It was late in the afternoon when
the carriage containing little Lord Fauntleroy and
Mr. Havisham drove up the long avenue which led to
the castle. The Earl had given orders that his
grandson should arrive in time to dine with him; and
for some reason best known to himself, he had also
ordered that the child should be sent alone into the
room in which he intended to receive him. As
the carriage rolled up the avenue, Lord Fauntleroy
sat leaning comfortably against the luxurious cushions,
and regarded the prospect with great interest.
He was, in fact, interested in everything he saw.
He had been interested in the carriage, with its large,
splendid horses and their glittering harness; he had
been interested in the tall coachman and footman,
with their resplendent livery; and he had been especially
interested in the coronet on the panels, and had struck
up an acquaintance with the footman for the purpose
of inquiring what it meant.
When the carriage reached the great
gates of the park, he looked out of the window to
get a good view of the huge stone lions ornamenting
the entrance. The gates were opened by a motherly,
rosy-looking woman, who came out of a pretty, ivy-covered
lodge. Two children ran out of the door of the
house and stood looking with round, wide-open eyes
at the little boy in the carriage, who looked at them
also. Their mother stood courtesying and smiling,
and the children, on receiving a sign from her, made
bobbing little courtesies too.
“Does she know me?” asked
Lord Fauntleroy. “I think she must think
she knows me.” And he took off his black
velvet cap to her and smiled.
“How do you do?” he said brightly.
“Good-afternoon!”
The woman seemed pleased, he thought.
The smile broadened on her rosy face and a kind look
came into her blue eyes.
“God bless your lordship!”
she said. “God bless your pretty face!
Good luck and happiness to your lordship! Welcome
to you!”
Lord Fauntleroy waved his cap and
nodded to her again as the carriage rolled by her.
“I like that woman,” he
said. “She looks as if she liked boys.
I should like to come here and play with her children.
I wonder if she has enough to make up a company?”
Mr. Havisham did not tell him that
he would scarcely be allowed to make playmates of
the gate-keeper’s children. The lawyer thought
there was time enough for giving him that information.
The carriage rolled on and on between
the great, beautiful trees which grew on each side
of the avenue and stretched their broad, swaying branches
in an arch across it. Cedric had never seen such
trees,—they were so grand and stately,
and their branches grew so low down on their huge
trunks. He did not then know that Dorincourt Castle
was one of the most beautiful in all England; that
its park was one of the broadest and finest, and its
trees and avenue almost without rivals. But he
did know that it was all very beautiful. He liked
the big, broad-branched trees, with the late afternoon
sunlight striking golden lances through them.
He liked the perfect stillness which rested on everything.
He felt a great, strange pleasure in the beauty of
which he caught glimpses under and between the sweeping
boughs—the great, beautiful spaces of the
park, with still other trees standing sometimes stately
and alone, and sometimes in groups. Now and then
they passed places where tall ferns grew in masses,
and again and again the ground was azure with the
bluebells swaying in the soft breeze. Several
times he started up with a laugh of delight as a rabbit
leaped up from under the greenery and scudded away
with a twinkle of short white tail behind it.
Once a covey of partridges rose with a sudden whir
and flew away, and then he shouted and clapped his
hands.
“It’s a beautiful place,
isn’t it?” he said to Mr. Havisham.
“I never saw such a beautiful place. It’s
prettier even than Central Park.”
He was rather puzzled by the length
of time they were on their way.
“How far is it,” he said,
at length, “from the gate to the front door?”
“It is between three and four
miles,” answered the lawyer.
“That’s a long way for
a person to live from his gate,” remarked his
lordship.
Every few minutes he saw something
new to wonder at and admire. When he caught sight
of the deer, some couched in the grass, some standing
with their pretty antlered heads turned with a half-startled
air toward the avenue as the carriage wheels disturbed
them, he was enchanted.
“Has there been a circus?”
he cried; “or do they live here always?
Whose are they?”
“They live here,” Mr.
Havisham told him. “They belong to the Earl,
your grandfather.”
