The Duke of Stone had been sufficiently
occupied with one of his slighter attacks of rheumatic
gout to have been, so to speak, out of the running
in the past weeks. His indisposition had not condemned
him to the usual dullness, however. He had suffered
less pain than was customary, and Mrs. Braddle had
been more than usually interesting in conversation
on those occasions when, in making him very comfortable
in one way or another, she felt that a measure of
entertainment would add to his well-being. His
epicurean habit of mind tended toward causing him
to find a subtle pleasure in the hearing of various
versions of any story whatever. His intimacy
with T. Tembarom had furnished forth many an agreeable
mental repast for him. He had had T. Tembarom’s
version of himself, the version of the county, the
version of the uneducated class, and his own version.
All of these had had varying shades of their own.
He had found a cynically fine flavor in Palliser’s
version, which he had gathered through talk and processes
of exclusion and inclusion.
“There is a good deal to be
said for it,” he summed it up. “It’s
plausible on ordinary sophisticated grounds.
T. Tembarom would say, `It looks sort of that way.”’
As Mrs. Braddle had done what she
could in the matter of expounding her views of the
uncertainties of the village attitude, he had listened
with stimulating interest. Mrs. Braddle’s
version on the passing of T. Tembarom stood out picturesquely
against the background of the version which was his
own—the one founded on the singular facts
he had shared knowledge of with the chief character
in the episode. He had not, like Miss Alicia,
received a communication from Tembarom. This
seemed to him one of the attractive features of the
incident. It provided opportunity for speculation.
Some wild development had called the youngster away
in a rattling hurry. Of what had happened since
his departure he knew no more than the villagers
knew. What had happened for some months before
his going he had watched with the feeling of an intelligently
observant spectator at a play. He had been provided
with varied emotions by the fantastic drama.
He had smiled; he had found himself moved once or twice,
and he had felt a good deal of the thrill of curious
uncertainty as to what the curtain would rise and
fall on. The situation was such that it was
impossible to guess. Results could seem only to
float in the air. One thing might happen; so
might another, so might a dozen more. What he
wished really to attain was some degree of certainty
as to what was likely to occur in any case to the
American Temple Barholm.
He felt, the first time he drove over
to call on Miss Alicia, that his indisposition and
confinement to his own house had robbed him of something.
They had deprived him of the opportunity to observe
shades of development and to hear the expressing
of views of the situation as it stood. He drove
over with views of his own and with anticipations.
He had reason to know that he would encounter in
the dear lady indications of the feeling that she
had reached a crisis. There was a sense of this
crisis impending as one mounted the terrace steps and
entered the hall. The men-servants endeavored
to wipe from their countenances any expression denoting
even a vague knowledge of it. He recognized
their laudable determination to do so. Burrill
was monumental in the unconsciousness of his outward
bearing.
Miss Alicia, sitting waiting on Fate
in the library, wore precisely the aspect he had
known she would wear. She had been lying awake
at night and she had of course wept at intervals,
since she belonged to the period the popular female
view of which had been that only the unfeeling did
not so relieve themselves in crises of the affections.
Her eyelids were rather pink and her nice little
face was tired.
“It is very, very kind of you
to come,” she said, when they shook hands.
“I wonder “—her hesitance was
touching in its obvious appeal to him not to take
the wrong side,—“I wonder if you know
how deeply troubled I have been?”
“You see, I have had a touch
of my abominable gout, and my treasure of a Braddle
has been nursing me and gossiping,” he answered.
“So, of course I know a great deal. None
of it true, I dare say. I felt I must come and
see you, however.”
He looked so neat and entirely within
the boundaries of finished and well-dressed modernity
and every-day occurrence, in his perfectly fitting
clothes, beautifully shining boots, and delicate fawn
gaiters, that she felt a sort of support in his mere
aspect. The mind connected such almost dapper
freshness and excellent taste only with unexaggerated
incidents and a behavior which almost placed the stamp
of absurdity upon the improbable in circumstance.
The vision of disorderly and illegal possibilities
seemed actually to fade into an unreality.
“If Mr. Palford and Mr. Grimby
knew him as I know him —as—as
you know him—” she added with a
faint hopefulness.
“Yes, if they knew him as we
know him that would make a different matter of it,”
admitted the duke, amiably. But, thought Miss
Alicia, he might only have put it that way through
consideration for her feelings, and because he was
an extremely polished man who could not easily reveal
to a lady a disagreeable truth. He did not speak
with the note of natural indignation which she thought
she must have detected if he had felt as she felt
herself. He was of course a man whose manner
had always the finish of composure. He did not
seem disturbed or even very curious—only
kind and most polite.
