When Dick and Stella walked along
the drive to the lane Harold Hazlewood, who was radiant
at the success of his dinner-party, turned to Robert
Pettifer in the hall.
“Have a whisky-and-soda, Robert,
before you go,” he said. He led the way
back into the library. Behind him walked the Pettifers,
Robert ill-at-ease and wishing himself a hundred miles
away, Margaret Pettifer boiling for battle. Hazlewood
himself dropped into an arm-chair.
“I am very glad that you came
to-night, Margaret,” he said boldly. “You
have seen for yourself.”
“Yes, I have,” she replied.
“Harold, there have been moments this evening
when I could have screamed.”
Robert Pettifer hurriedly turned towards
the table in the far corner of the room where the
tray with the decanters and the syphons had been placed.
“Margaret, I pass my life in
a scream at the injustice of the world,” said
Harold Hazlewood, and Robert Pettifer chuckled as he
cut off the end of a cigar. “It is strange
that an act of reparation should move you in the same
way.”
“Reparation!” cried Margaret
Pettifer indignantly. Then she noticed that the
window was open. She looked around the room.
She drew up a chair in front of her brother.
“Harold, if you have no consideration
for us, none for your own position, none for the neighbourhood,
if you will at all costs force this woman upon us,
don’t you think that you might still spare a
thought for your son?”
Robert Pettifer had kept his eyes
open that evening as well as his wife. He took
a step down into the room. He was anxious to take
no part in the dispute; he desired to be just; he
was favourably inclined towards Stella Ballantyne;
looking at her he had been even a little moved.
But Dick was the first consideration. He had
no children of his own, he cared for Dick as he would
have cared for his son, and when he went up each morning
by the train to his office in London there lay at
the back of his mind the thought that one day the
fortune he was amassing would add a splendour to Dick’s
career. Harold Hazlewood alone of the three seemed
to have his eyes sealed.
“Why, what on earth do you mean, Margaret?”
Margaret Pettifer sat down in her chair.
“Where was Dick yesterday afternoon?”
“Margaret, I don’t know.”
“I do. I saw him.
He was with Stella Ballantyne on the river in
the dusk in a Canadian canoe.”
She uttered each fresh detail in a more indignant
tone, as though it aggravated the crime. Yet even
so she had not done. There was, it seemed, a
culminating offence. “She was wearing a
white lace frock with a big hat.”
“Well,” said Mr. Hazlewood
mildly, “I don’t think I have anything
against big hats.”
“She was trailing her hand in
the water that he might notice its slenderness
of course. Outrageous I call it!”
Mr. Hazlewood nodded his head at his indignant sister.
“I know that frame of mind very
well, Margaret,” he remarked. “She
cannot do right. If she had been wearing a small
hat she would have been Frenchified.”
But Mrs. Pettifer was not in a mood for argument.
“Can’t you see what it all means?”
she cried in exasperation.
“I can. I do,” Mr.
Hazlewood retorted and he smiled proudly upon his
sister. “The boy’s better nature is
awakening.”
Margaret Pettifer lifted up her hands.
“The boy!” she exclaimed. “He’s
thirty-four if he’s a day.”
She leaned forward in her chair and
pointing up to the bay asked: “Why is that
window open, Harold?”
Harold Hazlewood showed his first
sign of discomfort. He shifted in his chair.
“It’s a hot night, Margaret.”
“That is not the reason,”
Mrs. Pettifer retorted implacably. “Where
is Dick?”
“I expect that he is seeing Mrs. Ballantyne
home.”
“Exactly,” said Mrs. Pettifer
with a world of significance in her voice. Mr.
Hazlewood sat up and looked at his sister.
“Margaret, you want to make
me uncomfortable,” he exclaimed pettishly.
“But you shan’t. No, my dear, you
shan’t.” He let himself sink back
again and joining the tips of his fingers contemplated
the ceiling. But Margaret was in the mind to
try. She shot out her words at him like so many
explosive bullets.
“Being friends is one thing,
Harold. Marrying is another.”
