Jenny had now on the board all the
pieces needed for her great combination embracing,
as it did, the restoration of her own position, the
regaining of Catsford’s loyal allegiance, the
extension of her territory and influence in the county,
and “doing the handsome thing by” Margaret.
Nobody who watched her closely both what
she did and the hints of her mind which she let fall could
long doubt which of these objects was paramount with
her. It was the last. The others were, in
a sense, no more than means to it; though in themselves
irresistible to her temperament, necessary to her
happiness, and instinctively sought by her, yet in
the combination they stood subsidiary to the master-stroke
that was to crown her game and redeem the pledge which
she had given to Leonard Octon as he lay dying.
But doing the handsome thing by Margaret carried with
it, or, rather, contained within itself, as Jenny conceived
the position, another object to which in its turn it
was, if not subsidiary, so closely related as to be
inseparable. Fate had severed her life from Octon’s;
Jenny imperiously refused to accept the severance
as complete. Octon, the man she loved, had been
at odds with the neighborhood, had been scorned and
rejected by it; she herself had openly disgraced him
at its bidding; because she had not been able to resist
his fascination, she had herself fallen into disgrace.
She meant now to obliterate all that. For him
she could directly do nothing; she would do everything
for his name and for the girl whom he had left.
She would vindicate or avenge his
memory; she would even glorify it in the person of
his daughter. That was the ultimate impulse which
gave birth to her combination and dictated its moves;
the achievement of that end was to be its consummation.
It was not a selfish impulse; it had
indeed a touch of something quixotic and fanciful
about it this posthumous victory which she
sought to win for Octon, this imposing of him in his
death on a society which would have nothing of him
while he lived, this proud refusal to court or to
accept oblivion for him or for her friendship with
him, this challenge thrown out to his detractors,
in his name, as it were from his grave. Her personal
restoration and aggrandizement, if welcome in themselves,
were also necessary to this final object. The
object itself was not self-seeking save in so far
as she stood identified with the cause which she championed.
Yet on the realization of it she did not scruple to
bring to bear all the resources and all the arts which
would have been appropriate to the most cold and calculating
selfishness. Everything was pressed into the
service the resources of her own wealth,
the opportunities afforded by the needs of her neighbors,
Catsford’s appetite for holidays and feasts,
as well as its aspirations toward higher education;
her own youth and attractiveness no less than Margaret’s
beauty; the wiles and the cunning by which she gained
power over men. She spent herself as lavishly
as she spent her money; she was as ready to sacrifice
herself as she was eager to make use of others.
She seized on every new ally and fitted him into her
scheme. Dormer had appeared at the last moment by
happy chance. In a moment she saw where he could
be of use, laid her hand on him, and pressed him into
the service. He became a new piece on the board;
he had his place in the combination.
Delicate and difficult is the game
when it is played with living pieces. They may
refuse to move or may move in the wrong
direction. There was one piece, of supreme importance
in the scheme, which she must handle with rarest skill
if he were to be induced to move at her bidding and
in the direction that her combination required.
He was to be the head and front of the final attack;
at the head of the opposing forces stood his father!
She must be very sure of her control over that piece
before she tried to move it! Only when he had
been brought wholly under her sway could the process
of impelling him in the desired direction safely be
begun.
Yes, Fillingford was the great enemy.
Round him gathered all the opposition to her, her
proceedings, and her pretensions; he lay right across
her path, and must be conquered if her schemes were
to win success. She was not bitter against him;
she was ready to admit that he had the right to be
bitter against her. She shared his pride too much
not to appreciate his attitude. She respected
him, in a way she liked him but she was
minded to fight him to the death if need be, and to
use against him every weapon that she could find even
those that came from his own household. If he
fell before her attack, the whole campaign would be
won. But it was preposterous to suppose that he
ever would? Jenny knew the difficulties, but
neither did she underestimate her own resources.
A long purse, a long head, and two remarkably attractive
young women these formed the nucleus of
her forces; they represented a power by no means to
be despised in whatever field they might be brought
into action.
I was at the luncheon-party “to
talk to Chat,” said Jenny; but in fact I had
fallen into the habit of lunching at the Priory.
