The Foreign Minister was down with
the gout. For a week he had been confined to
the house, and he had missed two Cabinet Councils at
a time when the pressure upon his department was severe.
It is true that he had an excellent undersecretary
and an admirable staff, but the Minister was a man
of such ripe experience and of such proven sagacity
that things halted in his absence. When his firm
hand was at the wheel the great ship of State rode
easily and smoothly upon her way; when it was removed
she yawed and staggered until twelve British editors
rose up in their omniscience and traced out twelve
several courses, each of which was the sole and only
path to safety. Then it was that the Opposition
said vain things, and that the harassed Prime Minister
prayed for his absent colleague.
The Foreign Minister sat in his dressing-room
in the great house in Cavendish Square. It was
May, and the square garden shot up like a veil of
green in front of his window, but, in spite of the
sunshine, a fire crackled and sputtered in the grate
of the sick-room. In a deep-red plush armchair
sat the great statesman, his head leaning back upon
a silken pillow, one foot stretched forward and supported
upon a padded rest. His deeply-lined, finely-chiselled
face and slow-moving, heavily-pouched eyes were turned
upwards towards the carved and painted ceiling, with
that inscrutable expression which had been the despair
and the admiration of his Continental colleagues upon
the occasion of the famous Congress when he had made
his first appearance in the arena of European diplomacy.
Yet at the present moment his capacity for hiding
his emotions had for the instant failed him, for about
the lines of his strong, straight mouth and the puckers
of his broad, overhanging forehead, there were sufficient
indications of the restlessness and impatience which
consumed him.
And indeed there was enough to make
a man chafe, for he had much to think of and yet was
bereft of the power of thought. There was, for
example, that question of the Dobrutscha and the navigation
of the mouths of the Danube which was ripe for settlement.
The Russian Chancellor had sent a masterly statement
upon the subject, and it was the pet ambition of our
Minister to answer it in a worthy fashion. Then
there was the blockade of Crete, and the British fleet
lying off Cape Matapan, waiting for instructions which
might change the course of European history.
And there were those three unfortunate Macedonian
tourists, whose friends were momentarily expecting
to receive their ears or their fingers in default
of the exorbitant ransom which had been demanded.
They must be plucked out of those mountains, by force
or by diplomacy, or an outraged public would vent its
wrath upon Downing Street. All these questions
pressed for a solution, and yet here was the Foreign
Minister of England, planted in an arm-chair, with
his whole thoughts and attention riveted upon the ball
of his right toe! It was humiliating horribly
humiliating! His reason revolted at it.
He had been a respecter of himself, a respecter of
his own will; but what sort of a machine was it which
could be utterly thrown out of gear by a little piece
of inflamed gristle? He groaned and writhed
among his cushions.
But, after all, was it quite impossible
that he should go down to the House? Perhaps
the doctor was exaggerating the situation. There
was a Cabinet Council that day. He glanced at
his watch. It must be nearly over by now.
But at least he might perhaps venture to drive down
as far as Westminster. He pushed back the little
round table with its bristle of medicine-bottles,
and levering himself up with a hand upon either arm
of the chair, he clutched a thick oak stick and hobbled
slowly across the room. For a moment as he moved,
his energy of mind and body seemed to return to him.
The British fleet should sail from Matapan.
Pressure should be brought to bear upon the Turks.
The Greeks should be shown Ow! In
an instant the Mediterranean was blotted out, and
nothing remained but that huge, undeniable, intrusive,
red-hot toe. He staggered to the window and rested
his left hand upon the ledge, while he propped himself
upon his stick with his right. Outside lay the
bright, cool, square garden, a few well-dressed passers-by,
and a single, neatly-appointed carriage, which was
driving away from his own door. His quick eye
caught the coat-of-arms on the panel, and his lips
set for a moment and his bushy eyebrows gathered ominously
with a deep furrow between them. He hobbled back
to his seat and struck the gong which stood upon the
table.
“Your mistress!” said he as the serving-man
entered.
It was clear that it was impossible
to think of going to the House. The shooting
up his leg warned him that his doctor had not overestimated
the situation. But he had a little mental worry
now which had for the moment eclipsed his physical
ailments. He tapped the ground impatiently with
his stick until the door of the dressing-room swung
open, and a tall, elegant lady of rather more than
middle age swept into the chamber. Her hair
was touched with grey, but her calm, sweet face had
all the freshness of youth, and her gown of green shot
plush, with a sparkle of gold passementerie at her
bosom and shoulders, showed off the lines of her fine
figure to their best advantage.