“Very true, Margaret, very true.”
“They are in love with one another.”
“Rubbish, Margaret, rubbish.”
“I watched them at the dinner-table
and afterwards. They are man and woman, Harold.
That’s what you don’t understand.
They are not illustrations of your theories.
Ask Robert.”
“No,” exclaimed Robert
Pettifer. He hurriedly lit a cigar. “Any
inference I should make must be purely hypothetical.”
“Yes, we’ll ask Robert.
Come, Pettifer!” cried Mr. Hazlewood. “Let
us have your opinion.”
Robert Pettifer came reluctantly down from his corner.
“Well, if you insist, I think they were very
friendly.”
“Ah!” cried Hazlewood
in triumph. “Being friends is one thing,
Margaret. Marrying is another.”
Mrs. Pettifer shook her head over
her brother with a most aggravating pity.
“Dick said a shrewd thing the other day to me,
Harold.”
Mr. Hazlewood looked doubtfully at his sister.
“I am sure of it,” he
answered, but he was careful not to ask for any repetition
of the shrewd remark. Margaret, however, was not
in the mind to let him off.
“He said that sentimental philosophers
sooner or later break their heads against their own
theories. Mark those words, Harold! I hope
they won’t come true of you. I hope so
very much indeed.”
But it was abundantly clear that she
had not a shadow of doubt that they would come true.
Mr. Hazlewood was stung by the slighting phrase.
“I am not a sentimental philosopher,”
he said hotly. “Sentiment I altogether
abhor. I hold strong views, I admit.”
“You do indeed,” his sister
interrupted with an ironical laugh. “Oh,
I have read your pamphlet, Harold. The prison
walls must cast no shadow and convicts, once they
are released, have as much right to sit down at our
dinner-tables as they had before. Well, you carry
your principles into practice, that I will say.
We had an illustration to-night.”
“You are unjust, Margaret,”
and Mr. Hazlewood rose from his chair with some dignity.
“You speak of Mrs. Ballantyne, not for the first
time, as if she had been tried and condemned.
In fact she was tried and acquitted,” and in
his turn he appealed to Pettifer.
“Ask Robert!” he said.
But Pettifer was slow to answer, and
when he did it was without assurance.
“Ye-es,” he replied
with something of a drawl. “Undoubtedly
Mrs. Ballantyne was tried and acquitted”; and
he left the impression on the two who heard him that
with acquittal quite the last word had not been said.
Mrs. Pettifer looked at him eagerly. She drew
clear at once of the dispute. She left the questions
now to Harold Hazlewood, and Pettifer had spoken with
so much hesitation that Harold Hazlewood could not
but ask them.
“You are making reservations, Robert?”
Pettifer shrugged his shoulders.
“I think we have a right to
know them,” Hazlewood insisted. “You
are a solicitor with a great business and consequently
a wide experience.”
“Not of criminal cases, Hazlewood.
I bring no more authority to judge them than any other
man.”
“Still you have formed an opinion.
Please let me have it,” and Mr. Hazlewood sat
down again and crossed his knees. But a little
impatience was now audible in his voice.
“An opinion is too strong a
word,” replied Pettifer guardedly. “The
trial took place nearly eighteen months ago. I
read the accounts of it certainly day by day as I
travelled in the train to London. But they were
summaries.”
“Full summaries, Robert,” said Hazlewood.
“No doubt. The trial made
a great deal of noise in the world. But they
were not full enough for me. Even if my memory
of those newspaper reports were clear I should still
hesitate to sit in judgment. But my memory isn’t
clear. Let us see what I do remember.”
Pettifer took a chair and sat for
a few moments with his forehead wrinkled in a frown.
Was he really trying to remember? His wife asked
herself that question as she watched him. Or had
he something to tell them which he meant to let fall
in his own cautiously careless way? Mrs. Pettifer
listened alertly.
“The well let
us call it the catastrophe took place in
a tent in some state of Rajputana.”
“Yes,” said Mr. Hazlewood.
“It took place at night.
