Of course I had a right to an explanation,
and equally, of course, I was determined to have it.
But the question was how to get it, and I confess
that for a long time I did not see my way. If
one had been dealing with a man it would have been
very different. But when a lady with whom you
have been on terms of intimacy and friendship turns
round upon you without any cause you can assign, and
tells you she desires to have no more to do with you,
it is not easy to see by what means you can force
her to a recognition of your side of the business.
What made the thing the more astonishing and bewildering
was that Lady Rollinson had always been so warm in
her friendship for me. Over and over again she
had alluded to my services to her son, and she had
introduced me to scores of people as the savior of
his life, magnifying a very simple incident to such
heroic proportions that she often put me to the blush
about it, and almost tempted me to wish that I had
let poor Jack take his chance without any interference
of mine. To have seen a lady the day before yesterday,
to have been hailed by her for the hundredth time as
her son’s preserver, to get a solemn “Not
at home” thrown at you when next you called-it
was an experience entirely new, and anything but agreeable.
If I may say so without bragging,
I have been judged a fairly good officer in my time.
I can give an order, I can obey an order, I can see
that an order is obeyed; but outside the realms of
discipline, and in the common complications of life,
I have never felt myself to be very much at ease!
The whole of this present business was so bewildering
that if only Lady Rollinson herself had been concerned
I should have retired from the consideration of the
problem instantly. But then she stopped my access
to. Violet, and that, for a young fellow who was
ardently in love, put altogether another complexion
on the affair. When I had got over my first amazement,
I sat down and wrote a note, which, in the fervor
of my feeling, bade fair to develop into a document
which would have filled, say, a column of the Times.
But when I had written, perhaps, a hundredth part
of what I felt it in me to say, I tore up the paper
and threw its fragments into the fire. Then I
started afresh, determined to be extremely brief and
business-like. Once more my feelings got the
upper hand of me, and again I covered half a dozen
closely-written pages before I discovered my mistake
anew. Finally I sat down to a pipe and thought
the matter over, until I decided on a definite line
of action. The upshot of it all was that I wrote
this note, and with my own hands bore it to her ladyship’s
house:
“Dear Lady Rollinson,-I
am utterly at a loss to understand the occurrences
of yesterday and to-day. A moment’s reflection
will show you that an explanation is absolutely due
to me. It is my right to demand it, and it is
at once your duty and your right to give it.”
Armed with this document I set out.
The same perturbed domestic greeted me with the formula
to which I was by this time growing accustomed, and
when I instructed him to carry the note within doors
and deliver it to his mistress, he closed the door
in my face and left me to await an answer on the steps.
The position was anything but comfortable. It
was a bright day, and a good many people were abroad,
considering how quiet the street generally was.
I felt as if everybody who passed was completely aware
of my discomfiture. Not a nurse-maid went by with
her charge who did not, to my distempered fancy, know
my business, and look meaningly at me in appreciation
of my position. By-and-by the door opened, and
the servant asked me to step inside. I had been
cooling my heels on the steps for full five minutes,
and was by this time as little self-possessed as I
have ever been in my life. I followed the man
blindly into the familiar morning-room, and was there
left alone for another ten minutes. Anger was
taking the place of bewilderment, and I was striding
rapidly up and down the room when Lady Rollinson entered.
The weather was still cold, but she carried a fan in
her hand, and moved it rapidly as she walked into
the room and sank into a chair. I bowed with
a stiff inclination of the head, but she made no return
to my salute.
“I hope, Captain Fyffe,”
she said, “that you will make this interview
as brief as possible. It is likely to be painful
to both of us, but you have insisted on it. I
do not see what purpose it can serve, but it is just
as well that you should understand that I am finally
determined.”
It was plainly to be seen that she
was painfully agitated; and though she had done her
best to abolish the traces of the fact, I could see
that she had been crying.
“You are finally determined!”
I echoed, and I dare say my manner was foolish enough.
“But what are you finally determined about?”
“I am finally determined,”
she responded, “that everything is over between
us; and until the count returns and learns the dreadful
truth, everything, so far as my influence can go,
is over between you and Violet.”