It was not long after this that they
saw the castle. It rose up before them stately
and beautiful and gray, the last rays of the sun casting
dazzling lights on its many windows. It had turrets
and battlements and towers; a great deal of ivy grew
upon its walls; all the broad, open space about it
was laid out in terraces and lawns and beds of brilliant
flowers.
“It’s the most beautiful
place I ever saw!” said Cedric, his round face
flushing with pleasure. “It reminds any
one of a king’s palace. I saw a picture
of one once in a fairy-book.”
He saw the great entrance-door thrown
open and many servants standing in two lines looking
at him. He wondered why they were standing there,
and admired their liveries very much. He did
not know that they were there to do honor to the little
boy to whom all this splendor would one day belong,—the
beautiful castle like the fairy king’s palace,
the magnificent park, the grand old trees, the dells
full of ferns and bluebells where the hares and rabbits
played, the dappled, large-eyed deer couching in the
deep grass. It was only a couple of weeks since
he had sat with Mr. Hobbs among the potatoes and canned
peaches, with his legs dangling from the high stool;
it would not have been possible for him to realize
that he had very much to do with all this grandeur.
At the head of the line of servants there stood an
elderly woman in a rich, plain black silk gown; she
had gray hair and wore a cap. As he entered the
hall she stood nearer than the rest, and the child
thought from the look in her eyes that she was going
to speak to him. Mr. Havisham, who held his hand,
paused a moment.
“This is Lord Fauntleroy, Mrs.
Mellon,” he said. “Lord Fauntleroy,
this is Mrs. Mellon, who is the housekeeper.”
Cedric gave her his hand, his eyes lighting up.
“Was it you who sent the cat?”
he said. “I’m much obliged to you,
ma’am.”
Mrs. Mellon’s handsome old face
looked as pleased as the face of the lodge-keeper’s
wife had done.
“I should know his lordship
anywhere,” she said to Mr. Havisham. “He
has the Captain’s face and way. It’s
a great day, this, sir.”
Cedric wondered why it was a great
day. He looked at Mrs. Mellon curiously.
It seemed to him for a moment as if there were tears
in her eyes, and yet it was evident she was not unhappy.
She smiled down on him.
“The cat left two beautiful
kittens here,” she said; “they shall be
sent up to your lordship’s nursery.”
Mr. Havisham said a few words to her in a low voice.
“In the library, sir,”
Mrs. Mellon replied. “His lordship is to
be taken there alone.”
A few minutes later, the very tall
footman in livery, who had escorted Cedric to the
library door, opened it and announced: “Lord
Fauntleroy, my lord,” in quite a majestic tone.
If he was only a footman, he felt it was rather a
grand occasion when the heir came home to his own land
and possessions, and was ushered into the presence
of the old Earl, whose place and title he was to take.
Cedric crossed the threshold into
the room. It was a very large and splendid room,
with massive carven furniture in it, and shelves upon
shelves of books; the furniture was so dark, and the
draperies so heavy, the diamond-paned windows were
so deep, and it seemed such a distance from one end
of it to the other, that, since the sun had gone down,
the effect of it all was rather gloomy. For a
moment Cedric thought there was nobody in the room,
but soon he saw that by the fire burning on the wide
hearth there was a large easy-chair and that in that
chair some one was sitting—some one who
did not at first turn to look at him.
But he had attracted attention in
one quarter at least. On the floor, by the arm-chair,
lay a dog, a huge tawny mastiff, with body and limbs
almost as big as a lion’s; and this great creature
rose majestically and slowly, and marched toward the
little fellow with a heavy step.
Then the person in the chair spoke.
“Dougal,” he called, “come back,
sir.”
But there was no more fear in little
Lord Fauntleroy’s heart than there was unkindness—he
had been a brave little fellow all his life. He
put his hand on the big dog’s collar in the
most natural way in the world, and they strayed forward
together, Dougal sniffing as he went.
And then the Earl looked up.
