It was Mr. Hutchinson who, having
an eye on the window, first announced an arriving
carriage.
“Some of ’em’s comin’
from the station,” he remarked. “There’s
no young woman with ’em, that I can see from
here.”
“I thought I heard wheels.”
Miss Alicia went to look out, agitatedly. “It
is the gentlemen. Perhaps Lady Joan—”
she turned desperately to the duke. “I
don’t know what to say to Lady Joan. I don’t
know what she will say to me. I don’t
know what she is coming for, Little Ann, do keep
near me!”
It was a pretty thing to see Little
Ann stroke her hand and soothe her.
“Don’t be frightened,
Miss Temple Barholm. All you’ve got to do
is to answer questions,” she said.
“But I might say things that
would be wrong—things that would harm
him.”
“No, you mightn’t, Miss
Temple Barholm. He’s not done anything that
could bring harm on him.”
The Duke of Stone, who had seated
himself in T. Tembarom’s favorite chair, which
occupied a point of vantage, seemed to Mr. Palford
and Mr. Grimby when they entered the room to wear
the aspect of a sort of presidiary audience.
The sight of his erect head and clear-cut, ivory-tinted
old face, with its alert, while wholly unbiased, expression,
somewhat startled them both. They had indeed
not expected to see him, and did not know why he
had chosen to come. His presence might mean
any one of several things, and the fact that he enjoyed
a reputation for quite alarming astuteness of a brilliant
kind presented elements of probable embarrassment.
If he thought that they had allowed themselves to
be led upon a wild-goose chase, he would express his
opinions with trying readiness of phrase.
His manner of greeting them, however,
expressed no more than a lightly agreeable detachment
from any view whatsoever. Captain Palliser felt
this curiously, though he could not have said what
he would have expected from him if he had known it
would be his whim to appear.
“How do you do? How d’
you do?” His Grace shook hands with the amiable
ease which scarcely commits a man even to casual
interest, after which he took his seat again.
“How d’ do, Miss Hutchinson?”
said Palliser. “How d’ do, Mr. Hutchinson?
Mr. Palford will be glad to find you here.”
Mr. Palford shook hands with correct civility.
“I am, indeed,” he said.
“It was in your room in New York that I first
saw Mr. Temple Temple Barholm.”
“Aye, it was,” responded Hutchinson, dryly.
“I thought Lady Joan was coming,” Miss
Alicia said to Palliser.
“She will be here presently.
She came down in our train, but not with us.”
“What—what is she coming for?”
faltered Miss Alicia.
“Yes,” put in the duke, “what, by
the way, is she coming for?”
“I wrote and asked her to come,”
was Palliser’s reply. “I have reason
to believe she may be able to recall something of
value to the inquiry which is being made.”
“That’s interesting,”
said his Grace, but with no air of participating
particularly. She doesn’t like him, though,
does she? Wouldn’t do to put her on the
jury.”
He did not wait for any reply, but
turned to Mr. Palford.
“All this is delightfully portentous.
Do you know it reminds me of a scene in one of those
numerous plays where the wrong man has murdered somebody—or
hasn’t murdered somebody—and the whole
company must be cross-examined because the curtain
cannot be brought down until the right man is unmasked.
Do let us come into this, Mr. Palford; what we know
seems so inadequate.”
Mr. Palford and Mr. Grimby each felt
that there lurked in this manner a possibility that
they were being regarded lightly. All the objections
to their situation loomed annoyingly large.
“It is, of course, an extraordinary
story,” Mr. Palford said, “but if we
are not mistaken in our deductions, we may find ourselves
involved in a cause celebre which will set all England
talking.”
“I am not mistaken,” Palliser
presented the comment with a short and dry laugh.
“Tha seems pretty cock-sure!” Hutchinson
thrust in.
“I am. No one knew Jem
Temple Barbolm better than I did in the past.
We were intimate—enemies.”
And he laughed again.
“Tha says tha’ll swear
th’ chap tha saw through th’ window was
him?” said Hutchinson.