“What is the dreadful truth?”
I asked. “I give you my word that I am
utterly in the dark.”
Now Lady Rollinson was a dear old
woman, and I had had a warm affection for her.
On her side she had treated me from the beginning of
our acquaintance almost as if I had been her son;
and hitherto there had been nothing but the most friendly
and affectionate sentiment between us. But I
began to get angry, and I dare say I spoke in a tone
to which she had been little accustomed. She
cast an indignant glance at me, and fanned herself
at a great rate for a full minute before she answered.
“Come,” I repeated more
than once; “what is this dreadful truth?
Surely I have a right to know it.”
“You shall know it, Captain
Fyffe,” she answered, in a voice of weeping
menace such as women use when they are both wounded
and angry; “you shall have it in a word.”
She dropped her fan upon her knees, and asked me,
with a lugubrious air of triumph and reproach, “Did
you ever hear of Constance Pleyel?”
I was standing before her, and as
she leaned forward suddenly to offer this surprising
question I stepped back a little. A chair caught
me at the back of the knees, and I dropped into it
as if I had been shot. I have laughed in memory
many a time over that ludicrous accident, but it was
no laughing matter at the moment, for it sent a conviction
to the old lady’s mind which I do not think
was altogether banished from it to her dying day.
Of course the question in such a connection came upon
me as a surprise. In all my searchings for the
cause of her ladyship’s distemper I had not
lighted on the thought of Constance Pleyel. I
was not so much amazed at it that the name alone could
have bowled me over in that way; but Lady Rollinson’s
idea was that it had gone home instantly to a guilty
conscience.
“That is enough,” she
said, “and more than enough.” With
these words she arose and walked towards the door,
but I intercepted her.
“I beg your pardon, it is not enough, or nearly
enough.”
“You know the name,” she
answered. “You have shown me enough to tell
me that.”
“I know the name, certainly,”
I replied. “I have known the name and the
person that owns the name for many years. But
that fact affords a very partial explanation of your
conduct. I must trouble you to sit down, Lady
Rollinson, and listen to what I have to say.”
The stupid, good old woman had taken
her side already, and if anything had been needed
to confirm her own mistaken judgment of the case that
ludicrous accident would have supplied it. She
fanned herself in an emotion made up of wrath and
grief and dignity, glancing at me from time to time,
and looking away again with an expression of disdain,
which was hard for an innocent man to bear.
“I suppose,” I said, as
coolly as I could, “that whatever information
you have upon this matter comes from the Baroness Bonnar?”
I waited for an answer, but she gave no sign.
“I must trouble you to tell me if that is so.”
“You know that well enough,”
she answered. “The Baroness Bonnar is the
only friend the poor creature has in London.”
“Do you know much of the Baroness
Bonnar?” I asked. “Would it ever have
occurred to you to guess that the Baroness Bonnar is
neither more nor less than a paid Austrian spy, and
that Miss Constance Pleyel is, in all probability,
her confederate?”
She looked at me with an incredulity
so open that I felt it to be an insult, and she preserved
the same disdainful silence.
“I came here yesterday,”
I continued, “to consult Violet-”
She interrupted me almost with a shriek.
“Don’t mention that poor
girl’s name!” she cried. “I
won’t have it mentioned! I won’t
listen to it in this connection!”
“Pardon me,” I said, “it
has to be mentioned, and unless you are in the humor
to permit yourself to be made the dupe and tool of
as wicked a little adventuress as ever lived, you
must listen to what I have to tell you. I came
here yesterday to consult Violet as to what I should
do with respect to a plot in which I have found the
baroness to be engaged. You have often heard
the count and myself speak of poor old Ruffiano.
You know him as one of Violet’s pensioners,
and, indeed, I remember that twice or thrice I have
met him in your house. He has been betrayed to
the Austrians, and is at this minute in their hands.
The prime mover in that matter is the Baroness Bonnar,
and her tool was the Honorable George Brunow.”