Jenny had human weaknesses, and, from this time on,
manifested a liking for a sympathetic audience which
she could find only in me. Chat was not, in her
judgment, “safe”; she was too leaky a vessel
to be trusted with the drops of confidence carefully
measured drops which Jenny was pleased
to let fall. Besides, she needed, now and then,
a little help.
The young men arrived in high spirits,
and Jenny, flanked by Chat and myself Margaret
was not down from changing after her riding lesson received
them gayly. They had a joke between themselves,
and it was not long in coming out. They had been
compelled to dodge Lady Sarah; only a bolt up a side
road had prevented them from meeting her carriage
face to face just outside Breysgate Park.
“You’re playing truants,
I’m afraid!” said Jenny, but with no air
of rebuke.
Loft announced lunch; we went in without
waiting for Margaret. She did not appear till
we had been eating for ten minutes. By that time
Jenny had both her guests well in hand. If her
manner to Dormer was cordial, yet it lacked the touch
of intimacy, of old-time friendliness, which she had
for Lacey. But neither was she any longer so candidly
Lacey’s friend and so definitely
nothing else as she had once thought it
politic to become. She did not now hold her wiles
in leash; she loosed them in pursuit of him, even
as in the earliest days of their acquaintance.
The door opened. Jenny’s
eyes flew quickly to it; she stopped talking and seemed
to wait for something. Margaret came running in,
her hair bright in the summer sun, her eyes sparkling
and her cheeks glowing the very picture
of radiant youth and beauty. Only a few feet separated
me from Lacey. I heard him say “By Jove!”
half under his breath.
Jenny heard, too. “Here’s
Margaret,” she said. The girl ran to her,
took her hand, and began to make a thousand excuses
for being late.
“And, after all the rest, that
nice clergyman stopped me on the road and talked to
me!”
“You mean Mr. Alison? He
stopped you?” Jenny looked interested. “What
did he say?”
“Oh, nothing only
that he’d known my father, and that he hoped
I was very happy. Of course I am with
you!”
“There’s your place between
Mr. Dormer and Austin. Sit down, or Loft won’t
give you any lunch.”
Between Dormer and me was opposite
Jenny and Lacey Chat and I each sitting
at an end of the oblong table. Jenny showed no
remission in her efforts to keep Lacey amused indeed
she rather engrossed him, and the other four of us
talked together. But from time to time his eyes
strayed across the table and once he caught
Miss Margaret studying his handsome face with evident
interest. The girl blushed. Jenny was smiling
contentedly as she regained her guest’s attention.
Dormer made great play with the pretty
girl. It did not take long to discover that this
was Dormer’s way. He had the gift one
enviable to slow-tongued folk like myself of
a perpetual flow of small talk; this he peppered copiously I
must confess to thinking that it needed seasoning with
flirtation, more or less obvious generally
more. He plied Margaret with the product, much
to her apparent liking; she was at her prettiest in
her timid fencing with his compliments, her shy enjoyment,
her consciously daring little excursions into coquetry.
But Dormer’s eyes were not all for his own side
of the table either; he made an effort or two to draw
Jenny into conversation; he often looked her way.
With those two in the room together, a man might well
be puzzled to decide on which face to turn his eyes.
Jenny assisted Dormer’s choice. She would
not be drawn by him she was still for Lacey.
The two couples talked, Chat and I falling out of
the conversation; we could not condescend to call
commonplaces across the space that divided us, and
Chat and I seldom talked anything else to one another.
After lunch we all went into the garden except
Chat, who always took a siesta when she could.
Here Jenny carried off Dormer, to see the hothouses it
was time to be civil to him. I fancied that she
would not be vexed if I left Lacey and Margaret to
a tete-a-tete, so, when they proposed strolling,
I was firm for sitting, and we parted company.
I could watch them as I sat. The two were getting
on very well. For a little while I watched.
My cigarette came to an end I followed Chat’s
excellent example and fell asleep.
I awoke to find Jenny standing beside
me. She was pulling a rose to pieces and smiling
thoughtfully. Our guests had, it seemed, departed;
Margaret was visible in a hammock under a tree at the
other end of the lawn.