Mrs. Ballantyne was asleep in her bed. The man
Ballantyne was found outside the tent in the doorway.”
“Yes.”
Pettifer paused. “So many
law cases have engaged my attention since,”
he said in apology for his hesitation. He seemed
quite at a loss. Then he went on:
“Wait a moment! A man had
been dining with them at night oh yes, I
begin to remember.”
Harold Hazlewood made a tiny movement
and would have spoken, but Margaret held out a hand
towards him swiftly.
“Yes, a man called Thresk,”
said Pettifer, and again he was silent.
“Well,” asked Hazlewood.
“Well that’s
all I remember,” replied Pettifer briskly.
He rose and put his chair back. “Except ”
he added slowly.
“Yes?”
“Except that there was left
upon my mind when the verdict was published a vague
feeling of doubt.”
“There!” cried Mrs. Pettifer
triumphantly. “You hear him, Harold.”
But Hazelwood paid no attention to
her. He was gazing at his brother-in-law with
a good deal of uneasiness.
“Why?” he asked. “Why were
you in doubt, Robert?”
But Pettifer had said all that he had any mind to
say.
“Oh, I can’t remember
why,” he exclaimed. “I am very likely
quite wrong. Come, Margaret, it’s time
that we were getting home.”
He crossed over to Hazlewood and held
out his hand. Hazlewood, however, did not rise.
“I don’t think that’s
quite fair of you, Robert,” he said. “You
don’t disturb my confidence, of course I
have gone into the case thoroughly but
I think you ought to give me a chance of satisfying
you that your doubts have no justification.”
“No really,” exclaimed
Pettifer. “I absolutely refuse to mix myself
up in the affair at all.” A step sounded
upon the gravel path outside the window. Pettifer
raised a warning finger. “It’s midnight,
Margaret,” he said. “We must go”;
and as he spoke Dick Hazlewood walked in through the
open window.
He smiled at the group of his relations
with a grim amusement. They certainly wore a
guilty look. He was surprised to remark some
embarrassment even upon his father’s face.
“You will see your aunt off,
Richard,” said Mr. Hazlewood.
“Of course.”
The Pettifers and Dick went out into
the hall, leaving the old man in his chair, a little
absent, perhaps a little troubled.
“Aunt Margaret, you have been
upsetting my father,” said Dick.
“Nonsense, Dick,” she
replied, and her face flushed. She stepped into
the carriage quickly to avoid questions, and as she
stepped in Dick noticed that she was carrying a little
paper-covered book. Pettifer followed. “Good-night,
Dick,” he said, and he shook hands with his nephew
very warmly. In spite of his cordiality, however,
Dick’s face grew hard as he watched the carriage
drive away. Stella was right. The Pettifers
were the enemy. Well, he had always known there
would be a fight, and now the sooner it came the better.
He went back to the library and as he opened the door
he heard his father’s voice. The old man
was sitting sunk in his chair and repeating to himself:
“I won’t believe it. I won’t
believe it.”
He stopped at once when Dick came in. Dick looked
at him with concern.
“You are tired, father,” he said.
“Yes, I think I am a little. I’ll
go to bed.”
Hazlewood watched Dick walk over to
the corner table where the candles stood beside the
tray, and his face cleared. For the first time
in his life the tidy well-groomed conventional look
of his son was a real pleasure to him. Richard
was of those to whom the good-will of the world meant
much. He would never throw it lightly away.
Hazlewood got up and took one of the candles from
his son. He patted him on the shoulder. He
became quite at ease as he looked into his face.
“Good-night, my boy,” he said.
“Good-night, sir,” replied
Dick cheerfully. “There’s nothing
like acting up to one’s theories, is there?”
“Nothing,” said the old man heartily.
“Look at my life!”
“Yes,” replied Dick.
“And now look at mine. I am going to marry
Stella Ballantyne.”
For a moment Mr. Hazlewood stood perfectly
still. Then he murmured lamely:
“Oh, are you? Are you,
Richard?” and he shuffled quickly out of the
room.