
+shook and blinked towards him. "He is loud, Abbie. Tell him not to be
+loud," she complained.
+
+"Look, ma'am, look," Lady Masham patted at her. "It is your brother, it
+is Prince James."
+
+The Pretender came forward, holding out his hand. "Am I welcome, Anne?"
+he said heavily.
+
+The Queen stared at him with dull eyes. "It is King Charles," she said,
+and stirred in her chair and gave a foolish laugh. "No, but he is like
+King Charles. But King Charles had so many sons. Who is he, Abbie? Why
+does he come? The Council is waiting."
+
+"I am your brother, Anne," the Pretender said.
+
+"What does he say, Abbie?" the Queen turned to Lady Masham and took her
+hand and fondled it feebly. "I am alone. There is none left to me. My boy
+is dead. My babies--I am alone. I am alone."
+
+"I am your brother and your King," the Pretender cried.
+
+She fell back in her chair staring at him. Her mouth opened and a mumble
+came from it. Then there was silence a moment, and then she began to
+shake, and one hand beat upon the table with its rings. So they waited a
+while, watching the tremulous, shapeless mass of her, and the tap, tap,
+tap of her hand beat through the room.
+
+Lady Masham took command. "Nay, sir, leave her. You can do no more now.
+Let her be. I will handle her if I can." She rustled across the room
+and struck a bell. "Masham, bring Dr. Arbuthnot. He irks her less than
+the rest."
+
+Harry followed the Pretender into the outer room, shambling
+awkwardly. The progress from failure to failure dazed him. He recalled
+afterwards, as many petty matters of this time stayed vivid in his
+memory, a preposterous blunder into a chair. The Pretender sat down
+and stretched at his ease. "We are too late, I think," he said coldly.
+"It is the genius of my family." He took snuff. "You may go, if you
+will, Mr. Boyce."
+
+Harry looked up and struggled to collect himself. "Not till you are in
+safety," he said, and was dully aware of some discomfort. The dying
+woman, the sheer ugliness of death, the sordid emotions about her numbed
+the life in him. He felt himself in a world inhuman. Yet, even
+afterwards, he seems not to have discovered anything ignoble in his
+admired Pretender. The blame was fate's that mocked coldly at the hopes
+and affections of men.
+
+"I am obliged, sir," said the Pretender, and so they waited together....
+
+After a little while of gloomy silence in that bare room, Masham broke
+in, beckoning and muttering: "Sir, sir, the Queen is dead."
+
+The Pretender stood up. "_Enfin_" said he, with a shrug.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV
+
+SAUVE QUI PEUT
+
+
+"Sir, you must be gone instantly," says Masham.
+
+"You are officious, my lord." The Pretender stared at him. "I have
+nothing to fear."
+
+"I warrant you have," Masham cried. "And so have others."
+
+"I believe that, _pardieu_. Come, my lord, command yourself. Where is
+this Council? I may still show myself to the lords and challenge them."
+
+"Damme, you cannot be so mad! 'Tis packed with Whigs. They must have wind
+of you, curse them. Marlborough is there, and Argyll and Sunderland, burn
+his foxy face. It might have gone amiss though the Queen armed you to her
+chair. Now she is dead, there is no hope for you. Go to the Council! Go
+to the Tower--go to the block."
+
+The Pretender turned to Harry with a smile and a shrug. "He trims his
+sails quickly."
+
+"That's unworthy, by God," Masham cried.
+
+"My lord is in the right, sir," Harry said. "It's true enough,
+Marlborough is here and he makes sure. You'll but extinguish yourself to
+try more now. The need is to bring you safe to your friends."
+
+"You also!" The Pretender shrugged again. "Faith, Mr. Boyce, you
+show yourself vastly anxious for my life. You are not much concerned
+for my honour."
+
+"Egad, sir, I should have thought your honour was to maintain your cause.
+You'll not do that from a prison or coffin."
+
+"Who knows?" the Pretender said. "My grandfather--"
+
+Masham was stamping with impatience. "Oh Lud, sir, must we gossip
+about your grandfather? Stay here, you cannot. It is not decent. The
+Queen's a corpse behind that door. Why, and if they take you in the
+palace, it's ruin for you and for us all. Oh, we shall not be spared
+if you are caught."
+
+"Yes. I am a curse to my friends." The Pretender laughed drearily. "Well,
+my lord, you shall be delivered at least. Lead the way." Masham hurried
+out on the word. As they followed the Pretender took Harry's arm. "I wish
+you may be right, Mr. Boyce," he said. "But my heart bids me stay."
+
+"Oh, sir, a king has no right to a heart," says Harry.
+
+They were suddenly thrown upon Masham as he checked and drew back without
+warning. He had come upon a woman who was leaving the Queen's apartments,
+a woman who had once been handsome, and was still proud of it. She
+stared haughtily at Masham and his companions, and swept on before them.
+He was much agitated.
+
+"What alarms you, my lord?" The Pretender sneered.
+
+"Carrots from Somerset, egad," Masham muttered, gazing after the
+disdainful lady's red head. "It's the Duchess of Somerset, sir, the
+damnedest Whig, and she came from the Queen. Now they will all know the
+Queen is gone. Come on, sir, come on for God's sake."
+
+They hurried after him through the palace. All was quiet enough.
+Afterwards, indeed, Harry could hardly believe that fancy had not played
+tricks with his memory; for the emptiness, the silence of the corridors
+must needs have been a dramatic invention of his own mind and no reality.
+But it is true that as they hurried their retreat he was haunted by the
+quiet of the place--the quiet of death, a quiet ominous of storm.
+
+They were down at the door by which they had entered, and Masham's
+servant-in-waiting there was dispatched for the horses. Masham fumed at
+the minutes of delay, ran out and in again, and then with some
+awkwardness apologized for himself. "Egad, sir, I warrant you we have
+done what we could. It is for you I fear, by God. I promise you, I doubt
+damnably how things may go. Pray, sir, put yourself in safety."
+
+"I am grateful for your emotions, my lord."
+
+Masham stared at him and then cried out, "Ods life, what now?" The horses
+were coming, but before the horses came two of the Guards at the double.
+They halted at the door, panting, and grounded their muskets. "What the
+devil's this, my lad?" says Masham.
+
+"None is to leave the palace, my lord."
+
+"Damme, sirrah, you know me?"
+
+"It won't do, my lord. That's the order. You must go speak with the
+captain at the main gate."
+
+"Come, sir, I have no time. Forget that you were here soon enough to stop
+me. You shall not lose by it."
+
+"It won't do, my lord. Nay, nay, don't force me to it." The corporal
+crossed muskets with his fellow as Masham was thrusting by. "Order is to
+spare none."
+
+"Damme, sir, what do your mean?"
+
+"Sure, my lord, you know better than that." The corporal grinned. "Ask
+the captain, if you please."
+
+Masham recoiled and drew the others back into the palace. They heard the
+corporal shout: "Put the nags up, my bully. My lord won't ride to-day."
+
+"They know you are here, sir," Masham said, with a very white face. "Damn
+the Somerset! She lost no time. What is to do now?"
+
+"It seems my own plan was the best, gentlemen. If I had gone into the
+Council we should at the worst have been in no worse case."
+
+"Oh Lud, sir, must we wrangle that out again?"
+
+"You are impudent, my lord. I will do without your company."
+
+"Good God, sir, it's no time for forms. What would you be at?"
+
+"I shall go to the main gate of your palace and see who will stand
+in my way."
+
+"That's ruin for certain," Masham groaned.
+
+"Be easy, my lord. I shall not boast myself your guest."
+
+"Oh, you are mad."
+
+"By your leave, sir," says Harry. "We need not so soon despair, I think,
+nor you run upon your death. There is something more to be tried. These
+sentries, they'll be on the watch for a gentleman of your distinction and
+in my lord's company or of some noble attendance. But a common fellow may
+pass them. If you would lend me your fine clothes and that great wig, and
+condescend to my subfuse and bob, there's no one would take so shabby a
+fellow for yourself. Maybe I might make a show to break out one way,
+while you slipped past by another."
+
+"And left you to bear the brunt for me? I complain of you again, Mr.
+Boyce--you do not much value my honour."
+
+"And I say again, sir, your honour is to maintain your cause. Nay, but
+what can they do to me? Faith, it's no sin to wear fine clothes. And
+I--well, I think the Whigs will never bring me into court. I know too
+much of my father."
+
+"Oh, you are specious, Mr. Boyce," the Pretender smiled at him. "Nay, if
+all my friends were such as you, I should not be in this queer plight."
+He put his hand on Harry's shoulder. "How am I to thank you, sirrah?"
+
+"Pray, sir, do as I advise."
+
+The hand pressed harder. "Be it so then."
+
+"Egad, I like it very well," says Masham heartily. The two exchanged a
+shrug and a sneer at him. "If Mr. Boyce will risk it, he may make a show
+of marching out by the garden entrance while you slip away by the
+servants' wicket beyond."
+
+"I believe I can trust you to get rid of me, my lord," the Pretender
+shrugged. "Pray, where may we exchange our characters--and our breeches?"
+
+"Oh, sir, follow me; we must be private about that."
+
+Harry burst out laughing. "Aye, faith, he is a gentleman of delicacy, our
+Masham," the Pretender said.
+
+But my lord had no ears or no understanding for irony. He brought them to
+his own quarters and, fervidly entreating them to lose no time, shut them
+in and mounted guard outside the door.
+
+They cut queer figures to their own eyes when they came out, and Masham
+was distressed by their laughter. "What ails you?" he protested
+nervously. "It does well enough, I swear."
+
+"I am flattered by your admiration, _pardieu_," says the Pretender, with
+a rueful grin down at the shabby clothes which were so tight upon him,
+and a clutch at the bob-wig's jauntiness.
+
+"Some are born great," says Harry, "and some have greatness thrust upon
+'em. I believe I can keep inside your periwig, sir, but damme if I am
+sure about your breeches. They disdain me, egad."
+
+"God's life, sir, if you make a jest of it you'll ruin us all," Masham
+cried. "I vow it's not seemly, neither. The Queen's dead but this
+half-hour, and--and, by God, our own heads are loose on our shoulders."
+
+"My lord's in the right, sir. It's no laughing matter," says Harry.
+
+"Aye, he's all noble feeling," the Pretender shrugged.
+
+"Come on, sir, in God's name," Masham groaned.
+
+"Look you, thus it goes. I'll bring you within sight of the garden
+entry. Then you make to go out, Mr. Boyce, with what parade you can. And
+you, sir, I'll take you to the head of the back stairs. You have but to
+go straight down and out, and I wish you God speed with all my heart.
+Come, come!"
+
+They marched along the corridor and must needs pass the end of that which
+led to the Queen's apartments. Masham was a little ahead of the others.
+He passed the corner. Then he checked and he turned sharp about and
+charged back on them, crowding them against the wall, trying to stand in
+front of both of them and hide them.
+
+It was Marlborough who alarmed my lord, Marlborough who came, alone,
+pacing slowly from the room where the Queen lay dead. No dismay, no
+emotion troubled his supreme grace. He disdained his splendours and his
+beauty with the wonted calm.
+
+He saw them, could not but see them, huddled together as they were and
+striving not to be seen. His face betrayed nothing. He paced slowly up to
+them. It seemed to Harry that from the first his placid eyes looked at
+none of them but the Pretender. "We have met before, sir, I think," he
+said gently.
+
+"On the field of battle," says the Pretender in French.
+
+Marlborough bowed. "Give me your company."
+
+"Oh, your family has always been too kind to mine."
+
+Marlborough pointed the way.
+
+The Pretender shrugged, and "_Enfin_," says he with a bitter laugh, and
+marched on with an air.
+
+Masham, leaning against the wall and very white, muttered to himself, "My
+God, my God!"
+
+Harry ran forward to look after them. He saw Marlborough glance over the
+Pretender's shabby clothes and then, making some ostentation of it, put
+on his hat. The Pretender with a stare of disdain put on his--or Harry's.
+They came to the head of the grand staircase and went down. The servants
+in the hall sprang up and ran to open the doors for His Grace. Harry
+heard a din and a clang and saw a flash of steel as the guard outside
+presented arms. The two passed out and out of sight. For a little while
+the servants stood staring after them, and then came back to their chairs
+whispering.
+
+Harry turned round to Masham. "What now?"
+
+"Now?" Masham stared. "Now we may go hang ourselves."
+
+"Like Judas? Damme, I don't feel the obligation. Do you, my lord?"
+
+Masham swore at him and began to walk off.
+
+"Can you lend me a humbler coat, my lord?" Harry cried. "I am no more
+use in this."
+
+"I'll do no more in it," Masham growled. "Look to yourself."
