It was during the voyage that Cedric’s
mother told him that his home was not to be hers;
and when he first understood it, his grief was so
great that Mr. Havisham saw that the Earl had been
wise in making the arrangements that his mother should
be quite near him, and see him often; for it was very
plain he could not have borne the separation otherwise.
But his mother managed the little fellow so sweetly
and lovingly, and made him feel that she would be
so near him, that, after a while, he ceased to be
oppressed by the fear of any real parting.
“My house is not far from the
Castle, Ceddie,” she repeated each time the
subject was referred to—“a very little
way from yours, and you can always run in and see
me every day, and you will have so many things to
tell me! and we shall be so happy together! It
is a beautiful place. Your papa has often told
me about it. He loved it very much; and you will
love it too.”
“I should love it better if
you were there,” his small lordship said, with
a heavy little sigh.
He could not but feel puzzled by so
strange a state of affairs, which could put his “Dearest”
in one house and himself in another.
The fact was that Mrs. Errol had thought
it better not to tell him why this plan had been made.
“I should prefer he should not
be told,” she said to Mr. Havisham. “He
would not really understand; he would only be shocked
and hurt; and I feel sure that his feeling for the
Earl will be a more natural and affectionate one if
he does not know that his grandfather dislikes me so
bitterly. He has never seen hatred or hardness,
and it would be a great blow to him to find out that
any one could hate me. He is so loving himself,
and I am so dear to him! It is better for him
that he should not be told until he is much older,
and it is far better for the Earl. It would make
a barrier between them, even though Ceddie is such
a child.”
So Cedric only knew that there was
some mysterious reason for the arrangement, some reason
which he was not old enough to understand, but which
would be explained when he was older. He was puzzled;
but, after all, it was not the reason he cared about
so much; and after many talks with his mother, in
which she comforted him and placed before him the
bright side of the picture, the dark side of it gradually
began to fade out, though now and then Mr. Havisham
saw him sitting in some queer little old-fashioned
attitude, watching the sea, with a very grave face,
and more than once he heard an unchildish sigh rise
to his lips.
“I don’t like it,”
he said once as he was having one of his almost venerable
talks with the lawyer. “You don’t
know how much I don’t like it; but there are
a great many troubles in this world, and you have
to bear them. Mary says so, and I’ve heard
Mr. Hobbs say it too. And Dearest wants me to
like to live with my grandpapa, because, you see,
all his children are dead, and that’s very mournful.
It makes you sorry for a man, when all his children
have died—and one was killed suddenly.”
One of the things which always delighted
the people who made the acquaintance of his young
lordship was the sage little air he wore at times
when he gave himself up to conversation;—combined
with his occasionally elderly remarks and the extreme
innocence and seriousness of his round childish face,
it was irresistible. He was such a handsome,
blooming, curly-headed little fellow, that, when he
sat down and nursed his knee with his chubby hands,
and conversed with much gravity, he was a source of
great entertainment to his hearers. Gradually
Mr. Havisham had begun to derive a great deal of private
pleasure and amusement from his society.
“And so you are going to try to like the Earl,”
he said.
“Yes,” answered his lordship.
“He’s my relation, and of course you have
to like your relations; and besides, he’s been
very kind to me. When a person does so many things
for you, and wants you to have everything you wish
for, of course you’d like him if he wasn’t
your relation; but when he’s your relation and
does that, why, you’re very fond of him.”
“Do you think,” suggested
Mr. Havisham, “that he will be fond of you?”
“Well,” said Cedric, “I
think he will, because, you see, I’m his relation,
too, and I’m his boy’s little boy besides,
and, well, don’t you see—of course
he must be fond of me now, or he wouldn’t want
me to have everything that I like, and he wouldn’t
have sent you for me.”
“Oh!” remarked the lawyer, “that’s
it, is it?”
“Yes,” said Cedric, “that’s
it. Don’t you think that’s it, too?
Of course a man would be fond of his grandson.”
The people who had been seasick had
no sooner recovered from their seasickness, and come
on deck to recline in their steamer-chairs and enjoy
themselves, than every one seemed to know the romantic
story of little Lord Fauntleroy, and every one took
an interest in the little fellow, who ran about the
ship or walked with his mother or the tall, thin old
lawyer, or talked to the sailors. Every one liked
him; he made friends everywhere. He was ever
ready to make friends. When the gentlemen walked
up and down the deck, and let him walk with them, he
stepped out with a manly, sturdy little tramp, and
answered all their jokes with much gay enjoyment;
when the ladies talked to him, there was always laughter
in the group of which he was the center; when he played
with the children, there was always magnificent fun
on hand. Among the sailors he had the heartiest
friends; he heard miraculous stories about pirates
and shipwrecks and desert islands; he learned to splice
ropes and rig toy ships, and gained an amount of information
concerning “tops’ls” and “mains’ls,”
quite surprising. His conversation had, indeed,
quite a nautical flavor at times, and on one occasion
he raised a shout of laughter in a group of ladies
and gentlemen who were sitting on deck, wrapped in
shawls and overcoats, by saying sweetly, and with a
very engaging expression:
“Shiver my timbers, but it’s a cold day!”
