The meeting was appointed by my Lord
Rotherby for seven o’clock next morning in Lincoln’s
Inn Fields. It is true that Lincoln’s Inn
Fields at an early hour of the day was accounted a
convenient spot for the transaction of such business
as this; yet, considering that it was in the immediate
neighborhood of Stretton House, overlooked, indeed,
by the windows of that mansion, it is not easy to
rid the mind of a suspicion that Rotherby appointed
that place of purpose set, and with intent to mark
his contempt and defiance of his father, with whom
he supposed Mr. Caryll to be in some league.
Accompanied by the Duke of Wharton
and Major Gascoigne, Mr. Caryll entered the enclosure
promptly as seven was striking from St. Clement Danes.
They had come in a coach, which they had left in waiting
at the corner of Portugal Row.
As they penetrated beyond the belt
of trees they found that they were the first in the
field, and his grace proceeded with the major to inspect
the ground, so that time might be saved against the
coming of the other party.
Mr. Caryll stood apart, breathing
the freshness of the sunlit morning, but supremely
indifferent to its glory. He was gloomy and preoccupied.
He had slept ill that night after his interview with
Sir Richard, tormented by the odious choice that lay
before him of either breaking with the adoptive father
to whom he owed obedience and affection, or betraying
his natural father whom he had every reason to hate,
yet who remained his father. He had been able
to arrive at no solution. Duty seemed to point
one way; instinct the other. Down in his heart
he felt that when the moment came it would be the
behests of instinct that he would obey, and, in obeying
them, play false to Sir Richard and to the memory
of his mother. It was the only course that went
with honor; and yet it was a course that must lead
to a break with the one friend he had in the world the
one man who stood to him for family and kin.
And now, as if that were not enough
to plague him, there was this quarrel with Rotherby
which he had upon his hands. That, too, he had
been considering during the wakeful hours of that summer
night. Had he reflected he must have seen that
no other result could have followed his narrative
at White’s last night; and yet it was a case
in which reflection would not have stayed him.
Hortensia Winthrop’s fair name was to be cleansed
of the smirch that had been cast upon it, and Justin
was the only man in whose power it had lain to do
it. More than that if more were needed it
was Rotherby himself, by his aggressiveness, who had
thrust Mr. Caryll into a position which almost made
it necessary for him to explain himself; and that
he could scarcely have done by any other than the
means which he had adopted. Under ordinary circumstances
the matter would have troubled him not at all; this
meeting with such a man as Rotherby would not have
robbed him of a moment’s sleep. But there
came the reflection belatedly that
Rotherby was his brother, his father’s son;
and he experienced just the same degree of repugnance
at the prospect of crossing swords with him as he
did at the prospect of betraying Lord Ostermore.
Sir Richard would force upon him a parricide’s
task; Fate a fratricide’s. Truly, he thought,
it was an enviable position, his.
Pacing the turf, on which the dew
still gleamed and sparkled diamond-like, he pondered
his course, and wondered now, at the last moment,
was there no way to avert this meeting. Could
not the matter be arranged? He was stirred out
of his musings by Gascoigne’s voice, raised
to curse the tardiness of Lord Rotherby.
“’Slife! Where does
the fellow tarry? Was he so drunk last night that
he’s not yet slept himself sober?”
“The streets are astir,”
put in Wharton, helping himself to snuff. And,
indeed, the cries of the morning hawkers reached them
now from the four sides of the square. “If
his lordship does not come soon, I doubt if we may
stay for him. We shall have half the town for
spectators.”
“Who are these?” quoth
Gascoigne, stepping aside and craning his neck to
get a better view. “Ah! Here they come.”
And he indicated a group of three that had that moment
passed the palings.
Gascoigne and Wharton went to meet
the newcomers. Lord Rotherby was attended by
Mainwaring, a militia captain a great, burly,
scarred bully of a man and a Mr. Falgate,
an extravagant young buck of his acquaintance.
An odder pair of sponsors he could not have found had
he been at pains to choose them so.
“Adso!” swore Mr. Falgate,
in his shrill, affected voice. “I vow ’tis
a most ungenteel hour, this, for men of quality to
be abroad. I had my beauty sleep broke into to
be here in time. Lard! I shall be dozing
all day for’t!” He took off his hat and
delicately mopped his brow with a square of lace he
called a handkerchief.