+
+"_Enfin,_ as His Majesty says," quoth Harry with a laugh, and went on to
+look for the garden entry or any other humble door. He found it soon
+enough and was going through it--to be instantly beset by a sergeant's
+party and a joyful shout, "Odso, 'tis himself, 'tis the Chevalier."
+
+"You flatter me," says Harry, and they marched him off.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI
+
+REVELATIONS
+
+
+Harry was kept a long time in a guard room. Once or twice an officer came
+in and looked him over, but he was asked no questions, and he asked none.
+He was ill at ease. Not, I believe, from any fear for himself. He knew,
+indeed, that he might hang for his pains. What he had done for the
+Pretender was surely treason, or would be adjudged treason, with the
+Whigs in power and the Hanoverian King. But death seemed no great matter.
+He was not a romantic hero, he had no faith, no cause to die for, and he
+saw the last scene as a mere horror of pain and shame. Only it must be
+some relief to come to the end. For he was beset by a hopeless, reckless
+distrust of himself. Everything that he did must needs go awry. He was
+born for failure and ignominy. Memories of his wild delight in Alison
+came stabbing at his heart, and he fought against them, and again they
+opened the wounds. Yes, for a little while he had been given the full
+zest of life, all the wonder and the glory--that he might know what it
+was to live maimed and starving. It was his own fault, faith. He should
+never have dared venture for her, he, a dull, blundering, graceless fool.
+How should he content her? Oh, forget her, forget all that and have done.
+She would be free of him soon, and so best. Best for himself, too; it was
+a dreary affair, this struggling from failure to failure. Whatever he put
+his hand to must needs go awry. Save the Pretender from the chance of a
+fight and deliver him into the hands of Marlborough! Marlborough, who
+would send him to the scaffold with the noblest air in the world! Why,
+but for that silly meddling at Kensington, the lad might have won free.
+Now he and his cause must die together before a jeering mob. So much for
+the endeavours of Mr. Harry Boyce to be a man of honour! Mr. Harry Boyce
+should have stayed in his garret with his small beer and his rind of
+cheese. He was fit for nothing better, born to be a servitor, an usher.
+And he must needs claim Alison Lambourne for his desires and rifle her
+beauty! Oh, it was good to make an end of life if only he could forget
+her, forget her as she lay in his arms.
+
+The door opened. The guard was beckoning to him. He was marched to a
+room in which one man sat at a table, a small man of a lean, sharp
+face. Unbidden, Harry flung himself into a chair. He must have been a
+ridiculous figure, overwhelmed by the black wig and the rich clothes
+too big for him. The sharp face opposite stared at him in
+contemptuous disgust.
+
+"Your name?"
+
+"La, you now!" Harry laughed. "I don't know you neither. And, egad, I can
+do without."
+
+"I am the Earl of Sunderland."
+
+"Then, damme, I am sorry for you."
+
+"Your name, I say?"
+
+"Why, didn't your fellows tell you? They told me."
+
+"Impudence will not serve you. I warn you, the one chance to save
+yourself is to be honest with me."
+
+Harry began to hum a song, and, between the bars, he said, "You may go to
+the devil. I care not a curse for anything you can do. So think of your
+dignity, my lord. And hold your silly tongue."
+
+Sunderland considered him keenly. A secretary came in and whispered. "I
+will see him," Sunderland said, and lay back in his chair.
+
+It was Colonel Boyce who broke in, Colonel Boyce something flushed and
+out of breath. "Egad, my lord," he began. Sunderland held up his hand.
+Colonel Boyce checked and stood staring at his son.
+
+Harry began to laugh. "Oh, sir, you're infinitely welcome. It only needed
+you to complete my happiness."
+
+"Od's life, sirrah." Colonel Boyce advanced upon him. "Are you crazy?
+What damned folly is this?"
+
+"You know him then?" says Sunderland.
+
+"Oh, my lord, it's a wise father knows his own son. And he is not
+wise, you know. Are you, most reverend? No, faith, or you would never
+have begot me. No, faith, nor enlist me to do murder neither. For I do
+but bungle it, you see. And make a fool of my Lord Sunderland, God
+bless him."
+
+"Is he mad?" says Sunderland.
+
+"I profess I begin to think so." Colonel Boyce frowned. "Lud, Harry,
+stop your ranting. What brought you here?"
+
+"You, sir, you. Your faithful striving to do my Lord Sunderland's murders
+for him. _Imprimis_, that work of grace. But, finally, some good soldiers
+who assured me I was the man my lord wanted to murder."
+
+"You came here with the Pretender?"
+
+Harry laughed and began to sing a catch:
+
+"'Tis nothing to you if I should do so,
+ And if nothing in it you find,
+Then thank me for nothing and that will be moe
+ Than ever I designed."
+
+"What a pox are you doing in his clothes, sirrah?" Colonel Boyce cried.
+
+"Faith, I try to keep them on me. Which is more difficult than you
+suppose. If I were to stand up in a hurry, my lord, we should all
+be shamed."
+
+"The lad is an idiot," said Sunderland, with a shrug.
+
+"Come, Harry, you have fooled it long enough. I had a guess of this mad
+fancy of yours. But the game is up now, lad. King George is king to-day,
+and his friends have all power in their grip. There's no more hope for
+your Jacobites. Tell me now--the Pretender is in your clothes, I
+see--where did you part from him?"
+
+"Why, don't you know?" Harry stared at him. "Oh, faith, that's bitter
+for you. You who always know everything! And your friends 'with all
+power in their grip,' Oh, my dear lord, I wonder if there's those who
+don't trust you?"
+
+Some voices made themselves heard from outside. Sunderland and Colonel
+Boyce looked at each other, and my lord bit his fingers. The Colonel
+muttered something in Sunderland's ear.
+
+Harry laughed. "Do you bite your thumb at me, my lord? No, sir, says he,
+but I bite my thumb. Odso, I bite my thumb."
+
+"Be silent, sirrah," Sunderland cried.
+
+The door opened. "Announce me," says a placid voice, and the secretary
+cried out in a hurry: "His Grace the Duke of Marlborough."
+
+Harry went on laughing. The contrast of Marlborough's assured calm and
+the agitation of the others was too impressive. "Oh, three merry men,
+three merry men, three merry men are ye," he chanted. "No, damme, it's
+more Shakespeare. The three witches, egad. And I suppose Duncan is
+murdered in the next act. When shall you three meet again? In--"
+
+"Oh, damn your tongue, Harry," his father exploded.
+
+Marlborough was not disturbed. His eye had picked out Sunderland. "Is
+this the whole conspiracy, my lord?" said he.
+
+"I beg your Grace's pardon," Sunderland started up. "You see, I am not
+private," and he called out: "Guard, guard."
+
+"No," Marlborough said, and, as the soldiers came in, dismissed them with
+"You are not needed."
+
+Sunderland fell back in his chair. "Oh, if you please," he cried
+peevishly. "At your Grace's command."
+
+"You have no secrets from Mr. Boyce, my lord." He turned to Harry. "Sir,
+we have met before," and he bowed.
+
+"Yes. The first time your wife was stuck in the mud. Now it's you."
+
+"Sir, you have obliged me on both occasions," Marlborough said. "Well, my
+lord? You had Mr. Boyce under examination. Pray go on."
+
+"I don't understand your Grace," Sunderland said sulkily. "I have done
+with the gentleman."
+
+Colonel Boyce thrust forward. "By your Grace's leave, I'll take the lad
+away. Time presses and--"
+
+"You may be silent," said Marlborough. For the first time in their
+acquaintance Harry saw his father look at a loss. It was an ugly,
+ignominious spectacle. Marlborough turned to Harry, smiling, and his
+voice lost its chill: "Well, Mr. Boyce, how far had it gone? Were they
+asking you what you had done with Prince James?"
+
+Harry stared at the bland, handsome condescension and hated it. "Oh,
+you have always had the devil's own luck," he cried. "Devil give you
+joy of it, now."
+
+"You mistake me, I believe. I can forgive you more easily than some
+others." He turned upon Sunderland. "I will tell you where Prince James
+is, my lord. Safe out of your reach. On his way to France."
+
+Sunderland made a petulant exclamation and spread out his hands. "Your
+Grace goes beyond me, I profess. Do you choose to be frank with me?"
+
+"Frank?" Marlborough laughed. "You know the word, then? By all means let
+us be frank. I found Prince James in the palace. He accepted my company.
+We had some conversation, my lord. I present to you the results. You have
+used my name to warrant a silly, knavish plot for murdering Prince James
+in France. You entered upon a silly, knavish plot to murder him on this
+mad visit to London, and while engaging me to aid your motions against
+the Jacobites you gave me no advice of this damning folly. To complete
+your blunders--but for the chance that I came upon him and took him
+through your guards you would have been silly enough to plant him on our
+hands in prison. I do not talk to you about honour, my lord, or your
+obligations. I advise you, I resent my name being confused with these
+imbecilities."
+
+Sunderland, who had been wriggling and become flushed, cried out: "I'll
+not submit to this. I don't choose to answer your Grace. You shall hear
+from me when you are cooler."
+
+"My compliments," Marlborough laughed. "I do not stand by my friends? I
+lose my temper? You will easily convince the world of that, my lord.
+Colonel Boyce!" Before Harry's wondering eyes his father came to
+attention and, with an expression much like a guilty dog's, waited his
+reward. "You have had some of my confidence and I think you have not lost
+by it. You have repaid me with an impudent treachery. I shall arrange
+that you have no more opportunity at home or abroad."
+
+"Pray leave to ask your Grace's pardon," Colonel Boyce muttered. "I
+swear--"
+
+"You may be silent," Marlborough said, and turned away from them. "Pray,
+Mr. Boyce, will you walk?" Something bewildered by this time, Harry stood
+up and they went out together. "I require a carriage for this gentleman,"
+said Marlborough to the sergeant of the guard, and with a smile to Harry,
+"That will be convenient, I think?"
+
+"Egad, sir, you might say, decent," says Harry with a wary hand on
+his breeches.
+
+"Spare me a moment while you wait," Marlborough turned into a recess of
+the corridor. "Prince James expressed himself much in your debt, Mr.
+Boyce. Consider me not less obliged. Thanks to you, I have freed myself
+of suspicions which I profess it had irked me to bear."
+
+"Your Grace owes me nothing. I never thought of you. Or if I did you were
+the villain of the piece."
+
+Marlborough laughed. "And now you are sorry to find I am not so
+distinguished. Why is it a pleasure to despise me, Mr. Boyce?"
+
+Harry had to laugh too. "It's a hit, sir. I suppose your Grace is so
+great a man that we all envy you and are eager for a chance to defame you
+and bring you down to our own level."
+
+"You're above that, Mr. Boyce," Marlborough said. "I make you my
+compliments on your conduct in the affair. And pray remember that I am in
+your debt. I don't know your situation. If I can serve you, do me the
+pleasure of commanding me."
+
+"Oh, your Grace does everything magnificently," says Harry, with a wry
+smile, and liked him none the better.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII
+
+VIRTUE IS ITS OWN REWARD
+
+
+There is reason to believe that the Earl of Sunderland and Colonel Boyce
+fell out. Sunderland, never an easy man, suspected that he had been
+ridiculous and was nervously eager to make some one smart for it. Colonel
+Boyce was in a despondent rage that any one should have heard Marlborough
+rate him so. They seem to have had some cat and dog business before they
+parted: each, I infer, blaming the other for their ignominy.
+
+But they took it in very different fashions. Colonel Boyce suffered in
+the more respectable part of his soul. Sunderland merely fumed and felt
+venomous. For it is certain (if absurd) that Colonel Boyce had a sincere
+reverence for Marlborough. He much desired (one of his few simple human
+emotions) that Marlborough should think well of him. If he had tacked
+Marlborough's name to a dirty business about which Marlborough knew
+nothing, he had honestly believed that His Grace would be very well
+content to know nothing of the means, and profit by the end. That his
+hero should retort upon him disgust and contempt wounded him painfully.
+Final proof of his devotion--he never thought of questioning
+Marlborough's judgment. He had no doubt that he had managed the affair
+with miserable stupidity, and bowed a humiliated head.
+
+Unfortunately, he was not ready to bow it before Sunderland. If there was
+to be scolding between him and Sunderland, he had a mind to give as much
+as he took. My lord had been art and part in the whole affair, and could
+have his share, too, in the disaster. But Sunderland had no notion of
+accepting Marlborough's opinion of him. Sunderland had no reverence for
+any of God's creatures, and with Marlborough safe out of the room,
+snarled something about an old fellow in his dotage. This much enlivened
+the quarrel, and they parted in some exhaustion, but still raging.
