Meanwhile Stella Ballantyne waited
below. She heard Mr. Hazlewood in the hall greeting
the Pettifers with the false joviality which sat so
ill upon him; she imagined the shy nods and glances
which told them that the trap was properly set.
Mr. Hazlewood led them into the room.
“Is tea ready, Stella?
We won’t wait for Dick,” he said, and Stella
took her place at the table. She had her back
to the door by which Thresk would enter. She
had not a doubt that thus her chair had been deliberately
placed. He would be in the room and near to the
table before he saw her. He would not have a
moment to prepare himself against the surprise of
her presence. Stella listened for the sound of
his footsteps in the hall; she could not think of
a single topic to talk about except the presence of
that extra sixth cup; and that she must not mention
if the tables were really to be turned upon her antagonists.
Surprise must be visible upon her side when Thresk
did come in. But she was not alone in finding
conversation difficult. Embarrassment and expectancy
weighed down the whole party, so that they began suddenly
to speak at once and simultaneously to stop.
Robert Pettifer however asked if Dick was playing
cricket, and so gave Harold Hazlewood an opportunity.
“No, the match was over early,”
said the old man, and he settled himself in his arm-chair.
“I have given some study to the subject of cricket,”
he said.
“You?” asked Stella with
a smile of surprise. Was he merely playing for
time, she wondered? But he had the air of contentment
with which he usually embarked upon his disquisitions.
“Yes. I do not consider
our national pastime beneath a philosopher’s
attention. I have formed two theories about the
game.”
“I am sure you have,” Robert Pettifer
interposed.
“And I have invented two improvements,
though I admit at once that they will have to wait
until a more enlightened age than ours adopts them.
In the first place” and Mr. Hazlewood
flourished a forefinger in the air “the
game ought to be played with a soft ball. There
is at present a suggestion of violence about it which
the use of a soft ball would entirely remove.”
“Entirely,” Mr. Pettifer
agreed and his wife exclaimed impatiently:
“Rubbish, Harold, rubbish!”
Stella broke nervously into the conversation.
“Violence? Why even women play cricket,
Mr. Hazlewood.”
“I cannot, Stella,” he
returned, “accept the view that whatever women
do must necessarily be right. There are instances
to the contrary.”
“Yes. I come across a few
of them in my office,” Robert Pettifer said
grimly; and once more embarrassment threatened to descend
upon the party. But Mr. Hazlewood was off upon
a favourite theme. His eyes glistened and the
object of the gathering vanished for the moment from
his thoughts.
“And in the second place,”
he resumed, “the losers should be accounted to
have won the game.”
“Yes, that must be right,”
said Pettifer. “Upon my word you are in
form, Hazlewood.”
“But why?” asked Mrs. Pettifer.
Harold Hazlewood smiled upon her as upon a child and
explained:
“Because by adopting that system
you would do something to eradicate the spirit of
rivalry, the desire to win, the ambition to beat somebody
else which is at the bottom of half our national troubles.”
“And all our national success,” said Pettifer.
Hazlewood patted his brother-in-law
upon the shoulder. He looked at him indulgently.
“You are a Tory, Robert,” he said, and
implied that argument with such an one was mere futility.
He had still his hand upon Pettifer’s
shoulder when the door opened. Stella saw by
the change in his face that it was Thresk who was entering.
But she did not move.
“Ah,” said Mr. Hazlewood.
“Come over here and take a cup of tea.”
Thresk came forward to the table.
He seemed altogether unconscious that the eyes of
the two men were upon him.
“Thank you. I should like
one,” he said, and at the sound of his voice
Stella Ballantyne turned around in her chair.
“You!” she cried and the
cry was pitched in a tone of pleasure and welcome.
“Of course you know Mrs. Ballantyne,”
said Hazlewood. He saw Stella rise from her chair
and hold out her hand to Thresk with the colour aflame
in her cheeks.
“You are surprised to see me again,” she
said.
Thresk took her hand cordially.
“I am delighted to see you again,” he
replied.
“And I to see you,” said
Stella, “for I have never yet had a chance of
thanking you”; and she spoke with so much frankness
that even Pettifer was shaken in his suspicions.
She turned upon Mr. Hazlewood with a mimicry of indignation.
“Do you know, Mr. Hazlewood, that you have done
a very cruel thing?”
Mr. Hazlewood was utterly discomfited
by the failure of his plot, and when Stella attacked
him so directly he had not a doubt but that she had
divined his treachery.
“I?” he gasped. “Cruel?
How?”
“In not telling me beforehand
that I was to meet so good a friend of mine.”
Her face relaxed to a smile as she added: “I
would have put on my best frock in his honour.”
Undoubtedly Stella carried off the
honour of that encounter. She had at once driven
the battle with spirit onto Hazlewood’s own ground
and left him worsted and confused. But the end
was not yet. Mr. Hazlewood waited for his son
Richard, and when Richard appeared he exclaimed:
“Ah, here’s my son.
Let me present him to you, Mr. Thresk. And there’s
the family.”
He leaned back, with a smile in his
eyes, watching Henry Thresk. Robert Pettifer
watched too.
