Lord Theign, when he had gone, revolved it
might have been nervously about the place
a little, but soon broke ground. “He’ll
have told you, I understand, that I’ve promised
to speak to you for him. But I understand also
that he has found something to say for himself.”
“Yes, we talked a
while since,” the girl said. “At least
he did.”
“Then if you listened I hope
you listened with a good grace.”
“Oh, he speaks very well and I’ve
never disliked him.”
It pulled her father up. “Is that all when
I think so much of him?”
She seemed to say that she had, to
her own mind, been liberal and gone far; but she waited
a little. “Do you think very, very
much?”
“Surely I’ve made my good opinion clear
to you!”
Again she had a pause. “Oh
yes, I’ve seen you like him and believe in him and
I’ve found him pleasant and clever.”
“He has never had,” Lord
Theign more or less ingeniously explained, “what
I call a real show.” But the character under
discussion could after all be summed up without searching
analysis. “I consider nevertheless that
there’s plenty in him.”
It was a moderate claim, to which
Lady Grace might assent. “He strikes me
as naturally quick and well, nice.
But I agree with you than he hasn’t had a chance.”
“Then if you can see your way
by sympathy and confidence to help him to one I dare
say you’ll find your reward.”
For a third time she considered, as
if a certain curtness in her companion’s manner
rather hindered, in such a question, than helped.
Didn’t he simplify too much, you would have felt
her ask, and wasn’t his visible wish for brevity
of debate a sign of his uncomfortable and indeed rather
irritated sense of his not making a figure in it?
“Do you desire it very particularly?”
was, however, all she at last brought out.
“I should like it exceedingly if
you act from conviction. Then of course only;
but of one thing I’m myself convinced of
what he thinks of yourself and feels for you.”
“Then would you mind my waiting
a little?” she asked. “I mean to be
absolutely sure of myself.” After which,
on his delaying to agree, she added frankly, as to
help her case: “Upon my word, father, I
should like to do what would please you.”
But it determined in him a sharper
impatience. “Ah, what would please me!
Don’t put it off on ‘me’! Judge
absolutely for yourself” he slightly
took himself up “in the light of my
having consented to do for him what I always hate
to do: deviate from my normal practice of never
intermeddling. If I’ve deviated now you
can judge. But to do so all round, of course,
take in reason! your time.”
“May I ask then,” she said, “for
still a little more?”
He looked for this, verily, as if
it was not in reason. “You know,”
he then returned, “what he’ll feel that
a sign of.”
“Well, I’ll tell him what I mean.”
“Then I’ll send him to you.”
He glanced at his watch and was going,
but after a “Thanks, father,” she had
stopped him. “There’s one thing more.”
An embarrassment showed in her manner, but at the
cost of some effect of earnest abruptness she surmounted
it. “What does your American Mr.
Bender want?”
Lord Theign plainly felt the challenge.
“‘My’ American? He’s none
of mine!”
“Well then Lord John’s.”
“He’s none of his either more,
I mean, than any one else’s. He’s
every one’s American, literally to
all appearance; and I’ve not to tell you,
surely, with the freedom of your own visitors, how
people stalk in and out here.”
“No, father certainly,”
she said. “You’re splendidly generous.”
His eyes seemed rather sharply to
ask her then how he could improve on that; but he
added as if it were enough: “What the man
must by this time want more than anything else is
his car.”
“Not then anything of ours?” she still
insisted.
“Of ’ours’?”
he echoed with a frown. “Are you afraid
he has an eye to something of yours?”
“Why, if we’ve a new treasure which
we certainly have if we possess a Mantovano haven’t
we all, even I, an immense interest in it?” And
before he could answer, “Is that exposed?”
she asked.
Lord Theign, a little unready, cast
about at his storied halls; any illusion to the “exposure”
of the objects they so solidly sheltered was obviously
unpleasant to him. But then it was as if he found
at a stroke both his own reassurance and his daughter’s.
“How can there be a question of it when he only
wants Sir Joshuas?”
“He wants ours?” the girl gasped.
“At absolutely any price.”
“But you’re not,” she cried, “discussing
it?”
He hesitated as between chiding and
contenting her then he handsomely chose.
“My dear child, for what do you take me?”
With which he impatiently started, through the long
and stately perspective, for the saloon.
