Jenny had failed with Powers; that
seemed to be the state of the case or,
at least, her success was so precarious as to put her
whole position in extreme peril. Neither storm
nor sunshine, neither wrath nor cajolery, had won
him securely. Behind each he could discern its
true object to gain time, to tide over.
When Jenny had finished her equivocal proceedings,
when she had settled down either to Fillingford or
to Octon Octon’s success must still
have seemed a possibility to the accomplice of their
meetings what would she do with her equally
equivocal partner? Reward him? Yes, if she
had trusted him. He knew very well that she trusted
him no longer; her threats and her wheedling combined
to prove it. Presumably Mr. Powers was acquainted
with the parable of The Unjust Steward; he, too, was
a child of this world indeed his earthly
parentage was witnessed to beyond the common by his
moral features. What should he do when he was
no longer steward, when Jenny was safely wedded to
Fillingford, or had thrown off, of her own motive
or on compulsion, all secrecy about Octon? Lady
Sarah should receive or at least introduce him
into a comfortable habitation and put money in his
pocket to pay its rent. Jenny had overrated her
domination; and she had forgotten that rogues are apt
not to know when they are well off. Even when
their own pockets are snugly lined, a pocket unpicked
is a challenge and a temptation.
Lady Sarah’s conduct is sufficiently
accounted for by most praiseworthy motives moral
principle, family pride, loyalty to her brother.
Let, then, no others be imputed. But if Jenny
would not credit these to her, well, there were others
of which she might have thought. She had chosen
not to think of Lady Sarah at all in connection
with Powers at all events. The very omission
might stand as a compliment to Lady Sarah, but Jenny
was not the person who could afford to pay it; her
own safety and honor still rested in those unclean
hands.
The last days the week
of Jenny’s hard-won respite passed
for us at Breysgate like the interval between the
firing of a fuse and the explosion. How would
it go? Clear away obstacles and open the adit
to profitable working? Or blow all the mine to
ruins, and engulf the engineer in the debris?
Nerves were on trial and severely tried. Chat
was in flutters beyond description. I do not suppose
that I myself was a cheerful companion. Jenny
was steel, but the steel was red-hot.
At last the last day!
Jenny’s week of respite drew to its end.
Be sure I had counted! But if I had not, Octon
himself came, most welcomely, to announce it.
With a mighty relief I heard him say, as he threw himself
into my arm-chair at the Old Priory, “I’ve
just dropped in to say good-by, Austin. I’m
off to-morrow.”
“Off? Where to?”
I had sooner have asked “For how long?”
His reply answered both questions.
“Right out of this hole for
good.” He smiled. “So, for once,
I chanced meeting Lady Aspenick again in the park.”
He took up the poker and began to dig and prod my
coals: all through our talk he held the poker,
now digging and prodding, now using it to emphasize
his words with a point or a wave. “I’m
done with here, Austin. I’ve played a game
that I never thought I should play again and
I’ve come to feel as if I’d never played
it before. I’ve played it with all the odds
against me, and I’ve made a good fight.”
“Yes, too good,” I said.
“Aye, aye! But I’ve
lost. So I’m off.” He lay back
in the big chair the same one in which
Lacey had stretched his graceful, lithe young body and
looked up at me where I stood on the rug. “There’s
not much more to say, is there? I thought I’d
say that much to you because you’re a good fellow.”
“And you’re not,”
I retorted angrily (Remember our nerves!)
“Have you no care for what you love?”
“Am I so much the worse man of the two?”
he asked.
“What’s that got to do with it? Well,
thank God you’re going to-morrow!”
“Everybody always thanks God
when I go, and I generally thank Him myself but
not to-day, perhaps.” His next prod at the
coals in the grate was a vicious one. “I
suppose that some day there’ll be a general
feeling that I must be wiped out an instinctive
revolt against my existence, Austin. This neighborhood
has felt the thing already. Some day it will
be felt where stronger measures than cutting are in
fashion. Then I shall be killed. Perhaps
I shall kill, too, but they’ll get me in the
end, depend upon it!” Suddenly he smiled in a
tender reflective way. “That was what poor
little Madge was always so afraid of. Well, I
had a good deal to try my temper while she was with
me.” He looked up at me, smiling now in
mockery. “Don’t be shocked, my excellent
Austin. I’m talking about my wife.”
“Your wife!” I cried in utter surprise
and consternation.
That was exactly the effect he intended
to produce and enjoyed producing. Amidst all
his distress he found leisure to indulge his taste
for administering shocks.