Now surely one would have thought
that a charge so plain and dreadful was at least worth
investigation, and it had not entered my mind to conceive
that even an angry woman could fail to take some sort
of account of it. Lady Rollinson took it merely
as a tissue of absurdities.
“It only shows,” she said,
“how desperate your own case must be when you
need to bolster it by a story like that-a
story which could be proved to be false in half a
minute.”
“Why should you suppose me,”
I retorted, “to be so foolish as to bring you
such a story if it could not be proved to be true?
I ask nothing more or less than that you should inquire
into the matter.”
“I shall do nothing of the sort,”
she answered. “I know too much already.”
“I am sorry,” I answered,
“to be so seriously at issue with you on such
a theme, but I am compelled to insist upon my right.”
“I shall have nothing to say
on the matter,” she answered, “until the
count returns. He will be the final judge of what
is to be done; but until he comes I shall do my duty,
and it is no part of my duty to allow my niece to
listen to the persuasions of a man who has only too
clearly proved his powers in that way already.”
“Only a few weeks ago,”
I said, desperately, “I had an interview with
the Baroness Bonnar, in which I warned her not to intrude
upon your society again.”
“I know all about it!”
cried Lady Rollinson, with an indignant movement of
her fan. “You tried to bully the poor thing
into silence. You may save yourself any further
trouble, Captain Fyffe. My mind is made up, and
I shall do what I have decided to do. In my days,”
she added, beginning to cry, which made the situation
more intolerable than ever-“in my
days, when a gentleman was told by a lady that his
presence was unwelcome in her house he would never
have intruded.”
“My dear Lady Rollinson,”
I responded, controlling myself with a very considerable
effort, “you must listen to reason. You
have been made the dupe of a thoroughly heartless
and unprincipled woman.”
“That appears to be your method!”
She flashed back at me. “You can say what
you please about my character, now that I know yours.
Thank God I am too well known to fear your rancorous
tongue!”
The position was actually maddening,
and I had never dreamed until then that even a woman
who was bent on revenging what she conceived to be
a gross injury to one of her own sex could be so utterly
unreasonable and deaf to argument.
“I repeat, madame,”
I declared, “that the Count Ruffiano has been
betrayed to the enemy by this woman whose lies you
accept as if they were gospel. Brunow confessed
to me barely six-and-thirty hours ago that he acted
as her agent in that villainous transaction. Is
that a woman whose bare word is to be taken against
the overwhelming proof an honest man can bring?”
I know I was excited, and it is very
likely that I was speaking in a louder voice than
I was altogether aware of, but her answer gave me a
new surprise.
“I am not in the least afraid
of you, Captain Fyffe; my servants are in the house,
and I can ring for them at any minute.”
This cooled me, even in the middle
of my exasperation and the galling sense of impotence
I felt.
“I beg your pardon, Lady Rollinson.
I am bewildered by your manner. I am laboring
under an accusation of a very dreadful sort, and you
refuse to listen to me, though I can prove my innocence
quite easily.”
“Why,” she exclaimed,
“I haven’t even told the man what the accusation
is! But in spite of his innocence he knows all
about it.”
“I know all about it,”
I retorted, “because it has been brought against
me before, and withdrawn by the very woman who brings
it now. Will you listen to me, Lady Rollinson?”
“I will not willingly listen to another word.”
“Where is Violet?” I asked.
“That I shall not tell you,”
she answered. “I have made up my mind I
shall do nothing until the arrival of the count.
When he comes back, if ever he does, poor man, the
responsibility will be off my shoulders. Until
then, I shall take very good care that you have nothing
to do with Violet.”
This seemed to me to be carrying things
with far too high a hand, and there, at least, I thought
I had a right to speak with some show of authority.
“Violet,” I said, “is
my promised wife, and I am not going to allow any
folly of this kind to come between her and me.
I shall insist upon my right to see her, and to clear
myself of any accusation which may have been brought
against me in my absence.”
“You may insist as much as you
please, Captain Fyffe,” Lady Rollinson answered.