“You sent for me, Charles?”
“Whose carriage was that which drove away just
now?”
“Oh, you’ve been up!”
she cried, shaking an admonitory forefinger.
“What an old dear it is! How can you be
so rash? What am I to say to Sir William when
he comes? You know that he gives up his cases
when they are insubordinate.”
“In this instance the case may
give him up,” said the Minister, peevishly;
“but I must beg, Clara, that you will answer
my question.”
“Oh! the carriage! It
must have been Lord Arthur Sibthorpe’s.”
“I saw the three chevrons
upon the panel,” muttered the invalid.
His lady had pulled herself a little
straighter and opened her large blue eyes.
“Then why ask?” she said.
“One might almost think, Charles, that you
were laying a trap! Did you expect that I should
deceive you? You have not had your lithia powder.”
“For Heaven’s sake, leave
it alone! I asked because I was surprised that
Lord Arthur should call here. I should have fancied,
Clara, that I had made myself sufficiently clear on
that point. Who received him?”
“I did. That is, I and Ida.”
“I will not have him brought
into contact with Ida. I do not approve of it.
The matter has gone too far already.”
Lady Clara seated herself on a velvet-topped
footstool, and bent her stately figure over the Minister’s
hand, which she patted softly between her own.
“Now you have said it, Charles,”
said she. “It has gone too far I
give you my word, dear, that I never suspected it until
it was past all mending. I may be to blame no
doubt I am; but it was all so sudden. The tail
end of the season and a week at Lord Donnythorne’s.
That was all. But oh! Charlie, she loves
him so, and she is our only one! How can we
make her miserable?”
“Tut, tut!” cried the
Minister impatiently, slapping on the plush arm of
his chair. “This is too much. I tell
you, Clara, I give you my word, that all my official
duties, all the affairs of this great empire, do not
give me the trouble that Ida does.”
“But she is our only one, Charles.”
“The more reason that she should not make a
mésalliance.”
“Mésalliance, Charles!
Lord Arthur Sibthorpe, son of the Duke of Tavistock,
with a pedigree from the Heptarchy. Debrett takes
them right back to Morcar, Earl of Northumberland.”
The Minister shrugged his shoulders.
“Lord Arthur is the fourth son
of the poorest duke in England,” said he.
“He has neither prospects nor profession.”
“But, oh! Charlie, you could find him both.”
“I do not like him. I do not care for
the connection.”
“But consider Ida! You
know how frail her health is. Her whole soul
is set upon him. You would not have the heart,
Charles, to separate them?”
There was a tap at the door.
Lady Clara swept towards it and threw it open.
“Yes, Thomas?”
“If you please, my lady, the Prime Minister
is below.”
“Show him up, Thomas.”
“Now, Charlie, you must not
excite yourself over public matters. Be very
good and cool and reasonable, like a darling.
I am sure that I may trust you.”
She threw her light shawl round the
invalid’s shoulders, and slipped away into the
bed-room as the great man was ushered in at the door
of the dressing-room.
“My dear Charles,” said
he cordially, stepping into the room with all the
boyish briskness for which he was famous, “I
trust that you find yourself a little better.
Almost ready for harness, eh? We miss you sadly,
both in the House and in the Council. Quite a
storm brewing over this Grecian business. The
Times took a nasty line this morning.”
“So I saw,” said the invalid,
smiling up at his chief. “Well, well, we
must let them see that the country is not entirely
ruled from Printing House Square yet. We must
keep our own course without faltering.”
“Certainly, Charles, most undoubtedly,”
assented the Prime Minister, with his hands in his
pockets.
“It was so kind of you to call.
I am all impatience to know what was done in the
Council.”
“Pure formalities, nothing more.
By-the-way, the Macedonian prisoners are all right.”
“Thank Goodness for that!”
“We adjourned all other business
until we should have you with us next week.
The question of a dissolution begins to press.
The reports from the provinces are excellent.”
The Foreign Minister moved impatiently and groaned.
“We must really straighten up
our foreign business a little,” said he.
“I must get Novikoff’s Note answered.