“I’ve really had to be
quite shy with Mr. Dormer in the hothouses,”
she said. “He’s such a ladies’
man! And he’s gone away with the impression
that that’s the sort of man I like. He has
pointed out that Hingston is only fifteen miles off,
and that he has a motor car and can do the distance
in twenty-two or was it twenty-seven? minutes,
so that lots can be seen of him, if desired.
He has hinted that this is, after all, a lonely life
for me for a person of my gifts and attractions and
has congratulated me on the growing prosperity of
Catsford. What do you make of all that, Austin?”
“Perhaps you told him that you wanted a bit
of his land?”
“Mr. Cartmell would never have
forgiven me if I’d let slip such a propitious
opportunity. I did.”
“It rather looks as if he wanted
all of yours,” I suggested.
“Then he communicated to me
the impression that, in his opinion, Lord Lacey was
considerably smitten with Eunice Aspenick and that
the match might come off. In return for which
I managed, I believe, to convey to him a sort of twofold
impression first, that I might possibly
marry myself some day; secondly, that,
when I did, Margaret would be dismissed with a decent
provision a small addition to the little
income which she has from her father. For reasons
of my own I laid some stress on the latter half of
that impression, Austin.” She was looking
over to where Margaret lay in the hammock. “She’s
very young,” she said softly, “and of
course, the man’s glib and in a way good-looking.”
“Are you beginning to feel a
little responsible? It’s easy work, marrying
off other people!”
“But they make such a beautiful
pair!” she pleaded. She did not mean Margaret
and Dormer. “I love just to see them together.
And the idea of it! How Leonard would have laughed!
Can’t you hear that great big outrageous guffaw
of his breaking out over it? But you don’t
think I’d force her?”
“No. And he’s a fine
lad. You wouldn’t be going far wrong.”
“She’s very young.
She might make a mistake. I thought
Mr. Dormer had better understand her real situation.”
“O mistress of many wiles, I
understand! But is Lacey to share the impression?”
“I should like him to up
to the last possible minute. And then the
fairy godmother! It’s all on the old-fashioned
lines but I like it.” Her voice
dropped. “The old, mischievous, none-too-respectable
fairy godmother, Austin!”
“Suppose the fairy godmother
seemed not so very old herself that mischief
proved attractive that ?”
“Impossible with
her here! Oh, you really think so, only you’re
always so polite. But anything short of of
that would be quite within the four corners
of the scheme.” She laughed at me, at her
schemes, at herself; yet about the two last she was
in deadly earnest. So she grew grave again in
a moment. “He’d have to get over so
much to make that seem even possible.”
Well, that was true enough. Fillingford’s
son the accomplice of my evening expedition
to Hatcham Ford! There was something to get over,
certainly. But there was something to get over
in the other plan, too.
“Still, I don’t mind its
seeming just possible,” said Jenny.
She looked at me with an air of wondering how I should
take what she was going to say. “It might
just be made to seem a danger!”
“This is walking on a razor’s edge, isn’t
it?”
“Yes it is rather.
Mr. Dormer’s got to help a little. I don’t
like him, Austin.”
“No more do I since
you mention it. And you’d have no pity for
him either?”
“I shall get his bit of land,
but he won’t get all mine,” said Jenny,
serenely pitiless. “He plays his game I’ll
play mine. We neither of us stake our hearts,
I think. You can’t stake what you’ve
never had or what you’ve lost.”
She stood silent for a minute, looking down to where
the smoke of busy Catsford rose in a blue mist between
us and the horizon. “He’s just ridiculous,
but he serves my turn. No need to talk any more
about him!”
Margaret tumbled herself out of the
hammock with a grace which was entirely accidental
and narrowly skirted a disaster to propriety.
She came across the lawn, yawning and laughing.
“I’ve been asleep, Jenny,” she cried,
“and having wonderful dreams!”
Jenny’s face lit up with an
extraordinary tenderness. She drew the girl to
her and stroked her hair. “Why did you wake
up? It’s a pity to wake up when the dreams
are wonderful.”
“Oh, but waking up’s great
fun, too! Everything’s great fun at Breysgate.”