She sank into a chair when he had
gone; she sat there some moments in a visible tension
of thought, her hands clasped in her lap and her dropped
eyes fixed and unperceiving; but she sprang up as Hugh
Crimble, in search of her, again stood before her.
He presented himself as with winged sandals.
“What luck to find you! I must take my
spin back.”
“You’ve seen everything as you wished?”
“Oh,” he smiled, “I’ve seen
wonders.”
She showed her pleasure. “Yes, we’ve
got some things.”
“So Mr. Bender says!” he laughed.
“You’ve got five or six ”
“Only five or six?” she cried in bright
alarm.
“’Only’?”
he continued to laugh. “Why, that’s
enormous, five or six things of the first importance!
But I think I ought to mention to you,” he added,
“a most barefaced ‘Rubens’ there
in the library.”
“It isn’t a Rubens?”
“No more than I’m a Ruskin.”
“Then you’ll brand us expose
us for it?”
“No, I’ll let you off I’ll
be quiet if you’re good, if you go straight.
I’ll only hold it in terrorem. One
can’t be sure in these dreadful days that’s
always to remember; so that if you’re not good
I’ll come down on you with it. But to balance
against that threat,” he went on, “I’ve
made the very grandest find. At least I believe
I have!”
She was all there for this news.
“Of the Manto-vano hidden
in the other thing?”
Hugh wondered almost as
if she had been before him. “You don’t
mean to say you’ve had the idea of that?”
“No, but my father has told me.”
“And is your father,” he eagerly asked,
“really gratified?”
With her conscious eyes on him her
eyes could clearly be very conscious about her father she
considered a moment. “He always prefers
old associations and appearances to new; but I’m
sure he’ll resign himself if you see your way
to a certainty.”
“Well, it will be a question
of the weight of expert opinion that I shall invoke.
But I’m not afraid,” he resolutely said,
“and I shall make the thing, from its splendid
rarity, the crown and flower of your glory.”
Her serious face shone at him with
a charmed gratitude. “It’s awfully
beautiful then your having come to us so. It’s
awfully beautiful your having brought us this way,
in a flash as dropping out of a chariot
of fire more light and what you apparently
feel with myself as more honour.”
“Ah, the beauty’s in your
having yourself done it!” he returned. He
gave way to the positive joy of it. “If
I’ve brought the ‘light’ and the
rest that’s to say the very useful
information who in the world was it brought
me?”
She had a gesture of protest “You’d
have come in some other way.”
“I’m not so sure!
I’m beastly shy little as I may seem
to show it: save in great causes, when I’m
horridly bold and hideously offensive. Now at
any rate I only know what has been.”
She turned off for it, moving away from him as with
a sense of mingled things that made for unrest; and
he had the next moment grown graver under the impression.
“But does anything in it all,” he asked,
“trouble you?”
She faced about across the wider space,
and there was a different note in what she brought
out. “I don’t know what forces me
so to tell you things.”
“‘Tell’ me?”
he stared. “Why, you’ve told me nothing
more monstrous than that I’ve been welcome!”
“Well, however that may be,
what did you mean just now by the chance of our not
‘going straight’? When you said you’d
expose our bad or is it our false? Rubens
in the event of a certain danger.”
“Oh, in the event of your ever
being bribed” he laughed again as
with relief. And then as her face seemed to challenge
the word: “Why, to let anything of
your best! ever leave Dedborough. By
which I mean really of course leave the country.”
She turned again on this, and something in her air
made him wonder. “I hope you don’t
feel there is such a danger? I understood
from you half an hour ago that it was unthinkable.”
“Well, it was, to me,
half an hour ago,” she said as she came nearer.
“But if it has since come up?”
“‘If’ it has!
But has it? In the form of that monster?
What Mr. Bender wants is the great Duchess,”
he recalled.
“And my father won’t sell
her? No, he won’t sell the great
Duchess there I feel safe. But he greatly
needs a certain sum of money or he thinks
he does and I’ve just had a talk with
him.”
“In which he has told you that?”
“He has told me nothing,”
Lady Grace said “or else told me quite
other things. But the more I think of them the
more it comes to me that he feels urged or tempted ”
“To despoil and denude these
walls?” Hugh broke in, looking about in his
sharper apprehension.
