We all knew Isobel’s history.
It had taken barely twenty minutes to tell it, but
they had been twenty minutes of tragedy. We were
all, I think, in different ways affected. Monsieur
Feurgeres alone sat back in his seat like a carved
image, his face white and haggard, his deep-set eyes
fixed upon vacancy. We felt that he had passed
wholly away from the world of present things.
He himself was lingering amongst the shadows of that
wonderful past, upon which he had only a moment before
dropped the curtain. He had told us to ask him
questions, but I for my part felt that questions just
then were a sacrilege. Arthur, however, seemed
to feel nothing of this. It was he who took the
lead.
“Isobel, then,” he said,
“is the granddaughter of the King of Waldenburg,
the only child of his eldest daughter! Her mother
was divorced from her husband, Prince of Herrshoff,
and afterwards married to you. What about her
father?”
“He died two years after the
divorce was granted,” Feurgeres said without
turning his head. “Isobel was hurried away
from the Court through the influence of her aunt,
the Archduchess of Bristlaw, and sent to a convent
in France. It was not intended that she should
ever reappear at the Court of Waldenburg.”
“Why not?”
“The King is very old, and he
is the richest man in Europe. Isobel is the daughter
of his eldest and favourite child. The Archduchess
also has a daughter, and, failing Isobel, she will
inherit.”
“Has the King,” I asked,
“taken any steps to discover Isobel?”
“He has been told that she is dead,” Feurgeres
answered.
We were all silent then for several
minutes. The things which we had heard were strange
enough, but they let in a flood of light upon all the
events of the last few months. It was Feurgeres
himself who broke in upon our thoughts.
“Gentlemen,” he said,
“there is another thing which I must tell you.”
His voice was very low but firm.
He had turned in his chair, and was facing us all.
His eyes were no longer vacant. He spoke as one
speaks of sacred things.
“All Europe,” he said,
“was pleased to discuss what was called the
elopement of the Princess Isobel with Feurgeres the
player. The gutter-press of the world filled
their columns with sensational and scandalous lies.
We at no time made any reply. There was no need.
If now I break the silence of years it is that Isobel
shall know the truth. It is you, Mr. Greatson,
who will tell her this, and many other things.
Listen carefully to what I say. The husband of
the Princess Isobel was a blackguard, a man unfit
for the society of any self-respecting woman.
She was living in misery when I was bidden to the Court
of Waldenburg. I was made the more welcome there,
perhaps, because I myself am a descendant of an ancient
and honourable French family. I met the Princess
Isobel often, and we grew to love each other.
Of the struggle which ensued between her sense of
duty and my persuasions I say nothing. She was
a highly sensitive and very intellectual woman, and
she had a profound conviction of the unalienable right
of a woman to live out her life to its fullest capacity,
to gather into it to the full all that is best and
greatest. Her position at Waldenburg was impossible.
I proved it to her. I prevailed. But ”
He paused, and held up his hand.
“The whole story of our elopement
was a lie. There was no elopement. The Princess
Isobel left her husband accompanied only by a maid
and a lady-in-waiting. They lived quietly in
Paris until her husband procured his divorce.
Then we were married, but until then we had not met
since our parting at Waldenburg. Isobel’s
mother was ever a pure and holy woman. Let Isobel
know that. Let her know that the greatest and
most wonderful sacrifice a woman ever made was surely
hers when she denied herself her own daughter
lest the merest shadow of shame should rest upon her
in later years. It is for that same reason that
I myself have kept away from Isobel. I have watched
over her always, but at a distance. That is why
I am content to stand aside even now and yield up
my place to strangers.”
It was Arthur again who questioned him.
“Mr. Feurgeres,” he said,
“you have told us wonderful things about Isobel.
You have told us wonderful things about the past, but
you have not spoken at all about the future.
Is it your wish that she returns to Waldenburg, or
is she to remain Isobel de Sorrens?”
Feurgeres turned his head and looked
searchingly at Arthur. The boy’s face was
flushed with excitement. He made no effort to
conceal his great interest. Feurgeres looked
at him steadfastly, and it was long before he spoke.
“You are asking me,” he
said slowly, “the very question which I have
been asking myself for a long time. Isobel’s
proper place is at Waldenburg, and yet there are many
and grave reasons why I dread her going there.
The King is an old man, the Court is ruled by the
Archduchess, a hard, unscrupulous woman. Already
she has schemed to get the child into her power.
I dread the thought of her there, alone and friendless.
Her mother spoke of this to me upon her deathbed.
She shrank always from the idea that even the shadow
of those hideous calumnies which oppressed her own
life should darken a single moment of Isobel’s.
I believe that if she were here at this moment she
would place the two issues before her and bid her
take her choice. I think that it is what we must
do.”
Arthur stood up. He looked very
eager and handsome, though a little boyish.
“Monsieur Feurgeres,”
he said, “I love Isobel. Give her to me,
and I will look after her future. I am not rich,
but I will make a home for her. She is too old
to stay here with us any longer. I will make her
happy! Indeed I will!”