“You’ve always thought
of me as a bachelor, haven’t you? I suppose
everybody thinks so except one person.
Well, it’s no affair of theirs, and they’ve
never chosen to inquire. I didn’t mean to
tell you, but the reference to her slipped out.”
“You’ve had a wife all
this time?” I gasped, sinking into a chair opposite
to him.
He laughed openly at me. “Poor
old Austin! No, it’s not Powers over again.”
(So he knew about Powers!) “The poor child’s
been dead these twelve years.”
I shrugged my shoulders impatiently.
“Does it really amuse you to play the fool just
now?”
“It amused me to make you jump.”
He watched me with a malicious grin for half a minute,
then fell to prodding the coals again. “We
were boy and girl and I had only two years
with her, and during that time I had the pleasure
of seeing her nearly starve. I had no money and
got very little work; in the usual way of things,
I came into my little bit of money it’s
precious little too late. She was very
pretty and a good girl, but not a lady by birth no,
not a lady, Austin. Consequently my folk my
respectable well-to-do folk left her pretty
nearly to starve and me to look on at it.
That’s among the reasons why I’m so fond
of respectable well-to-do people, why I have a natural
inclination to acquiesce in their claim to all the
virtues.”
“Does Miss Driver know this?”
“Yes.” He paused
a moment. “She knows this and
a little more which may or may not turn
out material some day.”
These words started my alarm afresh.
Did he mean still to be in touch with Jenny, still
to keep up communication with her a hold
on her even though he went? If that
were so, there was no end in sight, and no peace.
The next instant he relieved me from that fear by adding
in a low pensive voice, “But not while I live;
we know each other no more after to-day.”
Our eyes met again. He nodded
at me, confirming his last words. “You may
rely on that,” he seemed to say.
“Do you leave by an early train to-morrow?”
I asked.
“Yes first thing in the morning.”
“By this time to-morrow I shall
feel very kindly toward you, Octon, and the more kindly
for what you’ve told me to-day.”
“I believe you will, and I understand
the deferred payment of your love.” He
smiled at me again. “You’re true to
your salt, and I suppose you’re a bit in love
yourself, though you don’t seem to know anything
about it. Well, take care of her take
care of this great woman.”
“I don’t want to talk
about her to you. I don’t see the good of
it.”
“You ought to want to, because
I understand her. But since you don’t ”
He dropped the poker with a clatter and reared himself
to his height. “I’d better go, for,
as heaven’s above us, I can talk and think of
nothing else till to-morrow.”
“Where are you going to?”
“Into the dark” he
laughed gruffly “Continent. Did
my melodrama alarm you? Not that it’s dark
any longer more’s the pity! It’s
not very likely we shall meet again this side the
Styx.” He held out his hand to me with
a genuinely friendly air.
“We’re both young!”
I said as I clasped his hand. In the end, still,
I liked him, and his story had moved me to a new pity.
It was all of a piece with his perversity that he
should have hidden so long his strongest claim to
sympathy.
“I could have been young,”
he answered. “And that stiff fool can’t.”
He squeezed my hand to very pain before he dropped
it. “A great woman and a good fellow well,
in this hole it’s something to have met!
As for the rest of them the fate of Laodicea,
I think!”
“You’re so wrong, you know.”
“Yes? As usual? In
the end I shall certainly be stamped out!” He
shook his head with a whimsically humorous gravity.
“Part of the objection to me is simply because
I’m so large.”
That was actually true when I came
to think of it. His size seemed an oppression a
perpetual threat in itself a form of bullying.
Small men could have said the things he did with only
half the offense; the other half lay in his physical
security.
“Try to counteract that by improving
your manners,” I said, smiling at him in a friendly
amusement.
“Let the grizzly bear put on
silk knee-breeches wouldn’t he look
elegant? Good-by, Austin. Take care of her!”
“Since you say that again you
know I would with my life.”
“And I to my death. And I seem
to die to-day.”
There was nothing to be said to that.
We walked out into the open air together. I rejoiced
that he was going, and yet was sad. Something
of what Jenny felt was upon me then the
interest of him, the challenge to try and to discover,
the greatness of the effort to influence, the audacity
of the notion of ruling. The danger of him and
his bulk! A Dark Continent he seemed in himself!
I could not but be sorry that my little ship was now
to lose sight of the coasts of it. But there was
a nobler craft almost driven on to its
rocks, still tossing in its breakers. For her
a fair wind off land and an open sea!