What Cedric saw was a large old man with shaggy white
hair and eyebrows, and a nose like an eagle’s
beak between his deep, fierce eyes. What the
Earl saw was a graceful, childish figure in a black
velvet suit, with a lace collar, and with love-locks
waving about the handsome, manly little face, whose
eyes met his with a look of innocent good-fellowship.
If the Castle was like the palace in a fairy story,
it must be owned that little Lord Fauntleroy was himself
rather like a small copy of the fairy prince, though
he was not at all aware of the fact, and perhaps was
rather a sturdy young model of a fairy. But there
was a sudden glow of triumph and exultation in the
fiery old Earl’s heart as he saw what a strong,
beautiful boy this grandson was, and how unhesitatingly
he looked up as he stood with his hand on the big
dog’s neck. It pleased the grim old nobleman
that the child should show no shyness or fear, either
of the dog or of himself.
Cedric looked at him just as he had
looked at the woman at the lodge and at the housekeeper,
and came quite close to him.
“Are you the Earl?” he
said. “I’m your grandson, you know,
that Mr. Havisham brought. I’m Lord Fauntleroy.”
He held out his hand because he thought
it must be the polite and proper thing to do even
with earls. “I hope you are very well,”
he continued, with the utmost friendliness. “I’m
very glad to see you.”
The Earl shook hands with him, with
a curious gleam in his eyes; just at first, he was
so astonished that he scarcely knew what to say.
He stared at the picturesque little apparition from
under his shaggy brows, and took it all in from head
to foot.
“Glad to see me, are you?” he said.
“Yes,” answered Lord Fauntleroy, “very.”
There was a chair near him, and he
sat down on it; it was a high-backed, rather tall
chair, and his feet did not touch the floor when he
had settled himself in it, but he seemed to be quite
comfortable as he sat there, and regarded his august
relative intently but modestly.
“I’ve kept wondering what
you would look like,” he remarked. “I
used to lie in my berth in the ship and wonder if
you would be anything like my father.”
“Am I?” asked the Earl.
“Well,” Cedric replied,
“I was very young when he died, and I may not
remember exactly how he looked, but I don’t think
you are like him.”
“You are disappointed, I suppose?”
suggested his grandfather.
“Oh, no,” responded Cedric
politely. “Of course you would like any
one to look like your father; but of course you would
enjoy the way your grandfather looked, even if he
wasn’t like your father. You know how it
is yourself about admiring your relations.”
The Earl leaned back in his chair
and stared. He could not be said to know how
it was about admiring his relations. He had employed
most of his noble leisure in quarreling violently
with them, in turning them out of his house, and applying
abusive epithets to them; and they all hated him cordially.
“Any boy would love his grandfather,”
continued Lord Fauntleroy, “especially one that
had been as kind to him as you have been.”
Another queer gleam came into the old nobleman’s
eyes.
“Oh!” he said, “I have been kind
to you, have I?”
“Yes,” answered Lord Fauntleroy
brightly; “I’m ever so much obliged to
you about Bridget, and the apple-woman, and Dick.”
“Bridget!” exclaimed the Earl. “Dick!
The apple-woman!”
“Yes!” explained Cedric;
“the ones you gave me all that money for—the
money you told Mr. Havisham to give me if I wanted
it.”
“Ha!” ejaculated his lordship.
“That’s it, is it? The money you were
to spend as you liked. What did you buy with it?
I should like to hear something about that.”
He drew his shaggy eyebrows together
and looked at the child sharply. He was secretly
curious to know in what way the lad had indulged himself.
“Oh!” said Lord Fauntleroy,
“perhaps you didn’t know about Dick and
the apple-woman and Bridget. I forgot you lived
such a long way off from them. They were particular
friends of mine. And you see Michael had the
fever——”
“Who’s Michael?” asked the Earl.