“If we only knew where he was!”
she began again. “If we only knew where
Mr. Strangeways was!”
“My impression is that Messrs.
Palford & Grimby will probably find them both before
long,” he consoled her. “They are
no doubt exciting themselves unnecessarily.”
He was not agitated at all; she felt.
it would have been kinder if he had been a little
agitated. He was really not the kind of person
whose feelings appeared very deep, being given to
a light and graceful cynicism of speech which delighted
people; so perhaps it was not natural that he should
express any particular emotion even in a case affecting
a friend—surely he had been Temple’s
friend. But if he had seemed a little distressed,
or doubtful or annoyed, she would have felt that
she understood better his attitude. As it was,
he might almost have been on the other side—a
believer or a disbeliever—or merely a
person looking on to see what would happen. When
they sat down, his glance seemed to include her with
an interest which was sympathetic but rather as if
she were a child whom he would like to pacify.
This seemed especially so when she felt she must make
clear to him the nature of the crisis which was pending,
as he had felt when he entered the house.
“You perhaps do not know”—the
appeal which had shown itself in her eyes was in
her voice—“that the solicitors have
decided, after a great deal of serious discussion
and private inquiry in London, that the time has
come when they must take open steps.”
“In the matter of investigation?” he inquired.
“They are coming here this afternoon
with Captain Palliser to—to question the
servants, and some of the villagers. They will
question me,” alarmedly.
“They would be sure to do that,”—he
really seemed quite to envelop her with kindness—“but
I beg of you not to be alarmed. Nothing you
could have to say could possibly do harm to Temple
Barholm.” He knew it was her fear of this
contingency which terrified her.
“You do feel sure of that?”
she burst forth, relievedly. “You do—
because you know him?”
“I do. Let us be calm, dear lady.
Let us be calm.”
“I will! I will!”
she protested. “But Captain Palliser has
arranged that a lady should come here—a
lady who disliked poor Temple very much. She
was most unjust to him.”
“Lady Joan Fayre?” he
suggested, and then paused with a remote smile as
if lending himself for the moment to some humor he
alone detected in the situation.
“She will not injure his cause,
I think I can assure you.”
“She insisted on misunderstanding him.
I am so afraid—”
The appearance of Pearson at the door
interrupted her and caused her to rise from her seat.
The neat young man was pale and spoke in a nervously
lowered voice.
“I beg pardon, Miss. I
beg your Grace’s pardon for intruding, but—”
Miss Alicia moved toward him in such
a manner that he himself seemed to feel that he might
advance.
“What is it, Pearson? Have you anything
special to say?”
“I hope I am not taking too
great a liberty, Miss, but I did come in for a purpose,
knowing that his Grace was with you and thinking you
might both kindly advise me. It is about Mr.
Temple Barholm, your Grace—” addressing
him as if in involuntary recognition of the fact
that he might possibly prove the greater support.
“Our Mr. Temple Barholm, Pearson?
We are being told there are two of them.”
The duke’s delicate emphasis on the possessive
pronoun was delightful, and it so moved and encouraged
sensitive little Pearson that he was emboldened to
answer with modest firmness:
“Yes,—ours. Thank you, your
Grace.”
“You feel him yours too, Pearson?” a shade
more delightfully still.
“I—I take the liberty,
your Grace, of being deeply attached to him, and
more than grateful.”
“What did you want to ask advice about?”
“The family solicitors.
Captain Palliser and Lady Joan Fayre and Mr. and
Miss Hutchinson are to be here shortly, and I have
been told I am to be questioned. What I want
to know, your Grace, is—” He paused,
and looked no longer pale but painfully red as he
gathered himself together for his anxious outburst—“Must
I speak the truth?”
Miss Alicia started alarmedly.
The duke looked down at the delicate
fawn gaiters covering his fine instep. His fleeting
smile was not this time an external one.
“Do you not wish to speak the truth, Pearson?”
Pearson’s manner could have
been described only as one of obstinate frankness.
“No, your Grace. I do not!
Your Grace may misunderstand me—but I do
not!”
His Grace tapped the gaiters with
the slight ebony cane he held in his hand.
“Is this “—he
put it with impartial curiosity—“because
the truth might be detrimental to our Mr. Temple
Barholm?”
“If you please, your Grace,”
Pearson made a firm step forward, “what is
the truth?”
“That is what Messrs. Palford
& Grimby seem determined to find out. Probably
only our Mr. Temple Barholm can tell them.”
“Your Grace, what I’m
thinking of is that if I tell the truth it may seem
to prove something that’s not the truth.”
