“Then He Will Come Again”
Lady Mabel, when her young lover left
her, was for a time freed from the necessity of thinking
about him by her father. He had returned from
the Oaks in a very bad humour. Lord Grex had been
very badly treated by his son, whom he hated worse
than any one else in the world. On the Derby
Day he had won a large sum of money, which had been
to him at the time a matter of intense delight, for
he was in great want of money. But on this day
he had discovered that his son and heir had lost more
than he had won, and an arrangement had been suggested
to him that his winnings should go to pay Percival’s
losings. This was a mode of settling affairs to
which the Earl would not listen for a moment, had
he possessed the power of putting a veto upon it.
But there had been a transaction lately between him
and his son with reference to the cutting off a certain
entail under which money was to be paid to Lord Percival.
This money had not yet been forthcoming, and therefore
the Earl was constrained to assent. This was
very distasteful to the Earl, and he came home therefore
in a bad humour, and said a great many disagreeable
things to his daughter. “You know, papa,
if I could do anything I would.” This she
said in answer to a threat, which he had made often
before and now repeated, of getting rid altogether
of the house in Belgrave Square. Whenever he
made this threat he did not scruple to tell her that
the house had to be kept up solely for her welfare.
“I don’t see why the deuce you don’t
get married. You’ll have to do it sooner
or later.” That was not a pleasant speech
for a daughter to hear from her father. “As
to that,” she said, “it must come or not
as chance will have it. If you want me to sign
anything I will sign it;” for she
had been asked to sign papers, or in other words to
surrender rights; “but for that other
matter it must be left to myself.” Then
he had been very disagreeable indeed.
They dined out together, of
course with all the luxury that wealth can give.
There was a well-appointed carriage to take them backwards
and forwards to the next square, such as an Earl should
have. She was splendidly dressed, as became an
Earl’s daughter, and he was brilliant with some
star which had been accorded to him by his sovereign’s
grateful minister in return for staunch parliamentary
support. No one looking at them could have imagined
that such a father could have told such a daughter
that she must marry herself out of the way because
as an unmarried girl she was a burden.
During the dinner she was very gay.
To be gay was the habit, we may almost
say the work, of her life. It so chanced
that she sat between Sir Timothy Beeswax, who in these
days was a very great man indeed, and that very Dolly
Longstaff, whom Silverbridge in his irony had proposed
to her as a fitting suitor for her hand.
“Isn’t Lord Silverbridge
a cousin of yours?” asked Sir Timothy.
“A very distant one.”
“He has come over to us, you know. It is
such a triumph.”
“I was so sorry to hear it.”
This, however, as the reader knows, was a fib.
“Sorry!” said Sir Timothy.
“Surely Lord Grex’s daughter must be a
Conservative.”
“Oh yes; I am a Conservative
because I was born one. I think that people in
politics should remain as they are born, unless
they are very wise indeed. When men come to be
statesmen and all that kind of thing, of course they
can change backwards and forwards.”
“I hope that is not intended for me, Lady Mabel.”
“Certainly not. I don’t
know enough about it to be personal.” That,
however, was again not quite true. “But
I have the greatest possible respect for the Duke,
and I think it a pity that he should be made unhappy
by his son. Don’t you like the Duke?”
“Well; yes; in
a way. He is a most respectable man; and has been
a good public servant.”
“All our lot are ruined, you
know,” said Dolly, talking of the races.
“Who are your lot, Mr. Longstaff?”
“I’m one myself.”
“I suppose so.”
“I’m utterly smashed. Then there’s
Percival.”
“I hope he has not lost much. Of course
you know he’s my brother.”
“Oh laws; so he is.
I always put my foot in it. Well; he
has lost a lot. And so have Silverbridge and
Tifto. Perhaps you don’t know Tifto.”
“I have not the pleasure of knowing Mr. Tifto.”
“He is a major. I think
you’d like Major Tifto. He’s a sort
of racing coach to Silverbridge. You ought to
know Tifto. And Tregear is pretty nearly cleared
out.”
“Mr. Tregear! Frank Tregear!”
“I’m told he has been
hit very heavy. I hope he’s not a friend
of yours, Lady Mabel.”
“Indeed he is; a very dear friend
and a cousin.”
“That’s what I hear. He’s very
much with Silverbridge you know.”
“I cannot think that Mr. Tregear has lost money.”