“Michael is Bridget’s
husband, and they were in great trouble. When
a man is sick and can’t work and has twelve
children, you know how it is. And Michael has
always been a sober man. And Bridget used to come
to our house and cry. And the evening Mr. Havisham
was there, she was in the kitchen crying, because
they had almost nothing to eat and couldn’t pay
the rent; and I went in to see her, and Mr. Havisham
sent for me and he said you had given him some money
for me. And I ran as fast as I could into the
kitchen and gave it to Bridget; and that made it all
right; and Bridget could scarcely believe her eyes.
That’s why I’m so obliged to you.”
“Oh!” said the Earl in
his deep voice, “that was one of the things you
did for yourself, was it? What else?”
Dougal had been sitting by the tall
chair; the great dog had taken its place there when
Cedric sat down. Several times it had turned and
looked up at the boy as if interested in the conversation.
Dougal was a solemn dog, who seemed to feel altogether
too big to take life’s responsibilities lightly.
The old Earl, who knew the dog well, had watched it
with secret interest. Dougal was not a dog whose
habit it was to make acquaintances rashly, and the
Earl wondered somewhat to see how quietly the brute
sat under the touch of the childish hand. And,
just at this moment, the big dog gave little Lord
Fauntleroy one more look of dignified scrutiny, and
deliberately laid its huge, lion-like head on the
boy’s black-velvet knee.
The small hand went on stroking this
new friend as Cedric answered:
“Well, there was Dick,”
he said. “You’d like Dick, he’s
so square.”
This was an Americanism the Earl was not prepared
for.
“What does that mean?” he inquired.
Lord Fauntleroy paused a moment to
reflect. He was not very sure himself what it
meant. He had taken it for granted as meaning
something very creditable because Dick had been fond
of using it.
“I think it means that he wouldn’t
cheat any one,” he exclaimed; “or hit
a boy who was under his size, and that he blacks people’s
boots very well and makes them shine as much as he
can. He’s a perfessional bootblack.”
“And he’s one of your
acquaintances, is he?” said the Earl.
“He is an old friend of mine,”
replied his grandson. “Not quite as old
as Mr. Hobbs, but quite old. He gave me a present
just before the ship sailed.”
He put his hand into his pocket and
drew forth a neatly folded red object and opened it
with an air of affectionate pride. It was the
red silk handkerchief with the large purple horse-shoes
and heads on it.
“He gave me this,” said
his young lordship. “I shall keep it always.
You can wear it round your neck or keep it in your
pocket. He bought it with the first money he
earned after I bought Jake out and gave him the new
brushes. It’s a keepsake. I put some
poetry in Mr. Hobbs’s watch. It was, ‘When
this you see, remember me.’ When this I
see, I shall always remember Dick.”
The sensations of the Right Honorable
the Earl of Dorincourt could scarcely be described.
He was not an old nobleman who was very easily bewildered,
because he had seen a great deal of the world; but
here was something he found so novel that it almost
took his lordly breath away, and caused him some singular
emotions. He had never cared for children; he
had been so occupied with his own pleasures that he
had never had time to care for them. His own
sons had not interested him when they were very young—though
sometimes he remembered having thought Cedric’s
father a handsome and strong little fellow. He
had been so selfish himself that he had missed the
pleasure of seeing unselfishness in others, and he
had not known how tender and faithful and affectionate
a kind-hearted little child can be, and how innocent
and unconscious are its simple, generous impulses.
A boy had always seemed to him a most objectionable
little animal, selfish and greedy and boisterous when
not under strict restraint; his own two eldest sons
had given their tutors constant trouble and annoyance,
and of the younger one he fancied he had heard few
complaints because the boy was of no particular importance.
It had never once occurred to him that he should like
his grandson; he had sent for the little Cedric because
his pride impelled him to do so. If the boy was
to take his place in the future, he did not wish his
name to be made ridiculous by descending to an uneducated
boor. He had been convinced the boy would be
a clownish fellow if he were brought up in America.
He had no feeling of affection for the lad; his only
hope was that he should find him decently well-featured,
and with a respectable share of sense; he had been
so disappointed in his other sons, and had been made
so furious by Captain Errol’s American marriage,
that he had never once thought that anything creditable
could come of it. When the footman had announced
Lord Fauntleroy, he had almost dreaded to look at
the boy lest he should find him all that he had feared.