“I’d swear it,” with composure.
The duke was reflecting. He was
again tapping with his cane the gaiter covering his
slender, shining boot.
“If Mr. Temple Temple Barholm
had remained here his actions would have seemed less
suspicious?” he suggested.
It was Palliser who replied.
“Or if he hadn’t whisked
the other man away. He lost his head and played
the fool.”
“He didn’t lose his head,
that chap. It’s screwed on th’ right
way— his head is,” grunted Hutchinson.
“The curious fellow has a number
of friends,” the duke remarked to Palford and
Grimby, in his impartial tone. “I am hoping
you are not thinking of cross-examining me.
I have always been convinced that under cross-examination
I could be induced to innocently give evidence condemnatory
to both sides of any case whatever. But would
you mind telling me what the exact evidence is so
far? “
Mr. Palford had been opening a budget of papers.
“It is evidence which is cumulative,
your Grace,” he said. “Mr. Temple
Temple Barholm’s position would have been a
far less suspicious one— as you yourself
suggested—if he had remained, or if he hadn’t
secretly removed Mr.—Mr. Strangeways.”
“The last was Captain Palliser’s
suggestion, I believe,” smiled the duke.
“Did he remove him secretly? How secretly,
for instance?”
“At night,” answered Palliser.
“Miss Temple Barholm herself did not know when
it happened. Did you?” turning to Miss Alicia,
who at once flushed and paled.
“He knew that I was rather nervous
where Mr. Strangeways was concerned. I am sorry
to say he found that out almost at once. He even
told me several times that I must not think of him—that
I need hear nothing about him.” She turned
to the duke, her air of appeal plainly representing
a feeling that he would understand her confession.
“I scarcely like to say it, but wrong as it
was I couldn’t help feeling that it was like
having a—a lunatic in the house. I
was afraid he might be more—ill—than
Temple realized, and that he might some time become
violent. I never admitted so much of course, but
I was.”
“You see, she was not told,”
Palliser summed it up succinctly.
“Evidently,” the duke
admitted. “I see your point.”
But he seemed to disengage himself from all sense
of admitting implications with entire calmness, as
he turned again to Mr. Palford and his papers.
“You were saying that the exact evidence was—?”
Mr. Palford referred to a sheet of notes.
“That—whether before
or shortly after his arrival here is not at all certain—Mr.
Temple Temple Barholm began strongly to suspect the
identity of the person then known as Strangeways—”
Palliser again emitted the short and
dry laugh, and both the duke and Mr. Palford looked
at him inquiringly.
“He had `got on to’ it
before he brought him,” he answered their glances.
“Be sure of that.”
“Then why did he bring him?” the duke
suggested lightly.
“Oh, well,” taking his
cue from the duke, and assuming casual lightness
also, “he was obliged to come himself, and was
jolly well convinced that he had better keep his
hand on the man, also his eye. It was a good-enough
idea. He couldn’t leave a thing like that
wandering about the States. He could play benefactor
safely in a house of the size of this until he was
ready for action.”
The duke gave a moment to considering
the matter—still detachedly.
“It is, on the whole, not unlikely
that something of the sort might suggest itself to
the criminal mind,” he said. And his glance
at Mr. Palford intimated that he might resume his
statement.
“We have secured proof that
he applied himself to secret investigation.
He is known to have employed Scotland Yard to make
certain inquiries concerning the man said to have
been killed in the Klondike. Having evidently
reached more than suspicion he began to endeavor
to persuade Mr. Strangeways to let him take him to
London. This apparently took some time.
The mere suggestion of removal threw the invalid
into a state of painful excitement—”
“Did Pearson tell you that? ” the duke inquired.
“Captain Palliser himself in
passing the door of the room one day heard certain
expressions of terrified pleading,” was Mr. Palford’s
explanation.
“I heard enough,” Palliser
took it up carelessly, “to make it worth while
to question Pearson—who must have heard
a great deal more. Pearson was ordered to hold
his tongue from the first, but he will have to tell
the truth when he is asked.”