Monsieur Feurgeres looked back at
that vacant spot upon the wall, and was silent for
some time. It was impossible to gather anything
from his face, though Arthur watched him fixedly all
the time.
“And Isobel?” he asked at length.
“I have not spoken to her,”
Arthur said. “There was a compact between
us that we should not whilst she was under our care.”
Monsieur Feurgeres turned to me.
“That sounds like a compact
of your making, Arnold Greatson,” he said.
“What am I to say to your friend?”
“It is surely,” I said,
“for Isobel to decide. It is only another
issue to be placed before her with those others of
which you have spoken. You say that you must
leave for St. Petersburg to-morrow. Will you see
her now?”
He shook his head. I might almost
have imagined him indifferent but for the sudden twitching
of his lips, the almost pitiful craving which flashed
out for a moment from his deep-set eyes. These
were signs which came and went so quickly that I doubt
if either of the others observed them. But I
at least understood.
“I will not see her at all,”
he said. “It is better that I should not.
If she should decide upon Waldenburg, the less she
has seen of me the better. I leave it to you,
Arnold Greatson, to put these matters faithfully before
Isobel. I claim no guardianship over her.
Her mother’s sole desire was that when she had
reached her present age the whole truth should be
placed before her, and she should decide exactly as
she thought best. That is my charge upon you,”
he continued, looking me steadfastly in the face,
“and I know that you will fulfil it. I shall
send you my address in case it is necessary to communicate
with me.”
He rose to his feet, prepared for
departure. Arthur intercepted him.
“If Isobel will have me, then,”
he said, “you will not object?”
“Isobel shall make her own choice
of these various issues,” he answered.
“I claim no guardianship over her at all.
If any further decision has to be given, you must
look to Mr. Greatson.”
Arthur did look at me, but his eyes
fell quickly. He turned once more to Monsieur
Feurgeres.
“Whether you claim it or not,”
he said, “you are really her guardian, not Arnold.
I shall tell her that you left her free to choose.”
“I have said all that I have
to say,” Monsieur Feurgeres replied. “Except
this to you, Mr. Greatson,” he added, turning
to me. “You can have no longer any hesitation
in using the money which stands in Isobel’s
name at the National Bank. You will find that
it has accumulated, and I have also added to it.
Isobel will always be reasonably well off, for I have
left all that I myself possess to her, with the exception
of one legacy.”
Without any further form of farewell
he passed away from us. It was so obviously his
wish to be allowed to depart that we none of us cared
to stop him. Then we all three looked at one
another.
“To-morrow,” Mabane said, “you must
tell Isobel.”
“Why not to-night?” Arthur interposed.
“Why not to-night, indeed?”
Isobel’s soft voice asked. “If, indeed,
there is anything more to tell.”
We were all thunderstruck as she glided
out from behind the screen which shielded the inner
door, the door which led to her room. It needed
only a single glance into her face to assure us that
she knew everything. Her eyes were still soft
with tears, shining like stars as she stood and looked
at me across the floor; her cheeks were pale, and her
lips were still quivering.
“I heard my name,” she
said. “The door was unfastened, so I stole
out. And I think that I am glad I did. I
had a right to know all that I have heard. It
is very wonderful. I keep thinking and thinking,
and even now I cannot realize.”
“You heard everything, Isobel?”
Arthur exclaimed meaningly.
“Everything!” she answered,
her eyes suddenly seeking the carpet. “I
thank you all for what you have said and done for me.
To-morrow, I think, I shall know better how I feel
about these things.”
“Quite right, Isobel,”
Allan said quietly. “There are great issues
before you, and you should live with them for a little
while. Do not decide anything hastily!”
Arthur pressed forward to her side.
“You will give me your hand,
Isobel?” he pleaded. “You will say
good-night?”
She gave it to him passively.
He raised it to his lips. It was his active pronouncement
of himself as her suitor. I watched her closely,
and so did Allan. But she gave no sign. She
held out her hand to us, too a cold, sad
little hand it felt and turned away.
There was something curiously subdued about her movements
as well as her silence as she passed out of sight.
Arthur took up his hat. He was
nervous and uneasy. His tone was almost threatening.
“I shall be here early in the
morning,” he said. “I suppose you
will allow me to see Isobel?”
“By all means,” I answered.
“As things are now you need not go away unless
you like. Your room is still empty. Our compact
is at an end. Stay if you will.”
He hesitated for a moment, and then
threw down his hat. He sank into an easy chair,
and covered his face with his hands.
“I’ve been a beast, I
know!” he half sobbed. “I can’t
help it. Isobel is everything in the world to
me. You fellows can’t imagine how I care
for her.”
I laid my hand upon his shoulder a
little wearily, perhaps, though I tried to infuse
some sympathy into my tone.
“Cheer up, Arthur!” I
said. “You have your chance. Don’t
make a trouble of it yet.”
Arthur shook his head despondently.
“I think,” he said, “that she will
go to Waldenburg!”