“Yes, to satisfy, to save my
sister. Now do you think our state so ideal?”
she asked but without elation for her hint
of triumph.
He had no answer for this save “Ah,
but you terribly interest me. May I ask what’s
the matter with your sister?”
Oh, she wanted to go on straight now!
“The matter is in the first place that
she’s too dazzlingly, dreadfully beautiful.”
“More beautiful than you?” his sincerity
easily risked.
“Millions of times.”
Sad, almost sombre, she hadn’t a shade of coquetry.
“Kitty has debts great heaped-up gaming
debts.”
“But to such amounts?”
“Incredible amounts it appears.
And mountains of others too. She throws herself
all on our father.”
“And he has to pay them?
There’s no one else?” Hugh asked.
She waited as if he might answer himself,
and then as he apparently didn’t, “He’s
only afraid there may be some else that’s
how she makes him do it,” she said. And
“Now do you think,” she pursued, “that
I don’t tell you things?”
He turned them over in his young perception
and pity, the things she told him. “Oh,
oh, oh!” And then, in the great place, while
as, just spent by the effort of her disclosure, she
moved from him again, he took them all in. “That’s
the situation that, as you say, may force his hand.”
“It absolutely, I feel, does
force it.” And the renewal of her appeal
brought her round. “Isn’t it too lovely?”
His frank disgust answered. “It’s
too damnable!”
“And it’s you,”
she quite terribly smiled, “who by
the ’irony of fate’! have given
him help.”
He smote his head in the light of it. “By
the Mantovano?”
“By the possible Mantovano as
a substitute for the impossible Sir Joshua. You’ve
made him aware of a value.”
“Ah, but the value’s to be fixed!”
“Then Mr. Bender will fix it!”
“Oh, but as he himself
would say I’ll fix Mr. Bender!”
Hugh declared. “And he won’t buy
a pig in a poke.”
This cleared the air while they looked
at each other; yet she had already asked: “What
in the world can you do, and how in the world can
you do it?”
Well, he was too excited for decision.
“I don’t quite see now, but give me time.”
And he took out his watch as already to measure it.
“Oughtn’t I before I go to say a word
to Lord Theign?”
“Is it your idea to become a lion in his path?”
“Well, say a cub as
that’s what I’m afraid he’ll call
me! But I think I should speak to him.”
She drew a conclusion momentarily
dark. “He’ll have to learn in that
case that I’ve told you of my fear.”
“And is there any good reason why he shouldn’t?”
She kept her eyes on him and the darkness
seemed to clear. “No!” she at last
replied, and, having gone to touch an electric bell,
was with him again. “But I think I’m
rather sorry for you.”
“Does that represent a reason
why I should be so for you?”
For a little she said nothing; but
after that: “None whatever!”
“Then is the sister of whom you speak Lady Imber?”
Lady Grace, at this, raised her hand
in caution: the butler had arrived, with due
gravity, in answer to her ring; to whom she made known
her desire. “Please say to his lordship in
the saloon or wherever that Mr. Crimble
must go.” When Banks had departed, however,
accepting the responsibility of this mission, she
answered her friend’s question. “The
sister of whom I speak is Lady Imber.”
“She loses then so heavily at bridge?”
“She loses more than she wins.”
Hugh gazed as with interest at these
oddities of the great. “And yet she still
plays?”
“What else, in her set, should she do?”
This he was quite unable to say; but
he could after a moment’s exhibition of the
extent to which he was out of it put a question instead.
“So you’re not in her set?”
“I’m not in her set.”
“Then decidedly,” he said, “I don’t
want to save her. I only want ”
He was going on, but she broke in: “I know
what you want!”
He kept his eyes on her till he had
made sure and this deep exchange between
them had a beauty. “So you’re now
with me?”
“I’m now with you!”
“Then,” said Hugh, “shake hands
on it”
He offered her his hand, she took
it, and their grasp became, as you would have seen
in their fine young faces, a pledge in which they stood
a minute locked. Lord Theign came upon them from
the saloon in the midst of the process; on which they
separated as with an air of its having consisted but
of Hugh’s leave-taking. With some such form
of mere civility, at any rate, he appeared, by the
manner in which he addressed himself to Hugh, to have
supposed them occupied.