It is clever, but the fallacies are obvious.
I wish, too, we could clear up the Afghan frontier.
This illness is most exasperating. There is
so much to be done, but my brain is clouded.
Sometimes I think it is the gout, and sometimes I
put it down to the colchicum.”
“What will our medical autocrat
say?” laughed the Prime Minister. “You
are so irreverent, Charles. With a bishop one
may feel at one’s ease. They are not beyond
the reach of argument. But a doctor with his
stethoscope and thermometer is a thing apart.
Your reading does not impinge upon him. He
is serenely above you. And then, of course, he
takes you at a disadvantage. With health and
strength one might cope with him. Have you read
Hahnemann? What are your views upon Hahnemann?”
The invalid knew his illustrious colleague
too well to follow him down any of those by-paths
of knowledge in which he delighted to wander.
To his intensely shrewd and practical mind there
was something repellent in the waste of energy involved
in a discussion upon the Early Church or the twenty-seven
principles of Mesmer. It was his custom to slip
past such conversational openings with a quick step
and an averted face.
“I have hardly glanced at his
writings,” said he. “By-the-way,
I suppose that there was no special departmental news?”
“Ah! I had almost forgotten.
Yes, it was one of the things which I had called
to tell you. Sir Algernon Jones has resigned
at Tangier. There is a vacancy there.”
“It had better be filled at
once. The longer delay the more applicants.”
“Ah, patronage, patronage!”
sighed the Prime Minister. “Every vacancy
makes one doubtful friend and a dozen very positive
enemies. Who so bitter as the disappointed place-seeker?
But you are right, Charles. Better fill it at
once, especially as there is some little trouble in
Morocco. I understand that the Duke of Tavistock
would like the place for his fourth son, Lord Arthur
Sibthorpe. We are under some obligation to the
Duke.”
The Foreign Minister sat up eagerly.
“My dear friend,” he said,
“it is the very appointment which I should have
suggested. Lord Arthur would be very much better
in Tangier at present than in in ”
“Cavendish Square?” hazarded
his chief, with a little arch query of his eyebrows.
“Well, let us say London.
He has manner and tact. He was at Constantinople
in Norton’s time.”
“Then he talks Arabic?”
“A smattering. But his French is good.”
“Speaking of Arabic, Charles, have you dipped
into Averroes?”
“No, I have not. But the
appointment would be an excellent one in every way.
Would you have the great goodness to arrange the matter
in my absence?”
“Certainly, Charles, certainly. Is there
anything else that I can do?”
“No. I hope to be in the House by Monday.”
“I trust so. We miss you
at every turn. The Times will try to make mischief
over that Grecian business. A leader-writer is
a terribly irresponsible thing, Charles. There
is no method by which he may be confuted, however
preposterous his assertions. Good-bye!
Read Porson! Goodbye!”
He shook the invalid’s hand,
gave a jaunty wave of his broad-brimmed hat, and darted
out of the room with the same elasticity and energy
with which he had entered it.
The footman had already opened the
great folding door to usher the illustrious visitor
to his carriage, when a lady stepped from the drawing-room
and touched him on the sleeve. From behind the
half-closed portiere of stamped velvet a little pale
face peeped out, half-curious, half-frightened.
“May I have one word?”
“Surely, Lady Clara.”
“I hope it is not intrusive.
I would not for the world overstep the limits ”
“My dear Lady Clara!”
interrupted the Prime Minister, with a youthful bow
and wave.
“Pray do not answer me if I
go too far. But I know that Lord Arthur Sibthorpe
has applied for Tangier. Would it be a liberty
if I asked you what chance he has?”
“The post is filled up.”
“Oh!”
In the foreground and background there was a disappointed
face.
“And Lord Arthur has it.”
The Prime Minister chuckled over his little piece
of roguery.
“We have just decided it,” he continued.
“Lord Arthur must go in a week.
I am delighted to perceive, Lady Clara, that the
appointment has your approval. Tangier is a place
of extraordinary interest. Catherine of Braganza
and Colonel Kirke will occur to your memory.
Burton has written well upon Northern Africa.
I dine at Windsor, so I am sure that you will excuse
my leaving you. I trust that Lord Charles will
be better. He can hardly fail to be so with
such a nurse.”