“I hope he hasn’t.
I know I have. I wish someone would stick up for
me, and say that it was impossible.”
“But that is not Mr. Tregear’s
way of living. I can understand that Lord Silverbridge
or Percival should lose money.”
“Or me?”
“Or you, if you like to say so.”
“Or Tifto?”
“I don’t know anything about Mr. Tifto.”
“Major Tifto.”
“Or Major Tifto; what does it signify?”
“No; of course.
We inferior people may lose our money just as we please.
But a man who can look as clever as Mr. Tregear ought
to win always.”
“I told you just now that he was a friend of
mine.”
“But don’t you think that
he does look clever?” There could be no question
but that Tregear, when he disliked his company, could
show his dislike by his countenance; and it was not
improbable that he had done so in the presence of
Mr. Adolphus Longstaff. “Now tell the truth,
Lady Mabel; does he not look conceited sometimes?”
“He generally looks as if he
knew what he was talking about, which is more than
some other people do.”
“Of course he is a great deal
more clever than I am. I know that. But
I don’t think even he can be so clever as he
looks. ’Or you so stupid,’ that’s
what you ought to say now.”
“Sometimes, Mr. Longstaff, I
deny myself the pleasure of saying what I think.”
When all this was over she was very
angry with herself for the anxiety she had expressed
about Tregear. This Mr. Longstaff was, she thought,
exactly the man to report all she had said in the public
room at the club. But she had been annoyed by
what she had heard as to her friend. She knew
that he of all men should keep himself free from such
follies. Those others had, as it were, a right
to make fools of themselves. It had seemed so
natural that the young men of her own class should
dissipate their fortunes and their reputations by
every kind of extravagance! Her father had done
so, and she had never even ventured to hope that her
brother would not follow her father’s example.
But Tregear, if he gave way to such follies as these,
would soon fall headlong into a pit from which there
would be no escape. And if he did fall, she knew
herself well enough to be aware that she could not
stifle, nor even conceal, the misery which this would
occasion her. As long as he stood well before
the world she would be well able to assume indifference.
But were he to be precipitated into some bottomless
misfortunes then she could only throw herself after
him. She could see him marry, and smile, and
perhaps even like his wife. And while he was doing
so, she could also marry, and resolve that the husband
whom she took should be made to think that he had
a loving wife. But were Frank to die, then
must she fall upon his body as though he had been
known by all the world to be her lover. Something
of this feeling came upon her now, when she heard
that he had been betting and had been unfortunate.
She had been unable so to subdue herself as to seem
to be perfectly careless about it. She had begun
by saying that she had not believed it; but
she had believed it. It was so natural that Tregear
should have done as the others did with whom he lived!
But then the misfortune would be to him so terrible, so
irremediable! The reader, however, may as well
know at once that there was not a word of truth in
the assertion.
After the dinner she went home alone.
There were other festivities to be attended, had she
pleased to attend them; and poor Miss Cassewary was
dressed ready to go with her as chaperone; but
Miss Cassewary was quite satisfied to be allowed to
go to bed in lieu of Mrs. Montacute Jones’s
great ball. And she had gone to her bedroom when
Lady Mabel went to her. “I am glad you are
alone,” she said, “because I want to speak
to you.”
“Is anything wrong?”
“Everything is wrong. Papa says he must
give up this house.”
“He says that almost always
when he comes back from the races, and very often
when he comes back from the club.”
“Percival has lost ever so much.”
“I don’t think my Lord will hamper himself
for your brother.”
“I can’t explain it, but
there is some horrible money complication. It
is hard upon you and me.”
“Who am I?” said Miss Cassewary.
“About the dearest friend that
ever a poor girl had. It is hard upon you, and
upon me. I have given up everything, and
what good have I done?”
“It is hard, my dear.”
“But after all I do not care
much for all that. The thing has been going on
so long that one is used to it.”
“What is it then?”
“Ah; yes; what is it?
How am I to tell you?”
“Surely you can tell me,”
said the old woman, putting out her hand so as to
caress the arm of the younger one.
“I could tell no one else; I
am sure of that. Frank Tregear has taken to gambling, like
the rest of them.”
“Who says so?”
“He has lost a lot of money
at these races. A man who sat next me at dinner, one
of those stupid do-nothing fools that one meets everywhere, told
me so. He is one of the Beargarden set, and of
course he knows all about it.”