“Shall we come to business,
gentlemen?” quoth Mainwaring gruffly.
“With all my heart,” answered
Wharton. “It is growing late.”
“Late! La, my dears!”
clucked Mr. Falgate in horror. “Has your
grace not been to bed yet?”
“To save time,” said Gascoigne,
“we have made an inspection of the ground, and
we think that under the trees yonder is a spot not
to be bettered.”
Mainwaring flashed a critical and
experienced eye over the place. “The sun
is So?” he said, looking up.
“Yes; it should serve well enough, I ”
“It will not serve at all,”
cried Rotherby, who stood a pace or two apart.
“A little to the right, there, the turf is better.”
“But there is no protection,”
put in the duke. “You will be under observation
from that side of the square, including Stretton House.”
“What odds?” quoth Rotherby.
“Do I care who overlooks us?” And he laughed
unpleasantly. “Or is your grace ashamed
of being seen in your friend’s company?”
Wharton looked him steadily in the
face a moment, then turned to his lordship’s
seconds. “If Mr. Caryll is of the same mind
as his lordship, we had best get to work at once,”
he said; and bowing to them, withdrew with Gascoigne.
“See to the swords, Mainwaring,”
said Rotherby shortly. “Here, Fanny!”
This to Falgate, whose name was Francis, and who delighted
in the feminine diminutive which his intimates used
toward him. “Come help me with my clothes.”
“I vow to Gad,” protested
Mr. Falgate, advancing to the task. “I make
but an indifferent valet, my dear.”
Mr. Caryll stood thoughtful a moment
when Rotherby’s wishes had been made known to
him. The odd irony of the situation the
key to which he was the only one to hold was
borne in upon him. He fetched a sigh of utter
weariness.
“I have,” said he, “the
greatest repugnance to meeting his lordship.”
“’Tis little wonder,”
returned his grace contemptuously. “But
since ’tis forced upon you, I hope you’ll
give him the lesson in manners that he needs.”
“Is it is it unavoidable?”
quoth Mr. Caryll.
“Unavoidable?” Wharton looked at him in
stern wonder.
Gascoigne, too, swung round to stare.
“Unavoidable? What can you mean, Caryll?”
“I mean is the matter not to
be arranged in any way? Must the duel take place?”
His Grace of Wharton stroked his chin
contemplatively, his eye ironical, his lip curling
never so slightly. “Why,” said he,
at length, “you may beg my Lord Rotherby’s
pardon for having given him the lie. You may
retract, and brand yourself a liar and your version
of the Maidstone affair a silly invention which ye
have not the courage to maintain. You may do
that, Mr. Caryll. For my own sake, let me add,
I hope you will not do it.”
“I am not thinking of your grace
at all,” said Mr. Caryll, slightly piqued by
the tone the other took with him. “But to
relieve your mind of such doubts as I see you entertain,
I can assure you that it is out of no motives of weakness
that I boggle at this combat. Though I confess
that I am no ferrailleur, and that I abhor the duel
as a means of settling a difference just as I abhor
all things that are stupid and insensate, yet I am
not the man to shirk an encounter where an encounter
is forced upon me. But in this affair ”
he paused, then ended “there is more
than meets your grace’s eye, or, indeed, anyone’s.”
He was so calm, so master of himself,
that Wharton perceived how groundless must have been
his first notion. Whatever might be Mr. Caryll’s
motives, it was plain from his most perfect composure
that they were not motives of fear. His grace’s
half-contemptuous smile was dissipated.
“This is mere trifling, Mr.
Caryll,” he reminded his principal, “and
time is speeding. Your withdrawal now would not
only be damaging to yourself; it would be damaging
to the lady of whose fair name you have made yourself
the champion. You must see that it is too late
for doubts on the score of this meeting.”
“Ay by God!”
swore Gascoigne hotly. “What a pox ails
you, Caryll?”
Mr. Caryll took off his hat and flung
it on the ground behind him. “We must go
on, then,” said he. “Gascoigne, see
to the swords with his lordship’s friend there.”
With a relieved look, the major went
forward to make the final preparations, whilst Mr.