+
+The night brought counsel. Sunderland might tell himself and believe that
+Marlborough had become only the shadow of a great name. But the great
+name, he knew very well, was valuable to himself and his party, and he
+had no notion of throwing it away for the sake of his injured dignity. In
+his way, Colonel Boyce was quite as necessary to my lord. The fellow knew
+too much to be discarded. Moreover, he would still be valuable. His
+talents for intrigue and even that weakness of his, his fertility in
+multiplying intrigue, much appealed to Sunderland. So before noon on the
+next day, Colonel Boyce was reading a civil letter from my lord. He
+sneered over it, but it was welcome enough. He did not want to be idle,
+and could rely on Sunderland to find him agreeable occupation. He walked
+out to wait on my lord, and they made it up, which was perhaps
+unfortunate for Mr. Waverton.
+
+Later in the day my lord heard that a gentleman was asking to speak with
+him, a gentleman who professed to have information about the Pretender
+which he could give only to my lord's private ear. Thereupon my lord
+received a large and imposing young gentleman, who said: "My Lord
+Sunderland? My lord, I am Geoffrey Waverton of Tetherdown, a gentleman of
+family (as you may know) and sufficient estate. This is to advise you
+that I am in need of no private advantage and desire none, but only to do
+my duty against traitors."
+
+"You are benevolent, sir, but I am busy."
+
+"I believe you will be glad to postpone your business to mine, my lord,"
+says Mr. Waverton haughtily. "Let me tell you at this moment of anxious
+doubt," Mr. Waverton hesitated like one who forgets a bit of his prepared
+eloquence,--"let me tell you the Pretender has come to these shores. He
+has come to England, to London. He was in Kensington yesterday."
+
+"You amaze me, Mr. Waverton."
+
+"My lord, I can take you to the house."
+
+"You are very obliging. Is he there now?"
+
+"I believe not, my lord."
+
+"And I believe not too. Mr. Waverton, the world is full of gentlemen
+who know where the Pretender was the other day. You are tedious. Where
+is he now?"
+
+"My lord, I shall put in your power one who is in all his cunning
+secrets: one who is the treasonous mainspring of the plot."
+
+Sunderland, who was something of a purist, made a grimace: "A treasonous
+mainspring! You may keep it, sir."
+
+"You are pleased to be facetious, my lord. I warn you we have here no
+matter for levity. I shall deliver to your hands one who is deep in the
+most dangerous secrets of the Jacobites, art and part of the design
+which at this moment of peril and dismay brings the Pretender down upon
+our peace."
+
+"Mr. Waverton, you are as dull as a play. Who is he, this bogey of
+yours?"
+
+"He calls himself Boyce," said Mr. Waverton, with an intense sneer.
+"Harry Boyce, a shabby, scrubby trickster to the eye. You would take him
+for a starveling usher, a decayed footman. It's a lurker in holes and
+corners, indeed, a cringing, grovelling fellow. But with a heart full of
+treason and all the cunning of a base, low hypocrisy. Still a youth, but
+sodden in lying craft."
+
+Sunderland picked up a pen and played with it, and through the flutter of
+the feather he began to look keenly at Mr. Waverton. "Pray spare me the
+rhetoric," says he. "What has he done, your friend, Harry Boyce?"
+
+"He has this long time past been hand and glove with the Jacobites of
+Sam's. I have evidence of it. Now mark you what follows. Yesterday
+betimes he slunk out to Kensington, using much cunning secrecy. And there
+he made his way to a certain house--I wonder if you know it, my lord? It
+was close watched yesterday, and a coach that came from it was beset. I
+wonder if you have been asking yourself how the Pretender evaded that
+watch. I can dispel the mystery. This fellow Harry Boyce went in with
+news of the guard about the house. It was in his company that the
+Pretender rode away."
+
+"Why do you stop?" said Sunderland.
+
+"Where they went then I cannot tell you. You will please to observe, my
+lord, that I am precisely honest with you and even to this knave Boyce
+just. But it is certain that in the evening when Harry Boyce came back to
+the low tavern where he lodges--and he came, if you please, in a handsome
+coach--he was wearing the very clothes of the Pretender--aye, even to the
+hat and wig. I believe I have said enough, my lord. It will be plain to
+you that the fellow is very dangerous to the peace of the realm and our
+good and lawful king. If you lay hands on him, which I advise you to do
+swiftly, you will quench a treason which has us all in peril, and well
+deserve the favour of King George. For my own part I seek neither favour
+nor reward, desiring only to do my duty as a gentleman." Mr. Waverton
+concluded with a large bow in the flamboyant style.
+
+"Your name is Waverton?" Sunderland said coldly. Mr. Waverton was
+stupefied. That such eloquence should not raise a man's temperature! That
+he should not have made his name remembered! He remained dumb. "Pray when
+did you turn your coat?"
+
+"Turn my coat?" Mr. Waverton gasped.
+
+"You once professed yourself Jacobite. You went to France with a certain
+Colonel Boyce. You quarrelled with him because he was not Jacobite. Now
+you desire to get his son into trouble. You do not gain upon me, Mr.
+Waverton."
+
+"I can explain, my lord--"
+
+"Pray, spare me," says Sunderland. "You are not obscure. I see that you
+have a private grudge against the family of Boyce. Settle it in private,
+Mr. Waverton. It is more courageous."
+
+Mr. Waverton stared at him and began several repartees which were
+only begun.
+
+"I find you tiresome," Sunderland said. "I advise you, do not make me
+think of you again," and he struck his bell. But when Mr. Waverton was
+gone: "I fear he has not the spirit of a louse," my lord remarked to
+himself with a shrug.
+
+Thus Mr. Waverton's virtue was left to seek its own reward.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII
+
+IN THE TAP
+
+
+When Harry came back to his tavern, he was, you'll believe, not anxious
+to be seen. He made one step from the coach to the door, scurried through
+the tap and upstairs. But the coming of a coach, and a coach of some
+splendour, to the humble "Hand of Pork" had brought folks to the windows,
+and at the staircase window Harry bumped into his landlady, who gasped at
+him and began a "Save your lordship--" which ended in "God help us, it's
+Mr. Boyce."
+
+"Cook me a steak, Meg," Harry said, and went up the stairs three
+at a time.
+
+She screamed after him "Ha' you seen your letter? There's a letter for
+you in the tap."
+
+When Harry came down in his natural clothes, his best and one remaining
+suit, and shouted for his supper she was quarrelling with the potman and
+searching the shelves: "Meg, you villain--Meg, where's my steak?"
+
+"Lord love you, it's to the fire. I be looking for your letter. Ain't you
+had it now? Days it's been here, I swear, and I saw it again only this
+morning. By the black jar of usquebaugh it was, George, Od rot you."
+
+"Burn the letter," says Harry. "Go, bring me that steak, you slut."
+
+"Oh, God save you," Mrs. Meg cried in a pet, and so for Alison's letter
+there was no more search. But indeed they would not have found it.
+
+Harry, if he ever thought about it, supposed it one of the grumbling
+screeds of the bookseller for whom he scribbled and was glad to be rid of
+it so easily. But he was in no case to think usefully of anything. The
+amazement of his deliverance left him in a queer state of excited
+lassitude. His nerves were all tremulous, he must needs do everything
+vehemently, and felt the while as if he were being whirled along,
+passive, in the grip of some force outside himself One moment he was
+dreaming himself capable of miracles, the next he was limp with weariness
+and utterly impotent. And naturally, as soon as he had food inside him,
+weariness won and he was overwhelmed with great waves of languor. He
+hardly dragged himself up to his attic before he was asleep.
+
+When he woke, the world was grey. He could survey himself cynically and
+wonder why he had been such a fool as to be in a fluster overnight.
+Faith, it was a grand exploit to dabble in conspiracies and come out with
+your head still (for a while) on your shoulders. And that only by a turn
+of the luck, not any wit of his. Well! Neither winners nor losers would
+want more of the blundering offices of Mr. Harry Boyce. He was back again
+after his conversation with royalty--and royal breeches--a hack writer
+in his garret. And Alison as far away as ever. The wonderful Alison! The
+beauty of her flashed into his squalor. He felt her passionate life. Be
+hanged to Alison! Let the hack writer get to his writing.
+
+All that day he strove with the fluency of Ovid, and to this hour his
+labours, much flaccid verse, survive in a decent obscurity. It was late
+in the afternoon before he yielded to his growing disgust with the
+whinings of the Tristia and sought relief in the open air.
+
+There was not much movement in the air of Long Acre. The day had been
+warm and languorous, with heavy showers steaming up again in the sun.
+Clouds were darkening across the twilight for more rain. Harry turned off
+to stretch his legs and find some freer air across the fields by the
+Oxford road. But he was soon tired of them. The moist heat oppressed him
+still and lowering darkness across the sky threatened a storm. He had no
+desire for a wetting and an evening spent in the Pretender's clothes. He
+made for his tavern again by St. Martin's Lane and there came full upon
+his father.
+
+Colonel Boyce touched his hat. Harry touched his, gave him the wall
+and was going by. Then the Colonel laughed and caught his son's arm.
+"Well met, Harry. I was coming to seek you." (It's not known whether
+that was true.)
+
+"And I, sir--I had no notion of seeking you."
+
+"Fie, don't be haughty. I bear no malice."
+
+"Egad, sir, that's kind in you," Harry sneered and pushed on.
+
+Colonel Boyce linked arms with him. "Why, what's the matter? You
+went off with the honours. Od's heart, you left us like a pair of
+whipped dogs."
+
+"You've to thank yourself for that, sir. Not me."
+
+"No, zounds, you did very well. I profess I was proud of you, Harry."
+
+"Then I have to envy you."
+
+Colonel Boyce laughed. "You play that game well, you know. But sure, you
+need not play it all the time. No, but I never knew you could put on such
+an air, Harry. You carried it off _à merveille_. My lord was a
+whipper-snapper to you. I allow you were a thought too free of your wit.
+It's a young man's fault. But in the main you were admirable."
+
+"You make me uneasy," Harry said. "I hoped that I had quarrelled
+with you."
+
+"Oh Lud, Harry, why be so bitter? You have won, and sure you can afford
+to be civil. You have beat me and broken as pretty a plot as ever I knew.
+Why the devil should you snarl at me?"
+
+They were now turning into Long Acre and the coming storm had already
+brought darkness. Harry stopped and freed himself from his father's arm.
+"If you please, we'll have no more of this. I've no will to make an enemy
+of you. But if you seek to be friends, enemies we must be."
+
+"Why then? Harry, you are not so mad as to declare Jacobite now? It's a
+lost cause, boy. There's not a thing in it but noble hole-and-corner work
+and not a guinea for your pains. You--"
+
+"Aye, now we have it!" Harry laughed. "You want to be in my
+secrets. Sir, I'm obliged to you, and by your leave I'll
+discontinue your company."
+
+"I swear I wish you nothing but well," his father cried.
+
+"Dear sir, it's your good wishes that I dread. Pray cut me off without a
+blessing." He waved his hand to his father and strode off.
+
+For a moment Colonel Boyce looked after him--shrugged--went his way.
+
+So Harry walked alone upon his danger. He was near the tavern, he was
+passing the end of a court. From the blackness there men rushed upon him.
+They managed it well. He was almost borne down by the first onset, but
+hearing something in time, seeing a glimmer of steel, he swung aside and
+staggered back into the kennel slashing at them with his stick. They were
+borne past him by their vehemence, but he carried no sword and their
+swords were all about him. There was no hope. Two blades seared through
+his body and he fell.
+
+Colonel Boyce heard the clatter of ash and steel and turned at his
+leisure to look. It was a moment before he made out Harry in the midst
+of the mêlée. Then he shouted of help and threats and ran on with
+ready sword.
+
+He came too late. Harry was down and the dripping blades again at his
+body. Colonel Boyce had one fellow pinked before they were aware. The
+others bore upon him furiously and he was hard beset. He made a good
+fight--it's the best thing in his life--he understood the sword, and they
+were but hackers and hewers, they were in a mad hurry to finish him and
+he had a perfect calm. But he was hampered and overborne. He would not
+give ground for fear of more thrusts into the body at his feet, and they
+closed upon him and he could not break them.
+
+But now doors were opening and heads out of windows. From Harry's tavern
+a man came at a run. As Colonel Boyce reeled back with a point caught in
+his shoulder, gripping at the blade and thrusting at empty air, another
+sword shot into the fight. One man went down upon Harry's body. The other
+three broke off and bolted down the court by which they had come.
+
+"_Canaille_," says the deliverer mildly, and plucked at the cloak of the
+man he had overthrown to wipe his sword. "Is that a friend of yours
+underneath, sir?"
+
+"Egad, they have tickled me," quoth Colonel Boyce, feeling at his
+shoulder. "Pray, lend me your hand, sir."
