AILSA LEARNS CAREW’S SECRET
Ailsa had to journey to Selukwe in
the post-cart, and she found it very trying; all the
more so because her tender heart, which loved all
animals, suffered agonies of compassion for the poor
underfed, overworked mules, some with sores, urged
pitilessly along by their black driver. She wished
vainly that she was the happy possessor of a fortune,
and might at once finance in Rhodesia the Society for
the Prevention of Cruelty to Animals, for which funds
are so urgently needed. At Selukwe she had some
little time to wait at the hotel before taking the
train, and she went round to the posting-stables to
interview any white man she could find who might be
in a responsible position towards the post-cart mules
on the subject of their condition. The man, of
course, complained of the roads, which were in a hopeless
condition, and beyond satisfying in a measure her own
sense of compassion, she knew she had done little
good. But while she talked to the white man at
the stables, a thin, scholarly looking, grey-haired
gentleman chanced to overhear their discourse, and
raising his hat to her with grave courtesy, expressed
his admiration of her action.
“But can nothing be done, do
you think?” she asked him dolefully.
“I’m afraid not.
You see, the Government do not particularly wish that
route used, and so they have allowed the road to lapse.
Let us hope there will very shortly be a railway,
at any rate, to Edwardstown, and that then visitors
will be encouraged to go and see your wonderful Zimbabwe
ruins, instead of discouraged by the discomforts of
the way.”
They moved towards the hotel together,
and Ailsa asked, “Have you seen them?”
“Only for a few short hours,
which were all I could spare from some research work
I was doing elsewhere in Rhodesia. I was tremendously
impressed by the little I had time to see, and look
forward to a long sojourn there presently.”
They talked on, their conversation
drifting from one subject to another, and then he
discovered her name was Grenville, and she that his
was Delcombe, and they greeted each other anew as both
hailing from lovely Devon. After that he proudly
assumed the rôle of escort, and waited upon her hand
and foot. As it chanced, he also was journeying
to Salisbury, so they became travelling companions,
and the chance acquaintanceship ripened rapidly.
In the evening they dined together in the restaurant-car
and sat long over their meal; and then it was that
Ailsa chanced to mention the name of Major Carew.
Henry Delcombe at once remarked, “There
was a Major Carew at the Zimbabwe police camp, I think,
when I visited the ruins, but I did not see him.
I should like to have done. I understood from
the young trooper there that he is some relation to
the Fourtenay-Carews?” and he paused interrogatively.
“It was the man I am speaking
of. He is a Fourtenay-Carew.”
“Ah!...” and Ailsa saw
instantly the swift interest in her companion’s
eyes; a wave as of thought-telepathy that this man
probably held the key to Peter Carew’s past.
Delcombe read in her sparkling eyes that her interest
in the soldier-policeman was no casual one, but of
the warmest friendship.
“Did you know him before he
came out here?” she ventured.
“I knew his father well; I lived
near to them in Devon. I was doing some research
work, and I had a quiet little home in a lovely valley
close to the little place that was then this man’s
home, and quite near also to Dartwood Hall, where
the elder brother, Richard Fourtenay-Carew, lived.
They are not a rich family at all, you know.
Dartwood Hall and estates and money came to Richard
Carew through a very eccentric godmother, who brought
him up, and he could do as he liked with it all.
His younger brother, Peter Fourtenay-Carew, and his
wife had, I think, only a very small income between
them besides his pay as a captain. They rented
a pretty little place in Devonshire close to Dartwood
Hall, and came there for the hunting whenever he was
able. The brothers were good friends, and he always
had the run of the Dartwood stables. They were
an interesting pair, but it was the younger whom I
regarded as a friend, and that was why I was anxious
to find out if I had stumbled across his son.
As you may have heard, Captain Fourtenay-Carew, the
father, was killed in the hunting-field and his wife
died within the year. The two boys, then quite
babies, were adopted by Richard Carew and brought
up as his own sons.”
He paused and studied Ailsa’s
face gravely. She was almost breathless with
interest, and he seemed a little taken aback by it.
She saw the question in his eyes, and hastened to
add frankly, “I cannot tell you how interested
I am to hear this. My husband and I think there
is no one in the world like Major Carew; in fact,
in some vague, distant way I believe we are related.
But he never speaks of his past life at all.