Caryll, attended by Wharton, rapidly divested himself
of coat and waistcoat, then kicked off his light shoes,
and stood ready, a slight, lithe, graceful figure
in white Holland shirt and pearl-colored small clothes.
A moment later the adversaries were
face to face Rotherby, divested of his
wig and with a kerchief bound about his close-cropped
head, all a trembling eagerness; Mr. Caryll with a
reluctance lightly masked by a dangerous composure.
There was a perfunctory salute a
mere presenting of arms and the blades
swept round in a half-circle to their first meeting.
But Rotherby, without so much as allowing his steel
to touch his opponent’s, as the laws of courtesy
demanded, swirled it away again into the higher lines
and lunged. It was almost like a foul attempt
to take his adversary unawares and unprepared, and
for a second it looked as if it must succeed.
It must have succeeded but for the miraculous quickness
of Mr. Caryll. Swinging round on the ball of his
right foot, lightly and gracefully as a dancing master,
and with no sign of haste or fear in his amazing speed,
he let the other’s hard-driven blade glance past
him, to meet nothing but the empty air.
As a result, by the very force of
the stroke, Rotherby found himself over-reached and
carried beyond his point of aim; while Mr. Caryll’s
sideward movement brought him not only nearer his opponent,
but entirely within his guard.
It was seen by them all, and by none
with such panic as Rotherby himself, that, as a consequence
of his quasi-foul stroke, the viscount was thrown
entirely at the mercy of his opponent thus at the very
outset of the encounter, before their blades had so
much as touched each other. A straightening of
the arm on the part of Mr. Caryll, and the engagement
would have been at an end.
Mr. Caryll, however, did not straighten
his arm. He was observed to smile as he broke
ground and waited for his lordship to recover.
Falgate turned pale. Mainwaring
swore softly under his breath, in fear for his principal;
Gascoigne did the same in vexation at the opportunity
Mr. Caryll had so wantonly wasted. Wharton looked
on with tight-pressed lips, and wondered.
Rotherby recovered, and for a moment
the two men stood apart, seeming to feel each other
with their eyes before resuming. Then his lordship
renewed the attack with vigor.
Mr. Caryll parried lightly and closely,
plying a beautiful weapon in the best manner of the
French school, and opposing to the ponderous force
of his antagonist a delicate frustrating science.
Rotherby, a fine swordsman in his way, soon saw that
here was need for all his skill, and he exerted it.
But the prodigious rapidity of his blade broke as upon
a cuirass against the other’s light, impenetrable
guard.
His lordship broke ground, breathed
heavily, and sweated under the glare of the morning
sun, cursing this swordsman who, so cool and deliberate,
husbanded his strength and scarcely seemed to move,
yet by sheer skill and address more than neutralized
his lordship’s advantages of greater strength
and length of reach.
“You cursed French dog!”
swore the viscount presently, between his teeth, and
as he spoke he made a ringing parade, feinted, beat
the ground with his foot to draw off the other’s
attention, and went in again with a full-length lunge.
“Parry that, you damned maitre-d’armes”
he roared.
Mr. Caryll answered nothing; he parried;
parried again; delivered a riposte whenever the opportunity
offered, or whenever his lordship grew too pressing,
and it became expedient to drive him back; but never
once did he stretch out to lunge in his turn.
The seconds were so lost in wonder at the beauty of
this close play of his that they paid no heed to what
was taking place in the square about them. They
never observed the opening windows and the spectators
gathering at them as Wharton had feared.
Amongst these, had either of the combatants looked
up, he would have seen his own father on the balcony
of Stretton House. A moment the earl stood there,
Lady Ostermore at his side; then he vanished into the
house again, to reappear almost at once in the street,
with a couple of footmen hurrying after him.
Meanwhile the combat went on.
Once Lord Rotherby had attempted to fall back for
a respite, realizing that he was winded. But Mr.
Caryll denied him this, attacking now for the first
time, and the rapidity of his play was such that Rotherby
opined the end to be at hand, appreciated
to the full his peril. In a last desperate effort,
gathering up what shreds of strength remained him,
he repulsed Mr. Caryll by a vigorous counter attack.