+
+The deliverer looked him over without much sympathy: "And, egad, it's the
+ancient Boyce," he said. "Oh, you'll survive, _mon vieux_. Who is this in
+the mud?" He rolled his own victim, who groaned effusively, off Harry's
+body. "It's the boy, _mordieu_!" he cried.
+
+"In effect, Captain McBean, it's the boy," says Colonel Boyce, who was
+trying to fix a pad of handkerchief on his own wound.
+
+McBean was down on his knees beside Harry, handling him gently. "Twice
+through the body, by God," says he. "What does this mean, Boyce? Damme,
+did you set your fellows on him?"
+
+"I am not an imbecile," Colonel Boyce said fiercely, stared at McBean
+and laughed his contempt. Then with another manner, he turned to the
+little crowd which was mustered: "Bring me a shutter, good lads. We've a
+gentleman here much hurt. And some of you call the watch."
+
+McBean rose with bloody hands. "He has it I believe," he muttered.
+"Hark in your ear, Boyce. If this is your work, I'll see you dead, by
+God, I will."
+
+"Oh, damn your folly," says Colonel Boyce. "I struck in to help him. I
+know nothing who the knaves were. Your own tail, maybe."
+
+"Aye, aye," McBean looked at him queerly. "You would say that. Well,
+maybe this rogue can speak. He groans loud enough." Down he dropped again
+by his victim to cry out "Ben! You filthy rogue! Ben! Who a plague set
+you to this business?"
+
+"Oh, you've found a friend, then?" Colonel Boyce sneered.
+
+The man who groaned was Harry's old friend, Ben the fat highwayman of the
+North Road. He rolled his eyes and made hoarse, grievous noises.
+"Captain! Lord love you, captain, I didn't know you was in it. Oh, gad,
+and you ha' been the death o' me,'
+
+"I shall be if you lie," quoth McBean. "You rogue, who set you on
+Mr. Boyce?"
+
+"How would I know he was a friend of yours? 'Twas a squire out of
+Hornsey. Squire Waverton of Tetherdown. Paying handsome to have him
+downed. Oh, gad, captain, don't be hard. I ha' had no luck since you
+turned me off."
+
+Now the constables came running up and Colonel Boyce turned to them:
+"Secure that fellow. He and some others which have escaped stabbed my
+son who lies there. I am Colonel Boyce at the Blue House in St.
+Martin's Lane."
+
+The wretched Ben was haled off, groaning.
+
+Harry, lifeless still and bleeding, for all McBean's work, they lifted
+and carried away to his father's lodging.
+
+"What's your Waverton in this, sir?" says McBean.
+
+"The silly gentleman wanted Harry's wife. Egad, I never thought he had so
+much gall in him."
+
+"I believe I'll be letting some of it out," says McBean.
+
+"You'll be pleased to leave that to me," quoth Colonel Boyce.
+
+McBean looked up at him oddly. "_Ventrebleu_, I wonder if I'll make you
+my apologies. Have you bowels after all, sir?"
+
+"You're impertinent."
+
+"If you like." McBean cocked a wicked eye at him.
+
+"You concern yourself with the affairs of my family. I resent it,
+Captain McBean."
+
+"I believe you, _mon vieux_."
+
+"You have done me a notable service to-night and I am ready to forget
+the older injuries, your ill offices with my son. Let us call quits and
+part, sir."
+
+"It won't do," said McBean with a grin.
+
+"What now, sir?"
+
+"I must know how Harry does and make sure that he has the best there is
+for him. Surgery and friends--he will need both, sound and sure."
+
+"Be satisfied. I shall well provide him."
+
+Captain McBean shook his head.
+
+"Damn your infernal impudence." Colonel Boyce's temper gave way. "Od's
+life, sir, this is infamous. You put upon me that I would mishandle my
+own son as he lies wounded and near death! I shall murder him, I
+suppose. You had that against me before. Shall I rob him too, or
+torture him maybe? This is raving. Carry it where you will, I'll none
+of it. You may go."
+
+"Fie, what a heat!" says McBean placidly.
+
+They were now come to Colonel Boyce's lodging and he bade the bearers
+take Harry up to his own room.
+
+"I sent a brisk lad for Rolfe," says McBean. "I could but stop the blood.
+He'll be here soon enough. It's but a step to Chancery Lane. He knows
+more of wounds than any man in the town."
+
+Colonel Boyce was for a moment speechless. "I shall send for Dr.
+Radcliffe and Sir Samuel Garth," says he majestically. "I wish you good
+night, sir."
+
+"I believe they have sense enough to do no harm," said McBean. "And now,
+Boyce, a word with you. Not in the street."
+
+"I don't desire it, sir," which McBean answered by passing in front of
+him into the house. Colonel Boyce came after, fuming. "Egad, sir, you
+presume upon my wound," he cried. "You--"
+
+"Not I. Patch yourself up and I'll meet you at your convenience. There's
+more urgent matter. When the boy comes to himself--if ever he comes to
+himself--I must have speech of him."
+
+Colonel Boyce, who now completely commanded himself, had grown very pale.
+"You have gone too far, Captain McBean. I desired to forget that I have
+you in my power. You force me to use it. If you thrust yourself upon me I
+shall have you arrested as a traitor."
+
+McBean flushed. "Odso, then there is some villainy of yours in the
+affair! Devil take you, I have a mind to finish you now, a wounded man as
+you are." He had his hand on his sword.
+
+"Will you go, sir?"
+
+"Not I. If you ha' murdered him, you"--he slapped his sword home
+again--"no, _mordieu_, I can't touch you so. And you may meddle with me
+if you dare."
+
+"Oh, you have a great devotion to the boy," Colonel Boyce sneered with
+pallid lips. "You would have him deeper dipped in your mad treasons? I
+think you have done him harm enough." He struck his bell.
+
+"Harm?" McBean cried. "Is it harm? You that begat him for the heir to
+your damned infamy? You that soured him with your husk of a soul and your
+cold cunning? You that made a dirt-heap of his life to suit your muddling
+need? You--"
+
+But Colonel Boyce swayed in his seat and fell sideways fainting.
+
+A moment McBean surveyed him as if he thought this too a trick. Then,
+"_Ventrebleu_" says he, "here's Providence takes a hand," and he
+whistled, and it is not to be denied that he looked covetously at the
+cabinet which held Colonel Boyce's papers. "The poor old devil," he said
+with a shrug. "He grows old, in fact. I suppose there's more blood in his
+shirt now than his damned body," and he knelt down and began to feel
+about the wound.
+
+He was at that when a woman announced the surgeon. "Mr. Rolfe? Never more
+welcome. Here's old Colonel Boyce with a hole in his shoulder, and young
+Mr. Boyce with two holes through and through. A street brawl. Pray go up,
+sir, the lad's in bad case."
+
+"Faith, it's Captain McBean," says Rolfe, a brisk, big man, as they shook
+hands. "What have you to do with Noll Boyce?"
+
+"A friend of the family," says McBean. "Away with you to the lad;" and he
+knelt again and ministered to the unconscious Colonel. "A friend of the
+family, old gentleman," says he with a grin.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIX
+
+ALISON KNEELS
+
+
+So all this while Alison lacked an answer to her letter. She fretted at
+the delay, she grew angry soon, but it does not appear that she allowed
+herself any new pique against Harry. She was angry with circumstance,
+with herself, and something much more than angry with Mr. Waverton. It
+was detestable of Geoffrey to dare spy and plot against Harry,
+intolerable in him to suppose that she would favour the villainy. But she
+had been a fool and worse to give him any chance of insulting her so. And
+yet she might have hoped that her letter--sure, she had been humble
+enough in it--that her letter would bring Harry back in a hurry. It was
+maddening that some trick of circumstance should have kept it from him or
+him from her. For she had no notion that he would read the letter and
+toss it aside or delay to come. There was nothing petty about Mr. Harry,
+no spite. Nothing of the woman in him, thank God.
+
+What had happened that he gave her no answer? For certain the letter had
+gone safely to the tavern. She could be sure of her servant. Harry was
+living at the tavern. The people there gave assurance of that. It was
+strange that he made no sign. The servant, indeed, had waited for an
+answer late into the night and seen nothing of him. Perhaps he had
+discovered Geoffrey's spies and gone into hiding. It would be like
+Geoffrey to devise some mighty cunning villainy and so manage it that it
+was futile. Perhaps Harry really was at some secret politics, captured
+again by his father and sent off to France, or too deep in some matter of
+danger to show himself. Perhaps--perhaps a thousand things, so that she
+made no doubt of Harry. He would not deny her when she came seeking him.
+
+She had no fear either. Her nature could not imagine perils or disasters.
+There was too proud a force in her life for her to admit a dread of being
+defeated. Her man must live and be safe, because she needed him. Harry
+could not fail her. But she was desperately impatient. She wanted him
+every instant, and even more she wanted to stand before him and accuse
+herself, confess herself. For the truth is that Geoffrey Waverton had
+profoundly affected her. When she found Geoffrey daubing her with
+patronizing congratulations, when he dared to claim her as ally in mean
+tricks against her husband, she discovered that she must be miserably in
+the wrong. Approved by Geoffrey, annexed, used by Geoffrey--faith, she
+must have sunk very low before he could dare venture so with her. She
+received illumination. She saw herself in the wrong first and last, the
+sole sufficient cause of their catastrophe, a petty mean creature,
+snarling and spiteful and passionate for trivialities--just like
+Geoffrey, just such a creature as she hated most. Pride and honour
+instantly demanded that she must seek Harry, indict herself and read her
+recantation. She needed that, longed for it, and to satisfy herself, not
+him. It is possible that she then began to love.
+
+So monsieur must be found instantly, instantly. When she thought of all
+her tale of sins, she must needs think also of Mrs. Weston. Poor Weston
+had enough against her too--Weston--his mother. It still seemed almost
+incredible that poor, grey, puritan Weston should be mother to Harry. But
+if she was indeed, she might know something of him. At least, it would be
+good to make peace with her again; it was necessary. And so on the day
+that Harry fell, Mrs. Alison marched off to the little cottage behind the
+High Street.
+
+It was a room that opened straight from the path, and it seemed very
+full. Susan was sitting there, who was now Susan Hadley. Her fair
+placidity admitted no surprise. She smiled and said, "Alison!"
+
+Mrs. Weston stood up in a queer frozen fluster. "What do you need,
+ma'am?" says she.
+
+"Oh, Weston, dear, don't take me so," Alison cried, and she edged her way
+between the little table and the stiff chairs, holding out her hands.
+
+Mrs. Weston flushed. "Your servant, ma'am," says she with a curtsy, but
+she ignored the hands.
+
+Then Susan stood up. "I must go, I believe," she smiled, and bent to
+offer one fair cheek to Mrs. Weston. The other was then given to Alison.
+She smiled upon them both benignly and made for the door.
+
+"Susan! You'll dine with me to-morrow," Alison put in.
+
+"Oh. Mr. Hadley will be at home."
+
+"But of course you bring him."
+
+"Thank you then." The door shut behind her, and the room was larger.
+
+"I can't tell why you have come," says Mrs. Weston tremulously.
+
+"To say I was wrong and I'm sorry. Oh, Weston, dear, to say I have been a
+peevish wicked fool."
+
+Mrs. Weston sat down again. "Where is Harry?" she said.
+
+"I have writ to him to beg him come back to me."
+
+"I am asking you to come back to us."
+
+"You--"
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"Ah, you don't know then?"
+
+"I have not seen him since he left your house."
+
+"He has been living at a tavern in the Long Acre. I have made sure of
+that, and I wrote to him there. But he has not answered me. He does not
+answer me. I can't tell if he has gone away."
+
+"Where is his father?" Mrs. Weston asked quickly.
+
+"His father? Colonel Boyce? Oh, Weston! Colonel Boyce is his
+father, then?"
+
+"Did you come to pry?" Mrs. Weston flushed.
+
+"I do not deserve that," Alison said, and then very gently, "Oh, my dear,
+but I have been cruel enough to you."
+
+"It's very well," Mrs. Weston said faintly. "Where is Colonel Boyce?"
+
+"I know nothing. Does it matter, Weston, dear? He cannot help us
+to Harry."
+
+"I am afraid of him. Oh, it's all wrong maybe. I am so weak and stupid.
+But I am afraid what he may do with Harry."
+
+"Indeed, I think Mr. Harry can keep his head even against Colonel Boyce,"
+Alison smiled.
+
+"His head?" Mrs. Weston looked puzzled. "I don't mean that, I believe. I
+am afraid he may win Harry to be like himself. He is so clever and
+dazzling, and he is full of wickedness. He cares for nothing but his own
+will and to have power. When I saw him so friendly with Harry I thought I
+should have died."
+
+"My poor Weston," Alison said gently. "But I am not afraid of that. Mr.
+Harry won't be dazzled."
+
+"You dazzled him."