“The family?” Thresk asked.
“Is Mrs. Ballantyne a relation then?”
“She is going to be,” said Dick.
“Yes,” Mr. Hazlewood explained,
still beaming and still watchful. “Richard
and Stella are going to be married.”
A pause followed which was just perceptible
before Thresk spoke again. But he had his face
under control. He took the stroke without flinching.
He turned to Dick with a smile.
“Some men have all the luck,”
he said, and Dick, who had been looking at him in
bewilderment, cried:
“Mr. Thresk? Not the Mr. Thresk to whom
I owe so much?”
“The very man,” said Thresk, and Dick
held out his hand to him gravely.
“Thank you,” he said.
“When I think of the horrible net of doubt and
assumption in which Stella was coiled, I tell you I
feel cold down my spine even now. If you hadn’t
come forward with your facts
“Yes,” Thresk interposed.
“If I hadn’t come forward with my facts.
But I couldn’t well keep them to myself, could
I?” A few more words were said and then Dick
rose from his chair.
“Time’s up, Stella,”
and he explained to Henry Thresk: “We have
to look over a house this afternoon.”
“A house? Yes, I see,”
said Thresk, but he spoke slowly and there was just
audible a little inflection of doubt in his voice.
Stella was listening for it; she heard it when her
two antagonists noticed nothing.
“But, Dick,” she said
quickly, “we can put the inspection off.”
“Not on my account,” Thresk
returned. “There’s no need for that.”
He was not looking at Stella whilst he spoke and she
longed to see his face. She must know exactly
how she stood with him, what he thought of her.
She turned impulsively to Mr. Hazlewood.
“I haven’t been asked,
but may I come to dinner? You see I owe a good
deal to Mr. Thresk.”
Mr. Hazlewood was for the moment at
a loss. He had not lost hope that between now
and dinner-time explanations would be given which would
banish Stella Ballantyne altogether from Little Beeding.
But he had no excuse ready and he stammered out:
“Of course, my dear. Didn’t
I ask you? I must have forgotten. I certainly
expect you to dine with us to-night. Margaret
will no doubt be here.”
Margaret Pettifer had taken little
part in the conversation about the tea-table.
She sat in frigid hostility, speaking only when politeness
commanded. She accepted her brother’s invitation
with a monosyllable.
“Thank you,” said Stella,
and she faced Henry Thresk, looking him straight in
the eyes but not daring to lay any special stress upon
the words: “Then I shall see you to-night.”
Thresk read in her face a prayer that
he should hold his hand until she had a chance to
speak with him. She turned away and went from
the room with Dick Hazlewood.
The old man rose as soon as the door was closed.
“Now we might have a look at
the miniatures, Mr. Thresk. You will excuse us,
Margaret, won’t you?”
“Of course,” she answered
upon a nod from her husband. The two men passed
through the doors into the great library whilst Thresk
took a more ceremonious leave of Mrs. Pettifer; and
as Hazlewood opened the drawers of his cabinets Robert
Pettifer said in a whisper:
“That was a pretty good failure,
I must say. And it was my idea too.”
“Yes,” replied Hazlewood
in a voice as low. “What do you think?”
“That they share no secret.”
“You are satisfied then?”
“I didn’t say that”;
and Thresk himself appeared in the doorway and went
across to the writing-table upon which Hazlewood had
just laid a drawer in which miniatures were ranged.
“I haven’t met you,”
said Pettifer, “since you led for us in the great
Birmingham will-suit.”
“No,” answered Thresk
as he took his seat at the table. “It wasn’t
quite such a tough fight as I expected. You see
there wasn’t one really reliable witness for
the defence.”
“No,” said Pettifer grimly.
“If there had been we should have been beaten.”
Mr. Hazlewood began to point out this
and that miniature of his collection, bending over
Thresk as he did so. It seemed that the two collectors
were quite lost in their common hobby until Robert
Pettifer gave the signal.
Then Mr. Hazlewood began:
“I am very glad to meet you,
Mr. Thresk, for reasons quite outside these miniatures
of mine.”
He spoke with a noticeable awkwardness,
yet Henry Thresk disregarded it altogether.
“Oh?” he said carelessly.
“Yes. Being Richard’s
father I am naturally concerned in everything which
affects him nearly the trial of Stella Ballantyne
for instance.”
Thresk bent his head down over the tray.
“Quite so,” he said.
He pointed to a miniature. “I saw that at
Christie’s and coveted it myself.”
“Did you?” Mr. Hazlewood
asked and he almost offered it as a bribe. “Now
you gave evidence, Mr. Thresk.”
Thresk never lifted his head.
“You have no doubt read the
evidence I gave,” he said, peering from this
delicate jewel of the painter’s art to that.
“To be sure.”
“And since your son is engaged
to Mrs. Ballantyne, I suppose that you were satisfied
with it” and he paused to give a trifle
of significance to his next words “as
the jury was.”
“Yes, of course,” Mr.
Hazlewood stammered, “but a witness, I think,
only answers the questions put to him.”