It was because of this feeling that he had ordered
that the child should be sent to him alone. His
pride could not endure that others should see his
disappointment if he was to be disappointed. His
proud, stubborn old heart therefore had leaped within
him when the boy came forward with his graceful, easy
carriage, his fearless hand on the big dog’s
neck. Even in the moments when he had hoped the
most, the Earl had never hoped that his grandson would
look like that. It seemed almost too good to be
true that this should be the boy he had dreaded to
see—the child of the woman he so disliked—this
little fellow with so much beauty and such a brave,
childish grace! The Earl’s stern composure
was quite shaken by this startling surprise.
And then their talk began; and he
was still more curiously moved, and more and more
puzzled. In the first place, he was so used to
seeing people rather afraid and embarrassed before
him, that he had expected nothing else but that his
grandson would be timid or shy. But Cedric was
no more afraid of the Earl than he had been of Dougal.
He was not bold; he was only innocently friendly,
and he was not conscious that there could be any reason
why he should be awkward or afraid. The Earl could
not help seeing that the little boy took him for a
friend and treated him as one, without having any
doubt of him at all. It was quite plain as the
little fellow sat there in his tall chair and talked
in his friendly way that it had never occurred to
him that this large, fierce-looking old man could
be anything but kind to him, and rather pleased to
see him there. And it was plain, too, that, in
his childish way, he wished to please and interest
his grandfather. Cross, and hard-hearted, and
worldly as the old Earl was, he could not help feeling
a secret and novel pleasure in this very confidence.
After all, it was not disagreeable to meet some one
who did not distrust him or shrink from him, or seem
to detect the ugly part of his nature; some one who
looked at him with clear, unsuspecting eyes,—if
it was only a little boy in a black velvet suit.
So the old man leaned back in his
chair, and led his young companion on to telling him
still more of himself, and with that odd gleam in his
eyes watched the little fellow as he talked. Lord
Fauntleroy was quite willing to answer all his questions
and chatted on in his genial little way quite composedly.
He told him all about Dick and Jake, and the apple-woman,
and Mr. Hobbs; he described the Republican Rally in
all the glory of its banners and transparencies, torches
and rockets. In the course of the conversation,
he reached the Fourth of July and the Revolution,
and was just becoming enthusiastic, when he suddenly
recollected something and stopped very abruptly.
“What is the matter?”
demanded his grandfather. “Why don’t
you go on?”
Lord Fauntleroy moved rather uneasily
in his chair. It was evident to the Earl that
he was embarrassed by the thought which had just occurred
to him.
“I was just thinking that perhaps
you mightn’t like it,” he replied.
“Perhaps some one belonging to you might have
been there. I forgot you were an Englishman.”
“You can go on,” said
my lord. “No one belonging to me was there.
You forgot you were an Englishman, too.”
“Oh! no,” said Cedric quickly. “I’m
an American!”
“You are an Englishman,”
said the Earl grimly. “Your father was an
Englishman.”
It amused him a little to say this,
but it did not amuse Cedric. The lad had never
thought of such a development as this. He felt
himself grow quite hot up to the roots of his hair.
“I was born in America,”
he protested. “You have to be an American
if you are born in America. I beg your pardon,”
with serious politeness and delicacy, “for contradicting
you. Mr. Hobbs told me, if there were another
war, you know, I should have to—to be an
American.”
The Earl gave a grim half laugh—it
was short and grim, but it was a laugh.
“You would, would you?” he said.
He hated America and Americans, but
it amused him to see how serious and interested this
small patriot was. He thought that so good an
American might make a rather good Englishman when
he was a man.
They had not time to go very deep
into the Revolution again—and indeed Lord
Fauntleroy felt some delicacy about returning to the
subject—before dinner was announced.
Cedric left his chair and went to
his noble kinsman. He looked down at his gouty
foot.
“Would you like me to help you?”
he said politely. “You could lean on me,
you know. Once when Mr. Hobbs hurt his foot with
a potato-barrel rolling on it, he used to lean on
me.”