The duke did not appear to resent his view.
“Pearson would be likely to
know what went on,” he remarked. “He’s
an intelligent little fellow.”
“The fact remains that in spite
of his distress and reluctance Mr. Strangeways was
removed privately, and there our knowledge ends.
He has not been seen since—and a few hours
after, Captain Palliser expressed his conviction,
that the person he had seen through the West Room
window was Mr. James Temple Barholm, Mr. Temple Temple
Barholm left the house taking a midnight train, and
leaving no clue as to his where-abouts or intentions.”
“Disappeared! ” said the duke.
“Where has he been looked for?”
The countenance of both Mr. Palford
and his party expressed a certain degree of hesitance.
“Principally in asylums and
so-called sanatoriums,” Mr. Grimby admitted
with a hint of reluctance.
“Places where the curiosity
of outsiders is not encouraged,” said Palliser
languidly. “And where if a patient dies
in a fit of mania there are always respectable witnesses
to explain that his case was hopeless from the first.”
Mr. Hutchinson had been breathing
hard occasionally as he sat and listened, and now
he sprang up uttering a sound dangerously near a
violent snort.
“Art tha accusin’ that
lad o’ bein’ black villain enough to be
ready to do bloody murder?” he cried out.
“He was in a very tight place,
Hutchinson,” Palliser shrugged his shoulders
as he said it. “But one makes suggestions
at this stage—not accusations.”
That Hutchinson had lost his head
was apparent to his daughter at least.
“Tha’d be in a tight place,
my fine chap, if I had my way,” he flung forth
irately. “I’d like to get thy head
under my arm.”
The roll of approaching wheels reached Miss Alicia.
“There’s another carriage,”
was her agitated exclamation. “Oh, dear!
It must be Lady Joan!”
Little Ann left her seat to make her
father return to his.
“Father, you’d better
sit down,” she said, gently pushing him in the
right direction. “When you can’t
prove a thing’s a lie, it’s just as well
to keep quiet until you can.” And she kept
quiet herself, though she turned and stood before
Palliser and spoke with clear deliberateness.
“What you pretend to believe is not true, Captain
Palliser. It’s just not true,” she
gave to him.
They were facing and looking at each
other when Burrill announced Lady Joan Fayre.
She entered rather quickly and looked round the room
with a sweeping glance, taking them all in.
She went to the duke first, and they shook hands.
“I am glad you are here! ” she said.
“I would not have been out of
it, my dear young lady,” he answered, “`for
a farm’ That’s a quotation.”
“I know,” she replied,
giving her hand to Miss Alicia, and taking in Palliser
and the solicitors with a bow which was little more
than a nod. Then she saw Little Ann, and walked
over to her to shake hands.
“I am glad you are here.
I rather felt you would be,” was her greeting.
“I am glad to see you.”
“Whether tha ’rt glad
to see me or not I’m glad I’m here,”
said Hutchinson bluntly. “I’ve just
been speaking a bit o’ my mind.”
“Now, Father love!” Little Ann put her
hand on his arm.
Lady Joan looked him over. Her
hungry eyes were more hungry than ever. She
looked like a creature in a fever and worn by it.
“I think I am glad you are here too,”
she answered.
Palliser sauntered over to her.
He had approved the duke’s air of being at
once detached and inquiring, and he did not intend
to wear the aspect of the personage who plays the
unpleasant part of the pursuer and avenger.
What he said was:
“It was good of you to come, Lady Joan.”
“Did you think I would stay
away?” was her answer. “But I will
tell you that I don’t believe it is true.”
“You think that it is too good to be true?”
Her hot eyes had records in them it
would have been impossible for him to read or understand.
She had been so torn; she had passed through such
hours since she had been told this wild thing.
“Pardon my not telling you what
I think,” she said. “Nothing matters,
after all, if he is alive!”
“Except that we must find him,” said Palliser.
“If he is in the same world
with me I shall find him,” fiercely. Then
she turned again to Ann. “You are the
girl T. Tembarom loves?” she put it to her.