“I’m sorry my daughter
can’t keep you; but I must at least thank you
for your interesting view of my picture.”
Hugh indulged in a brief and mute,
though very grave, acknowledgment of this expression;
presently speaking, however, as on a resolve taken
with a sense of possibly awkward consequences:
“May I before you’re sure of
your indebtedness put you rather a straight
question, Lord Theign?” It sounded doubtless,
and of a sudden, a little portentous as
was in fact testified to by his lordship’s quick
stiff stare, full of wonder at so free a note.
But Hugh had the courage of his undertaking. “If
I contribute in ny modest degree to establishing the
true authorship of the work you speak of, may I have
from you an assurance that my success isn’t
to serve as a basis for any peril or possibility of
its leaving the country?”
Lord Theign was visibly astonished,
but had also, independently of this, turned a shade
pale. “You ask of me an ’assurance’?”
Hugh had now, with his firmness and
his strained smile, quite the look of having counted
the cost of his step. “I’m afraid
I must, you see.”
It pressed at once in his host the
spring of a very grand manner. “And pray
by what right here do you do anything of the sort?”
“By the right of a person from
whom you, on your side, are accepting a service.”
Hugh had clearly determined in his
opponent a rise of what is called spirit. “A
service that you half an hour ago thrust on me, sir and
with which you may take it from me that I’m already
quite prepared to dispense.”
“I’m sorry to appear indiscreet,”
our young man returned; “I’m sorry to
have upset you in any way. But I can’t overcome
my anxiety ”
Lord Theign took the words from his
lips. “And you therefore invite me at
the end of half an hour in this house! to
account to you for my personal intentions and my private
affairs and make over my freedom to your hands?”
Hugh stood there with his eyes on
the black and white pavement that stretched about
him the great loz-enged marble floor that
might have figured that ground of his own vision which
he had made up his mind to “stand.”
“I can only see the matter as I see it, and I
should be ashamed not to have seized any chance to
appeal to you.” Whatever difficulty he
had had shyly to face didn’t exist for him now.
“I entreat you to think again, to think well,
before you deprive us of such a source of just envy.”
“And you regard your entreaty
as helped,” Lord Theign asked, “by the
beautiful threat you are so good as to attach to it?”
Then as his monitor, arrested, exchanged a searching
look with Lady Grace, who, showing in her face all
the pain of the business, stood off at the distance
to which a woman instinctively retreats when a scene
turns to violence as precipitately as this one appeared
to strike her as having turned: “I ask
you that not less than I should like to know whom you
speak of as ‘deprived’ of property that
happens for reasons that I don’t
suppose you also quarrel with! to be mine.”
“Well, I know nothing about
threats, Lord Theign,” Hugh said, “but
I speak of all of us of all the
people of England; who would deeply deplore such an
act of alienation, and whom, for the interest they
bear you, I beseech you mercifully to consider.”
“The interest they bear me?” the
master of Dedborough fairly bristled with wonder.
“Pray how the devil do they show it?”
“I think they show it in all
sorts of ways” and Hugh’s critical
smile, at almost any moment hovering, played over
the question in a manner seeming to convey that he
meant many things.
“Understand then, please,”
said Lord Theign with every inch of his authority,
“that they’ll show it best by minding their
own business while I very particularly mind mine.”
“You simply do, in other words,”
Hugh explicitly concluded, “what happens to
be convenient to you.”
“In very distinct preference
to what happens to be convenient to you! So
that I need no longer detain you,” Lord Theign
added with the last dryness and as if to wind up their
brief and thankless connection.
The young man took his dismissal,
being able to do no less, while, unsatisfied and unhappy,
he looked about mechanically for the cycling-cap he
had laid down somewhere in the hall on his arrival.
“I apologise, my lord, if I seem to you to have
ill repaid your hospitality. But,” he went
on with his uncommended cheer, “my interest
in your picture remains.”
Lady Grace, who had stopped and strayed
and stopped again as a mere watchful witness, drew
nearer hereupon, breaking her silence for the first
time. “And please let me say, father, that
mine also grows and grows.”
It was obvious that this parent, surprised
and disconcerted by her tone, judged her contribution
superfluous. “I’m happy to hear it,
Grace but yours is another affair.”