+
+"Oh, and am I full of wickedness too?" Alison laughed. "Dear,
+forgive me."
+
+"No, but you are strong and hard as his father was."
+
+Alison drew in her breath. "I shall teach you not to call me that,
+Weston," she said. "And Harry--well, Harry shall find me for him."
+
+There was silence for a while, and Alison watched with new emotions the
+tired, wistful face. "Weston, dear, I want you to come back to me. I want
+Mr. Harry to find you with me when he comes home."
+
+Mrs. Weston cried out, "He does not know who I am!" in anxious fear, and
+clutched at Alison's hand.
+
+"No, indeed. But he loves you already, I think."
+
+"But I do not want him to know," Mrs. Weston cried. "I--I was not married
+to Colonel Boyce."
+
+"Weston, dear," Alison pressed the hand.
+
+"I lived at Kingston. My father reared us strictly. He was harsh. I think
+that was because my mother died so young. Mr. Boyce--he was a gentleman
+in the Blues then, and very fine, much gayer than Harry and more
+handsome. He used to ride out to Hampton Court to an old cousin of his,
+who had a charge at the Palace. He met me one day by the river. I don't
+know why he set himself upon me. I was never much to his taste, I think.
+But I thought him the most wonderful man in the world. I let him do what
+he would with me. I don't blame him for that. He never promised me
+anything. In a while he grew tired. Then Harry came. My father could not
+forgive me. Afterwards they said that I had killed him. Harry was born. I
+lay very ill and they believed that I should die. I never knew whether it
+was my father or my brother sent for Mr. Boyce. My brother boasted
+afterwards that it was he made him relieve them of the baby. And I--I did
+not die, you know. When I began to be well again my baby was gone. My
+father lay dying then. He would not see me. My brother was the head of
+the family, and he--I could not stay there. I tried to find Mr. Boyce,
+but he had left the regiment. He had gone to Holland, they said, after
+the Duke of Monmouth. I could do nothing. And my brother had told me that
+Mr. Boyce would soon find a way to be rid of my baby. I--I believed that
+he had. I never saw Harry again till--you know. I never saw his father
+till that day at Lady Waverton's. He told me afterwards that they had
+said to him I was dying, and he supposed me dead. I believe that is
+true. He would not have troubled himself with the child else."
+
+"Oh, Weston, dear," Alison murmured, and caressed her.
+
+Mrs. Weston pushed back the hair from her wrinkled brow. "Mr. Boyce
+promised me that Harry need know nothing of me now. I do not know if he
+has kept his word about that."
+
+"There's nothing about Harry that is not safe with me," Alison said. "Oh,
+my dear, now I know where Harry has his strength from and his
+gentleness."
+
+Mrs. Weston looked at her in a puzzled fashion. "I wonder what he is
+doing now?" she said wearily. "I think I have told you everything,
+Alison. Oh! Your father. Your father was very kind to me. When I did not
+know what to do--I had no money left--they gave me five pounds--I went to
+him. He used to come to my father's house, you know, when he had business
+in Kingston. He used to go all over the country about his trading. My
+father said he was a godless man, but he was always kind to me. I told
+him everything. He took me into his house, and indeed I did not know
+where to go for food. I was your mother's servant while she lived, but I
+think she doubted me. Your father never told her anything, and she--but
+she let me be."
+
+"Oh, Weston, Weston," Alison said. "And you have spent all your life
+caring for me."
+
+"There was nothing else to do. But I was glad to do that." She looked
+at the girl with strange, puzzled, wistful eyes and saw Alison's eyes
+full of tears. She put out her hand shyly, awkwardly, and touched
+Alison's cheek.
+
+Alison smiled, laughed with a sob in her voice. "It is a long while since
+I cried," she said, and put her arms round Mrs. West on and laid her head
+on Mrs. Weston's bosom and cried indeed.
+
+Mrs. Weston held her close. "Alison! But this isn't like you."
+
+"Indeed it is," Alison sobbed.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXX
+
+EMOTIONS BY MR. WAVERTON
+
+
+You behold Mr. Waverton exhibiting a high impatience. He was alone in the
+best room of the "Peacock" at Islington, a well-looking place after its
+severe old oak fashion. Disordered food upon the table showed that Mr.
+Waverton had been trying to eat with little success. Mr. Waverton's hat
+upon one chair, his whip upon another, and his cloak tumbled inelegantly
+over a third proved that he was not himself. For he was born to treat his
+clothes with respect. Mr. Waverton would be jumping up to look out of the
+window, flounce down again in his chair to drink wine and stare with
+profound meaning at the table, start up and stride to the hearth and
+glower down at its emptiness--and repeat the motions in a different
+order. He must be theatrical even without an audience.
+
+But he had some excuse for his uneasiness. It was the evening of his
+conversation with my Lord Sunderland, and that fiasco had stimulated him,
+you know, to a grand exploit. He was waiting for news of it.
+
+The twilight darkened early. Mr. Waverton pushed the window open wider,
+and leaned out only to come in again in a hurry as if he were afraid of
+being seen. The room was close, and he wiped his large brow and flung
+himself down and drank. There was a dull sound of thunder rolling far
+away. In a little while came the beat of rain--slow, big drops. That was
+soon over. Then lightning stabbed into the room, and the storm broke.
+
+Candles were brought to Mr. Waverton's petulant appeal, and an excited
+maid-servant bustled and blundered over clearing his table with pious
+invocations at each thunder-clap. She fretted Mr. Waverton, who
+admonished her and made her worse.
+
+Upon him and her there came a man cloaked from heel to eye, streaming
+rain from every angle. He shook a shower from his hat. "Hell! What a
+night," says he, breathless. "Save you, squire!"
+
+"Begone, girl! Begone, I say. Od's life, leave us, do you hear?" says Mr.
+Waverton, in much agitation.
+
+"Bring us a noggin of rum, Sukey, darling," says the wet gentleman,
+dragging himself out of his sodden cloak. He flung it upon Mr.
+Waverton's.
+
+"Run, girl!" says Mr. Waverton, in a terrible voice. "Go, you fool." He
+advanced upon her, and she stopped gaping, and got herself out with a
+great clatter of crockery.
+
+"Od burn and blast it! I want it," says the wet gentleman, and collapsed
+into a chair. "I believe you, squire. I want it."
+
+"What is the news with you?" Mr. Waverton said.
+
+"Od's bones, ha' you got the megs? The megs, I say. Oh, rot you, the
+ready, the hundred guineas?"
+
+"Is it done then?" Mr. Waverton's voice dropped.
+
+"Out with the cole, burn you."
+
+Mr. Waverton put a bag of money down on the table. The man snatched at
+it, tore it open, and began to count. "Is it done, Ned, I say?" Mr.
+Waverton cried.
+
+Ned showed some broken teeth. "I believe you, by God. He has it. He's
+dead meat. Two irons through and through his guts."
+
+Mr. Waverton flung back in his chair. "How then?" he said, in a low
+voice. "Ned--was it in fight? You brought him into a fight?" Ned went
+on counting the guineas, and sometimes tried one in his yellow teeth.
+"Oh, have done with that!" Mr. Waverton cried. "They come straight
+from my goldsmith, man. Tell me--you said you would force a fight on
+him. Did he--"
+
+"Lay your life!" Ned grinned. "There was a fight, sure. Old Ben knows
+that, by God. Aye, aye, you're fond of fighting ain't you, squire?"
+
+"I fight with gentlemen, sirrah," says Mr. Waverton. "For such base
+rogues as this fellow, I must provide otherwise."
+
+"Provide my breeches!" says Ned coarsely, and swept up his money.
+"Where's that damned rum?"
+
+"You may take it in the tap." Mr. Waverton rose. "Nay, she'll bring it.
+Nay, but, Ned--how did he take it?"
+
+"Rot you, how would you take an iron in your gizzard?"
+
+"He said nothing?"
+
+"Now, stap me, do you think we waited for him to say his prayers?"
+
+"Prayers!" says Mr. Waverton grandly, "They would little avail him."
+
+"Well now, burn me, you're a saint yourself, ain't you?"
+
+The rum arrived, and the servant, with frightened eyes upon the
+bedraggled Ned, went stumbling out of the room again. "You are
+impertinent, sirrah," says Mr. Waverton. "The fellow well deserved his
+end. I may tell you that I was advised to deal with him thus privately by
+a noble lord in high place."
+
+"Then it's worth more than a hundred megs."
+
+"You have your pay, I believe. I am satisfied with you."
+
+"Damn your airs," says Ned, but something awed by this parade. "Well, I
+must quit."
+
+"It is better," Mr. Waverton agreed.
+
+"Oh! There was a letter for my gentleman at his tavern. We pouched that
+while we were waiting for him. D'ye care for it? It's a pretty, tender
+thing. I reckon it's cheap for another five pieces."
+
+"You are a scoundrel," said Mr. Waverton, and tossed another guinea on
+the table.
+
+"Pot to you," says Ned, but slapped down the letter. "Well, I'll march.
+Maybe you'll have some more in my way. I won't forget you, squire," and
+out he went.
+
+Mr. Waverton, left alone, fingered the letter contemptuously. His great
+mind was indeed possessed by thoughts of victory. He had hated Harry
+rarely with the chief count in his enmity that Harry was a low fellow,
+hireling, menial. He could have borne defeat with some grace, he might
+even have sought no revenge for being made ridiculous, if the offender
+had been of a higher station than his own. But such insolence from a
+pauper! The fellow must needs be crushed like an insect. Only such
+ignominious extinction could satisfy Mr. Waverton's dignity. He inclined
+to despise himself for a shadow of human concern about the manner of
+Harry's death. Faith, it was an extravagance of chivalry to desire that
+the rogue should have had a chance to fight--that generous chivalry which
+had ever been his bane. He felt nothing but exultation at the issue. The
+wretched creature had been properly punished--stamped out by knaves of
+his own class in a vulgar street brawl--a dirty hole-and-corner end.
+Egad, my lord was very right. These petty, shabby knaves should be dealt
+with privately. Mr. Waverton found revenge very sweet.
+
+So Mr. Harry Boyce had gone to his account, and Alison was happily
+delivered. Dear child! Mr. Waverton felt a pleasant warmth of heroism
+steal over him, felt himself a knight-errant rescuing his lady from the
+powers of darkness. Dear Alison! She was free now. To be sure, she need
+not be told the manner of the deliverance. That would be an outrage on
+her delicacy. Enough for her that the cunning wretch who had cozened her
+was dead, and she a happy widow. She had but to show a pretty penitence,
+and Mr. Waverton proposed to be magnanimous. The prospect much pleased
+him. He saw himself grandly accepting her; permitting her to be very
+tender; wittily, but with a touch of magnificence, restraining her from
+too much humility....
+
+He came out of this golden dream in the end, and was conscious again of
+the letter, and sneered at it. A nasty, infected thing, to be sure,
+damp and filthy from Ned's handling. What was it the fellow said? A
+tender composition? Pah, some blowsy paramour of the knave Boyce. But,
+perhaps it would be well that Alison should know the fellow had
+paramours in his own class. She ought to be made to feel how low she
+had sunk by yielding to him.
+
+Mr. Waverton opened the letter and saw Alison's writing:
+
+"MR. BOYCE,--I desire that you would come to me at Highgate. I have
+to-day heard from Geoffrey Waverton what you must instantly know. And the
+truth is, I cannot be content till I speak with you. But I would not have
+you come for this my asking. Pray, believe it is urgent for us both that
+we meet, and I do require it of you, not desiring of you what you may
+have no mind to, but to be honest with you, and lest that should befall
+which I hope you would not have me bear.
+
+"A."
+
+Mr. Waverton read with swelling eyes.
+
+It was a little while before the meaning came home to him. He was never
+quick. Then (a sin to which he was not prone) he used oaths. The
+treacherous, besotted woman! She was still craving for her shabby lover,
+then. She offered a fair face to her too generous, too faithful Mr.
+Waverton, only to obtain his confidence and betray him again. Egad, she
+was too base. Rotten at the very heart of her. Why, some women must lust
+after a low, common fellow, as dogs after dirt. So she would have saved
+her Boyce from his master's punishment? Mr. Waverton laughed. She would
+have had him back in her arms again? Mr. Waverton continued to laugh.
+
+But faith, she went too far when she tried to trick Mr. Waverton a second
+time. Much she had gained by her treachery. Her fine husband was out of
+her reach now. It would be a pleasure to advise her of his death. Nay,
+faith, a duty. The miserable creature had been saved from herself. She
+must be shown that--oh delicately, with something of a cold grandeur, a
+touch of irony maybe, but always in a lofty manner as became one who
+moved upon heights far above her grovelling soul. Mr. Waverton, for all
+his high irony, rode back home through the dregs of the storm very
+furiously.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXI
+
+CAPTAIN McBEAN TAKES HORSE
+
+
+Captain McBean, healthily red and brown, showed no sign of having been
+out of bed all night. From cold water and a razor in his own lodgings he
+came back at a round pace to St. Martin's Lane. He found his aide, Mr.