He saw an opening, feinted to enlarge it, and drove
in quickly, throwing his last ounce of strength into
the effort. This time it could not be said to
have been parried. Something else happened.
His blade, coming foible on forte against Mr. Caryll’s,
was suddenly enveloped. It was as if a tentacle
had been thrust out to seize it. For the barest
fraction of a second was it held so by Mr. Caryll’s
sword; then, easily but irresistibly, it was lifted
out of Rotherby’s hand, and dropped on the turf
a half-yard or so from his lordship’s stockinged
feet.
A cold sweat of terror broke upon
him. He caught his breath with a half-shuddering
sob of fear, his eyes dilating wildly for
Mr. Caryll’s point was coming straight as an
arrow at his throat. On it came and on, until
it was within perhaps three inches of the flesh.
There it was suddenly arrested, and
for a long moment it was held there poised, death
itself, menacing and imminent. And Lord Rotherby,
not daring to move, rooted where he stood, looked
with fascinated eyes along that shimmering blade into
two gleaming eyes behind it that seemed to watch him
with a solemnity that was grim to the point of mockery.
Time and the world stood still, or
were annihilated in that moment for the man who waited.
High in the blue overhead a lark was
pouring out its song; but his lordship heard it not.
He heard nothing, he was conscious of nothing but
that gleaming sword and those gleaming eyes behind
it.
Then a voice the voice
of his antagonist broke the silence.
“Is more needed?” it asked, and without
waiting for a reply, Mr. Caryll lowered his blade
and drew himself upright. “Let this suffice,”
he said. “To take your life would be to
deprive you of the means of profiting by this lesson.”
It seemed to Rotherby as if he were
awaking from a trance. The world resumed its
way. He breathed again, and straightened himself,
too, from the arrested attitude of his last lunge.
Rage welled up from his black soul; a crimson flood
swept into his pallid cheeks; his eyes rolled and
blazed with the fury of the mad.
Mr. Caryll moved away. In that
quiet voice of his: “Take up your sword,”
he said to the vanquished, over his shoulder.
Wharton and Gascoigne moved towards
him, without words to express the amazement that still
held Rotherby glared an instant longer without moving.
Then, doing as Mr. Caryll had bidden him, he stooped
to recover his blade. A moment he held it, looking
after his departing adversary; then with swift, silent
stealth he sprang to follow. His fell intent was
written on his face.
Falgate gasped a helpless
fool while Mainwaring hurled himself forward
to prevent the thing he saw impended. Too late.
Even as he flung out his hands to grapple with his
lordship, Rotherby’s arm drove straight before
him and sent his sword through the undefended back
of Mr. Caryll.
All that Mr. Caryll realized at first
was that he had been struck a blow between the shoulder
blades; and then, ere he could turn to inquire into
the cause, he was amazed to see some three inches of
steel come through his shirt in front. The next
instant an exquisite, burning, searing pain went through
and through him as the blade was being withdrawn.
He coughed and swayed, then hurtled sideways into the
arms of Major Gascoigne. His senses swam.
The turf heaved and rolled as if an earthquake moved
it; the houses fronting the square and the trees immediately
before him leaped and danced as if suddenly launched
into grotesque animation, while about him swirled
a wild, incoherent noise of voices, rising and falling,
now loud, now silent, and reaching him through a murmuring
hum that surged about his ears until it shut out all
else and consciousness deserted him.
Around him, meanwhile, a wild scene was toward.
His Grace of Wharton had wrenched
away the sword from Rotherby, and mastered by an effort
his own impulse to use it upon the murderer.
Captain Mainwaring Rotherby’s own
second, a man of quick, fierce passions utterly
unable to control himself, fell upon his lordship and
beat him to the ground with his hands, cursing him
and heaping abuse upon him with every blow; whilst
delicate Mr. Falgate, in the background, sick to the
point of faintness, stood dabbing his lips with his
handkerchief and swearing that he would rot before
he allowed himself again to be dragged into an affair
of honor.
“Ye damned cutthroat!”
swore the militia captain, standing over the man he
had felled. “D’ye know what’ll
be the fruits of this? Ye’ll swing at Tyburn
like the dirty thief y’ are. God help me!
I’d give a hundred guineas sooner than be mixed
in this filthy business.”