Stroking Margaret’s hair, Jenny
looked down at me in my wicker arm-chair. “I’ve
been having fun, too telling Austin secrets!”
“Tell me some.”
“The day after to-morrow or just
about then!” laughed Jenny.
The ensuing days were full of triumph
for Jenny. Her munificent donation was gratefully
and enthusiastically accepted; a new Committee, composed
of members of the Corporation, was appointed to take
in hand the erection of the Institute immediately;
there was no danger of this Committee’s adjourning
sine die! Her holiday and her feast went
off in a blaze of success. She received a wonderful
ovation from the town; there was no appearance of
her being ostracized by the county. She came
out to greet her guests, supported by the Aspenicks,
by Dormer, even by Lacey; it was significant that
the last-named should appear on so public an occasion.
His presence compromised the attitude of Fillingford
Manor; though its master was not there, though the
lady who presided over the house was severely absent,
the heir was there and there, evidently,
on terms of friendship and intimacy.
Lady Aspenick came, I think, not merely
because she was committed to civility; she also desired
to spy out the land, to get some light on the situation.
Lacey’s visits to Breysgate were becoming frequent;
they had not passed unnoticed by vigilant eyes in
the neighborhood, and the report of them had reached
Overington Grange. Did Lacey brave the disapproval
of his family for nothing? While Eunice joined
the gay group which followed Jenny as she made a progress
round the tables, Lady Aspenick fell to my share.
“All this is a great triumph
for Jenny’s friends,” she remarked.
“Those of us who have been her friends all through,
I mean.”
“It must be very gratifying to you, Lady Aspenick.”
“I have been loyal,” she
said with candid pride, “and I am loyal still,
although, as I told you, I can’t approve of everything
she does.” Her eyes were on the group in
front of us, where Lacey walked between Eunice and
Margaret. Dormer was escorting Jenny, with the
new Mayor of Breysgate on her other side.
“She has her own way of doing
things,” I murmured. “Sometimes they
come off.”
“Amyas Lacey here, too!
How is that regarded at the Manor?”
“You ask me but I
shouldn’t wonder if you knew better than I do,”
said I, smiling.
“Well, I admit I know Lady Sarah’s
views; she makes no secret of them. I was thinking
of well, of his father, you know. He
doesn’t share these visits!”
“If common gossip was right,
there’s an obvious explanation of that.”
“Yes, but it seems to me to
apply to the son almost as strongly.” She
turned her eyeglasses sharply round to my face.
“Having jilted his father ”
“I didn’t say I believed
the common gossip; but even the fact of its having
existed might make him shy of ”
“Oh, come, we both know a good
deal more than that about it! However, let’s
hope they’ll make it up through Amyas.
He can act as peacemaker, and then we may have the
wedding after all!”
Lady Aspenick’s voice failed
to carry conviction. It was borne in upon me
that she did not believe in her own forecast that
she knew very well, from information gleaned in the
enemy’s camp, that there was small chance of
Lacey’s effecting a reconciliation, and none
at all of a marriage between Jenny and Fillingford
coming off. She threw out the suggestion as a
feeler; another possible alliance was really in her
mind. She might elicit some hint about that; if
people spoke truly, she was interested in the subject
for her daughter’s sake. Was it possible
that Jenny, having lost the father, would annex the
son? That was in her mind. It would be rather
a strong thing to do but then, Lady Aspenick
would retort, “Only look at the things she does!”
The woman who brought Margaret Octon to Breysgate would
she hesitate at capturing young Lacey if she could?
“I can only say that in my opinion
it’s not at all likely, and has never entered
Miss Driver’s head.”
“Then it’s very funny
that Amyas should come here so much!”
“Young men like young company,” I remarked.
“It’s not quite the only
house in the neighborhood where there’s young
company,” she retorted sharply. My remark
had certainly rather overlooked the claims of Overington
Grange.
She said no more, perhaps because
her fish my humble self did not
bite, perhaps merely because at that moment the Mayor
of Catsford began to make a speech, highly eulogistic
of Jenny and all her works. Lady Aspenick listened or
at least looked on (listening was not easy) with
an air which was distinctly critical.
