In a certain sense she had been dragged
to the place by her mother. Lady Mallowe had
many resources, and above all she knew how to weary
her into resistlessness which was almost indifference.
There had been several shameless little scenes in
the locked boudoir. But though she had been
dragged, she had come with an intention. She knew
what she would find herself being forced to submit
to if the intruder were not disposed of at the outset,
and if the manoeuvering began which would bring him
to London. He would appear at her elbow here and
there and at every corner, probably unaware that
he was being made an offensive puppet by the astute
cleverness against which she could not defend herself,
unless she made actual scenes in drawing-rooms, at
dinner-tables, in the very streets themselves.
Gifted as Lady Mallowe was in fine and light-handed
dealing of her cards in any game, her stakes at this
special juncture were seriously high. Joan knew
what they were, and that she was in a mood touched
with desperation. The defenselessly new and
ignorant Temple Barholm was to her mind a direct intervention
of Providence, and it was only Joan herself who could
rob her of the benefits and reliefs he could provide.
With regard to Lady Joan, though Palliser’s
quoted New Yorkism, “wipe up the earth,”
was unknown to her, the process she had in mind when
she left London for Lancashire would have been well
covered by it. As in feudal days she might have
ordered the right hand of a creature such as this to
be struck off, forgetting that he was a man, so was
she capable to-day of inflicting upon him any hurt
which might sweep him out of her way. She had
not been a tender-hearted girl, and in these years
she was absolutely callous. The fellow being
what he was, she had not the resources she might
have called upon if he had been a gentleman. He
would not understand the chills and slights of good
manners. In the country he would be easier to
manage than in town, especially if attacked in his
first timidity before his new grandeurs. His big
house no doubt frightened him, his servants, the
people who were of a class of which he knew nothing.
When Palliser told his story she saw new openings.
He would stand in servile awe of her and of others
like her. He would be afraid of her, to begin
with, and she could make him more so.
But though she had come to alarm him
so that he would be put to absolute flight, she had
also come for another reason. She had never
seen Temple Barholm, and she had discovered before
they had known each other a week that it was Jem’s
secret passion. He had loved it with a slighted
and lonely child’s romantic longing; he had dreamed
of it as boy and man, knowing that it must some time
be his own, his home, and yet prevented by his uncle’s
attitude toward him from daring to act as though
he remembered the fact. Old Mr. Temple Barholm’s
special humor had been that of a man guarding against
presumption.
Jem had not intended to presume, but
he had been snubbed with relentless cruelty even
for boyish expressions of admiration. And he
had hid his feeling in his heart until he poured it
out to Joan. To-day it would have been his.
Together, together, they would have lived in it and
loved every stone of it, every leaf on every great
tree, every wild daffodil nodding in the green grass.
Most people, God be thanked! can forget. The
wise ones train themselves beyond all else to forgetting.
Joan had been a luckless, ill-brought-up,
passionate child and girl. In her Mayfair nursery
she had been as little trained as a young savage.
Since her black hour she had forgotten nothing, allowed
herself no palliating moments. Her brief dream
of young joy had been the one real thing in her life.
She absolutely had lain awake at night and reconstructed
the horror of Jem’s death, had lived it over
again, writhing in agony on her bed, and madly feeling
that by so doing she was holding her love close to
her life.
And the man who stood in the place
Jem had longed for, the man who sat at the head of
his table, was this “thing!” That was what
she felt him to be, and every hurt she could do him,
every humiliation which should write large before
him his presumption and grotesque unfitness, would
be a blow struck for Jem, who could never strike
a blow for himself again. It was all senseless,
but she had not want to reason. Fate had not
reasoned in her behalf. She watched Tembarom under
her lids at the dinner-table.
He had not wriggled or shuffled when
she spoke to him in the gallery; he did neither now,
and made no obvious efforts to seem unembarrassed.
He used his knife and fork in odd ways, and he was
plainly not used to being waited upon. More
than once she saw the servants restrain smiles.
She addressed no remarks to him herself, and answered
with chill indifference such things as he said to
her. If conversation had flagged between him
and Mr. Palford because the solicitor did not know
how to talk to him, it did not even reach the point
of flagging with her, because she would not talk
and did not allow it to begin. Lady Mallowe,
sick with annoyance, was quite brilliant. She
drew out Miss Alicia by detailed reminiscences of
a visit paid to Rowlton Hall years before. The
vicar had dined at the hall while she had been there.
She remembered perfectly his charm of manner and
powerful originality of mind, she said sweetly.
