It is astonishing how short a time
it takes for very wonderful things to happen.
It had taken only a few minutes, apparently, to change
all the fortunes of the little boy dangling his red
legs from the high stool in Mr. Hobbs’s store,
and to transform him from a small boy, living the
simplest life in a quiet street, into an English nobleman,
the heir to an earldom and magnificent wealth.
It had taken only a few minutes, apparently, to change
him from an English nobleman into a penniless little
impostor, with no right to any of the splendors he
had been enjoying. And, surprising as it may
appear, it did not take nearly so long a time as one
might have expected, to alter the face of everything
again and to give back to him all that he had been
in danger of losing.
It took the less time because, after
all, the woman who had called herself Lady Fauntleroy
was not nearly so clever as she was wicked; and when
she had been closely pressed by Mr. Havisham’s
questions about her marriage and her boy, she had
made one or two blunders which had caused suspicion
to be awakened; and then she had lost her presence
of mind and her temper, and in her excitement and
anger had betrayed herself still further. All
the mistakes she made were about her child. There
seemed no doubt that she had been married to Bevis,
Lord Fauntleroy, and had quarreled with him and had
been paid to keep away from him; but Mr. Havisham
found out that her story of the boy’s being born
in a certain part of London was false; and just when
they all were in the midst of the commotion caused
by this discovery, there came the letter from the
young lawyer in New York, and Mr. Hobbs’s letters
also.
What an evening it was when those
letters arrived, and when Mr. Havisham and the Earl
sat and talked their plans over in the library!
“After my first three meetings
with her,” said Mr. Havisham, “I began
to suspect her strongly. It appeared to me that
the child was older than she said he was, and she
made a slip in speaking of the date of his birth and
then tried to patch the matter up. The story these
letters bring fits in with several of my suspicions.
Our best plan will be to cable at once for these two
Tiptons,—say nothing about them to her,—and
suddenly confront her with them when she is not expecting
it. She is only a very clumsy plotter, after
all. My opinion is that she will be frightened
out of her wits, and will betray herself on the spot.”
And that was what actually happened.
She was told nothing, and Mr. Havisham kept her from
suspecting anything by continuing to have interviews
with her, in which he assured her he was investigating
her statements; and she really began to feel so secure
that her spirits rose immensely and she began to be
as insolent as might have been expected.
But one fine morning, as she sat in
her sitting-room at the inn called “The Dorincourt
Arms,” making some very fine plans for herself,
Mr. Havisham was announced; and when he entered, he
was followed by no less than three persons—one
was a sharp-faced boy and one was a big young man
and the third was the Earl of Dorincourt.
She sprang to her feet and actually
uttered a cry of terror. It broke from her before
she had time to check it. She had thought of these
new-comers as being thousands of miles away, when she
had ever thought of them at all, which she had scarcely
done for years. She had never expected to see
them again. It must be confessed that Dick grinned
a little when he saw her.
“Hello, Minna!” he said.
The big young man—who was Ben—stood
still a minute and looked at her.
“Do you know her?” Mr. Havisham asked,
glancing from one to the other.
“Yes,” said Ben.
“I know her and she knows me.” And
he turned his back on her and went and stood looking
out of the window, as if the sight of her was hateful
to him, as indeed it was. Then the woman, seeing
herself so baffled and exposed, lost all control over
herself and flew into such a rage as Ben and Dick
had often seen her in before. Dick grinned a
trifle more as he watched her and heard the names she
called them all and the violent threats she made,
but Ben did not turn to look at her.
“I can swear to her in any court,”
he said to Mr. Havisham, “and I can bring a
dozen others who will. Her father is a respectable
sort of man, though he’s low down in the world.
Her mother was just like herself. She’s
dead, but he’s alive, and he’s honest enough
to be ashamed of her. He’ll tell you who
she is, and whether she married me or not.”
Then he clenched his hand suddenly and turned on her.
“Where’s the child?”
he demanded. “He’s going with me!
He is done with you, and so am I!”
And just as he finished saying the
words, the door leading into the bedroom opened a
little, and the boy, probably attracted by the sound
of the loud voices, looked in. He was not a handsome
boy, but he had rather a nice face, and he was quite
like Ben, his father, as any one could see, and there
was the three-cornered scar on his chin.
Ben walked up to him and took his
hand, and his own was trembling.
“Yes,” he said, “I
could swear to him, too. Tom,” he said to
the little fellow, “I’m your father; I’ve
come to take you away. Where’s your hat?”
The boy pointed to where it lay on
a chair. It evidently rather pleased him to hear
that he was going away. He had been so accustomed
to queer experiences that it did not surprise him
to be told by a stranger that he was his father.
He objected so much to the woman who had come a few
months before to the place where he had lived since
his babyhood, and who had suddenly announced that
she was his mother, that he was quite ready for a
change. Ben took up the hat and marched to the
door.
“If you want me again,”
he said to Mr. Havisham, “you know where to find
me.”
He walked out of the room, holding
the child’s hand and not looking at the woman
once. She was fairly raving with fury, and the
Earl was calmly gazing at her through his eyeglasses,
which he had quietly placed upon his aristocratic,
eagle nose.
“Come, come, my young woman,”
said Mr. Havisham. “This won’t do
at all. If you don’t want to be locked
up, you really must behave yourself.”
And there was something so very business-like
in his tones that, probably feeling that the safest
thing she could do would be to get out of the way,
she gave him one savage look and dashed past him into
the next room and slammed the door.
“We shall have no more trouble
with her,” said Mr. Havisham.
And he was right; for that very night
she left the Dorincourt Arms and took the train to
London, and was seen no more.
When the Earl left the room after
the interview, he went at once to his carriage.
“To Court Lodge,” he said to Thomas.
“To Court Lodge,” said
Thomas to the coachman as he mounted the box; “an’
you may depend on it, things are taking a uniggspected
turn.”
When the carriage stopped at Court
Lodge, Cedric was in the drawing-room with his mother.
The Earl came in without being announced.
He looked an inch or so taller, and a great many years
younger. His deep eyes flashed.
“Where,” he said, “is Lord Fauntleroy?”
Mrs. Errol came forward, a flush rising to her cheek.
“Is it Lord Fauntleroy?” she asked.
“Is it, indeed!”
The Earl put out his hand and grasped hers.
“Yes,” he answered, “it is.”
Then he put his other hand on Cedric’s shoulder.
“Fauntleroy,” he said
in his unceremonious, authoritative way, “ask
your mother when she will come to us at the Castle.”
Fauntleroy flung his arms around his mother’s
neck.
“To live with us!” he cried. “To
live with us always!”
The Earl looked at Mrs. Errol, and Mrs. Errol looked
at the Earl.
His lordship was entirely in earnest.
He had made up his mind to waste no time in arranging
this matter. He had begun to think it would suit
him to make friends with his heir’s mother.
“Are you quite sure you want
me?” said Mrs. Errol, with her soft, pretty
smile.
“Quite sure,” he said
bluntly. “We have always wanted you, but
we were not exactly aware of it. We hope you
will come.”