It surprised him when they laughed.
He had picked up this sea-faring remark from an “elderly
naval man” of the name of Jerry, who told him
stories in which it occurred frequently. To judge
from his stories of his own adventures, Jerry had
made some two or three thousand voyages, and had been
invariably shipwrecked on each occasion on an island
densely populated with bloodthirsty cannibals.
Judging, also, by these same exciting adventures,
he had been partially roasted and eaten frequently
and had been scalped some fifteen or twenty times.
“That is why he is so bald,”
explained Lord Fauntleroy to his mamma. “After
you have been scalped several times the hair never
grows again. Jerry’s never grew again after
that last time, when the King of the Parromachaweekins
did it with the knife made out of the skull of the
Chief of the Wopslemumpkies. He says it was one
of the most serious times he ever had. He was
so frightened that his hair stood right straight up
when the king flourished his knife, and it never would
lie down, and the king wears it that way now, and
it looks something like a hair-brush. I never
heard anything like the asperiences Jerry has had!
I should so like to tell Mr. Hobbs about them!”
Sometimes, when the weather was very
disagreeable and people were kept below decks in the
saloon, a party of his grown-up friends would persuade
him to tell them some of these “asperiences”
of Jerry’s, and as he sat relating them with
great delight and fervor, there was certainly no more
popular voyager on any ocean steamer crossing the Atlantic
than little Lord Fauntleroy. He was always innocently
and good-naturedly ready to do his small best to add
to the general entertainment, and there was a charm
in the very unconsciousness of his own childish importance.
“Jerry’s stories int’rust
them very much,” he said to his mamma. “For
my part—you must excuse me, Dearest—but
sometimes I should have thought they couldn’t
be all quite true, if they hadn’t happened to
Jerry himself; but as they all happened to Jerry—well,
it’s very strange, you know, and perhaps sometimes
he may forget and be a little mistaken, as he’s
been scalped so often. Being scalped a great many
times might make a person forgetful.”
It was eleven days after he had said
good-bye to his friend Dick before he reached Liverpool;
and it was on the night of the twelfth day that the
carriage in which he and his mother and Mr. Havisham
had driven from the station stopped before the gates
of Court Lodge. They could not see much of the
house in the darkness. Cedric only saw that there
was a drive-way under great arching trees, and after
the carriage had rolled down this drive-way a short
distance, he saw an open door and a stream of bright
light coming through it.
Mary had come with them to attend
her mistress, and she had reached the house before
them. When Cedric jumped out of the carriage he
saw one or two servants standing in the wide, bright
hall, and Mary stood in the door-way.
Lord Fauntleroy sprang at her with a gay little shout.
“Did you get here, Mary?”
he said. “Here’s Mary, Dearest,”
and he kissed the maid on her rough red cheek.
“I am glad you are here, Mary,”
Mrs. Errol said to her in a low voice. “It
is such a comfort to me to see you. It takes the
strangeness away.” And she held out her
little hand, which Mary squeezed encouragingly.
She knew how this first “strangeness”
must feel to this little mother who had left her own
land and was about to give up her child.
The English servants looked with curiosity
at both the boy and his mother. They had heard
all sorts of rumors about them both; they knew how
angry the old Earl had been, and why Mrs. Errol was
to live at the lodge and her little boy at the castle;
they knew all about the great fortune he was to inherit,
and about the savage old grandfather and his gout
and his tempers.
“He’ll have no easy time
of it, poor little chap,” they had said among
themselves.
But they did not know what sort of
a little lord had come among them; they did not quite
understand the character of the next Earl of Dorincourt.
He pulled off his overcoat quite as
if he were used to doing things for himself, and began
to look about him. He looked about the broad hall,
at the pictures and stags’ antlers and curious
things that ornamented it. They seemed curious
to him because he had never seen such things before
in a private house.
“Dearest,” he said, “this
is a very pretty house, isn’t it? I am glad
you are going to live here. It’s quite a
large house.”
It was quite a large house compared
to the one in the shabby New York street, and it was
very pretty and cheerful. Mary led them upstairs
to a bright chintz-hung bedroom where a fire was burning,
and a large snow-white Persian cat was sleeping luxuriously
on the white fur hearth-rug.