He had spoken with such affection of his “little
Alicia,” who was such a help to him in his parish
work.
“I thought he was speaking of
a little girl at first,” she said smilingly,
“but it soon revealed itself that ‘little
Alicia’ was only his caressing diminutive.”
A certain widening of Miss Alicia’s
fascinated eye, which could not remove itself from
her face, caused her to quail slightly.
“He was of course a man of great
force of character and— and expression,”
she added. “I remember thinking at the time
that his eloquent frankness of phrase might perhaps
seem even severe to frivolous creatures like myself.
A really remarkable personality.”
“His sermons,” faltered
Miss Alicia, as a refuge, “were indeed remarkable.
I am sure he must greatly have enjoyed his conversations
with you. I am afraid there were very few clever
women in the neighborhood of Rowlton.”
Casting a bitter side glance on her
silent daughter, Lady Mallowe lightly seized upon
New York as a subject. She knew so much of it
from delightful New Yorkers. London was full
of delightful New Yorkers. She would like beyond
everything to spend a winter in New York. She
understood that the season there was in the winter
and that it was most brilliant. Mr. Temple Barholm
must tell them about it.
“Yes,” said Lady Joan,
looking at him through narrowed lids, “Mr.
Temple Barholm ought to tell us about it.”
She wanted to hear what he would say,
to see how he would try to get out of the difficulty
or flounder staggeringly through it. Her mother
knew in an instant that her own speech had been a
stupid blunder. She had put the man into exactly
the position Joan would enjoy seeing him in.
But he wasn’t in a position, it appeared.
“What is the season, anyhow?”
he said. “You’ve got one on me when
you talk about seasons.”
“In London,” Miss Alicia
explained courageously, “it is the time when
her Majesty is at Buckingham Palace, and when the
drawing-rooms are held, and Parliament sits, and
people come up to town and give balls.”
She wished that Lady Mallowe had not
made her remark just at this time. She knew
that the quietly moving servants were listening, and
that their civilly averted eyes had seen Captain
Palliser smile and Lady Joan’s curious look,
and that the whole incident would form entertainment
for their supper- table.
“I guess they have it in the
winter in New York, then, if that’s it,”
he said. “There’s no Buckingham
Palace there, and no drawing-rooms, and Congress
sits in Washington. But New York takes it out
in suppers at Sherry’s and Delmonico’s
and theaters and receptions. Miss Alicia knows
how I used to go to them when I was a little fellow,
don’t you, Miss Alicia?” he added, smiling
at her across the table.
“You have told me,” she
answered. She noticed that Burrill and the footmen
stood at attention in their places.
“I used to stand outside in
the snow and look in through the windows at the people
having a good time,” he said. “Us
kids that were selling newspapers used to try to
fill ourselves up with choosing whose plate we’d
take if we could get at it. Beefsteak and French
fried potatoes were the favorites, and hot oyster
stews. We were so all-fired hungry!”
“How pathetic!” exclaimed
Lady Mallowe. “And how interesting, now
that it is all over!”
She knew that her manner was gushing,
and Joan’s slight side glance of subtle appreciation
of the fact exasperated her almost beyond endurance.
What could one do, what could one talk about, without
involving oneself in difficulties out of which one’s
hasty retreat could be effected only by gushing?
Taking into consideration the awkwardness of the
whole situation and seeing Joan’s temper and
attitude, if there had not been so much at stake
she would have received a summoning telegram from
London the next day and taken flight. But she
had been forced to hold her ground before in places
she detested or where she was not wanted, and she
must hold it again until she had found out the worst
or the best. And, great heaven! how Joan was
conducting herself, with that slow, quiet insultingness
of tone and look, the wicked, silent insolence of
bearing which no man was able to stand, however admiringly
he began! The Duke of Merthshire had turned
his back upon it even after all the world had known
his intentions, even after the newspapers had prematurely
announced the engagement and she herself had been
convinced that he could not possibly retreat.
She had worked desperately that season, she had fawned
on and petted newspaper people, and stooped to little
things no one but herself could have invented and
which no one but herself knew of. And never
had Joan been so superb; her beauty had seemed at its
most brilliant height. The match would have
been magnificent; but he could not stand her, and
would not. Why, indeed, should any man? She
glanced at her across the table. A beauty, of
course; but she was thinner, and her eyes had a hungry
fierceness in them, and the two delicate, straight
lines between her black brows were deepening.
And there were no dukes on the horizon.