“’Tis no matter for that
now,” said the duke, touching him on the shoulder
and drawing him away from his lordship. “Get
up, Rotherby.”
Heavily, mechanically, Rotherby got
to his feet. Now that the fit of rage was over,
he was himself all stricken at the thing he had done.
He looked at the limp figure on the turf, huddled
against the knee of Major Gascoigne; looked at the
white face, the closed eyes and the stain of blood
oozing farther and farther across the Holland shirt,
and, as white himself as the stricken man, he shuddered
and his mouth was drawn wide with horror.
But pitiful though he looked, he inspired
no pity in the Duke of Wharton, who considered him
with an eye of unspeakable severity. “If
Mr. Caryll dies,” said he coldly, “I shall
see to it that you hang, my lord. I’ll
not rest until I bring you to the gallows.”
And then, before more could be said,
there came a sound of running steps and labored breathing,
and his grace swore softly to himself as he beheld
no other than Lord Ostermore advancing rapidly, all
out of breath and apoplectic of face, a couple of
footmen pressing close upon his heels, and, behind
these, a score of sightseers who had followed them.
“What’s here?” cried
the earl, without glancing at his son. “Is
he dead? Is he dead?”
Gascoigne, who was busily endeavoring
to stanch the bleeding, answered without looking up:
“It is in God’s hands. I think he
is very like to die.”
Ostermore swung round upon Rotherby.
He had paled suddenly, and his mouth trembled.
He raised his clenched hand, and it seemed that he
was about to strike his son; then he let it fall again.
“You villain!” he panted, breathless from
running and from rage. “I saw it! I
saw it all. It was murder, and, as God’s
my life, if Mr. Caryll dies, I shall see to it that
you hang I, your own father.”
Thus assailed on every side, some
of the cowering, shrinking manner left the viscount.
His antagonism to his father spurred him to a prouder
carriage. He shrugged indifferently. “So
be it,” he said. “I have been told
that already. I don’t greatly care.”
Mainwaring, who had been stooping
over Mr. Caryll, and who had perhaps more knowledge
of wounds than any present, shook his head ominously.
“’Twould be dangerous
to move him far,” said he. “’Twill
increase the hemorrhage.”
“My men shall carry him across
to Stretton House,” said Lord Ostermore.
“Lend a hand here, you gaping oafs.”
The footmen advanced. The crowd,
which was growing rapidly and was watching almost
in silence, awed, pressed as close as it dared upon
these gentlemen. Mainwaring procured a couple
of cloaks and improvised a stretcher with them.
Of this he took one corner himself, Gascoigne another,
and the footmen the remaining two. Thus, as gently
as might be, they bore the wounded man from the enclosure,
through the crowd that had by now assembled in the
street, and over the threshold of Stretton House.
A groom had been dispatched for a
doctor, and his Grace of Wharton had compelled Rotherby
to accompany them into his father’s house, sternly
threatening to hand him over to a constable at once
if he refused.
Within the cool hall of Stretton House
they were met by her ladyship and Mistress Winthrop,
both pale, but the eyes of each wearing a vastly different
expression.
“What’s this?” demanded
her ladyship, as they trooped in. “Why do
you bring him here?”
“Because, madam,” answered
Ostermore in a voice as hard as iron, “it imports
to save his life; for if he dies, your son dies as
surely and on the scaffold.”
Her ladyship staggered and flung a
hand to her breast. But her recovery was almost
immediate. “’Twas a duel ”
she began stoutly.
“’Twas murder,”
his lordship corrected, interrupting “murder,
as any of these gentlemen can and will bear witness.
Rotherby ran Mr. Caryll through the back after Mr.
Caryll had spared his life.”
“’Tis a lie!” screamed
her ladyship, her lips ashen. She turned to Rotherby,
who stood there in shirt and breeches and shoeless,
as he had fought. “Why don’t you
say that it is a lie?” she demanded.
Rotherby endeavored to master himself.
“Madam,” he said, “here is no place
for you.”
“But is it true? Is it true what is being
said?”
He half-turned from her, with a despairing
movement, and caught the sharp hiss of her indrawn
breath. Then she swept past him to the side of
the wounded man, who had been laid on a settle.