“It was the house-kaper up at
the Castle, ma’am, sint her to yez,” explained
Mary. “It’s herself is a kind-hearted
lady an’ has had iverything done to prepar’
fur yez. I seen her meself a few minnits, an’
she was fond av the Capt’in, ma’am, an’
graivs fur him; and she said to say the big cat slapin’
on the rug moight make the room same homeloike to
yez. She knowed Capt’in Errol whin he was
a bye—an’ a foine handsum’
bye she ses he was, an’ a foine young man wid
a plisint word fur every one, great an’ shmall.
An’ ses I to her, ses I: ’He’s
lift a bye that’s loike him, ma’am, fur
a foiner little felly niver sthipped in shoe-leather.”’
When they were ready, they went downstairs
into another big bright room; its ceiling was low,
and the furniture was heavy and beautifully carved,
the chairs were deep and had high massive backs, and
there were queer shelves and cabinets with strange,
pretty ornaments on them. There was a great tiger-skin
before the fire, and an arm-chair on each side of it.
The stately white cat had responded to Lord Fauntleroy’s
stroking and followed him downstairs, and when he
threw himself down upon the rug, she curled herself
up grandly beside him as if she intended to make friends.
Cedric was so pleased that he put his head down by
hers, and lay stroking her, not noticing what his
mother and Mr. Havisham were saying.
They were, indeed, speaking in a rather
low tone. Mrs. Errol looked a little pale and
agitated.
“He need not go to-night?”
she said. “He will stay with me to-night?”
“Yes,” answered Mr. Havisham
in the same low tone; “it will not be necessary
for him to go to-night. I myself will go to the
Castle as soon as we have dined, and inform the Earl
of our arrival.”
Mrs. Errol glanced down at Cedric.
He was lying in a graceful, careless attitude upon
the black-and-yellow skin; the fire shone on his handsome,
flushed little face, and on the tumbled, curly hair
spread out on the rug; the big cat was purring in
drowsy content,—she liked the caressing
touch of the kind little hand on her fur.
Mrs. Errol smiled faintly.
“His lordship does not know
all that he is taking from me,” she said rather
sadly. Then she looked at the lawyer. “Will
you tell him, if you please,” she said, “that
I should rather not have the money?”
“The money!” Mr. Havisham
exclaimed. “You can not mean the income
he proposed to settle upon you!”
“Yes,” she answered, quite
simply; “I think I should rather not have it.
I am obliged to accept the house, and I thank him for
it, because it makes it possible for me to be near
my child; but I have a little money of my own,—enough
to live simply upon,—and I should rather
not take the other. As he dislikes me so much,
I should feel a little as if I were selling Cedric
to him. I am giving him up only because I love
him enough to forget myself for his good, and because
his father would wish it to be so.”
Mr. Havisham rubbed his chin.
“This is very strange,”
he said. “He will be very angry. He
won’t understand it.”
“I think he will understand
it after he thinks it over,” she said. “I
do not really need the money, and why should I accept
luxuries from the man who hates me so much that he
takes my little boy from me—his son’s
child?”
Mr. Havisham looked reflective for a few moments.
“I will deliver your message,” he said
afterward.
And then the dinner was brought in
and they sat down together, the big cat taking a seat
on a chair near Cedric’s and purring majestically
throughout the meal.
When, later in the evening, Mr. Havisham
presented himself at the Castle, he was taken at once
to the Earl. He found him sitting by the fire
in a luxurious easy-chair, his foot on a gout-stool.
He looked at the lawyer sharply from under his shaggy
eyebrows, but Mr. Havisham could see that, in spite
of his pretense at calmness, he was nervous and secretly
excited.
“Well,” he said; “well,
Havisham, come back, have you? What’s the
news?”
“Lord Fauntleroy and his mother
are at Court Lodge,” replied Mr. Havisham.
“They bore the voyage very well and are in excellent
health.”
The Earl made a half-impatient sound
and moved his hand restlessly.
“Glad to hear it,” he
said brusquely. “So far, so good. Make
yourself comfortable. Have a glass of wine and
settle down. What else?”
“His lordship remains with his
mother to-night. To-morrow I will bring him to
the Castle.”
The Earl’s elbow was resting
on the arm of his chair; he put his hand up and shielded
his eyes with it.
“Well,” he said; “go
on. You know I told you not to write to me about
the matter, and I know nothing whatever about it.
What kind of a lad is he? I don’t care
about the mother; what sort of a lad is he?”
Mr. Havisham drank a little of the
glass of port he had poured out for himself, and sat
holding it in his hand.
“It is rather difficult to judge
of the character of a child of seven,” he said
cautiously.
The Earl’s prejudices were very
intense. He looked up quickly and uttered a rough
word.
“A fool, is he?” he exclaimed.
“Or a clumsy cub? His American blood tells,
does it?”
“I do not think it has injured
him, my lord,” replied the lawyer in his dry,
deliberate fashion. “I don’t know
much about children, but I thought him rather a fine
lad.”