Merthshire had married almost at once, and all the
others were too young or had wives already. If
this man would take her, she might feel herself lucky.
Temple Barholm and seventy thousand a year were not
to be trifled with by a girl who had made herself
unpopular and who was twenty-six. And for her
own luck the moment had come just before it was too
late—a second marriage, wealth, the end
of the hideous struggle. Joan was the obstacle
in her path, and she must be forced out of it.
She glanced quickly at Tembarom. He was trying
to talk to Joan now. He was trying to please
her. She evidently had a fascination for him.
He looked at her in a curious way when she was not
looking at him. It was a way different from
that of other men whom she had watched as they furtively
stared. It had struck her that he could not take
his eyes away. That was because he had never
before been on speaking terms with a woman of beauty
and rank.
Joan herself knew that he was trying
to please her, and she was asking herself how long
he would have the courage and presumption to keep it
up. He could scarcely be enjoying it.
He was not enjoying it, but he kept
it up. He wanted to be friends with her for
more reasons than one. No one had ever remained
long at enmity with him. He had “got over”
a good many people in the course of his career, as
he had “got over” Joseph Hutchinson.
This had always been accomplished because he presented
no surface at which arrows could be thrown.
She was the hardest proposition he had ever come up
against, he was thinking; but if he didn’t
let himself be fool enough to break loose and get
mad, she’d not hate him so much after a while.
She would begin to understand that it wasn’t
his fault; then perhaps he could get her to make
friends. In fact, if she had been able to read
his thoughts, there is no certainty as to how far her
temper might have carried her. But she could
see him only as a sharp-faced, common American of
the shop-boy class, sitting at the head of Jem Temple
Barholm’s table, in his chair.
As they passed through the hall to
go to the drawing-room after the meal was over, she
saw a neat, pale young man speaking to Burrill and
heard a few of his rather anxiously uttered words.
“The orders were that he was
always to be told when Mr. Strangeways was like this,
under all circumstances. I can’t quiet him,
Mr. Burrill. He says he must see him at once.”
Burrill walked back stiffly to the dining-room.
“It won’t trouble him
much to be disturbed at his wine,” he muttered
before going. “He doesn’t know hock
from port.”
When the message was delivered to
him, Tembarom excused himself with simple lack of
ceremony.
“I ’ll be back directly,”
he said to Palliser. “Those are good cigars.”
And he left the room without going into the matter
further.
Palliser took one of the good cigars,
and in taking it exchanged a glance with Burrill
which distantly conveyed the suggestion that perhaps
he had better remain for a moment or so. Captain
Palliser’s knowledge of interesting detail
was obtained “by chance here and there,”
he sometimes explained, but it was always obtained
with a light and casual air.
“I am not sure,” he remarked
as he took the light Burrill held for him and touched
the end of his cigar—“I am not quite
sure that I know exactly who Mr. Strangeways is.”
“He’s the gentleman, sir,
that Mr. Temple Barholm brought over from New York,”
replied Burrill with a stolidity clearly expressive
of distaste.
“Indeed, from New York! Why doesn’t
one see him?”
“He’s not in a condition
to see people, sir,” said Burrill, and Palliser’s
slightly lifted eyebrow seeming to express a good deal,
he added a sentence, “He’s not all there,
sir.”
“From New York, and not all
there. What seems to be the matter?” Palliser
asked quietly. “Odd idea to bring a lunatic
all the way from America. There must be asylums
there.”
“Us servants have orders to
keep out of the way,” Burrill said with sterner
stolidity. “He’s so nervous that the
sight of strangers does him harm. I may say
that questions are not encouraged.”
“Then I must not ask any more,”
said Captain Palliser. “I did not know
I was edging on to a mystery.”
“I wasn’t aware that I
was myself, sir,” Burrill remarked, “until
I asked something quite ordinary of Pearson, who
is Mr. Temple Barholm’s valet, and it was not
what he said, but what he didn’t, that showed
me where I stood.”
“A mystery is an interesting
thing to have in a house,” said Captain Palliser
without enthusiasm. He smoked his cigar as though
he was enjoying its aroma, and even from his first
remark he had managed not to seem to be really quite
addressing himself to Burrill. He was certainly
not talking to him in the ordinary way; his air was
rather that of a gentleman overhearing casual remarks
in which he was only vaguely interested. Before
Burrill left the room, however, and he left it under
the impression that he had said no more than civility
demanded, Captain Palliser had reached the point
of being able to deduce a number of things from what
he, like Pearson, had not said.