+Mackenzie, taking the air on the doorstep of the Blue House, and rebuked
+him. "I bade ye bide with the lad, Donald."
+
+"The surgeon has him in hand, sir."
+
+"_Tiens_. He's a brisk fellow, that Rolfe."
+
+"I'm thinking Mr. Boyce will need him."
+
+"Eh, is there anything new?"
+
+"I would not say so. But he's sore hurt. And I'm thinking he takes it
+hard."
+
+"Aye, you're the devil of a thinker, Donald." Captain McBean grinned.
+"And the Colonel, has he made a noise?"
+
+"He's in the way of calling for liquors, but he's peaceable, the
+women say."
+
+"You'll go get your breakfast and be back again. And bring O'Connor with
+you. I'll hope to need the two of you." Captain McBean relieved guard on
+the doorstep till the surgeon came down. "I'm obliged to you, Mr. Rolfe.
+What do you make of him?"
+
+"Egad, Captain, you're devoted. Why, the old gentleman has put in for
+some fever, but I doubt he will do well enough."
+
+"Be sure of it. What of the young one?"
+
+Mr. Rolfe pursed his lip. "Faith, there's no more amiss. But--but--why,
+he was hard hit, I grant you--but you might take the young one for the
+old one. D'ye follow me? The lad hath no vigour in him."
+
+McBean nodded. "I'll be talking to him, by your leave."
+
+"Od's life, I would not talk long. I don't like it, Captain, and there's
+the truth. Go easy with him. I will be here again to-day."
+
+Captain McBean went up to the room where Harry lay as white as his
+pillows. A woman was feeding him out of a cup. "You made it damned salt,
+your broth," says Harry, in a feeble disgust.
+
+"'Tis what you lack, look you." Captain McBean sat himself on the bed and
+took the cup and waved the woman off. "'Tis the natural, hale salinity
+and the sanguineous part which you lose by a wound, and for lack of it
+you are thus faint. Therefore we do ever administer great possets of salt
+to the wounded, and--"
+
+"And pickle me before I be dead," says Harry. "Be hanged to your jargon."
+
+"You'll take another sup, my lad, if I hold your long nose to it. And you
+may suck your orange after."
+
+Harry made a wry face, swallowed a mouthful and lay back out of breath.
+After a while, "You were here all night, weren't you?" he said.
+
+"I am body physician to the family of Boyce, _mon brave_."
+
+"My father?"
+
+"Has a hole in his shoulder, praise God, and a damned paternal temper. He
+will do well enough."
+
+"How do you come into it?" McBean grinned. "Who were they?"
+
+"I am here to talk to you, _mon cher_. You will not talk to me, for it is
+disintegrating to your tissues. _Allons_, compose yourself and attend.
+Now I come into it, if you please, out of gratitude. Mr. Boyce--I have it
+in command from His Majesty to present you with his thanks for very
+gallant and faithful service."
+
+"Oh, the boy got off then?"
+
+"King James is returned to France, sir," says McBean with dignity.
+"Look 'e, tie up your tongue. His Majesty charged me to put this in
+your hands and to advise you that he would ever have in memory your
+resource and spirit and your loyalty. Which I do with a great
+satisfaction, Mr. Boyce."
+
+Harry fingered a pretty toy of a watch circled with diamonds, and wrought
+with a monogram in diamonds and sapphires. "Poor lad," says he.
+
+"It's his own piece and was his father's, I believe. _Pardieu_, sir,
+there's many will envy you."
+
+Harry's head went back on its pillows. "It's a queer taste."
+
+"Mr. Boyce, you may count upon it that when His Majesty is established in
+power, he--"
+
+"He will have as bad a memory as the rest of his family. Bah, what does
+it matter? You are talking of the millennium."
+
+"You will talk, will you?" says McBean. "I'll gag you, _mordieu_, if you
+answer me back again. Come, sirrah, you know the King better. It's a
+noble, generous lad. So leave the Whiggish sneers to your father. So much
+for that. Now, _mon ami_, you have put me under a great obligation. It
+was a rare piece of work, and to be frank, I did not think you had it in
+you. But I did count upon you as a gentleman of high honour, and,
+_pardieu_, I count myself very fortunate I applied to you. I speak for my
+party, Mr. Boyce, when I thank you and promise you any service of mine."
+
+Harry mumbled something like, "Damn your eloquence."
+
+But McBean was not to be put off. "You will like to know that the King
+when he was quit of Marlborough--egad, the old villain hath been a
+gentleman in this business--made straight for me and was instant that I
+should concern myself for you. I held it my first duty to get His Majesty
+out of the country. Between ourselves, I was never in love with this plan
+of palace trickery and Madame Anne. But the thing was offered us, and we
+could not show the white feather. _Bien_, His Majesty took assurance from
+Marlborough of your safety, so I had no great alarm for you. I could not
+be aware of your private feuds. But now, _mordieu_, I make them my own. I
+promise you, it touches me nearly that you should be hacked down, and
+egad, before my eyes."
+
+Harry tried to raise himself and said eagerly, "Who was in it? Who
+were they?"
+
+Captain McBean responded with some more of the salt broth. "Now I'll
+confess that I had some doubts of your father. As soon as I was back in
+London I made haste to find you. I was waiting at that tavern of yours
+when I heard the scuffle. You were down before I could reach you, and
+there was your father fighting across you most heroical. Faith, I did not
+know the old gentleman had it in him. He had pinked one, I believe, but
+he is slow, and they were too many for him. He took it badly in the
+shoulder as I came. But they were not workmen. I put one out at the first
+thrust, and the rogues would not stand. I tickled one in the ham as he
+ran, but missed the sinew in his fat. So it ended. Now I'll confess I did
+the old gentleman a wrong. I guessed the business might be one of his
+damned superfine plots. It would be like him to have you finished while
+he made a brag of fighting for you. But I was wrong. _Mordieu_, I believe
+he has a kindness for you, Harry."
+
+"What?" says Harry, startled by the name.
+
+"Oh, _mon ami_, you must let me be kindly too. Egad, you command my
+emotions, sir. No, the old gentleman hath his humanity. He would have
+died for you, Harry, and faith he is so rheumatic he nearly did. No, it
+was not he played this damned game. Who d'ye think it was that I put on
+his back? That rascal Ben--you remember Ben of the North Road? I put the
+villain to the question who set him on you. _Bien_ he was hired to it by
+that fine fellow Waverton."
+
+"Geoffrey!" Harry gasped.
+
+"Even so. Now, Harry, what has Master Geoffrey Waverton against you? If
+he wanted to murder your father I could understand it. That affair at
+Pontoise is matter enough for a life or two. Though he should take it
+gentlemanly. But why must he murder you?"
+
+"I am not dead yet," said Harry, and his mouth set.
+
+Captain McBean laughed. "Not by fifty year:" and he contemplated Harry's
+pale drawn face with benign approval. "But why does Mr. Waverton want you
+dead now?"
+
+"That's my affair," said Harry.
+
+"_Enfin_." Captain McBean shrugged, with a twist of the lip and a cock
+of the eye.
+
+"Is there more of that broth?" says Harry.
+
+Captain McBean administered it. "I go get another cup, Harry." He nodded
+and went out.
+
+His two aides, Mackenzie and O'Connor, were waiting below. "Donald, go
+up. The same orders. None but Rolfe is to come to him without you
+stand by. And shorten your damned long face, if you can. Patrick, we
+take horse."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXII
+
+PERPLEXITIES OF CAPTAIN McBEAN
+
+
+Captain McBean and Mr. O'Connor halted steaming horses before the door of
+Tetherdown. The butler announced that Mr. Waverton had gone out, and then
+impressed by the evidence of haste and the martial elegance of McBean,
+suggested that my lady might receive the gentleman.
+
+"How? The animal has a mother?" says Me Bean in French, and shrugged and
+beckoned the butler closer. "Now, my friend, could you make a guess where
+I should look for Mr. Waverton?" and money passed.
+
+"Sir, Mr. Waverton rides over sometimes to the Hall at Highgate. Miss
+Lam--Mrs. Boyce's house;" the butler looked knowing.
+
+"Mrs. Boyce? Eh, is that Colonel Boyce's lady?"
+
+The butler smiled discreetly. "No, sir, to be sure. Young Boyce--young
+Mr. Boyce, sir."
+
+Captain McBean wheeled round in such a hurry that the butler was almost
+overthrown. They clattered off.
+
+It was not till they were riding through the wood that McBean spoke:
+"Patrick, my man, would you say that Harry Boyce is the man to marry
+wisely and well?"
+
+"Faith, I believe he would not be doing anything wisely. That same is
+his charm."
+
+"_Tiens_, it begins now to be ugly. Why must the boy be married at all,
+_mordieu_?"
+
+"It will be in his nature," says O'Connor. "And likely to a shrew."
+
+"If that were all! Ah, bah, they shall have no satisfaction in it. But no
+more will I..."
+
+There were at the Hall two women who had almost become calm by mingling
+their distress and their tears. It's believed that they slept in each
+other's arms, and slept well enough. In the morning another messenger was
+sent off to the Long Acre tavern. If he came back with no news it was
+agreed they should move into town. They said no more of their fears. Each
+had some fancy that she was putting on a brave face for the other's sake.
+There is no doubt that they found the stress easier to bear for
+consciousness of each other's endurance.
+
+So Mr. Hadley and his Susan were received by an atmosphere of gentle
+peace. Much to Mr. Hadley's surprise, who would complain that venture
+into Alison's house was much like a post over against the Irish Brigade;
+for a man never knew how she would break out upon him, but could count
+upon it that she would be harassing.
+
+"We are so glad," says Susan.
+
+"She loves to march her prisoner through the town. It's a simple,
+brutish taste."
+
+"Oh. I am so, I believe," says Susan, and contemplated Mr. Hadley with
+placid satisfaction.
+
+"She is too honest for you, Mr. Hadley," Alison said.
+
+"Oh Lud, yes, ma'am. The mass of her overwhelms me, and it's all plain
+virtue--a heavy, solemn thing. Look you, Susan, you embarrass madame with
+your revelations."
+
+"It is curious. He is always ill at ease when I am with him."
+
+"Because you make me tedious, child."
+
+"That's your vanity, Mr. Hadley." Alison tried to keep in tune with them.
+
+"Look you, Susan, I am cashiered by marriage. Once I was Charles. Now I
+am without honour."
+
+"Mr. Geoffrey Waverton," quoth the butler.
+
+Alison's hand went to her breast and she was white.
+
+"Dear Geoffrey!" Mr. Hadley murmured. "I do not know when last I saw dear
+Geoffrey," and he turned a sardonic face to the door.
+
+Susan leaned forward. "Alison, dear--if you choose--" she began in
+a whisper.
+
+"Sit still," Alison muttered. "Stay, stay."
+
+Mr. Waverton came in with measured pomp, stopped short and surveyed the
+company and at last made his bow. "Madame, your most obedient. I fear
+that I come untimely."
+
+Alison could not find her voice, so it was Mr. Hadley who answered, "Lud,
+Geoffrey dear, you're never out of season: like mutton."
+
+"I give Mrs. Hadley joy," says Geoffrey. "Such wit must be rare company."
+
+Alison was staring at him. "You have something to say to me? You may
+speak out. There are no secrets here."
+
+"Is it so, faith? Egad, what friendship! But you have always been
+fortunate. And in fact I bring you news of more fortune. You are free
+of your Mr. Boyce, ma'am. You are done with him. He has been picked up
+dead." He smiled at Alison, Alison white and still and dumb. Mrs.
+Weston gave a cry and fell back in her chair and her fingers plucked at
+her dress.
+
+Mr. Hadley strode across and stood very close to Geoffrey. "Take care,"
+says he in a low voice.
+
+"Well. Tell all your story," Alison said.
+
+"They found him lying in the kennel in Long Acre," Geoffrey smiled. "Oh,
+there was some brawl, it seems. He was set upon by his tavern cronies in
+a quarrel about a wench he had. A very proper end."
+
+"Geoffrey, you are a cur," says Mr. Hadley in his ear.
+
+"You are lying," Alison cried.
+
+Mr. Waverton laughed and waved his hand. "Oh, ma'am, you are a chameleon.
+The other day you desired nothing better than monsieur's demise. Now at
+the news of it you grow venomous. I vow I cannot keep pace with your
+changes. I must withdraw from your intimacy. 'Tis too exacting for my
+poor vigour. Madame, your most humble."
+
+"Not yet," Alison cried.