He bowed, waved, and was off down
the steps to his brougham. As he drove away,
Lady Clara could see that he was already deeply absorbed
in a paper-covered novel.
She pushed back the velvet curtains,
and returned into the drawing-room. Her daughter
stood in the sunlight by the window, tall, fragile,
and exquisite, her features and outline not unlike
her mother’s, but frailer, softer, more delicate.
The golden light struck one half of her high-bred,
sensitive face, and glimmered upon her thickly-coiled
flaxen hair, striking a pinkish tint from her closely-cut
costume of fawn-coloured cloth with its dainty cinnamon
ruchings. One little soft frill of chiffon nestled
round her throat, from which the white, graceful neck
and well-poised head shot up like a lily amid moss.
Her thin white hands were pressed together, and her
blue eyes turned beseechingly upon her mother.
“Silly girl! Silly girl!”
said the matron, answering that imploring look.
She put her hands upon her daughter’s sloping
shoulders and drew her towards her. “It
is a very nice place for a short time. It will
be a stepping stone.”
“But oh! mamma, in a week! Poor Arthur!”
“He will be happy.”
“What! happy to part?”
“He need not part. You shall go with him.”
“Oh! mamma!”
“Yes, I say it.”
“Oh! mamma, in a week?”
“Yes indeed. A great deal
may be done in a week. I shall order your trousseau
to-day.”
“Oh! you dear, sweet angel!
But I am so frightened! And papa? Oh!
dear, I am so frightened!”
“Your papa is a diplomatist, dear.”
“Yes, ma.”
“But, between ourselves, he
married a diplomatist too. If he can manage
the British Empire, I think that I can manage him,
Ida. How long have you been engaged, child?”
“Ten weeks, mamma.”
“Then it is quite time it came
to a head. Lord Arthur cannot leave England
without you. You must go to Tangier as the Minister’s
wife. Now, you will sit there on the settee,
dear, and let me manage entirely. There is Sir
William’s carriage! I do think that I know
how to manage Sir William. James, just ask the
doctor to step in this way!”
A heavy, two-horsed carriage had drawn
up at the door, and there came a single stately thud
upon the knocker. An instant afterwards the
drawing-room door flew open and the footman ushered
in the famous physician. He was a small man,
clean-shaven, with the old-fashioned black dress and
white cravat with high-standing collar. He swung
his golden pince-nez in his right hand
as he walked, and bent forward with a peering, blinking
expression, which was somehow suggestive of the dark
and complex cases through which he had seen.
“Ah,” said he, as he entered.
“My young patient! I am glad of the opportunity.”
“Yes, I wish to speak to you
about her, Sir William. Pray take this arm-chair.”
“Thank you, I will sit beside
her,” said he, taking his place upon the settee.
“She is looking better, less anæmic unquestionably,
and a fuller pulse. Quite a little tinge of
colour, and yet not hectic.”
“I feel stronger, Sir William.”
“But she still has the pain in the side.”
“Ah, that pain!” He tapped
lightly under the collar-bones, and then bent forward
with his biaural stethoscope in either ear. “Still
a trace of dulness still a slight crepitation,”
he murmured.
“You spoke of a change, doctor.”
“Yes, certainly a judicious change might be
advisable.”
“You said a dry climate.
I wish to do to the letter what you recommend.”
“You have always been model patients.”
“We wish to be. You said a dry climate.”
“Did I? I rather forget
the particulars of our conversation. But a dry
climate is certainly indicated.”
“Which one?”
“Well, I think really that a
patient should be allowed some latitude. I must
not exact too rigid discipline. There is room
for individual choice the Engadine, Central
Europe, Egypt, Algiers, which you like.”
“I hear that Tangier is also recommended.”
“Oh, yes, certainly; it is very dry.”
“You hear, Ida? Sir William says that you
are to go to Tangier.”
“Or any ”
“No, no, Sir William!
We feel safest when we are most obedient. You
have said Tangier, and we shall certainly try Tangier.”
“Really, Lady Clara, your implicit
faith is most flattering. It is not everyone
who would sacrifice their own plans and inclinations
so readily.”
“We know your skill and your
experience, Sir William. Ida shall try Tangier.
I am convinced that she will be benefited.”
“I have no doubt of it.”
“But you know Lord Charles.
He is just a little inclined to decide medical matters
as he would an affair of State. I hope that you
will be firm with him.”