“Yes, my lady.”
“If he was lost, and you knew
he was on the earth with you, don’t you know
that you would find him?”
“I should know he’d come
back to me,” Little Ann answered her. “That’s
what—” her small face looked very
fine as in her second of hesitation a spirited flush
ran over it, “that’s what your man will
do,” quite firmly.
It was amazing to see how the bitter
face changed, as if one word had brought back a passionate
softening memory.
“My man!” Her voice mellowed
until it was deep and low. “Did you call
T. Tembarom that, too? Oh, I understand you!
Keep near me while I talk to these people.”
She made her sit down by her.
“I know every detail of your
letters.” She addressed Palliser as well
as Palford & Grimby, sweeping all details aside.
“What is it you want to ask me?”
“This is our position, your
ladyship,” Mr. Palford fumbled a little with
his papers in speaking. “Mr. Temple Temple
Barholm and the person known as Mr. Strangeways have
been searched for so far without result. In
the meantime we realize that the more evidence we obtain
that Mr. Temple Temple Barholm identified Strangeways
and acted from motive, the more solid the foundation
upon which Captain Palliser’s conviction rests.
Up to this point we have only his statement which he
is prepared to make on oath. Fortunately, however,
he on one occasion overheard something said to you
which he believes will be corroborative evidence.”
“What did you overhear?” she inquired
of Palliser.
Her tone was not pacific considering
that, logically, she must be on the side of the investigators.
But it was her habit, as Captain Palliser remembered,
to seem to put most people on the defensive. He
meant to look as uninvolved as the duke, but it was
not quite within his power. His manner was sufficiently
deliberate.
“One evening, before you left
for London, I was returning from the billiard-room,
and heard you engaged in animated conversation with—
our host. My attention was arrested, first because—”
a sketch of a smile ill-concealed itself, “you
usually scarcely deigned to speak to him, and secondly
because I heard Jem Temple Barholm’s name.”
“And you—?” neither
eyes nor manner omitted the word listened.
But the slight lift of his shoulders
was indifferent enough.
“I listened deliberately.
I was convinced that the fellow was a criminal impostor,
and I wanted evidence.”
“Ah! come now,” remarked
the duke amiably. “Now we are getting on.
Did you gain any?”
“I thought so. Merely of
the cumulative order, of course,” Palliser
answered with moderation. “Those were early
days. He asked you,” turning to Lady Joan
again, “if you knew any one—any one—who
had any sort of a photograph of Jem. You had
one and you showed it to him!”
She was quite silent for a moment.
The hour came back to her—the extraordinary
hour when he had stood in his lounging fashion before
her, and through some odd, uncivilized but absolutely
human force of his own had made her listen to him
—and had gone on talking in his nasal
voice until with one common, crude, grotesque phrase
he had turned her hideous world upside down—changed
the whole face of it— sent the stone wall
rising before her crumbling into dust, and seemed
somehow to set her free. For the moment he had
lifted a load from her the nature of which she did
not think he could understand—a load of
hatred and silence. She had clutched his hand,
she had passionately wept on it, she could have kissed
it. He had told her she could come back and
not be afraid. As the strange episode rose before
her detail by detail, she literally stared at Palliser.
“You did, didn’t you?” he inquired.
“Yes,” she answered.
Her mind was in a riot, because in
the midst of things which must be true, something
was false. But with the memory of a myriad subtle
duplicities in her brain, she had never seen anything
which could have approached a thing like that.
He had made her feel more human than any one in the
world had ever made her feel—but Jem.
He had been able to do it because he was human himself—human.
“I’m friendly,” he had said with
his boy’s laugh—“just friendly.”
“I saw him start, though you
did not,” Palliser continued. “He
stood and studied the locket intently.”
She remembered perfectly. He
had examined it so closely that he had unconsciously
knit his brows.
“He said something in a rather
low voice,” Palliser took it up. “I
could not quite catch it all. It was something
about `knowing the face again.’ I can
see you remember, Lady Joan. Can you repeat the
exact words?”