+
+"Let him go, ma'am," Mr. Hadley broke in sharply. "Go home, sirrah.
+You'll not wait long before you hear from me."
+
+"From which hand?" Geoffrey flicked at the empty sleeve. "Nay, faith, it
+suits madame well, the left-handed champion."
+
+Mr. Hadley turned on his heel. "Pray, ma'am, leave us. This is become
+my affair."
+
+"I have not done with him yet," Alison said.
+
+But the door was opened for the servant to say: "Captain Hector McBean,
+Mr. Patrick O'Connor," and with a clank of spurs and something of a
+military swagger the little man and the long man marched in.
+
+Captain McBean swept a glance round the room.
+
+"So," says he with satisfaction and made a right guess at Alison. "Mrs.
+Boyce, I am necessitated to present myself. Captain McBean."
+
+"What, more champions!" Geoffrey laughed. "Oh, ma'am, you have too
+general a charity. My sympathy is in your way," and he made his bow and
+was going off.
+
+"_Mordieu_, you relieve me marvellously," says McBean, and O'Connor put
+his back against the door.
+
+Mr. Waverton waved O'Connor aside.
+
+"You'll be Mr. Waverton?" said O'Connor.
+
+"Od's life, sir, stand out of my way." But O'Connor laughed and McBean
+tapped the magnificent shoulder. Mr. Waverton swung round.
+
+"Hark in your ear," says McBean. "You're a lewd, cowardly scoundrel, Mr.
+Waverton."
+
+Mr. Waverton glared at him, stepped back and turned on Alison. "Pray,
+ma'am, control your bullies. I desire to leave your house!"
+
+"Let him be, sir," Alison stood up. "Leave us, if you please, I have to
+speak with him."
+
+"You have not," McBean frowned. "The affair is out of your hands. Come,
+sir, march. There's a pretty piece of turf beyond the gates. Your friend
+there may serve you."
+
+"Not I, sir," Mr. Hadley put in. "I have myself a meeting to require of
+Mr. Waverton."
+
+"So? I like the air here better and better, _pardieu_. Well, Mr.
+Waverton, we'll e'en walk out alone."
+
+"Your bluster won't serve you, sirrah. If you be a gentleman, which you
+make incredible, you may proceed in order and I'll consider if I may do
+you the honour to meet you."
+
+"Gentleman? Bah, I am Hector McBean, Captain in Bouffiers' regiment.
+Come, sir, now are you warmer?" He struck Mr. Waverton across the eyes.
+
+Mr. Waverton, drawing back, turned again upon Alison: "My God, did you
+bring your bullies here to murder me?"
+
+"I did not bid you here," Alison said.
+
+"_Lâche_," says Mr. O'Connor with a shrug.
+
+"_En effet_," says McBean and sat down. "Observe, Waverton: I have given
+you the chance to take a clean death. You have not the courage for it.
+_Tant mieux_. You may now hang."
+
+Mr. Waverton again made a move for the door, but Mr. O'Connor stood
+solidly in the way. "Attention, Waverton. You have bungled your business,
+as usual. Your fellow Ned Boon hath been taken and lies in Newgate. He
+has confessed that he and his gang were hired for this murder by a
+certain Geoffrey Waverton."
+
+"It is a lie!"
+
+"Waverton--I have a whip as well as a sword."
+
+"I do not concern myself with you, sir," says Mr. Waverton with
+dignity. "You are repeating a lesson, I see. But I advise you, I shall
+not permit myself to be slandered. This fellow Ned Bone--Boon--what is
+his vulgar name? I know nothing of him. If he pretends to any knowledge
+of me, he lies."
+
+"You told me that you had hired men to spy upon Mr. Boyce," Alison said.
+
+Mr. Waverton laughed. "Oh, ma'am, I thank you for a flash of honesty.
+Here's the truth then. In madame's interest, I had arranged with her that
+a party of fellows should watch her scurvy husband. She suspected him of
+various villainies, infidelity, what you will. And, egad, I dare to say
+she was right. But I have no more concern in it. So you may his back to
+your employers, Captain Mac what's your name, and advise them that I am
+not to be bullied. I shall know how to defend myself."
+
+Alison came nearer Captain McBean. "Sir, this is a confection of lies. It
+is true the man told me he was planning a watch on Mr. Boyce. But not of
+my will. And when I knew I did instantly give Mr. Boyce warning."
+
+"I shall deal with you in good time," McBean frowned. "_Dieu de dieu!_ I
+do not excuse you. Attention, Waverton! You lie stupidly. Your bullies,
+_mordieu_, blunder in your own style. It would not content them to murder
+Mr. Boyce. They must have his father too. They could not do their
+business quietly nor finish it. The rogue Ben was caught and the Colonel
+has only a hole in his shoulder. You may know that he is not the man to
+forgive you for it. So, Waverton. You have suborned murder and furnished
+evidence to hang you for it. You must meddle with Colonel Boyce to make
+sure that his Whiggish party who hold the government shall not spare you.
+You set every Jacobite against you when you struck at Harry. However
+things go now there'll be those in power urgent to hang you. Go home and
+wait till the runners take you off to Newgate. March!"
+
+Mr. O'Connor opened the door with alacrity.
+
+"I am not afraid of you," Waverton cried. "And you, madame, you, the
+widow--be sure if I am attacked, your loose treachery shall not win you
+off. What I have done--you know well it was done for you and in commerce
+with you." Mr. O'Connor took him by the arm. "Don't presume to touch me!"
+he called out, trembling with rage. Mr. O'Connor propelled him out.
+
+"I believe Patrick will cut the coat off his back," said McBean pensively
+and then laughed a little. He brushed his hand over his face and stood up
+and marched on Alison. "Now for you," he said. "I beg leave of the
+company." He made them a bow and waved them out of the room.
+
+"Sir, Mr. Boyce?" Mrs. Weston said faintly.
+
+"Madame, Mr. Boyce is not dead. He lies wounded. I make no apology,
+_pardieu_! It is imperative to frighten the Waverton out of the
+country--since he would not stand up to be killed. You, madame," he
+turned frowning upon Alison, "you must have him no more in your
+neighbourhood."
+
+Alison bent her head. Mr. Hadley came forward. "Captain McBean, you take
+too much upon yourself."
+
+"I'll answer for it at my leisure, sir."
+
+"Pray go, Charles," Alison said gently. So they went out, Mrs.
+Weston upon Susan's arm, and Captain McBean and Alison were left
+alone, the fierce little lean man stretching every inch of him
+against her rich beauty.
+
+"You do me some wrong, sir," Alison said.
+
+"Is it possible?" McBean's chest swelled to the sneer.
+
+"Pray, sir, don't scold. It passes me by. Nay, I cannot answer you. I
+have no defence, I believe. Be sure that you can say nothing to make my
+hurt worse."
+
+"How long shall we go on talking about you, madame?"
+
+Alison flushed dark, and turned away and muttered something.
+
+"What now?" McBean said. In another moment he saw that she was crying.
+Some satisfaction perhaps, no pity, softened his stare....
+
+She turned, making no pretence to hide her tears. "I beg of you--take me
+to Mr. Boyce."
+
+"I said, madame, Mr. Boyce is not yet dead." The sharp, precise voice
+spared her nothing. "I do not know whether he will live." Alison gave a
+choking cry. "I do not now know whether he would desire to live."
+
+"What do you mean?" A madness of fear, of love perhaps, distorted her
+face.
+
+"You well know. When I rode out this morning, I had it in mind to kill
+the Waverton and conduct you to Mr. Boyce. But I did not guess that
+Waverton would refuse to be killed like a gentleman or that I should find
+you engaged in the rogue's infamy."
+
+"But that is his lie! Ah, you must know that it is a lie. You heard how
+he turned on me, and his vileness."
+
+"_Bien_, you have played fast and loose with him. I allow that. It does
+not commend you to me, madame."
+
+"I'll not bear it," Alison cried wildly. "Oh, sir, you have no right. Mr.
+Boyce would never endure you should treat me so."
+
+"_Dieu de dieu_! Would you trade upon Harry's gentleness now? Aye,
+madame, he would not treat you so, _mordieu_. He would see nothing, know
+nothing, believe nothing. And let you make a mock of him again. But if
+you please, I stand between him and you."
+
+"You have no right," Alison muttered.
+
+"It is you who have put me there. You, madame, when you played him false
+with this Waverton."
+
+"That is a lie--a lie," she cried.
+
+"Oh, content you. You are all chastity. I do not doubt it. But you drove
+Harry away from you. You admitted your Waverton to intimacy--you let him
+hope--believe--bah, what does it matter? You were in his secrets. You
+knew he put bullies upon Harry. Now he has failed and you are in a fright
+and want your Harry again. Permit me, madame, not to admire you."
+
+"What do you want of me?" Alison said miserably.
+
+"I cannot tell. I want to know what I am to do with Harry. And you--you
+are another wound."
+
+Alison shuddered. "For God's sake take me to him. I will content him."
+
+"Yes. For how long?"
+
+"Oh, I deserve it all. I cannot answer you. And yet you are wrong. I am
+not such as you think me. I have never had anything but contempt for Mr.
+Waverton. If he were not what he is, he must have known that. He came to
+me after I left Harry. He told me that he was having Harry spied upon.
+The moment he was gone I wrote to Harry and gave him warning and begged
+him come back to me. He has never answered me. And I--oh--am I to speak
+of Harry and me?"
+
+"If you could I should not much believe you. From the first, madame, I
+have believed you."
+
+"It was I who drove him away from me. I have been miserable for it ever
+since. I humbled myself."
+
+Captain McBean held up his hand. "I still believe you. Pray, order
+your coach."
+
+"Where is he?"
+
+"He lies at his father's lodging. Observe, madame: I have said--he is
+not yet dead. Whether he lives rests, I believe to God, upon what you
+may be to him."
+
+"Then he will be well enough," she sobbed as she laughed.
+
+"Oh! I believe in your power," says McBean with a twist of a smile.
+
+She stayed a moment by the door and flung her arms wide. "What I am--it
+is all for him."
+
+Captain McBean left alone, took snuff. "A splendid wild cat--and that
+mouse of a Harry," says he.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIII
+
+REMORSE OF COLONEL BOYCE
+
+
+Captain McBean was strutting to and fro for the benefit of his impatience
+when Mr. O'Connor returned to him. "Patrick, you look morose. Had he the
+legs of you?"
+
+"He had not," says O'Connor, nursing his hand. "But he had a
+beautiful nose. Sure, it was harder than you would think. And I have
+sprained my thumb."
+
+"What, did he fight?"
+
+"He did not--saving the tongue of him. But I had broke my whip upon him,
+so I broke his nose to be even. Egad, he was beautiful before and behind.
+He cannot show this long while. Neither behind nor before, faith. What
+will he do, d'ye think?"
+
+"Oh Lud, he'll not face it out. He would dream of hangmen. He'll take the
+waters. He'll go the grand tour. D'ye know, Patrick, there's a masterly
+touch in old Boyce. To choose that oaf for his decoy at Pontoise! Who
+could guess at danger in him? No wonder Charles Middleton saw no guile!
+Yet, you observe, the creature's full of venom."
+
+"He bleeds like a pig," says Mr. O'Connor. "What will we be waiting
+for, sir?"
+
+"The lady."
+
+"She goes to Harry? Oh, he's the lucky one. What a Venus it is!"
+
+"Aye, aye. She should have married you, Patrick. You would have
+ridden her."
+
+"Ah now, don't destroy me with envy and desires," says Mr. O'Connor.
+"But, sure, there was another, a noble fat girl. Will she be bespoke?"
+
+"She belongs to the one-armed hero."
+
+"Maybe she could do with another. There's enough of her for two. Oh, come
+away, sir, before I danger my soul."
+
+They heard the wheels of the coach and marched out. Alison was coming
+downstairs with Mrs. Weston. "What now?" says McBean glowering. "Do you
+need a duenna to watch you with your husband?"
+
+"Madame is Harry's mother, sir," Alison said.
+
+For once Captain McBean was disconcerted. "A thousand pardons," says he,
+and with much ceremony put Mrs. Weston into the coach.
+
+As they rode after it, "You fight too fast, sir," says O'Connor with a
+grin. "I have remarked it before."
+
+Captain McBean 'was still something out of countenance. "Who would have
+thought he had a mother here?" he growled.
+
+"Oh, faith, you did not suppose the old Colonel brought him forth--like
+Jove plucking Minerva out of his swollen head."
+
+"I did not, Patrick, you loon. But I did not guess his mother would be
+here with this gorgeous madame wife."
+
+"Fie now, is it the Lord God don't advise you of everything? 'Tis an
+indignity, faith."
+
+Captain Me Bean swore at him in a friendly way, and they jogged on
+through the Islington lanes....