The big footman almost periled his
reputation and his situation by smiling. He was
an aristocratic footman who had always lived in the
best of noble families, and he had never smiled; indeed,
he would have felt himself a disgraced and vulgar
footman if he had allowed himself to be led by any
circumstance whatever into such an indiscretion as
a smile. But he had a very narrow escape.
He only just saved himself by staring straight over
the Earl’s head at a very ugly picture.
The Earl looked his valiant young
relative over from head to foot.
“Do you think you could do it?” he asked
gruffly.
“I think I could,”
said Cedric. “I’m strong. I’m
seven, you know. You could lean on your stick
on one side, and on me on the other. Dick says
I’ve a good deal of muscle for a boy that’s
only seven.”
He shut his hand and moved it upward
to his shoulder, so that the Earl might see the muscle
Dick had kindly approved of, and his face was so grave
and earnest that the footman found it necessary to
look very hard indeed at the ugly picture.
“Well,” said the Earl, “you may
try.”
Cedric gave him his stick and began
to assist him to rise. Usually, the footman did
this, and was violently sworn at when his lordship
had an extra twinge of gout. The Earl was not
a very polite person as a rule, and many a time the
huge footmen about him quaked inside their imposing
liveries.
But this evening he did not swear,
though his gouty foot gave him more twinges than one.
He chose to try an experiment. He got up slowly
and put his hand on the small shoulder presented to
him with so much courage. Little Lord Fauntleroy
made a careful step forward, looking down at the gouty
foot.
“Just lean on me,” he
said, with encouraging good cheer. “I’ll
walk very slowly.”
If the Earl had been supported by
the footman he would have rested less on his stick
and more on his assistant’s arm. And yet
it was part of his experiment to let his grandson
feel his burden as no light weight. It was quite
a heavy weight indeed, and after a few steps his young
lordship’s face grew quite hot, and his heart
beat rather fast, but he braced himself sturdily,
remembering his muscle and Dick’s approval of
it.
“Don’t be afraid of leaning
on me,” he panted. “I’m all
right—if—if it isn’t a
very long way.”
It was not really very far to the
dining-room, but it seemed rather a long way to Cedric,
before they reached the chair at the head of the table.
The hand on his shoulder seemed to grow heavier at
every step, and his face grew redder and hotter, and
his breath shorter, but he never thought of giving
up; he stiffened his childish muscles, held his head
erect, and encouraged the Earl as he limped along.
“Does your foot hurt you very
much when you stand on it?” he asked. “Did
you ever put it in hot water and mustard? Mr.
Hobbs used to put his in hot water. Arnica is
a very nice thing, they tell me.”
The big dog stalked slowly beside
them, and the big footman followed; several times
he looked very queer as he watched the little figure
making the very most of all its strength, and bearing
its burden with such good-will. The Earl, too,
looked rather queer, once, as he glanced sidewise
down at the flushed little face. When they entered
the room where they were to dine, Cedric saw it was
a very large and imposing one, and that the footman
who stood behind the chair at the head of the table
stared very hard as they came in.
But they reached the chair at last.
The hand was removed from his shoulder, and the Earl
was fairly seated.
Cedric took out Dick’s handkerchief
and wiped his forehead.
“It’s a warm night, isn’t
it?” he said. “Perhaps you need a
fire because—because of your foot, but
it seems just a little warm to me.”
His delicate consideration for his
noble relative’s feelings was such that he did
not wish to seem to intimate that any of his surroundings
were unnecessary.
“You have been doing some rather
hard work,” said the Earl.
“Oh, no!” said Lord Fauntleroy,
“it wasn’t exactly hard, but I got a little
warm. A person will get warm in summer time.”
