It was half-past nine o’clock
next morning when the man-servant at Sir Anthony Merrick’s
in Harley Street brought up to his master’s
room a plain hand-written card on which he read the
name, “Dolores Barton.”
“Does the girl want to blackmail
me?” Sir Anthony thought testily.
The great doctor’s old age was
a lonely and a sordid one. He was close on eighty
now, but still to this day he received his patients
from ten to one, and closed his shrivelled hand with
a clutch on their guineas. For whom, nobody
knew. Lady Merrick was long dead. His daughters
were well married, and he had quarrelled with their
husbands. Of his two younger sons, one had gone
into the Fusiliers and been speared at Suakim;
the other had broken his neck on a hunting-field in
Warwickshire. The old man lived alone, and hugged
his money-bags. They were the one thing left
for which he seemed to retain any human affection.
So, when he read Dolly’s card,
being by nature suspicious, he felt sure the child
had called to see what she could get out of him.
But when he descended to the consulting-room
with stern set face, and saw a beautiful girl of seventeen
awaiting him, a tall sunny-haired girl,
with Alan’s own smile and Alan’s own eyes, he
grew suddenly aware of an unexpected interest.
The sun went back on the dial of his life for thirty
years or thereabouts, and Alan himself seemed to stand
before him. Alan, as he used to burst in for
his holidays from Winchester! After all, this
pink rosebud was his eldest son’s only daughter.
Chestnut hair, pearly teeth, she was Alan all over.
Sir Anthony bowed his most respectful
bow, with old-fashioned courtesy.
“And what can I do for you,
young lady?” he asked in his best professional
manner.
“Grandfather,” the girl
broke out, blushing red to the ears, but saying it
out none the less; “Grandfather, I’m your
granddaughter, Dolores Barton.”
The old man bowed once more, a most
deferential bow. Strange to say, when he saw
her, this claim of blood pleased him.
“So I see, my child,”
he answered. “And what do you want with
me?”
“I only knew it last night,”
Dolly went on, casting down those blue eyes in her
shamefaced embarrassment. “And this morning
. . . I’ve come to implore your protection.”
“That’s prompt,”
the old man replied, with a curious smile, half suspicious,
half satisfied. “From whom, my little one?”
And his hand caressed her shoulder.
“From my mother,” Dolly
answered, blushing still deeper crimson. “From
the mother who put this injustice upon me. From
the mother who, by her own confession, might have
given me an honorable birthright, like any one else’s,
and who cruelly refused to.”
The old man eyed her with a searching glance.
“Then she hasn’t brought
you up in her own wild ideas?” he said.
“She hasn’t dinged them into you!”
“She has tried to,” Dolly
answered. “But I will have nothing to do
with them. I hate her ideas, and her friends,
and her faction.”
Sir Anthony drew her forward and gave
her a sudden kiss. Her spirit pleased him.
“That’s well, my child,”
he answered. “That’s well for
a beginning.”
Then Dolly, emboldened by his kindness, for
in a moment, somehow, she had taken her grandfather’s
heart by assault, began to tell him how
it had all come about; how she had received an offer
from a most excellent young man at Combe Mary in Dorsetshire, very
well connected, the squire of his parish; how she
had accepted him with joy; how she loved him dearly;
how this shadow intervened; how thereupon, for the
first time, she had asked for and learned the horrid
truth about her parentage; how she was stunned and
appalled by it; how she could never again live under
one roof with such a woman; and how she came to him
for advice, for encouragement, for assistance.
She flung herself on his mercy. Every word she
spoke impressed Sir Anthony. This was no mere
acting; the girl really meant it. Brought up
in those hateful surroundings, innate purity of mind
had preserved her innocent heart from the contagion
of example. She spoke like a sensible, modest,
healthy English maiden. She was indeed a granddaughter
any man might be proud of. ’Twas clear
as the sun in the London sky to Sir Anthony that she
recoiled with horror from her mother’s position.
He sympathized with her and pitied her. Dolores,
all blushes, lifted her eyelids and looked at him.
Her grandfather drew her towards him with a smile
of real tenderness, and, unbending as none had seen
him unbend before since Alan’s death, told her
all the sad history as he himself envisaged it.
Dolores listened and shuddered. The old man
was vanquished. He would have taken her once
to himself, he said, if Herminia had permitted it;
he would take her to himself now, if Dolores would
come to him.
As for Dolly, she lay sobbing and
crying in Sir Anthony’s arms, as though she
had always known him. After all, he was her grandfather.
Nearer to her in heart and soul than her mother.
And the butler could hardly conceal his surprise
and amazement when three minutes later Sir Anthony
rang the bell, and being discovered alone with a strange
young lady in tears, made the unprecedented announcement
that he would see no patients at all that morning,
and was at home to nobody.
But before Dolly left her new-found
relation’s house, it was all arranged between
them. She was to come there at once as his adopted
daughter; was to take and use the name of Merrick;
was to see nothing more of that wicked woman, her
mother; and was to be married in due time from Sir
Anthony’s house, and under Sir Anthony’s
auspices, to Walter Brydges.
She wrote to Walter then and there,
from her grandfather’s consulting-room.
Numb with shame as she was, she nerved her hand to
write to him. In what most delicate language
she could find, she let him plainly know who Sir Anthony
was, and all else that had happened. But she
added at the end one significant clause: “While
my mother lives, dear Walter, I feel I can never marry
you.”