His manner of speech was always deliberate
and unenthusiastic, but he made it a trifle more so
than usual. He had a shrewd fancy that it would
be better that the Earl should judge for himself, and
be quite unprepared for his first interview with his
grandson.
“Healthy and well-grown?” asked my lord.
“Apparently very healthy, and quite well-grown,”
replied the lawyer.
“Straight-limbed and well enough to look at?”
demanded the Earl.
A very slight smile touched Mr. Havisham’s
thin lips. There rose up before his mind’s
eye the picture he had left at Court Lodge,—the
beautiful, graceful child’s body lying upon the
tiger-skin in careless comfort—the bright,
tumbled hair spread on the rug—the bright,
rosy boy’s face.
“Rather a handsome boy, I think,
my lord, as boys go,” he said, “though
I am scarcely a judge, perhaps. But you will find
him somewhat different from most English children,
I dare say.”
“I haven’t a doubt of
that,” snarled the Earl, a twinge of gout seizing
him. “A lot of impudent little beggars,
those American children; I’ve heard that often
enough.”
“It is not exactly impudence
in his case,” said Mr. Havisham. “I
can scarcely describe what the difference is.
He has lived more with older people than with children,
and the difference seems to be a mixture of maturity
and childishness.”
“American impudence!”
protested the Earl. “I’ve heard of
it before. They call it precocity and freedom.
Beastly, impudent bad manners; that’s what it
is!”
Mr. Havisham drank some more port.
He seldom argued with his lordly patron,—never
when his lordly patron’s noble leg was inflamed
by gout. At such times it was always better to
leave him alone. So there was a silence of a
few moments. It was Mr. Havisham who broke it.
“I have a message to deliver
from Mrs. Errol,” he remarked.
“I don’t want any of her
messages!” growled his lordship; “the less
I hear of her the better.”
“This is a rather important
one,” explained the lawyer. “She prefers
not to accept the income you proposed to settle on
her.”
The Earl started visibly.
“What’s that?” he cried out.
“What’s that?”
Mr. Havisham repeated his words.
“She says it is not necessary,
and that as the relations between you are not friendly——”
“Not friendly!” ejaculated
my lord savagely; “I should say they were not
friendly! I hate to think of her! A mercenary,
sharp-voiced American! I don’t wish to
see her.”
“My lord,” said Mr. Havisham,
“you can scarcely call her mercenary. She
has asked for nothing. She does not accept the
money you offer her.”
“All done for effect!”
snapped his noble lordship. “She wants to
wheedle me into seeing her. She thinks I shall
admire her spirit. I don’t admire it!
It’s only American independence! I won’t
have her living like a beggar at my park gates.
As she’s the boy’s mother, she has a position
to keep up, and she shall keep it up. She shall
have the money, whether she likes it or not!”
“She won’t spend it,” said Mr. Havisham.
“I don’t care whether
she spends it or not!” blustered my lord.
“She shall have it sent to her. She sha’n’t
tell people that she has to live like a pauper because
I have done nothing for her! She wants to give
the boy a bad opinion of me! I suppose she has
poisoned his mind against me already!”
“No,” said Mr. Havisham.
“I have another message, which will prove to
you that she has not done that.”
“I don’t want to hear
it!” panted the Earl, out of breath with anger
and excitement and gout.
But Mr. Havisham delivered it.
“She asks you not to let Lord
Fauntleroy hear anything which would lead him to understand
that you separate him from her because of your prejudice
against her. He is very fond of her, and she is
convinced that it would cause a barrier to exist between
you. She says he would not comprehend it, and
it might make him fear you in some measure, or at
least cause him to feel less affection for you.
She has told him that he is too young to understand
the reason, but shall hear it when he is older.
She wishes that there should be no shadow on your first
meeting.”
The Earl sank back into his chair.
His deep-set fierce old eyes gleamed under his beetling
brows.
“Come, now!” he said,
still breathlessly. “Come, now! You
don’t mean the mother hasn’t told him?”
“Not one word, my lord,”
replied the lawyer coolly. “That I can
assure you. The child is prepared to believe you
the most amiable and affectionate of grandparents.
Nothing—absolutely nothing has been said
to him to give him the slightest doubt of your perfection.
And as I carried out your commands in every detail,
while in New York, he certainly regards you as a wonder
of generosity.”
“He does, eh?” said the Earl.
“I give you my word of honor,”
said Mr. Havisham, “that Lord Fauntleroy’s
impressions of you will depend entirely upon yourself.
And if you will pardon the liberty I take in making
the suggestion, I think you will succeed better with
him if you take the precaution not to speak slightingly
of his mother.”
“Pooh, pooh!” said the
Earl. “The youngster is only seven years
old!”
“He has spent those seven years
at his mother’s side,” returned Mr. Havisham;
“and she has all his affection.”