And he rubbed his damp curls rather
vigorously with the gorgeous handkerchief. His
own chair was placed at the other end of the table,
opposite his grandfather’s. It was a chair
with arms, and intended for a much larger individual
than himself; indeed, everything he had seen so far,—the
great rooms, with their high ceilings, the massive
furniture, the big footman, the big dog, the Earl
himself,—were all of proportions calculated
to make this little lad feel that he was very small,
indeed. But that did not trouble him; he had
never thought himself very large or important, and
he was quite willing to accommodate himself even to
circumstances which rather overpowered him.
Perhaps he had never looked so little
a fellow as when seated now in his great chair, at
the end of the table. Notwithstanding his solitary
existence, the Earl chose to live in some state.
He was fond of his dinner, and he dined in a formal
style. Cedric looked at him across a glitter
of splendid glass and plate, which to his unaccustomed
eyes seemed quite dazzling. A stranger looking
on might well have smiled at the picture,—the
great stately room, the big liveried servants, the
bright lights, the glittering silver and glass, the
fierce-looking old nobleman at the head of the table
and the very small boy at the foot. Dinner was
usually a very serious matter with the Earl—and
it was a very serious matter with the cook, if his
lordship was not pleased or had an indifferent appetite.
To-day, however, his appetite seemed a trifle better
than usual, perhaps because he had something to think
of beside the flavor of the entrees and the management
of the gravies. His grandson gave him something
to think of. He kept looking at him across the
table. He did not say very much himself, but he
managed to make the boy talk. He had never imagined
that he could be entertained by hearing a child talk,
but Lord Fauntleroy at once puzzled and amused him,
and he kept remembering how he had let the childish
shoulder feel his weight just for the sake of trying
how far the boy’s courage and endurance would
go, and it pleased him to know that his grandson had
not quailed and had not seemed to think even for a
moment of giving up what he had undertaken to do.
“You don’t wear your coronet
all the time?” remarked Lord Fauntleroy respectfully.
“No,” replied the Earl,
with his grim smile; “it is not becoming to me.”
“Mr. Hobbs said you always wore
it,” said Cedric; “but after he thought
it over, he said he supposed you must sometimes take
it off to put your hat on.”
“Yes,” said the Earl, “I take it
off occasionally.”
And one of the footmen suddenly turned
aside and gave a singular little cough behind his
hand.
Cedric finished his dinner first,
and then he leaned back in his chair and took a survey
of the room.
“You must be very proud of your
house,” he said, “it’s such a beautiful
house. I never saw anything so beautiful; but,
of course, as I’m only seven, I haven’t
seen much.”
“And you think I must be proud
of it, do you?” said the Earl.
“I should think any one would
be proud of it,” replied Lord Fauntleroy.
“I should be proud of it if it were my house.
Everything about it is beautiful. And the park,
and those trees,—how beautiful they are,
and how the leaves rustle!”
Then he paused an instant and looked
across the table rather wistfully.
“It’s a very big house
for just two people to live in, isn’t it?”
he said.
“It is quite large enough for
two,” answered the Earl. “Do you find
it too large?”
His little lordship hesitated a moment.
“I was only thinking,”
he said, “that if two people lived in it who
were not very good companions, they might feel lonely
sometimes.”
“Do you think I shall make a
good companion?” inquired the Earl.
“Yes,” replied Cedric,
“I think you will. Mr. Hobbs and I were
great friends. He was the best friend I had except
Dearest.”
The Earl made a quick movement of his bushy eyebrows.
“Who is Dearest?”
“She is my mother,” said
Lord Fauntleroy, in a rather low, quiet little voice.
Perhaps he was a trifle tired, as
his bed-time was nearing, and perhaps after the excitement
of the last few days it was natural he should be tired,
so perhaps, too, the feeling of weariness brought to
him a vague sense of loneliness in the remembrance
that to-night he was not to sleep at home, watched
over by the loving eyes of that “best friend”
of his. They had always been “best friends,”
this boy and his young mother. He could not help
thinking of her, and the more he thought of her the
less was he inclined to talk, and by the time the
dinner was at an end the Earl saw that there was a
faint shadow on his face. But Cedric bore himself
with excellent courage, and when they went back to
the library, though the tall footman walked on one
side of his master, the Earl’s hand rested on
his grandson’s shoulder, though not so heavily
as before.