“I have made up my mind as to what is my duty,
and I shall do it, even at the risk of your most serious
displeasure.”
“You tell me,” I said, “that she
is not here?”
“I have told you already,”
she replied, “that she is not here. I have
made arrangements for her until the count returns.”
“And am I to understand,”
I asked, “that you refuse to allow me to know
her address?”
“You may understand that definitely,”
said her ladyship.
It was all very disagreeable, but
at least there was one ray of comfort in the middle
of it.
“Violet knows my address,”
I said, “and she is certain to write to me.”
“I might have something to thank
you for there, Captain Fyffe,” said the old
lady, with an almost comical increase of dignity, “if
I had not already taken my precautions. I may
tell you, however, that Violet is accompanied by a
discreet person, who has my instructions as to the
disposal of any letters she may write.”
This amounted to an open declaration
of war, and I felt myself on the point of answering
so hotly that I was wise in binding myself, for the
moment at least, to silence.
“Pray let us thoroughly understand
each other,” I said at length. “You,
on your side, have resolved to place complete reliance
on the statement of an exposed adventuress, without
one word of corroboration, and to refuse the clear
proof of my innocence, which I undertake to give you.”
I waited for a moment, but she maintained an altogether
obstinate silence. “Very well,” I
resumed, “that is understood so far. You
conceive it your duty to separate Violet and myself,
and to attempt to widen any possible separation between
us by suppressing my letters to her and hers to me.
You must permit me to point out to you that you are
adopting a very dangerous course, and I must warn you
that I shall do my best to frustrate a design which
seems to me so ureasonable and so cruel that I should
never have thought you capable of forming it.”
“You will do your best, of course,”
she answered, “and I shall do mine. I wish
you good-morning, Captain Fyffe.”
What with perplexity, and what with
grief and anger, I scarce knew what to do, but I turned
to her with a final appeal.
“I am sure,” I said, “that
you have your niece’s interests at heart.
It is not so very long since you professed to be my
friend. Ever since I have known you I have had
to tell you that you very much overestimated a chance
service I have rendered to your son.”
“I have been waiting for that,”
she answered. “That is just the sort of
appeal I was expecting you to make. It is of no
use for us to discuss this question any longer, for
let me tell you I have seen your letters.”
“The letters!” I cried.
“The letters,” she repeated-“the
letters to Miss Constance Pleyel.”
“Great Heaven, madam!”
I cried, exasperated beyond patience, “I have
never denied that I wrote to Miss Constance Pleyel,
but the letters were written when I was a boy, and
they are as absolutely harmless and blameless as any
love-sick nonsense ever written in the world!”
“I have seen the letters,”
she repeated, “and I have seen Miss Pleyel,
and, once more, Captain Fyffe, and for the last time,
I have made up my mind.”
With that she laid her hand upon the
bell-pull, and sounded a peal at the bell which was
so rapidly answered that I more than half suspected,
and, indeed, do now more than half suspect, that the
man who responded to it had been listening.
“Show Captain Fyffe out,”
said her ladyship. And so, a definite end being
put to the interview, I left the house as wrathful
and as humiliated a man as any to be found that hour
in London. So long as I live I shall not forget
the smug alacrity with which the servant obeyed the
behest of his mistress. I was in a state to wreak
my own ill-humor upon anybody, and it was in my mind,
and more than half in my heart, to kick that smug
man in livery down the steps. I have suffered
all my life from a certain Scotch vivacity of temperament
which it has cost me many and many a hard struggle
to control. It has not often been more unreasonable
or more vigorous in its internal demonstrations than
it was then, but I managed to reach the street and
to walk away without exposing myself. As to where
I went for the next few hours I never had the remotest
idea. I must have walked a good many miles, for
at last, when I pulled up, I found myself, at five
o’clock in the evening, in a part of the town
to which I was a complete stranger, and I had a confused
remembrance of Oxford Street and the parks, and then
of Highgate Archway. I made out, after a while,
that I was at the East End, and, turning westward,
I tramped back to my own lodgings with a return to
self-possession which was partly due to the fact that
bodily fatigue had dulled the sting of resentment.