“Did he say how much?”
“How is he to pay anything?
Of all things that men do this is the worst.
A man who would think himself disgraced for ever if
he accepted a present of money will not scruple to
use all his wits to rob his friend of everything that
he has by studying the run of cards or by watching
the paces of some brutes of horses! And they consider
themselves to be fine gentlemen! A real gentleman
should never want the money out of another man’s
pocket; should never think of money at
all.”
“I don’t know how that
is to be helped, my dear. You have got to think
of money.”
“Yes; I have to think of it,
and do think of it; and because I do so I am not what
I call a gentleman.”
“No; my dear; you’re a lady.”
“Psha! you know what I mean.
I might have had the feelings of a gentleman as well
as the best man that ever was born. I haven’t;
but I have never done anything so mean as gambling.
Now I have got something else to tell you.”
“What is it? You do frighten
me so when you look like that.”
“You may well be frightened, for
if this all comes round I shall very soon be able
to dispense with you altogether. His Royal Highness
Lord Silverbridge ”
“What do you mean, Mabel?”
“He’s next door to a Royal
Highness at any rate, and a much more topping man
than most of them. Well then; His Serene
Highness the heir of the Duke of Omnium has done
me the inexpressible honour of asking me to
marry him.”
“No!”
“You may well say, No. And to tell the
truth exactly, he didn’t.”
“Then why do you say he did?”
“I don’t think he did
quite ask me, but he gave me to understand that he
would do so if I gave him any encouragement.”
“Did he mean it?”
“Yes; poor boy!
He meant it. With a word; with a look,
he would have been down there kneeling. He asked
me whether I liked him well enough. What do you
think I did?”
“What did you do?”
“I spared him; out
of sheer downright Christian charity! I said to
myself ‘Love your neighbours.’ ‘Don’t
be selfish.’ ’Do unto him as you
would he should do unto you,’ that
is, think of his welfare. Though I had him in
my net, I let him go. Shall I go to heaven for
doing that?”
“I don’t know,”
said Miss Cassewary, who was so much perturbed by
the news she had heard as to be unable to come to any
opinion on the point just raised.
“Or mayn’t I rather go
to the other place? From how much embarrassment
should I have relieved my father! What a friend
I should have made for Percival! How much I might
have been able to do for Frank! And then what
a wife I should have made him!”
“I think you would.”
“He’ll never get another
half so good; and he’ll be sure to get one before
long. It is a sort of tenderness that is quite
inefficacious. He will become a prey, as I should
have made him a prey. But where is there another
who will treat him so well?”
“I cannot bear to hear you speak
of yourself in that way.”
“But it is true. I know
the sort of girl he should marry. In the first
place she should be two years younger, and four years
fresher. She should be able not only to like
him and love him, but to worship him. How well
I can see her! She should have fair hair, and
bright green-gray eyes, with the sweetest complexion,
and the prettiest little dimples; two inches
shorter than me, and the delight of her life should
be to hang with two hands on his arm. She should
have a feeling that her Silverbridge is an Apollo
upon earth. To me he is a rather foolish, but
very, very sweet-tempered young man; anything
rather than a god. If I thought that he would
get the fresh young girl with the dimples then I ought
to abstain.”
“If he was in earnest,”
said Miss Cassewary, throwing aside all this badinage
and thinking of the main point, “if he was in
earnest he will come again.”
“He was quite in earnest.”
“Then he will come again.”
“I don’t think he will,”
said Lady Mabel. “I told him that I was
too old for him, and I tried to laugh him out of it.
He does not like being laughed at. He has been
saved, and he will know it.”
“But if he should come again?”
“I shall not spare him again.
No; not twice. I felt it to be hard
to do so once, because I so nearly love him!
There are so many of them who are odious to me, as
to whom the idea of marrying them seems to be mixed
somehow with an idea of suicide.”
“Oh, Mabel!”
“But he is as sweet as a rose.
If I were his sister, or his servant, or his dog,
I could be devoted to him. I can fancy that his
comfort and his success and his name should be everything
to me.”
“That is what a wife ought to feel.”
“But I could never feel him
to be my superior. That is what a wife ought
in truth to feel. Think of those two young men
and the difference between them! Well; don’t
look like that at me. I don’t often give
way, and I dare say after all I shall live to be the
Duchess of Omnium.” Then she kissed
her friend and went away to her own room.