“I think on the contrary that
it’s quite the same one,” she returned “since
it’s on my hint to him that Mr. Crimble has said
to you what he has.” The resolution she
had gathered while she awaited her chance sat in her
charming eyes, which met, as she spoke, the straighter
paternal glare. “I let him know that I supposed
you to think of profiting by the importance of Mr.
Bender’s visit.”
“Then you might have spared,
my dear, your I suppose and hope well-meant interpretation
of my mind.” Lord Theign showed himself
at this point master of the beautiful art of righting
himself as without having been in the wrong.
“Mr. Bender’s visit will terminate as
soon as he has released Lord John without
my having profited in the smallest particular.”
Hugh meanwhile evidently but wanted
to speak for his friend. “It was Lady Grace’s
anxious inference, she will doubtless let me say for
her, that my idea about the Moretto would add to your
power well,” he pushed on not without
awkwardness, “of ‘realising’ advantageously
on such a prospective rise.”
Lord Theign glanced at him as for
positively the last time, but spoke to Lady Grace.
“Understand then, please, that, as I detach myself
from any association with this gentleman’s ideas whether
about the Moretto or about anything else his
further application of them ceases from this moment
to concern us.”
The girl’s rejoinder was to
address herself directly to Hugh, across their companion.
“Will you make your inquiry for me then?”
The light again kindled in him.
“With all the pleasure in life!” He had
found his cap and, taking them together, bowed to the
two, for departure, with high emphasis of form.
Then he marched off in the direction from which he
had entered.
Lord Theign scarce waited for his
disappearance to turn in wrath to Lady Grace.
“I denounce the indecency, wretched child, of
your public defiance of me!”
They were separated by a wide interval
now, and though at her distance she met his reproof
so unshrinkingly as perhaps to justify the terms into
which it had broken, she became aware of a reason for
his not following it up. She pronounced in quick
warning “Lord John!” for their
friend, released from among the pictures, was rejoining
them, was already there.
He spoke straight to his host on coming
into sight. “Bender’s at last off,
but” he indicated the direction of
the garden front “you may still find
him, out yonder, prolonging the agony with Lady Sand-gate.”
Lord Theign remained a moment, and
the heat of his resentment remained. He looked
with a divided discretion, the pain of his indecision,
from his daughter’s suitor and his approved
candidate to that contumacious young woman and back
again; then choosing his course in silence he had
a gesture of almost desperate indifference and passed
quickly out by the door to the terrace.
It had left Lord John gaping.
“What on earth’s the matter with your
father?”
“What on earth indeed?”
Lady Grace unaidingly asked. “Is he discussing
with that awful man?”
“Old Bender? Do you think
him so awful?” Lord John showed surprise which
might indeed have passed for harmless amusement; but
he shook everything off in view of a nearer interest.
He quite waved old Bender away. “My dear
girl, what do we care ?”
“I care immensely, I assure
you,” she interrupted, “and I ask of you,
please, to tell me!”
Her perversity, coming straight and
which he had so little expected, threw him back so
that he looked at her with sombre eyes. “Ah,
it’s not for such a matter I’m here, Lady
Grace I’m here with that fond question
of my own.” And then as she turned away,
leaving him with a vehement motion of protest:
“I’ve come for your kind answer the
answer your father instructed me to count on.”
“I’ve no kind answer to
give you!” she raised forbidding hands.
“I entreat you to leave me alone.”
There was so high a spirit and so
strong a force in it that he stared as if stricken
by violence. “In God’s name then what
has happened when you almost gave me your
word?”
“What has happened is that I’ve
found it impossible to listen to you.”
And she moved as if fleeing she scarce knew whither
before him.
He had already hastened around another
way, however, as to meet her in her quick circuit
of the hall. “That’s all you’ve
got to say to me after what has passed between us?”
He had stopped her thus, but she had
also stopped him, and her passionate denial set him
a limit. “I’ve got to say sorry
as I am that if you must have an
answer it’s this: that never, Lord John,
never, can there be anything more between us.”
And her gesture cleared her path, permitting her to
achieve her flight. “Never, no, never,”
she repeated as she went “never,
never, never!” She got off by the door at which
she had been aiming to some retreat of her own, while
aghast and defeated, left to make the best of it,
he sank after a moment into a chair and remained quite
pitiably staring before him, appealing to the great
blank splendour.