“That is so,” said Thresk,
“if he is a wise witness.” He took
one of the miniatures out of the drawer and held it
to the light. But Mr. Hazlewood was not to be
deterred.
“And subsequent reflection,”
he continued obstinately, “might suggest that
all the questions which could throw light upon the
trial had not been put.”
Thresk replaced the miniature in the
drawer in front of him and leaned back in his chair.
He looked now straight at Mr. Hazlewood.
“It was not, I take it, in order
to put those questions to me that you were kind enough,
Mr. Hazlewood, to ask me to give my opinion on your
miniatures. For that would have been setting a
trap for me, wouldn’t it?”
Hazlewood stared at Thresk with the
bland innocence of a child. “Oh no, no,”
he declared, and then an insinuating smile beamed upon
his long thin face. “Only since you are
here and since so much is at stake for me my
son’s happiness I hoped that you might
perhaps give us an answer or two which would disperse
the doubts of some suspicious people.”
“Who are they?” asked Thresk.
“Neighbours of ours,”
replied Hazlewood, and thereupon Robert Pettifer stepped
forward. He had remained aloof and silent until
this moment. Now he spoke shortly, but he spoke
to the point:
“I for one.”
Thresk turned with a smile upon Pettifer.
“I thought so. I recognised
Mr. Pettifer’s hand in all this. But he
ought to know that the sudden confrontation of a suspected
person with unexpected witnesses takes place, in those
countries where the method is practised, before the
trial; not, as you so ingeniously arranged it this
afternoon, two years after the verdict has been given.”
Robert Pettifer turned red. Then
he looked whimsically across the table at his brother-in-law.
“We had better make a clean breast of it, Hazlewood.”
“I think so,” said Thresk gently.
Pettifer came a step nearer.
“We are in the wrong,” he said bluntly.
“But we have an excuse. Our trouble is
very great. Here’s my brother-in-law to
begin with, whose whole creed of life has been to deride
the authority of conventional man to tilt
against established opinion. Mrs. Ballantyne
comes back from her trial in Bombay to make her home
again at Little Beeding. Hazlewood champions
her not for her sake, but for the sake of
his theories. It pleases his vanity. Now
he can prove that he is not as others are.”
Mr. Hazlewood did not relish this
merciless analysis of his character. He twisted
in his chair, he uttered a murmur of protest.
But Robert Pettifer waved him down and continued:
“So he brings her to his house.
He canvasses for her. He throws his son in her
way. She has beauty she has something
more than beauty she stands apart as a
woman who has walked through fire. She has suffered
very much. Look at it how one will, she has suffered
beyond her deserts. She has pretty deferential
ways which make their inevitable appeal to women as
to men. In a word, Hazlewood sets the ball rolling
and it gets beyond his reach.”
Thresk nodded.
“Yes, I understand that.”
“Finally, Hazlewood’s
son falls in love with her not a boy mind,
but a man claiming a man’s right to marry where
he loves. And at once in Hazlewood conventional
man awakes.”
“Dear me, no,” interposed Harold Hazlewood.
“But I say yes,” Pettifer
continued imperturbably. “Conventional man
awakes in him and cries loudly against the marriage.
Then there’s myself. I am fond of Dick.
I have no child. He will be my heir and I am not
poor. He is doing well in his profession.
To be an Instructor of the Staff Corps at his age
means hard work, keenness, ability. I look forward
to a great career. I am very fond of him.
And understand me, Mr. Thresk” he
checked his speech and weighed his words very carefully “I
wouldn’t say that he shouldn’t marry Stella
Ballantyne just because Stella Ballantyne has lain
under a grave charge of which she has been acquitted.
No, I may be as formal as my brother-in-law thinks,
but I hold a wider faith than that. But I am
not satisfied. That is the truth, Mr. Thresk.
I am not sure of what happened in that tent in far-away
Chitipur after you had ridden away to catch the night
mail to Bombay.”
Robert Pettifer had made his confession
simply and with some dignity. Thresk looked at
him for a few moments. Was he wondering whether
he could answer the questions? Was he hesitating
through anger at the trick which had been played upon
him? Pettifer could not tell. He waited
in suspense. Thresk pushed his chair back suddenly
and came forward from behind the table.
“Ask your questions,” he said.
“You consent to answer them?”
Mr. Hazlewood cried joyously, and Thresk replied with
coldness:
“I must. For if I don’t
consent your suspicions at once are double what they
were. But I am not pleased.”
“Oh, we practised a little diplomacy,”
said Hazlewood, making light of his offence.
“Diplomacy!” For the first
time a gleam of anger shone in Thresk’s eyes.
“You have got me to your house by a trick.
You have abused your position as my host. And
but that I should injure a woman whom life has done
nothing but injure I should go out of your door this
instant.”
He turned his back upon Harold Hazlewood
and sat down in a chair opposite to Robert Pettifer.
A little round table separated them. Pettifer,
seated upon a couch, took from his pocket the envelope
with the press-cuttings and spread them on the table
in front of him. Thresk lolled back in his chair.
It was plain that he was in no terror of Pettifer’s
examination.
“I am at your service,” he said.