He did not understand the struggle
he saw in her face. It would have been impossible
for him to understand it. What she felt was that
if she lost hold on her strange belief in the honesty
of this one decent thing she had seen and felt so
close to her that it cleared the air she breathed,
it would be as if she had fallen into a bottomless
abyss. Without knowing why she did it, she got
up from her chair as if she were a witness in a court.
“Yes, I can,” she said.
“Yes, I can; but I wish to make a statement
for myself. Whether Jem Temple Barholm is alive
or dead, Captain Palliser, T. Tembarom has done him
no harm.”
The duke sat up delicately alert.
He had evidently found her worth looking at and listening
to from the outset.
“Hear! Hear!” he said pleasantly.
“What were the exact words?” suggested
Palliser.
Miss Alicia who had been weeping on
Little Ann’s shoulder —almost on
her lap—lifted her head to listen.
Hutchinson set his jaw and grunted, and Mr. Palford
cleared his throat mechanically.
“He said,” and no one
better than herself realized how ominously “cumulative”
the words sounded, “that a man would know a face
like that again—wherever he saw it.”
“Wherever he saw it!” ejaculated Mr. Grimby.
There ensued a moment of entire pause.
It was inevitable. Having reached this point
a taking of breath was necessary. Even the duke
ceased to appear entirely detached. As Mr. Palford
turned to his papers again there was perhaps a slight
feeling of awkwardness in the air. Miss Alicia
had dropped, terror smitten, into new tears.
The slight awkwardness was, on the
whole, rather added to by T. Tembarom—as
if serenely introduced by the hand of drama itself—
opening the door and walking into the room. He
came in with a matter-of-fact, but rather obstinate,
air, and stopped in their midst, looking round at
them as if collectedly taking them all in.
Hutchinson sprang to his feet with
a kind of roar, his big hands plunging deep into
his trousers pockets.
“Here he is! Danged if
he isn’t!” he bellowed. “Now,
lad, tha let ’em have it!”
What he was to let them have did not
ensue, because his attitude was not one of assault.
“Say, you are all here, ain’t
you!” he remarked obviously. “Good
business!”
Miss Alicia got up from the sofa and
came trembling toward him as one approaches one risen
from the dead, and he made a big stride toward her
and took her in his arms, patting her shoulder in reproachful
consolation.
“Say, you haven’t done
what I told you—have you?” he soothed.
“You’ve let yourself get rattled.”
“But I knew it wasn’t
true,” she sobbed. “I knew it wasn’t.”
“Of course you did, but you
got rattled all the same.” And he patted
her again.
The duke came forward with a delightfully
easy and—could it be almost jocose?—air
of bearing himself. Palford and Grimby remarked
it with pained dismay. He was so unswerving
in his readiness as he shook hands.
“How well done of you!”
he said. “How well arranged! But I’m
afraid you didn’t arrange it at all. It
has merely happened. Where did you come from?”
“From America; got back yesterday.”
T. Tembarom’s hand-shake was a robust hearty
greeting. “It’s all right.”
“From America!” The united
voices of the solicitors exclaimed it.
Joseph Hutchinson broke into a huge
guffaw, and he stamped in exultation.
“I’m danged if be has
na’ been to America!” he cried out.
“To America!”
“Oh!” Miss Alicia gasped
hysterically, “they go backward and forward
to America like—like lightning!”
Little Ann had not risen at his entrance,
but sat still with her hands clasped tightly on her
lap. Her face had somehow the effect of a flower
gradually breaking into extraordinary bloom. Their
eyes had once met and then she remained, her soul
in hers which were upon him, as she drank in every
word he uttered. Her time had not yet come.
Lady Joan had remained standing by
the chair, which a few moments before her manner
had seemed to transform into something like a witness
stand in a court of justice. Her hungry eyes had
grown hungrier each second, and her breath came and
went quickly. The very face she had looked up
at on her last talk with T. Tembarom—the
oddly human face—turned on her as he came
to her. It was just as it had been that night
—just as commonly uncommon and believable.