For some reason he seems to regard it as a closed book;
he even persists in calling himself a Rhodesian, and
resolutely ignores the fact that he is anything else
as well.”
“Ah!...” and the thin,
scholarly face of her companion looked as if he were
obtaining a clue he wanted. There was a pause,
and each seemed to be weighing something in his and
her mind. Then Ailsa spoke: “I conclude
he has some reason for his extreme reticence, and I
hope I should be one of the last to pry into anyone’s
secrets; but for a reason I can hardly explain, I
should be very glad to know something now that might
possibly help me to do a special service for him.
I shall see him in Salisbury.”
“What I know is no secret in
a general sense,” said Delcombe, speaking with
grave deliberation; “but the facts of it were
cleverly hushed up by his uncle, and you will easily
understand that Major Carew would never speak of it
now. My own interest in the matter is because
of my regard for his father, and, I think I may say,
admiration for himself. Anyone seeing the two
brothers together as I did that is, the
younger men must have felt deeply drawn
to the elder and repulsed by the younger. A finer
young fellow than Peter Fourtenay-Carew never stepped.
The other brother was good-looking also, but he was
cunning and crafty and little liked. Yet, such
are the mysterious ways of Providence, the younger
brother, by an unlooked-for turn of events, became
the possessor of wealth and place and influence, and
the elder went out from his country penniless, exiled,
and alone. As far as I can judge, no one in England
has ever heard of him since. I don’t think
it is even known where he is. A few of us knew
that he came out to South Africa, and journeyed to
Rhodesia with one of the pioneer columns, but that
is quite sixteen years ago, and events at home move
quickly, and his utter silence lost him the warm places
he might have held in most hearts, or, at any rate,
left them in abeyance. I only came out to Rhodesia
a few months ago, and I have been much on the veldt,
studying ancient relics; but I have kept my ears open.
I heard of the man you are speaking of at the police
camp at Zimbabwe, but the young trooper, Mr. Stanley,
was not communicative. With a very praiseworthy
esprit de corps, he declined to be drawn into
any discussion whatever concerning his officer.
I heard after I left that he, Major Carew, was a very
reserved, taciturn man, but it was generally credited
he had once held a captaincy in the Blues; that and
a personal description persuaded me he was my old friend’s
son.”
“Yes,” Ailsa said, “there
can be no doubt about it. I suppose you knew
that he was going to be married just before he came
away, and something rather dreadful happened?”
“Ah; he has revealed that much,
has he?” in some surprise.
“Not to me; to a great friend of mine.”
“I see.”
He seemed perplexed, uncertain evidently,
how much to tell her. Ailsa understood, and was
a little at a loss how to act herself.
“I should not have mentioned
the fact to anyone else,” she said, “as
he evidently wishes to keep all personal matters entirely
to himself; but, of course, you were very likely to
know it. I also learnt from my husband that he
was the elder brother and originally his uncle’s
heir, but something happened to cause Mr. Carew to
change his mind.”
Then Mr. Delcombe said thoughtfully,
“I think there is no reason why I should not
tell you a little more about him. I have always
felt exceedingly sorry for his determined exile, and
the isolation from all his old friends and old delights.
I know that he dearly loved Devon, and one feels it
is time now that he came back to try and pick up the
threads. You and your husband appear to be his
only friends, and as a distant connection you might
be able to approach him upon a subject where a stranger,
or shall we say a forgotten friend, would be diffident.”
He paused, then added, “I wonder if he has the
remotest idea that, owing to several deaths, he is
now the next heir to the Marquis of Toxeter?”
A sudden joy seemed to sweep Ailsa
through and through, and her eyes shone, and she clasped
and unclasped her hands with excitement as she breathed,
“O, is that really true? It seems
too good; too much like a story-book.”
“Yes, it is a fact. Major
Carew’s family was a younger branch, and sixteen
years ago it would never have entered anyone’s
head that the marquisate might fall to them.
Time makes many changes, and three heirs have died
in succession. The present marquis is old and
has no children, therefore the next heir was Richard
Fourtenay-Carew, also childless, and after him Major
Carew’s father. Richard Carew died very
shortly after this man left England, and young Geoffrey
Carew then succeeded to all his possessions.
I believe something was left to Major Carew, but he
refused to touch it. It is since then that (his
uncle being dead) he has become the heir of the present
marquis, and I think it highly probable he has no
notion of the fact whatever.”