As we stood before my door, I awaiting
Octon’s departure, he perhaps loath to look
his last on a scene which must carry for him such
significance, I saw Lacey coming toward me on horseback.
He beckoned to me in token that he wanted me.
“Ah, an opportunity for another
good-by!” said Octon grimly.
Lacey brought his horse to a stand
by us, but did not dismount.
“I’m trespassing, I’m
afraid, Lord Lacey! My being in this park is
against the law, isn’t it?”
Octon’s opening was not very
conciliatory, but Lacey’s good-humor was proof
against him. Moreover the lad looked preoccupied.
“I’m not out for a row
to-day, Mr. Octon,” he said. “I want
just one word with you, Austin.”
“Then I’ll be off,”
said Octon. He nodded to me; he did not offer
to shake hands again.
“I’ll come and see you
off to-morrow morning. The eleven-five, I suppose?”
That was the fast train to London.
“Yes. All right, I shall
be glad to see you. To Lord Lacey and
his friends this is good-by.”
“You’re going away?”
asked Lacey, joy and relief plain in his voice.
“Yes. You seem very glad.”
“I am glad,” said young Lacey, “but
I mean no offense, Mr. Octon.”
Their eyes met fair and square.
I expected an angry outburst from Octon, but none
came; his look was moody again, but it was not fierce.
He looked restless and unhappy, but he spoke with
dignity.
“I recognize that. I take
no offense. Good-by, Lord Lacey.” With
a slight lift of his hat, courteously responded to
by Lacey, he turned his back on us and walked away
with his heavy slouching gait, his head sunk low on
his shoulders. We watched him go for a moment
or two in silence.
“Is he going for good?” Lacey asked me.
“Yes, to-morrow.”
He seemed to consider something within
himself. “Then I don’t know that
I really need trouble you. It’s a delicate
matter and ” He beat his leg with
his crop, frowning thoughtfully. “I wonder,
Austin, whether you’re aware how matters stand
between Miss Driver and my father?” His use of
“my father” instead of “the governor”
was a significant mark of his seriousness.
“Yes, she told me.”
“My father told me. To-morrow
is the day for the announcement. Austin, the
last two or three days my father has been very worried
and upset. Aunt Sarah’s been at him about
something. I’m sure it’s about about
Miss Driver. I can tell it is by the way they
both look when her name’s mentioned. And
I I tried an experiment. At lunch to-day
I began to talk about that fellow Powers. I tried
it on by saying I thought he was a scoundrel and that
I hoped Miss Driver would give him the sack. I
never saw a man look up with such a start as my father
did. Aunt Sarah was ready to be on to me, but
he was too quick. ‘Why do you say that?’
he snapped out eagerly, you know as
if he was uncommonly anxious to hear my reasons.
Well, of course, I’d none to give, only my impressions
of the chap. Aunt Sarah looked triumphant and
read me a lecture on envy, malice, and all uncharitableness.
My father sat staring at the tablecloth, but listening
hard to every word. Why the devil should my father
be so interested in Powers? Can you tell me that,
Austin?”
“No, I can’t tell you,”
I said, “but I’m much obliged to you for
this information.”
“I thought there would be well,
just no harm in mentioning it to you,” he said.
“Of course it’s probably all right really.
And if everything is settled, and announced, and all
that, to-morrow and ” He
broke off, not adding in words what there was no need
to add “Octon gone to-morrow!”
But to-day was not to-morrow.
Lady Sarah was at work, and Fillingford much interested
in Mr. Powers! Worried, upset, and very much interested
in Powers!
Lacey gathered his reins and prepared
to be off. “Sorry if I’ve meddled
in what’s not my business,” he said.
“But I’m ready to take the responsibility.”
That was permission to me to use his information, and
to vouch his authority to Jenny. He nodded to
me. “See you to-morrow, perhaps, and we’ll
drink the health of the engaged couple!” He smiled,
but he looked puzzled and not very happy, rather as
though he were hoping for the best, and staving off
anticipation of some hitch or misfortune.
As soon as he was gone, I went up
to the Priory. My task was not an easy one, but
I had an overwhelming feeling a feeling
which refused all counter-argument that
it was necessary. There was still this one evening an
opportunity for a last bit of recklessness, and Heaven
alone knew how great a temptation.
Jenny received me in her little upstairs
sitting-room, next to the room where she slept.
She wore an indoors gown and, in answer to my formal
inquiry, told me that she had a cold and was feeling
rather “seedy” not a common
admission for her to make. Then I went to work,
stumbling at my awkward story so full of
implied accusation against her, if it were not utterly
unmeaning under the steady thoughtful gaze
of her eyes. She heard me to the end in silence.