“Say, Lady Joan! You didn’t
believe all that guff, did you—You didn’t?”
he said.
“No—no—no! I couldn’t!”
she cried fiercely.
He saw she was shaking with suspense,
and he pushed her gently into a chair.
“You’d better sit down
a minute. You’re about all in,” he
said.
She might have been a woman with an
ague as she caught his arm, shaking it because her
hands themselves so shook.
“Is it true?” was her
low cry. “Is he alive—is he alive?”
“Yes, he’s alive.”
And as he answered he drew close and so placed himself
before her that he shielded her from the others in
the room. He seemed to manage to shut them out,
so that when she dropped her face on her arms against
the chair-back her shuddering, silent sobbing was
hidden decently. It was not only his body which
did it, but some protecting power which was almost
physically visible. She felt it spread before
her.
“Yes, he’s alive,”
he said, “and he’s all right—though
it’s been a long time coming, by gee!”
“He’s alive.”
They all heard it. For a man of Palliser’s
make to stand silent in the midst of mysterious slowly
accumulating convictions that some one—perilously
of his own rarely inept type—was on the
verge of feeling appallingly like a fool—was
momentarily unendurable. And nothing had been
explained, after all.
“Is this what you call `bluff’
in New York?” he demanded. “You’ve
got a lot to explain. You admit that Jem Temple
Barholm is alive?” and realized his asinine
error before the words were fully spoken.
The realization was the result of
the square-shouldered swing with which T. Tembarom
turned round, and the expression of his eyes as they
ran over him.
“Admit!” he said.
“Admit hell! He’s up-stairs,”
with a slight jerk of his head in the direction of
the ceiling.
The duke alone did not gasp. He laughed slightly.
“We’ve just got here.
He came down from London with me, and Sir Ormsby
Galloway.” And he said it not to Palliser
but to Palford and Grimby.
“The Sir Ormsby Galloway?”
It was an ejaculation from Mr. Palford himself.
T. Tembarom stood square and gave
his explanation to the lot of them, so to speak,
without distinction.
“He’s the big nerve specialist.
I’ve had him looking after the case from the
first—before I began to suspect anything.
I took orders, and orders were to keep him quiet
and not let any fool butt in and excite him.
That’s what I’ve been giving my mind to.
The great stunt was to get him to go and stay at
Sir Ormsby’s place.” He stopped a
moment and suddenly flared forth as if he had had
about enough of it. He almost shouted at them
in exasperation. “All I’m going to
tell you is that for about six months I’ve
been trying to prove that Jem Temple Barholm was
Jem Temple Barholm, and the hardest thing I had to
do was to get him so that he could prove it himself.”
He strode over to the hearth and rang a bell.
“It’s not my place to give orders here
now,” he said, “but Jem commissioned
me to see this thing through. Sir Ormsby’ll
tell you all you want to hear.”
He turned and spoke solely to the duke.
“This is what happened,”
he said. “I dare say you’ll laugh
when you hear it. I almost laughed myself.
What does Jem do, when he thinks things over, but
get some fool notion in his head about not coming
back here and pushing me out. And he lights out
and leaves the country—leaves it—to
get time to think it over some more.”
The duke did not laugh. He merely
smiled—a smile which had a shade of curious
self-questioning in it.
“Romantic and emotional—and
quite ridiculous,” he commented slowly.
“He’d have awakened to that when he had
thought it out `some more.’ The thing
couldn’t be done.”
Burrill had presented himself in answer
to the bell, and awaited orders. His Grace called
Tembarom’s attention to him, and Tembarom included
Palliser with Palford and Grimby when he gave his gesture
of instruction.
“Take these gentlemen to Sir
Ormsby Galloway, and then ask Mr. Temple Barholm
if he’ll come down-stairs,” he said.
It is possible that Captain Palliser
felt himself more irritatingly infolded in the swathing
realization that some one was in a ridiculous position,
and it is certain that Mr. Palford felt it necessary
to preserve an outwardly flawless dignity as the
duke surprisingly left his chair and joined them.