“As long as Lord Charles honours
me so far as to ask my advice I am sure that he would
not place me in the false position of having that
advice disregarded.”
The medical baronet whirled round
the cord of his pince-nez and pushed out
a protesting hand.
“No, no, but you must be firm on the point of
Tangier.”
“Having deliberately formed
the opinion that Tangier is the best place for our
young patient, I do not think that I shall readily
change my conviction.”
“Of course not.”
“I shall speak to Lord Charles upon the subject
now when I go upstairs.”
“Pray do.”
“And meanwhile she will continue
her present course of treatment. I trust that
the warm African air may send her back in a few months
with all her energy restored.”
He bowed in the courteous, sweeping,
old-world fashion which had done so much to build
up his ten thousand a year, and, with the stealthy
gait of a man whose life is spent in sick-rooms, he
followed the footman upstairs.
As the red velvet curtains swept back
into position, the Lady Ida threw her arms round her
mother’s neck and sank her face on to her bosom.
“Oh! mamma, you are a diplomatist!”
she cried.
But her mother’s expression
was rather that of the general who looked upon the
first smoke of the guns than of one who had won the
victory.
“All will be right, dear,”
said she, glancing down at the fluffy yellow curls
and tiny ear. “There is still much to be
done, but I think we may venture to order the trousseau.”
“Oh I how brave you are!”
“Of course, it will in any case
be a very quiet affair. Arthur must get the
license. I do not approve of hole-and-corner
marriages, but where the gentleman has to take up
an official position some allowance must be made.
We can have Lady Hilda Edgecombe, and the Trevors,
and the Grevilles, and I am sure that the Prime Minister
would run down if he could.”
“And papa?”
“Oh, yes; he will come too,
if he is well enough. We must wait until Sir
William goes, and, meanwhile, I shall write to Lord
Arthur.”
Half an hour had passed, and quite
a number of notes had been dashed off in the fine,
bold, park-paling handwriting of the Lady Clara, when
the door clashed, and the wheels of the doctor’s
carriage were heard grating outside against the kerb.
The Lady Clara laid down her pen, kissed her daughter,
and started off for the sick-room. The Foreign
Minister was lying back in his chair, with a red silk
handkerchief over his forehead, and his bulbous, cotton-wadded
foot still protruding upon its rest.
“I think it is almost liniment
time,” said Lady Clara, shaking a blue crinkled
bottle. “Shall I put on a little?”
“Oh! this pestilent toe!”
groaned the sufferer. “Sir William won’t
hear of my moving yet. I do think he is the most
completely obstinate and pig-headed man that I have
ever met. I tell him that he has mistaken his
profession, and that I could find him a post at Constantinople.
We need a mule out there.”
“Poor Sir William!” laughed
Lady Clara. “But how has he roused your
wrath?”
“He is so persistent-so dogmatic.”
“Upon what point?”
“Well, he has been laying down
the law about Ida. He has decreed, it seems,
that she is to go to Tangier.”
“He said something to that effect before he
went up to you.”
“Oh, he did, did he?”
The slow-moving, inscrutable eye came sliding round
to her.
Lady Clara’s face had assumed
an expression of transparent obvious innocence, an
intrusive candour which is never seen in nature save
when a woman is bent upon deception.
“He examined her lungs, Charles.
He did not say much, but his expression was very
grave.”
“Not to say owlish,” interrupted the Minister.
“No, no, Charles; it is no laughing
matter. He said that she must have a change.
I am sure that he thought more than he said.
He spoke of dulness and crepitation, and the effects
of the African air. Then the talk turned upon
dry, bracing health resorts, and he agreed that Tangier
was the place. He said that even a few months
there would work a change.”
“And that was all?”
“Yes, that was all.”
Lord Charles shrugged his shoulders
with the air of a man who is but half convinced.
“But of course,” said
Lady Clara, serenely, “if you think it better
that Ida should not go she shall not. The only
thing is that if she should get worse we might feel
a little uncomfortable afterwards. In a weakness
of that sort a very short time may make a difference.
Sir William evidently thought the matter critical.
Still, there is no reason why he should influence
you. It is a little responsibility, however.
If you take it all upon yourself and free me from
any of it, so that afterwards ”
“My dear Clara, how you do croak!”