When the footman left them alone,
Cedric sat down upon the hearth-rug near Dougal.
For a few minutes he stroked the dog’s ears in
silence and looked at the fire.
The Earl watched him. The boy’s
eyes looked wistful and thoughtful, and once or twice
he gave a little sigh. The Earl sat still, and
kept his eyes fixed on his grandson.
“Fauntleroy,” he said
at last, “what are you thinking of?”
Fauntleroy looked up with a manful effort at a smile.
“I was thinking about Dearest,”
he said; “and—and I think I’d
better get up and walk up and down the room.”
He rose up, and put his hands in his
small pockets, and began to walk to and fro.
His eyes were very bright, and his lips were pressed
together, but he kept his head up and walked firmly.
Dougal moved lazily and looked at him, and then stood
up. He walked over to the child, and began to
follow him uneasily. Fauntleroy drew one hand
from his pocket and laid it on the dog’s head.
“He’s a very nice dog,”
he said. “He’s my friend. He
knows how I feel.”
“How do you feel?” asked the Earl.
It disturbed him to see the struggle
the little fellow was having with his first feeling
of homesickness, but it pleased him to see that he
was making so brave an effort to bear it well.
He liked this childish courage.
“Come here,” he said.
Fauntleroy went to him.
“I never was away from my own
house before,” said the boy, with a troubled
look in his brown eyes. “It makes a person
feel a strange feeling when he has to stay all night
in another person’s castle instead of in his
own house. But Dearest is not very far away from
me. She told me to remember that—and—and
I’m seven—and I can look at the picture
she gave me.”
He put his hand in his pocket, and
brought out a small violet velvet-covered case.
“This is it,” he said.
“You see, you press this spring and it opens,
and she is in there!”
He had come close to the Earl’s
chair, and, as he drew forth the little case, he leaned
against the arm of it, and against the old man’s
arm, too, as confidingly as if children had always
leaned there.
“There she is,” he said,
as the case opened; and he looked up with a smile.
The Earl knitted his brows; he did
not wish to see the picture, but he looked at it in
spite of himself; and there looked up at him from it
such a pretty young face—a face so like
the child’s at his side—that it quite
startled him.
“I suppose you think you are very fond of her,”
he said.
“Yes,” answered Lord Fauntleroy,
in a gentle tone, and with simple directness; “I
do think so, and I think it’s true. You
see, Mr. Hobbs was my friend, and Dick and Bridget
and Mary and Michael, they were my friends, too; but
Dearest—well, she is my close friend,
and we always tell each other everything. My
father left her to me to take care of, and when I
am a man I am going to work and earn money for her.”
“What do you think of doing?” inquired
his grandfather.
His young lordship slipped down upon
the hearth-rug, and sat there with the picture still
in his hand. He seemed to be reflecting seriously,
before he answered.
“I did think perhaps I might
go into business with Mr. Hobbs,” he said; “but
I should like to be a President.”
“We’ll send you to the
House of Lords instead,” said his grandfather.
“Well,” remarked Lord
Fauntleroy, “if I couldn’t be a President,
and if that is a good business, I shouldn’t
mind. The grocery business is dull sometimes.”
Perhaps he was weighing the matter
in his mind, for he sat very quiet after this, and
looked at the fire for some time.
The Earl did not speak again.
He leaned back in his chair and watched him.
A great many strange new thoughts passed through the
old nobleman’s mind. Dougal had stretched
himself out and gone to sleep with his head on his
huge paws. There was a long silence.
In about half an hour’s time
Mr. Havisham was ushered in. The great room was
very still when he entered. The Earl was still
leaning back in his chair. He moved as Mr. Havisham
approached, and held up his hand in a gesture of warning—it
seemed as if he had scarcely intended to make the
gesture—as if it were almost involuntary.
Dougal was still asleep, and close beside the great
dog, sleeping also, with his curly head upon his arm,
lay little Lord Fauntleroy.