“Let me go, too,” he suggested;
“I may be able to assist in throwing light.”
His including movement in Miss Alicia’s direction
was delightfully gracious and friendly. It was
inclusive of Mr. Hutchinson also.
“Will you come with us, Miss
Temple Barholm?” he said. “And you
too, Mr. Hutchinson. We shall go over it all
in its most interesting detail, and you must be eager
about it. I am myself.”
His happy and entirely correct idea
was that the impending entrance of Mr. James Temple
Barholm would “come off” better in the
absence of audience.
Hutchinson almost bounced from his
chair in his readiness. Miss Alicia looked at
Tembarom.
“Yes, Miss Alicia,” he
answered her inquiring glance. “You go,
too. You’ll get it all over quicker.”
Rigid propriety forbade that Mr. Palford
should express annoyance, but the effort to restrain
the expression of it was in his countenance.
Was it possible that the American habit of being jocular
had actually held its own in a matter as serious
as this? And could even the most cynical and
light-minded of ducal personages have been involved
in its unworthy frivolities? But no one looked
jocular—Tembarom’s jaw was set in
its hard line, and the duke, taking up the broad ribbon
of his rimless monocle to fix the glass in his eye,
wore the expression of a man whose sense of humor
was temporarily in abeyance.
“Are we to understand that your Grace—?”
“Yes,” said his Grace
a trifle curtly, “I have known about it for some
time.”
“But why was nobody told?” put in Palliser.
“Why should people be told?
There was nothing sufficiently definite to tell.
It was a waiting game.” His Grace wasted
no words. “I was told. Mr. Temple
Barholm did not know England or English methods.
His idea— perhaps a mistaken one—was
that an English duke ought to be able to advise him.
He came to me and made a clean breast of it. He
goes straight at things, that young fellow.
Makes what he calls a `bee line.’ Oh!
I’ve been in it—I ’ve been in
it, I assure you.”
It was as they crossed the hall that
his Grace slightly laughed.
“It struck me as a sort of wild-goose
chase at first. He had only a ghost of a clue—a
mere resemblance to a portrait. But he believed
in it, and he had an instinct.” He laughed
again. “The dullest and most unmelodramatic
neighborhood in England has been taking part in a
melodrama—but there has been no villain
in it—only a matter-of-fact young man,
working out a queer thing in his own queer, matter-of-fact
way.”
When the door closed behind them,
Tembarom went to Lady Joan. She had risen and
was standing before the window, her back to the room.
She looked tall and straight and tensely braced when
she turned round, but there was endurance, not fierceness
in her eyes.
“Did he leave the country knowing
I was here—waiting?” she asked.
Her voice was low and fatigued. She had remembered
that years had passed, and that it was perhaps after
all only human that long anguish should blot things
out, and dull a hopeless man’s memory.
“No,” answered Tembarom
sharply. “He didn’t. You weren’t
in it then. He believed you’d married
that Duke of Merthshire fellow. This is the
way it was: Let me tell it to you quick.
A letter that had been wandering round came to him
the night before the cave-in, when they thought he
was killed. It told him old Temple Barholm was
dead. He started out before daylight, and you
can bet he was strung up till he was near crazy with
excitement. He believed that if he was in England
with plenty of money he could track down that cardsharp
lie. He believed you’d help him.
Somewhere, while he was traveling he came across
an old paper with a lot of dope about your being engaged.”
Joan remembered well how her mother
had worked to set the story afloat—how
they had gone through the most awful of their scenes—
almost raving at each other, shut up together in the
boudoir in Hill Street.
“That’s all he remembers,
except that he thought some one had hit him a crack
on the head. Nothing had hit him. He’d
had too much to stand up under and something gave
way in his brain. He doesn’t know what
happened after that. He’d wake up sometimes
just enough to know he was wandering about trying
to get home. It’s been the limit to try
to track him. If he’d not come to himself
we could never have been quite sure. That’s
why I stuck at it. But he did come to himself.