+
+So after a while it happened that Colonel Boyce, raising a hot and angry
+head at the creature who dared open his bedroom door, found himself
+looking at Mrs. Weston. "Ods my life! Kate! What a pox do you want
+here?" says he.
+
+"You are hurt. I thought you would want nursing."
+
+"I do not want nursing, damme. How did you hear of the business?"
+
+"That Scotch captain rode out to tell us."
+
+"Od burn the fellow! Humph. No. Maybe he is no fool, neither. Us? Who is
+us, Kate? Mrs. Alison?"
+
+"She is gone up to Harry now."
+
+Colonel Boyce whistled. "Come up and we will show you a thing, eh? That
+is Scripture, Kate. You used to have your mouth full of Scripture."
+
+"You put me out of favour with that."
+
+"Let it be, can't you? What, they will make it up, then?"
+
+"Does that hurt you? Indeed, they would never have quarrelled but for
+you."
+
+"Oh, aye, blame it on me. I am the devil, faith. Come, ma'am, what have I
+done to the pretty dears? She's a warm piece and Harry's a milksop, and
+that's the whole of it."
+
+"With your tricks you made her think Harry was such as you are. And that
+wife you married came to Alison and told her that Harry was base-born."
+
+"Rot the shrew! She must meddle must she? Egad, she was always a blunder,
+Madame Rachel." He swore at her fully. "Bah, what though? Why should
+jolly Alison heed her?"
+
+"Alison knows everything now. I told her."
+
+"Egad, you go beyond me, Kate. You that made me swear none should ever
+know the boy was yours. You go and blab it out! Damn you for a woman."
+
+The woman looked at him strangely. "You have done that indeed," she said.
+
+"No, that's too bad. I vow it is." For once Colonel Boyce was stung. He
+fell silent and fidgeted, and made a long arm for the herb water by his
+bed. Mrs. Weston gave it him. "Let be, can't you?" he cried, and drank
+all the same. "Eh, Kate that came over my guard.... She has made you
+suffer, the shrew. Egad, I could whip her through the town for it."
+
+"Yes. Whip her."
+
+"Oh, what would you have?" Colonel Boyce shifted under a rueful air,
+strange in him. "I am what I am. I have had no luck in women. She was a
+blunder. And you--you have paid to say of me what you will. Egad, you
+have the chance now."
+
+"Are you in pain?"
+
+"Be hanged to pain! Don't gloat, Kate. That's not like you, at least."
+
+"Oh, I am sorry. I am sorry."
+
+"No, nor that neither. Damme, what should I be with you pitying me? Let
+it be. Come, you want something of me, I suppose. Something for your
+Harry, eh? What is it?"
+
+"I want nothing but that he should live. He has no need of you or me."
+
+"Oh Lud, he will live. But you were always full of fears."
+
+"Yes. You used to say that long ago."
+
+Colonel Boyce winced again. "Eh, you get in your thrusts, Kate, I swear I
+did what I could to save him."
+
+"I could not have borne to come to you else."
+
+"Humph. I see no good in your coming. There's little comfort for you or
+me in seeing each other. I suppose it's your damned duty."
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"Oh Lud, then begone and let's have done with it all."
+
+"I want to stay till you are well."
+
+"Aye, faith, it's comfortable to see me on my back and helpless."
+
+Mrs. Weston did not answer for a moment. She was busy with setting his
+table in order. "I want to have some right somewhere. She is with Harry."
+
+"By God, Kate, you're a good soul," Colonel Boyce cried.
+
+"I am not. I am jealous of her," Mrs. Weston said with a sob.
+
+"Does Harry know of you?"
+
+"What does it matter? He'll not care now."
+
+"Kate--come here, child."
+
+"No. No. I am not crying," Mrs. Weston said.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXXIV
+
+HARRY WAKES UP
+
+
+Harry lay asleep when Alison came into his room.
+
+She made sure of that and sat herself beside him to wait. It was not, you
+know, a thing which she did well. She looked down at him gravely.
+Afterwards Harry would accuse her that what first she felt was how little
+and miserable a man she had taken to herself.
+
+He lay there very still and his breath hardly stirred him. Indeed, the
+surgery of Mr. Rolfe had bound him up so tightly that he was in armour
+from waist to neck. After a moment, she started and trembled and bent
+over him and put her cheek close to his lips. She felt his breath and
+rose again slowly almost as pale as he. That cheating fear had stabbed
+cruelly, and still it would not let her be. His face was so thin, so
+white and utterly tired. The life was drained out of him....
+
+She sat beside him, still but for the beat of her bosom, and it seemed
+that the consciousness in her was falling from a height or galloping
+against the wind. She seemed to try to stop and could not.
+
+She tried to change the fashion of her thought and had no power in that
+either. It was a strange, half-angry, half-contemptuous pity that moved
+in her, and a fever of impatience. He was wicked to be struck down so,
+rent, impotent. Why must the wretch go plunging out into the world and
+measure himself against these swashbuckling conspirators? He had no
+equipment for it. He was fated to end it with disaster. Faith, it was a
+cruel folly to throw himself away and drag up her life by the roots as he
+fell. She needed him--needed him quick and eager, and there he lay, a
+shrunken thing that could use only gentleness, help, a tedious, trivial
+service like a child.
+
+He was humiliated, a condition not to be borne in her man. As she watched
+him, she saw Geoffrey Waverton rise between them, blusterous and
+menacing, and his lustiness mocked at the still, helpless body. But on
+that all other feeling was lost in a fever of hate of Mr. Waverton. He
+was branded with every contemptible sin that she knew, she ached to have
+him suffer, and (unaware of the contusions and extravasations
+administered by Mr. O'Connor) tried to console herself by recalling the
+ignominious condition of Geoffrey in the hands of the truculent gentlemen
+at Highgate. Bah, the coward was dishonoured for ever, at least. He would
+never dare show his face in town or country. How could he? Mr. Hadley
+would spit him like a joint. The good Charles! She found some consolation
+in the memory of Mr. Hadley's sardonic contempt. Nay, but the others,
+that fire-eating little Scotsman and his lank friend, they were of the
+same scornful mind about Mr. Waverton. His blusterous bullying went for
+nothing with them but to call for more disdain. They had no doubt that he
+cut a miserable figure, that it was he who was humiliated in the affair.
+And so all men would think, indeed. It was only a fool of a woman who
+could be imposed upon by his brag, only a mean, detestable woman who
+could suppose Harry defeated.
+
+Why, Harry must needs have done nobly to enlist these men on his side. He
+was nothing to Captain McBean, nothing but what he had done, and yet
+McBean took up his cause with a perfect devotion, cared for nothing but
+to punish his enemies, and to assure his safety. Faith, the little man
+would be as glad to thrash her as to overthrow Master Geoffrey. He had
+come near it, indeed. She smiled a little. The absurd imagination was not
+unpleasant. Monsieur was welcome to beat her if it would bring Harry any
+comfort. Aye, it would be very good for her. She would be glad to show
+Harry the stripes. Nay, but it was Harry who should beat her--only he
+never would. And these fantastics were swept away in a wave of
+tenderness.
+
+Mr. Harry was not good at making others suffer. He left it to his wife,
+poor lad, and she--she had done it greedily. Well. There was to be an end
+of that. Pray God he might ever be strong enough to hurt her. She bent
+over him in this queer mood, and her eyes were dim, and she kissed him,
+and whispered to herself--to him. Yes. She must make him hurt her. She
+must have pain of him to bear....
+
+Harry slept on. She began to caress his pillow, and crooned over him like
+a mother with her child, and found herself blushing and was still and
+silent again. Indeed, she was detestable. To make a show of fondling
+after having driven him to the edge of death! To chatter and flutter
+about him when he had no more than strength enough for sleep! Why, this
+was the very way for a light o' love. And, indeed, she was no better,
+wanting him only for her pleasure, for what he would give, watching
+greedily till he should be fit to serve her turn again. Yes, that was the
+only way of love Mrs. Alison understood.
+
+It was some satisfaction to scold herself, to make herself believe that
+she was vile. For she wanted to suffer, she wanted to be humbled. Not so
+much for the comfort of penance, not even for the luxury of sensation
+which makes self-torture pleasure, but that she might be sure of
+realizing her sins against the love which was now in command of all her
+being, and go on to serve it with a clean devotion. One thing only was
+worth doing, in one thing only could there be honour and joy, to make him
+welcome her and have delight in her... And so she fell among dreams....
+
+She saw something glitter on the table by the bed, and idly put out her
+hand for it. She found herself looking at the diamonds of the Pretender's
+watch. How did Harry come to such a gorgeous toy? J.R., the diamonds
+wrote. Who was J.R.?
+
+"Alison," Harry said.
+
+She started, stared at him, and stood up. His eyes were open, and he
+frowned a little.
+
+"Alison? It is you?" he said, and rubbed at his eyes.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Why have you come?"
+
+She fell on her knees by the bed. "Oh, Harry, Harry," she murmured, and
+hid her face.
+
+"Is it true?"
+
+"I will be true," she sobbed.
+
+"I want to see you."
+
+She showed him her face pale and wet with tears....
+
+After a while, "Why have you come?" he said again.
+
+"Harry, I knew about Geoffrey. He told me."
+
+"You--knew?"
+
+I wrote you warning. I begged you come back to me. Oh, Harry, Harry, you
+are proud."
+
+"I had no warning. Proud? Oh, yes, I am proud. What were you with
+Geoffrey?"
+
+"Harry! Oh, Harry! No, it's fair. Well. I tried to trick him for your
+sake to save you."
+
+"I am obliged for your care of me."
+
+She cried out "Ah, God," and hid her face again. Harry lay still and
+white as death.... "Oh, Harry, you torture me," she murmured. "You have
+the right. No man but you has ever had a thought of me. Harry--I want to
+pray you--oh, I want to lie at your feet. Only believe in me--use
+me--take me again."
+
+"I am a fool," Harry said, and she looked up and saw that he, too, was
+crying. "Oh, curse the wound," he said hoarsely. "Egad, I am damned
+feeble, child."
+
+"I love you, I love you," she sobbed, and pressed her face to his....
+"Oh, Harry, I am wicked."
+
+She raised herself. "You are hurt, and I wear you out."
+
+"That's a brag." Harry smiled faintly, "It takes more than you can give
+to kill me, ma'am."
+
+"Ah, don't."
+
+"Stand up and let me look at you." Which she did, and made parade of her
+beauty, smiling through tears. "Aye, you're a splendid woman," and his
+eyes brightened.
+
+She made him a curtsy. "It's at your will, sir." "Yes, and why? Why? What
+made you come back?"
+
+"My dear!" She held out her arms to him. "I have wanted you ever since I
+lost you. And now--now I am nothing unless you want me."
+
+"Oh, be easy. There is plenty of you, and I want it all."
+
+"Can you say so? Ah, Harry, you have known enough bad that's me, cruel
+and greedy and hard and cheating. I have always taken, and given
+nothing back."
+
+"Damn your humilities," Harry said.
+
+"Oh, sir, but I want them, my new humilities. I have nothing else to
+cover my nakedness."
+
+"You look better without them, ma'am."
+
+"Fie, I will stop your mouth." But it was a cup of herb water that she
+offered him instead of a kiss.
+
+"You are a cheat," Harry spluttered. "You presume on my infirmities."
+
+"No. No. I have made you talk too much. You must be still and rest
+again."
+
+"Burn your maternal care! I have hardly seen you yet a minute."
+
+"A minute! Oh!" She looked at the jewelled watch. "Aye, sir, an hour.
+And what's this pretty toy?"
+
+Harry laughed. "Why, now I have you. Sure, ma'am, it's a love token."
+
+"I shall go away, sir."
+
+"Not till you come by the secret. I know you."
+
+His ear was pinched. "J.R. Who is J.R., sir?"
+
+"Jemima Regina. A queen of beauty, ma'am. She fell in love with my nose.
+And offered me a thousand pound for it."
+
+"Harry! I am going to say good night."
+
+"Hear the truth, Alison. Do you remember--you told me I was born to be a
+highwayman--my stand-and-deliver stare--my--"
+
+"Oh! Don't play so. I was a fiend when I taunted you so."
+
+"Why, child, it's nothing. Come then--J.R., it's Jacobus Rex, the poor
+lad, Prince James, who will never be a king, God help him. He gave me
+that for the memory of some little service I did him. McBean brought the
+toy to-day."
+
+Alison nodded. "I will have that story from Captain McBean, sir. You tell
+stories mighty ill, do you know--highwayman. Yes, Harry, you are that.
+You pillage us all. Love, honour, you win it from all. And I--I am the
+last to know you."
+
+"Bah, you will never be a wife," Harry said. "You have too much
+imagination. But you make a mighty fine lover, my dear."
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of The Highwayman, by H.C. Bailey
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