“What kinds of things, Pearson?” still
impartially.
“I can be plain with your Grace.
Things like this: I was with Mr. Temple Barholm
and Mr. Strangeways a great deal. They’ll
ask me about what I heard. They’ll ask
me if Mr. Strangeways was willing to go away to the
doctor; if he had to be persuaded and argued with.
Well, he had and he hadn’t, your Grace.
At first, just the mention of it would upset him
so that Mr. Temple Barholm would have to stop talking
about it and quiet him down. But when he improved—and
he did improve wonderfully, your Grace—he
got into the way of sitting and thinking it over
and listening quite quiet. But if I’m asked
suddenly—”
“What you are afraid of is that
you may be asked point-blank questions without warning?”
his Grace put it with the perspicacity of experience.
“That’s why I should be
grateful for advice. Must I tell the truth,
your Grace, when it will make them believe things I’d
swear are lies— I’d swear it, your
Grace.”
“So would I, Pearson.”
His serene lightness was of the most baffling, but
curiously supporting, order. “This being
the case, my advice would be not to go into detail.
Let us tell white lies—all of us—without
a shadow of hesitancy. Miss Temple Barholm,
even you must do your best.”
“I will try—indeed,
I will try!” And the Duke felt her tremulously
ardent assent actually delicious.
“There! we’ll consider that settled, Pearson,”
he said.
“Thank you, your Grace.
Thank you, Miss,” Pearson’s relieved gratitude
verged on the devout. He turned to go, and as
he did so his attention was arrested by an approach
he remarked through a window.
“Mr. and Miss Hutchinson are
arriving now, Miss,” he announced, hastily.
“They are to be brought in here,” said
Miss Alicia.
The duke quietly left his seat and
went to look through the window with frank and unembarrassed
interest in the approach. He went, in fact,
to look at Little Ann, and as he watched her walk up
the avenue, her father lumbering beside her, he evidently
found her aspect sufficiently arresting.
“Ah!” he exclaimed softly,
and paused. “What a lot of very nice red
hair,” he said next. And then, “No
wonder! No wonder!”
“That, I should say,”
he remarked as Miss Alicia drew near, “is what
I once heard a bad young man call `a deserving case.’”
He was conscious that she might have
been privately a little shocked by such aged flippancy,
but she was at the moment perturbed by something
else.
“The fact is that I have never
spoken to Hutchinson,” she fluttered.
“These changes are very confusing. I suppose
I ought to say Mr. Hutchinson, now that he is such
a successful person, and Temple—”
“Without a shadow of a doubt!”
The duke seemed struck by the happiness of the idea.
“They will make him a peer presently. He
may address me as ‘Stone’ at any moment.
One must learn to adjust one’s self with agility.
`The old order changeth.’ Ah! she is smiling
at him and I see the dimples.”
Miss Alicia made a clean breast of it.
“I went to her—I
could not help it! ” she confessed. “I was
in such distress and dare not speak to anybody.
Temple had told me that she was so wonderful.
He said she always understood and knew what to do.”
“Did she in this case?” he asked, smiling.
Miss Alicia’s manner was that
of one who could express the extent of her admiration
only in disconnected phrases.
“She was like a little rock.
Such a quiet, firm way! Such calm certainty!
Oh, the comfort she has been to me! I begged her
to come here to-day. I did not know her father
had returned.”
“No doubt he will have testimony
to give which will be of the greatest assistance,”
the duke said most encouragingly. “Perhaps
he will be a sort of rock.”
“I—I don’t
in the least know what he will be!” sighed Miss
Alicia, evidently uncertain in her views.
But when the father and daughter were
announced she felt that his Grace was really enchanting
in the happy facility of his manner. He at least
adjusted himself with agility. Hutchinson was
of course lumbering. Lacking the support of
T. Tembarom’s presence and incongruity, he
himself was the incongruous feature. He would
have been obliged to bluster by way of sustaining
himself, even if he had only found himself being
presented to Miss Alicia; but when it was revealed
to him that he was also confronted with the greatest
personage of the neighborhood, he became as hot and
red as he had become during certain fateful business
interviews. More so, indeed.
“Th’ other chaps hadn’t
been dukes;” and to Hutchinson the old order
had not yet so changed that a duke was not an awkwardly
impressive person to face unexpectedly.
The duke’s manner of shaking
hands with him, however, was even touched with an
amiable suggestion of appreciation of the value of
a man of genius. He had heard of the invention,
in fact knew some quite technical things about it.
He realized its importance. He had congratulations
for the inventor and the world of inventions so greatly
benefited.