Hinge had dinner ready when I reached
home, but I had no appetite for it, and, to the good
fellow’s dismay, I sent it away untasted.
I turned over a thousand schemes that evening, and
rejected each in turn. But I decided, finally,
to prepare an advertisement for the newspapers, Which
might perhaps prevent further mischief. I concocted
so many subterfuges, each of which in turn proved
to reveal too much or to be too enigmatical, that
at ten o’clock I found myself with a dozen sheets
of closely-written paper before me. But at last
I hit on this:
“Dear Violet,-Distrust
altogether anything you may hear to my disadvantage
until I have found an opportunity to explain.
Do not wonder at not hearing from me. Both your
letters and mine are intercepted. When you
next write, post letter with your own hand.”
After much consideration, I hit upon
“John of Itzia” as a signature, and having
made three clear copies, I drove round to the offices
of the three great daily newspapers of that date,
and at each secured the insertion of this advertisement
for a week. A little comforted by that achievement,
I went to bed, and, being dog tired, got to sleep.
The days that followed were among
the dreariest I can remember. I spent them for
the most part at home, sitting at the open window which
looked upon the street, and waiting for the advent
of the postman.
I was there in the morning an hour
before his arrival could reasonably be expected, and
I was there all day, and there still an hour after
his last round had been made. Every time he came
in sight my heart beat furiously; and as the short
official note on the knocker came nearer and nearer,
I strove in vain to resist the temptation to run down-stairs
and await him at the front door. Every man on
that beat got to know me, and I grew to be utterly
ashamed of myself at last, for day after day went
by, and there came no answer to my advertisement and
no note from anywhere of Violet’s existence.
At last the week for which I had prepaid the advertisement
expired. I had determined to renew my warning
and entreaty if no answer came, and I waited the last
part of that day with a throbbing heart. The
minutes of the dull, rainy night-it was
mid-April by this time-crawled slowly on,
and at last I heard the belated knocker at the far
end of the street, and hurried on my overcoat and
hat in case I should be disappointed once again.
Then I slipped down to the door, and waited in the
portico. The postman knocked next door, and I
was ashamed to show myself; but only a second or two
later he appeared with a single letter in his hand.
“Captain Fyffe?” he asked,
inquiringly, and I responding “Captain Fyffe,”
he handed me the letter.
The superscription was in Violet’s
hand. I tore it open and read, in embossed letters
at the top of the first page, “Scarfell House,
Richmond.” Then came this:
“My Dearest,-Is the
strange advertisement addressed to Violet and
signed ‘John of Itzia’ yours? I almost
think it must be, and yet I am half afraid and
half ashamed to say so. But since I left
town, nine days ago, I have written to you every
day, and have not received a line in answer. If
you will look in either the Times or the Advertiser,
if the advertisement should not have been put
there by yourself, you will see what I mean.
I shall obey its instructions, and shall post
this letter with my own hands. So far I have
given my letters to my maid, and I cannot think
of any reason which could induce her to be wicked
enough to destroy or suppress them. This,
at least, will be sure to reach you, and if my
fancy is absurd, I know you well enough to trust to
your forgiveness. If you are not ‘John of
Itzia,’ I can only fear that something
dreadful has happened, for I do not believe that
you could be so unkind as to leave eight consecutive
letters of mine unanswered by a single word. I
have only just seen the advertisement by chance,
and if you are at home when this arrives it ought
to reach you at about nine o’clock.
It is very little over an hour’s drive to Richmond,
and I beg you to come down at once. If the whole
thing is a mistake, you have still something to
explain, and must have, I am sure a great deal
to tell me.
“Yours always,
“Violet.”
I had no sooner read this than, with
the letter crumpled in my hand, I dashed into the
street and made at full-speed for the nearest cab-stand.
Half a dozen whips were waved at me at once, but I
walked up and down the line inspecting the horses
before I would choose a vehicle. A sorrier lot
of screws I never saw, but I chose the one that looked
the least unpromising, and gave the driver the word
for Richmond.