“If that rascal is trying to
make mischief, if he has trumped up some story ”
I tried so to put it that she could feel entitled to
be on her guard without making any admissions.
She made none, and offered no direct
comment on the story. She took up an envelope
from the writing-table by her.
“This is my formal leave to
Lord Fillingford to announce our engagement.
I was going to post it to-night. I’ll send
it now by a groom. Please ring the bell for me,
Austin.”
Loft appeared. She gave him the
letter and ordered that a groom should take it to
Fillingford Manor on horseback. Loft glanced at
the clock.
“The men will just be at their
tea, miss,” he said. It was now about half-past
four.
“It’ll do in half an hour’s
time,” she answered. “But let it get
there this afternoon without fail.”
As Loft went out, she turned to me.
“There now, that’s settled.”
Was it? There was still to-night.
I suspected to-night desperately. I suspected
Jenny’s love of having it both ways to the very
last moment that she could. I suspected the strength
of the lure toward Octon. Whether she divined
my suspicions I cannot tell. She went on in her
simplest, most plausible way.
“Now I’m going to lie
down, and I’m not sure I shall get up again.
A plate of soup and a novel in bed look rather attractive!
And I must get a good beauty-sleep against
my lord’s coming to-morrow!”
She held out her hand to me.
As I took it I gave her a long look. The bright
eyes were candid and unembarrassed. Yet I had
grave doubts whether Jenny was speaking the whole
truth and nothing but it!
On the stairs I encountered Chat.
She broke out on me volubly about Jenny’s indisposition.
“You’ve seen our poor
Jenny the poor child? So ill, such
a cold! And she actually wanted to go down to
Catsford to see Mr. Bindlecombe and Mr. Powers on
some Institute business! As if she was fit to
go out a raw cold evening, too, and getting
dark so much earlier nowadays! At any rate I
persuaded her out of that, and I do hope she’ll
be sensible and go to bed.”
“So do I very much, Miss Chatters,”
I replied.
“And she’s just given me to understand
that she means to do it.”
“That’s the safe thing,”
Chat averred with emphasis; and, without a doubt,
she was perfectly right from more points
of view than one. In bed at Breysgate, with her
soup, her novel, and a watchful maid in attendance,
Jenny would be safe. I did not, however, need
quite as much convincing of it as Chat seemed disposed
to administer to me.
There was nothing more to do.
I went back home, brewed myself a cup of tea, and
sat down to write letters; writing letters compels
an attention which would wander from a book.
I had an accumulation to answer, some on my own account,
the greater part on Jenny’s affairs, and I worked
away steadily till it was nearly seven o’clock.
Then I was suddenly interrupted by a loud knock on
my door. As I rose, the door opened, and Lacey
was again before me. He was still in riding dress,
but his boots were covered with dust; he was hot and
out of breath. He had been walking walking
fast, or even running. He seemed excited, but
tried to smile at me.
“Here I am again!” he
said. “I don’t know whether I am a
fool, Austin I hope I am but
there’s something I want you to hear.”
He shut the door behind him, glanced at the clock,
and went on quickly. “Do you know a sandy-haired
boy who wears a red cap and rides a girl’s bicycle?”
“Yes,” I answered. “That’s
Powers’s boy Alban Powers.”
“I thought I remembered the
young beggar. That boy brought a note up to Aunt
Sarah while we were having tea about a quarter
past five, it must have been, I think. Aunt Sarah
pounced on the note, read it, said there was no answer,
and then handed the note over to my father. ’Who’s
it from?’ he asked peevishly. ‘You’ll
see if you read it,’ she said. I asked
if I was de trop, but my father signed to me
to sit where I was. He read the note, and handed
it back to Aunt Sarah. ’What are you going
to do?’ she asked. ‘Nothing,’
he said. She pursed up her lips and shrugged
her shoulders she made it pretty plain what
she thought of that answer. ‘Nothing!’
she sort of whispered, throwing her eyes up to the
ceiling. Then he broke out: ’I’ve
forbidden the subject to be mentioned!’ but
he looked very unhappy and uncomfortable. Nobody
said anything for a bit; Aunt Sarah looked obstinate-silent
and my father unhappy-silent. I tried to talk
about something or other, but it was no good.
Then the man came in with another note, saying a groom
had brought it for his lordship. Well, he read
that and it seemed to please him a bit
better.”
“Well it might!” I remarked.