Dormer was remarkably jubilant that
day perhaps as a result of his exchange
of impressions with Jenny in the hothouses. He
danced attendance on her constantly and was evidently
only too glad to be seen in her train. Jenny
received his homage with the utmost graciousness; he
might well flatter himself that he stood high in her
favor. There was a familiarity in his manner
toward her which grated on my nerves; it had been
there from his first meeting with her. It looked
as though he thought that her past history gave him
an advantage, and entitled him to consider himself
a better match for her than he would have been held
to be for another woman in her position. Perhaps
Jenny would have had no right to resent such an idea;
at any rate she showed no signs of resenting his behavior.
She let him almost monopolize her saving
the Mayor’s official rights leaving
Lacey to the care of Eunice Aspenick and of Margaret.
Lacey looked much less happy than
might have been expected in such company. He
appeared restless and ill at ease. When we were
having a smoke together, while the ladies were getting
ready for dinner (which was to be eaten hastily and
followed by fireworks), I got some light on the cause
of his discontent.
“It’s curious,”
he observed over his cigar, “how disagreeable
girls can manage to be to one another without saying
a word that you can lay hold of.”
“It is,” said I.
“Who’s been exercising the gentle art this
afternoon?”
“Why, Eunice Aspenick!
You saw us three walking together? Well, we must
have been walking like that round the tables,
you know for the best part of an hour.
Upon my honor, I don’t believe she once addressed
a remark directly to Miss Octon! And when Miss
Octon spoke to her, she answered through me.
And why?”
“The tandem whip, I suppose hereditary
feud and that sort of thing.”
“It’s not Miss Octon’s
fault; it’s a shame to make her responsible.”
“There doesn’t seem to be any other reason.”
He pulled his trim little fair mustache;
I rather think that he blushed a little. “I
don’t like it, and I’ve a good mind to
tell Eunice so. Miss Octon is Miss Driver’s
guest, just as we are, and on that ground anyhow entitled
to civility.”
I believe that he carried out his
possibly chivalrous but certainly unwise purpose,
and no doubt he got a snubbing for his pains.
At any rate he had a short interview with Eunice just
before we dined and, afterwards, spoke
to her no more that evening. While the fireworks
blazed and the rockets roared, he placed himself between
Jenny and Margaret. I managed to get near Margaret
on the other side, just for the love of seeing the
beauty of the girl’s face as she watched the
show with an intensity of excitement and delight.
She clapped her hands, she laughed, she almost crowed
in exultation. Once or twice she caught Lacey
by the arm, as you see a child do with its father when
the pleasure is really too much to hold all by itself.
Jenny seemed to heed her very little and
to heed Amyas Lacey even less; she looked decidedly
ruminative, gazing with a grave face at the spectacle,
her clean-cut pallid profile standing out like a coin
against the blaze of light. Amyas glanced at
her now and again, but he was not proof against the
living, exuberant, ebullient joy that bubbled and gurgled
on his other side. Presently he abandoned himself
altogether to the charm of it, fell under its sway,
and became partaker of its mood. Now they were
two children together, their shouts of laughter, of
applause, of simulated alarm, filling the air.
Grim looked the Aspenick ladies, very scornful that
elegant gentleman Mr. Dormer! Margaret had never
a thought for them; if Lacey had, he cast it away.
Thus they were when the show ended but
its ending did not check their talk and their laughter.
Jenny rose, refreshments were spread within; to call
Lacey’s attention to her, she touched his shoulder.
He turned round suddenly with a start.
“Oh, I say, I beg your pardon!
I I didn’t know you were still there,
Miss Driver.”
“There’s something to
eat indoors,” said Jenny. “If you
want it!”
“Oh, no, Jenny, dear, it’s
much nicer here. I’m sure Lord Lacey isn’t
hungry!”
He was not. Jenny turned away.
As she passed me, she gave me an odd sort of smile,
amused, satisfied, just a trifle the least
trifle scornful. “Success number
one!” she whispered. “But it’s
just as well that I’m not a vain woman, Austin!”
“You could undo it all in ten minutes if you
liked.”
Jenny’s smile broadened a little and
her eyes confessed.