All of a sudden. Sir Ormsby will tell you that’s
what nearly always happens. They wake up all
of a sudden. It’s all right; it’s
all right. I used to promise him it would be—when
I wasn’t sure that I wasn’t lying.”
And for the first time he broke into the friendly
grin—but it was more valiant than spontaneous.
He wanted her to know that it was “all right.”
“Oh!” she cried, “oh! you—”
She stopped because the door was opening.
“It’s Jem,” he said
sharply. “Ann, let’s go.”
And that instant Little Ann was near him.
“No! no! don’t go,” cried Lady Joan.
Jem Temple Barholm came in through
the doorway. Life and sound and breath stopped
for a second, and then the two whirled into each
other’s arms as if a storm had swept them there.
“Jem!” she wailed. “Oh, Jem!
My man! Where have you been?”
“I’ve been in hell, Joan—in
hell!” he answered, choking, —“and
this wonderful fellow has dragged me out of it.”
But Tembarom would have none of it.
He could not stand it. This sort of thing filled
up his throat and put him at an overwhelming disadvantage.
He just laid a hand on Jem Temple Barholm’s shoulder
and gave him an awkwardly friendly push.
“Say, cut me out of it!”
he said. “You get busy,” his voice
rather breaking. “You’ve got a lot
to say to her. It was up to me before;—
now, it’s up to you.”
Little Ann went with him into the next room.
The room they went into was a smaller
one, quiet, and its oriel windows much overshadowed
by trees. By the time they stood together in
the center of it Tembarom had swallowed something twice
or thrice, and had recovered himself. Even his
old smile had come back as he took one of her hands
in each of his, and holding them wide apart stood and
looked down at her.
“God bless you, Little Ann,”
he said. “I just knew I should find you
here. I’d have bet my last dollar on it.”
The hands he held were trembling just
a little, and the dimples quivered in and out.
But her eyes were steady, and a lovely increasing
intensity glowed in them.
“You went after him and brought
him back. He was all wrought up, and he needed
some one with good common sense to stop him in time
to make him think straight before he did anything
silly,” she said.
“I says to him,” T. Tembarom
made the matter clear; “`Say, you’ve left
something behind that belongs to you! Comeback
and get it.’ I meant Lady Joan. And
I says, `Good Lord, man, you’re acting like a
fellow in a play. That place doesn’t belong
to me. It belongs to you. If it was mine,
fair and square, Little Willie’d hang on to it.
There’d be no noble sacrifice in his.
You get a brace on.’”
“When they were talking in that
silly way about you, and saying you’d run away,”
said Little Ann, her face uplifted adoringly as she
talked, “I said to father, `If he’s gone,
he’s gone to get something. And he’ll
be likely to bring it back.’”
He almost dropped her hands and caught
her to him then. But he saved himself in time.
“Now this great change has come,”
he said, “everything will be different.
The men you’ll know will look like the pictures
in the advertisements at the backs of magazines—those
fellows with chins and smooth hair. I shall
look like a chauffeur among them.”
But she did not blench in the least,
though she remembered whose words he was quoting.
The intense and lovely femininity in her eyes only
increased. She came closer to him, and so because
of his height had to look up more.
“You will always make jokes—but
I don’t care. I don’t care for anything
but you,” she said. “I love your jokes;
I love everything about you: I love your eyes—and
your voice —and your laugh. I love
your very clothes.” Her voice quivered
as her dimples did. “These last months
I’ve sometimes felt as if I should die of loving
you.”
It was a wonderful thing—wonderful.
His eyes—his whole young being had kindled
as he looked down drinking in every word.
“Is that the kind of quiet little
thing you are?” he said.
“Yes, it is,” she answered firmly.
“And you’re satisfied—you
know, who it is I want?— You’re ready
to do what you said you would that last night at
Mrs. Bowse’s?”
“What do you think?” she said in her clear
little voice.
He caught her then in a strong, hearty, young, joyous
clutch.
“You come to me, Little Ann. You come right
to me,” he said.