“It was from Miss Driver and it said what he
wanted.”
“Wait a bit, Austin. He
sat with this note Miss Driver’s in
his hand, turning it over and over. He didn’t
offer to show it to either of us, but he kept looking
across at Aunt Sarah. I took up a paper, but I
watched them from behind it. He was weighing something
in his mind; she wouldn’t look at him playing
sulky still over the business of the first note, the
one that boy in the red cap had brought. At last
he got up and went over to her. He spoke rather
low, but I heard well, he could have sent
me away, or gone away with her himself, if he hadn’t
wanted me to hear. ’A note I’ve had
from Miss Driver makes it very proper for me to call
on her this evening,’ he said. Aunt Sarah
looked up, wide awake in a minute. ‘You’ll
go this evening to Breysgate?’ she
asked. ’Yes, at seven.’ ‘At
seven,’ she repeated after him with a nod.
’But perhaps she’ll be out.’
‘That’s possible,’ he answered.
’But I shall wait for her she must
come in before dinner.’ Aunt Sarah looked
hard at him. ’They’ll probably know
where she’s gone if she is out. You could
go and meet her,’ she said to him. I can’t
give you the way they talked it was all
as if what they said meant something different, or
something more, at any rate. When Aunt Sarah
suggested that he might go and meet Miss Driver, he
started a little, then thought it over. At last
he said, ’I shall try to find her to-night.’
‘You’re sensible at last!’ she said and
added something in a whisper. My father nodded,
and walked out of the room, pocketing his letter.
Aunt Sarah went to the fire and burned hers.
I wish I could have got a look at it!”
“So do I,” I said. “It’s
just on seven now.”
I was thinking hard. The boy
with the red cap Powers’s boy the
note the subterranean quarrel over it the
strange half-spoken half-suppressed conversation that
followed these gave plenty of matter for
thought when I added to them my sore doubts of the
way in which Jenny in truth meant to spend the evening.
“Of course it may be all nothing.
I’m afraid all the time of being infernally
officious.”
“Your father will pretty nearly be at Breysgate
by now.”
“And she’s there, I suppose,
isn’t she?” His question was full of hesitation.
In an instant, on his question, my
doubts and suspicions seemed to harden into certainties.
I knew it was nothing less than knowledge that
she was not there, and that the note brought by the
boy with the red cap told truly where she was.
Fillingford would go to Breysgate he would
be referred to Chat. Chat would tell him that
Jenny was in bed. Would he believe it and go
home peacefully to face Lady Sarah’s
angry scorn and the doubts of his own perplexed mind?
He might then all would be well. But
he might not believe it. He had said that he
would try to find her to-night. He knew where
to find her if he trusted the information
which the boy in the red cap had brought.
“He doesn’t know you’ve come here,
of course?”
“Not he! I got a start and,
by Jove, I ran! Are you going to do anything
about it?”
I was quite clear what I had to do
about it. Chat must be in the secret; she might
manage to send Fillingford home or she might
keep him at Breysgate long enough to give me, in my
turn, a chance. No good lay in my going to meet
him Chat could lie as well as I, and, if
he would not believe her, he would not believe me
either. Neither would I send Lacey to him; any
appearance of Lacey’s in the matter would show
that we were afraid, that we knew there was something
to conceal. My course was to take the start Lacey’s
warning gave me, to go where Jenny was, trusting to
reach her in time to get her away before Fillingford
came on from Breysgate. It was time to put away
pretenses, scruples, formalities. I must find
her wherever she was; I must meet her face to face
with my message of danger.
I put on my hat and coat hastily.
Lacey stood looking at me.
“Where are you going?” he asked.
“Where that boy came from,” I answered.
“Do you mind if I come, too? As far as
the house, say?”
“Why do you want to come?”
He spoke with a certain calm authority.
“I think I’ve a right to come. You
must excuse me for saying that I think I know with
whom we’re dealing. We may very likely
be in for a row, Austin. I don’t want to
be seen, if I can help it, but I do want to be somewhere
handy in case my father well, in case there
is a row, you know.”
Yes, we knew with whom we might have to deal.
A row was not unlikely.
“Very well, come along,” I said.
The clock struck seven as we started
out into a dull, foggy, chill evening. Darkness
had fallen and the lights of Catsford twinkled in the
valley beneath us. As we began to walk, I heard
carriage wheels on the road behind us. Fillingford
was on his way to Breysgate. Lie well, Chat!
Be clever! Keep him there keep him
there, till the danger is overpast!