“I am almost certain he has
not,” Ailsa intercepted, “for I think he
would have mentioned it to my husband.”
“Unfortunately there is very
little money with the title, but he is not a man to
trouble much about that; and, of course, the present
marquis may live some time. But I have thought
sometimes if he knew it might wipe out a little
of the past bitterness. His brother robbed him
of so much, but in the end it would seem Nature is
making things even again. Geoffrey would give
half his wealth to have the title, and I have reason
to believe that it is a great bitterness to him to
know that his brother, who cares nothing at all about
it probably, must inevitably inherit it if he outlives
the present owner.”
“And you will tell him?...” eagerly.
“Perhaps. Or it may be
that you!...” He hesitated, and looked at
her thoughtfully.
And then Ailsa said impulsively, “Let
me give you trust for trust. I am taking this
journey now chiefly on Major Carew’s account.
There is trouble in the air. I cannot tell you
the facts; I scarcely know them. But he has lived
his isolated, reserved life so long, I feel it has
perhaps warped his view a little, and if he could be
persuaded to open his heart to a friend he might see
things in a clearer light, and save himself and a
dear friend of mine great unhappiness.”
She paused, then added sadly, “But I am so much
in the dark concerning him I hardly know how to win
his confidence. There appears to have been this
something before he left England, something rather
terrible, that has shadowed all his life.”
“There was; I will tell you
in confidence. Richard Carew hushed it all up,
but there were a few of us who knew. His
quarrel with his uncle was because he insisted upon
marrying a poor governess, a most lovely and charming
lady, instead of the bride his uncle had chosen.
He was disinherited, and his allowance so curtailed
that he would have to leave his regiment; but none
of that troubled him in the least. He adored
his fiancee, and was supremely happy, as anyone could
see. Then the tragedy fell. I cannot tell
you all the details, probably no one knows them except
his friends the Maitlands and his brother, and uncle
who is now dead. He was out shooting with Maitland,
and the other two were near at hand; and Maitland
had repeated something to him his brother had said,
which was a deadly insult to Miss Whitby. He was
in a blind fury, and scarcely knew what he was doing,
when he swung round and fired at a hare behind him....”
There was a moment’s intense pause before he
finished in a low voice “and the shot
killed the poor girl he was to have married in a week.”
“O, how terrible!...”
Ailsa gasped, and went white to the lips. “How
terrible! Poor man! O, poor man!” Tears
came into her eyes, and she turned away to hide them,
and for some moments both were silent.
Then Delcombe continued, “It
is no wonder that he has been always reserved and
silent. I suppose in a way it killed the part
of him that could be anything else. He just went
right away to a strange country, dropped the double
name they had always been proud of, and cut himself
adrift altogether from everything connected with his
old life. It is no doubt his intention to remain
apart, and take up the old threads no more. But
I loved his father, and I loved him in my old-fashioned
way which he was not likely to perceive; and when
the Royal Geographical Society offered me a chance
of a trip to Rhodesia I took it gladly. One of
my first thoughts, when the decision was finally made
and I was appointed, was, ‘Perhaps I shall come
across Peter Carew’s son.’”
Ailsa rested her elbow on the table
and leaned her head on her hand, still with the glisten
of tears in her eyes. “It makes one feel
there is surely a Providence,” she told him
softly, “for my chance meeting with you may
save him, and that other, from everlasting regret.”
A little later, when they went to
their separate compartments for the night, she thanked
him again. “You have made me feel quite
broken-hearted for our dear soldier-policeman.
Think what his memories must have been all these years!
But perhaps his dark day is finished. I am very
hopeful now. God bless you for remaining so staunch
a friend to him and giving me your confidence!”
And in Johannesburg that night Meryl
said simply and quietly to van Hert, “I will
marry you as soon as you wish. As you say, there
is nothing to wait for, and, afterwards, there is
much that we can do together.”
“In a fortnight?” he urged, and she assented.
But Diana insisted otherwise.
“It is simply indecent haste,” she exclaimed,
“and nothing in this world will persuade me to
decide upon my bridesmaid’s frock and have it
ready in less than three weeks, and it may be a month.”
And Meryl a quiet, white-faced
Meryl nowadays, with little enough enthusiasm for
frocks and wedding-presents let her have
her way.