“What is his hurt?” she inquired wildly,
looking about her. But no one spoke. Tragedy more
far than the tragedy of that man’s possible death was
in the air, and struck them all silent. “Will
no one answer me?” she insisted. “Is
it mortal? Is it?”
His Grace of Wharton turned to her
with an unusual gravity in his blue eyes. “We
hope not, ma’am,” he said. “But
it is as God wills.”
Her limbs seemed to fail her, and
she sank down on her knees beside the settle.
“We must save him,” she muttered fearfully.
“We must save his life. Where is the doctor?
He won’t die! Oh, he must not die!”
They stood grouped about, looking
on in silence, Rotherby in the background. Behind
him again, on the topmost of the three steps that led
up into the inner hall, stood Mistress Winthrop, white
of face, a wild horror in the eyes she riveted upon
the wounded and unconscious man. She realized
that he was like to die. There was an infinite
pity in her soul and, maybe, something
more. Her impulse was to go to him; her every
instinct urged her. But her reason held her back.
Then, as she looked, she saw with
a feeling almost of terror that his eyes were suddenly
wide open.
“Wha what?” came in feeble
accents from his lips.
There was a stir about him.
“Never move, Justin,”
said Gascoigne, who stood by his head. “You
are hurt. Lie still. The doctor has been
summoned.”
“Ah!” It was a sigh.
The wounded man closed his eyes a moment, then re-opened
them. “I remember. I remember,”
he said feebly. “It is it is
grave?” he inquired. “It went right
through me. I remember!” He surveyed himself.
“There’s been a deal of blood lost.
I am like to die, I take it.”
“Nay, sir, we hope not we
hope not!” It was the countess who spoke.
A wry smile twisted his lips.
“Your ladyship is very good,” said he.
“I had not thought you quite so much my well-wisher.
I I have done you a wrong, madam.”
He paused for breath, and it was not plain whether
he spoke in sincerity or in sarcasm. Then with
a startling suddenness he broke into a soft laugh
and to those risen, who could not think what had occasioned
it, it sounded more dreadful than any plaint he could
have uttered.
He had bethought him that there was
no longer the need for him to come to a decision in
the matter that had brought him to England, and his
laugh was almost of relief. The riddle he could
never have solved for himself in a manner that had
not shattered his future peace of mind, was solved
and well solved if this were death.
“Where where is Rotherby?”
he inquired presently.
There was a stir, and men drew back,
leaving an open lane to the place where Rotherby stood.
Mr. Caryll saw him, and smiled, and his smile held
no tinge of mockery. “You are the best friend
I ever had, Rotherby,” he startled all by saying.
“Let him approach,” he begged.
Rotherby came forward like one who
walks in his sleep. “I am sorry,”
he said thickly, “cursed sorry.”
“There’s scarce the need,”
said Mr. Caryll. “Lift me up, Tom,”
he begged Gascoigne. “There’s scarce
the need. You have cleared up something that
was plaguing me, my lord. I am your debtor for for
that. It disposes of something I could never
have disposed of had I lived.” He turned
to the Duke of Wharton. “It was an accident,”
he said significantly. “You all saw that
it was an accident.”
A denial rang out. “It
was no accident!” cried Lord Ostermore, and swore
an oath. “We all saw what it was.”
“I’faith, then, your eyes
deceived you. It was an accident, I say and
who should know better than I?” He was smiling
in that whimsical enigmatic way of his. Smiling
still he sank back into Gascoigne’s arms.
“You are talking too much,” said the Major.
“What odds? I am not like to talk much
longer.”
The door opened to admit a gentleman
in black, wearing a grizzle wig and carrying a gold-headed
cane. Men moved aside to allow him to approach
Mr. Caryll. The latter, not noticing him, had
met at last the gaze of Hortensia’s eyes.
He continued to smile, but his smile was now changed
to wistfulness under that pitiful regard of hers.
“It is better so,” he was saying.
“Better so!”
His glance was upon her, and she understood
what none other there suspected that those
words were for her alone.
He closed his eyes and swooned again,
as the doctor stooped to remove the temporary bandages
from his wound.
Hortensia, a sob beating in her throat,
turned and fled to her own room.