“Oh! I don’t wish
to do that, Charles. But you remember what happened
to Lord Bellamy’s child. She was just Ida’s
age. That was another case in which Sir William’s
advice was disregarded.”
Lord Charles groaned impatiently.
“I have not disregarded it,” said he.
“No, no, of course not.
I know your strong sense, and your good heart too
well, dear. You were very wisely looking at both
sides of the question. That is what we poor
women cannot do. It is emotion against reason,
as I have often heard you say. We are swayed
this way and that, but you men are persistent, and
so you gain your way with us. But I am so pleased
that you have decided for Tangier.”
“Have I?”
“Well, dear, you said that you would not disregard
Sir William.”
“Well, Clara, admitting that
Ida is to go to Tangier, you will allow that it is
impossible for me to escort her?
“Utterly.”
“And for you?
“While you are ill my place is by your side.”
“There is your sister?”
“She is going to Florida.”
“Lady Dumbarton, then?”
“She is nursing her father. It is out
of the question.”
“Well, then, whom can we possibly
ask? Especially just as the season is commencing.
You see, Clara, the fates fight against Sir William.”
His wife rested her elbows against
the back of the great red chair, and passed her fingers
through the statesman’s grizzled curls, stooping
down as she did so until her lips were close to his
ear.
“There is Lord Arthur Sibthorpe,” said
she softly.
Lord Charles bounded in his chair,
and muttered a word or two such as were more frequently
heard from Cabinet Ministers in Lord Melbourne’s
time than now.
“Are you mad, Clara!”
he cried. “What can have put such a thought
into your head?”
“The Prime Minister.”
“Who? The Prime Minister?”
“Yes, dear. Now do, do
be good! Or perhaps I had better not speak to
you about it any more.”
“Well, I really think that you have gone rather
too far to retreat.”
“It was the Prime Minister,
then, who told me that Lord Arthur was going to Tangier.”
“It is a fact, though it had escaped my memory
for the instant.”
“And then came Sir William with
his advice about Ida. Oh! Charlie, it is
surely more than a coincidence!”
“I am convinced,” said
Lord Charles, with his shrewd, questioning gaze, “that
it is very much more than a coincidence, Lady Clara.
You are a very clever woman, my dear. A born
manager and organiser.”
Lady Clara brushed past the compliment.
“Think of our own young days,
Charlie,” she whispered, with her fingers still
toying with his hair. “What were you then?
A poor man, not even Ambassador at Tangier.
But I loved you, and believed in you, and have I
ever regretted it? Ida loves and believes in
Lord Arthur, and why should she ever regret it either?”
Lord Charles was silent. His
eyes were fixed upon the green branches which waved
outside the window; but his mind had flashed back to
a Devonshire country-house of thirty years ago, and
to the one fateful evening when, between old yew hedges,
he paced along beside a slender girl, and poured out
to her his hopes, his fears, and his ambitious.
He took the white, thin hand and pressed it to his
lips.
“You, have been a good wife to me, Clara,”
said he.
She said nothing. She did not
attempt to improve upon her advantage. A less
consummate general might have tried to do so, and ruined
all. She stood silent and submissive, noting
the quick play of thought which peeped from his eyes
and lip. There was a sparkle in the one and a
twitch of amusement in the other, as he at last glanced
up at her.
“Clara,” said he, “deny
it if you can! You have ordered the trousseau.”
She gave his ear a little pinch.
“Subject to your approval,” said she.
“You have written to the Archbishop.”
“It is not posted yet.”
“You have sent a note to Lord Arthur.”
“How could you tell that?”
“He is downstairs now.”
“No; but I think that is his brougham.”
Lord Charles sank back with a look of half-comical
despair.
“Who is to fight against such
a woman?” he cried. “Oh! if I could
send you to Novikoff! He is too much for any
of my men. But, Clara, I cannot have them up
here.”
“Not for your blessing?”
“No, no!”
“It would make them so happy.”
“I cannot stand scenes.”
“Then I shall convey it to them.”
“And pray say no more about
it to-day, at any rate. I have been
weak over the matter.”
“Oh! Charlie, you who are so strong!”
“You have outflanked me, Clara.
It was very well done. I must congratulate
you.”
“Well,” she murmured,
as she kissed him, “you know I have been studying
a very clever diplomatist for thirty years.”