“Lancashire must be proud of
your success, Mr. Hutchinson.” How agreeably
and with what ease he said it!
“Aye, it’s a success now,
your Grace,” Hutchinson answered, “but
I might have waited a good bit longer if it hadn’t
been for that lad an’ his bold backing of me.”
“Mr. Temple Barholm?” said the duke.
“Aye. He’s got th’
way of making folks see things that they can’t
see even when they’re hitting them in th’
eyes. I’d that lost heart I could never
have done it myself.”
“But now it is done,” smiled his Grace.
“Delightful!”
“I’ve got there—same
as they say in New York—I’ve got there,”
said Hutchinson.
He sat down in response to Miss Alicia’s
invitation. His unease was wonderfully dispelled.
He felt himself a person of sufficient importance
to address even a duke as man to man.
“What’s all this romancin’
talk about th’ other Temple Barholm comin’
back, an’ our lad knowin’ an’ hidin’
him away? An’ Palliser an’ th’
lawyers an’ th’ police bein’ after
’em both?”
“You have heard the whole story?” from
the duke.
“I’ve heard naught else since I come back.”
“Grandmother knew a great deal before we came
home,” said Little Ann.
The duke turned his attention to her
with an engaged smile. His look, his bow, his
bearing, in the moment of their being presented to
each other, had seemed to Miss Alicia the most perfect
thing. His fine eye had not obviously wandered
while he talked to her father, but it had in fact
been taking her in with an inclusiveness not likely
to miss agreeable points of detail.
“What is her opinion, may I ask?” he said.
“What does she say?”
“Grandmother is very set in
her ways, your Grace.” The limpidity of
her blue eye and a flickering dimple added much to
the quaint comprehensiveness of her answer.
“She says the world’s that full of fools
that if they were all killed the Lord would have to
begin again with a new Adam and Eve.”
“She has entire faith in Mr.
Temple Barholm—as you have,” put forward
his Grace.
“Mine’s not faith exactly.
I know him,” Little Ann answered, her tone
as limpid as her eyes.
“There’s more than her
has faith in him,” broke forth Hutchinson.
“Danged if I don’t like th’ way
them village chaps are taking it. They’re
ready to fight over it. Since they’ve found
out what it’s come to, an’ about th’
lawyers comin’ down, they’re talkin’
about gettin’ up a kind o’ demonstration.”
“Delightful!” ejaculated
his Grace again. He leaned forward. “Quite
what I should have expected. There’s a
good deal of beer drunk, I suppose.”
“Plenty o’ beer, but it’ll
do no harm.” Hutchinson began to chuckle.
“They’re talkin’ o’ gettin’
out th’ fife an’ drum band an’ marchin’
round th’ village with a calico banner with
`Vote for T. Tembarom’ painted on it, to show
what they think of him.”
The duke chuckled also.
“I wonder how he’s managed
it?” he laughed. “They wouldn’t
do it for any of the rest of us, you know, though
I’ve no doubt we’re quite as deserving.
I am, I know.”
Hutchinson stopped laughing and turned on Miss Alicia.
“What’s that young woman comin’
down here for?” he inquired.
“Lady Joan was engaged to Mr.
James Temple Barholm,” Miss Alicia answered.
“Eh! Eh!” Hutchinson
jerked out. “That’ll turn her into
a wildcat, I’ll warrant. She’ll
do all th’ harm she can. I’m much
obliged to you for lettin’ us come, ma’am.
I want to be where I can stand by him.”
“Father,” said Little
Ann, “what you have got to remember is that you
mustn’t fly into a passion. You know you’ve
always said it never did any good, and it only sends
the blood to your head.”
“You are not nervous, Miss Hutchinson?”
the duke suggested.
“About Mr. Temple Barholm?
I couldn’t be, your Grace. If I was to see
two policemen bringing him in handcuffed I shouldn’t
be nervous. I should know the handcuffs didn’t
belong to him, and the policemen would look right-down
silly to me.”
Miss Alicia fluttered over to fold her in her arms.
“Do let me kiss you,” she said. “Do
let me, Little Ann!”
Little Ann had risen at once to meet
her embrace. She put a hand on her arm.
“We don’t know anything
about this really,” she said. “We’ve
only heard what people say. We haven’t
heard what he says. I’m going to wait.”
They were all looking at her,— the duke
with such marked interest that she turned toward
him as she ended. “And if I had to wait
until I was as old as grandmother I’d wait—and
nothing would change my mind.”
“And I’ve been lying awake
at night!” softly wailed Miss Alicia.