Colonel Kelmscott’s punishment.
While Montague Nevitt was thus congenially
engaged in pulling off his treble coup of settling
his own share in the Rio Negro deficit, pocketing
three thousand pounds, pro tem, for incidental expenses,
and getting Guy Waring thoroughly into his power by
his knowledge of a forgery, two other events were
taking place elsewhere, which were destined to prove
of no small importance to the future of the twins
and their immediate surroundings. Things generally
were converging towards a crisis in their affairs.
Colonel Kelmscott’s wrong-doing was bearing
first-fruit abundantly.
For as soon as Granville Kelmscott
received that strangely-worded note from Gwendoline
Gildersleeve, he proceeded, as was natural, straight
down, in his doubt, to his father’s library.
There, bursting into the room, with Gwendoline’s
letter still crushed in his hand in the side pocket
of his coat, and a face like thunder, he stood in
the attitude of avenging fate before his father’s
chair, and gazed down upon him angrily.
“What does this mean?”
he asked, in a low but fuming voice, brandishing the
note before his eyes as he spoke. “Is every
one in the county to be told it but I? Is everybody
else to hear my business before you tell me a word
of it? A letter comes to me this morning—no
matter from whom—and here’s what it
says: ’I know you’re not the eldest
son, and that somebody else is the heir of Tilgate.’
Surely, if anybody was to know, I should have
known it first. Surely, if I’m to be turned
adrift on the world, after being brought up to think
myself a man of means so long, I should, at least,
be turned adrift with my eyes open.”
Colonel Kelmscott gazed at him open-mouthed
with horror.
“Did Gwendoline Gildersleeve
write that to you?” he cried, overpowered at
once by remorse and awe. “Did Gwendoline
Gildersleeve write that to you? Well, if Gwendoline
Gildersleeve knows it, it’s all up with the
scheme! That rascally lawyer, her father, has
found out everything. These two young men must
have put their case in the fellow’s hands.
He must be hunting up the facts. He must be preparing
to contest it. My boy, my boy, we’re ruined!
we’re ruined!”
“These two young men,”
Granville repeated, with a puzzled air of surprise.
“What two young men? I don’t
know them. I never heard of them.”
Then suddenly one of those flashes of intuition burst
in upon him that burst in upon us all at moments of
critical importance to our lives. “Father,
father,” he cried, loaning forward in his anguish
and clutching the oak chair, “you don’t
mean to tell me those fellows, the Warings, that we
met at Chetwood Court, are your lawful sons—and
that that was why you bought the landscape with
the snake in it?”
Kelmscott, of Tilgate, bent his proud
head down to the table unchecked. “My son,
my son,” he cried, in his despair, “you
have said it yourself. Your own mouth has suggested
it. What use my trying to keep it from you any
longer? These lads—are Kelmscotts.”
“And—my mother?”
Granville Kelmscott burst out, in a very tremulous
voice. The question was almost more than a man
dare ask. But he asked it in the first bitterness
of a terrible awakening.
“Your mother,” Colonel
Kelmscott answered, lifting his head once more, with
a terrible effort, and looking his son point-blank
in the face—“your mother is just
what I have always called her—my lawful
wife—Lady Emily Kelmscott. The mother
of these lads, to whom I was also once duly married,
died before my marriage with my present wife—thank
God I can say so. I may have acted foolishly,
cruelly, criminally; but at least I never acted quite
so basely and so ill as you impute to me, Granville.”
“Thank Heaven for that,”
his son answered fervently, with one hand on his breast,
drawing a deep sigh as he spoke. “You’re
my father, sir, and it isn’t for me to reproach
you; but if you had only done that—oh,
my mother! my mother! I don’t know, sir,
I’m sure, how I could ever have forgiven you;
I don’t know how I could ever have kept my hands
off you.”
Colonel Kelmscott straightened himself
up, and looked hard at his son. A terrible pathos
gleamed in his proud brown eyes. His white moustache
had more dignity than ever.
“Granville,” he said slowly,
like a broken man, “I don’t ask you to
forgive me; you can never forgive me; I don’t
ask you to sympathise with me; a father knows better
than to accept sympathy from a son; but I do ask you
to bear with me while I try to explain myself.”
He braced himself up, and with many
long pauses, and many inarticulate attempts to set
forth the facts in the least unfavourable aspect,
told his story all through, in minute detail, to that
hardest of all critics, his own dispossessed and disinherited
boy.
“If you’re hard upon me,
Granville,” he cried at last as he finished,
looking wistfully for pity into his son’s face,
“you should remember, at least, it was for your
sake I did it, my boy; it was for your sake I did
it—yours, yours, and your mother’s.”
Granville let him relate his whole
story in full to the bitter end, though it was with
difficulty at times that that proud and grey-haired
man nerved himself up to tell it. Then, as soon
as all was told, he looked in his father’s face
once more, and said slowly, with the pitilessness
of sons in general towards the faults and failings
of their erring parents—
“It’s not my place to
blame you, I know. You did it, I suppose, as
you say so, for me and my mother. But it is
my place to tell you plainly, father, that I, for
one, will have nothing at all to do with the fruits
of your deception. I was no party to the fraud;
I will be no party either to its results or its clearing
up. I, too, have to think, as you say, of my
mother. For her sake, I won’t urge you
to break her heart at once by disinheriting her son,
now and here, too openly. You can make what arrangements
you like with these blood-sucking Warings. You
can do as you will in providing them with hush-money.
Let them take their black-mail! You’ve handed
them over half the sum you got for Dowlands already,
I suppose. You can buy them off for awhile by
handing them over the remainder. Twelve thousand
will do. Leeches as they are, that will surely
content them, at least for the present.”
Colonel Kelmscott raised one hand
and tried hard to interrupt him; but Granville would
not be interrupted.
“No, no,” he went on sternly,
shaking his head and frowning. “I’ll
have my say for once, and then for ever keep silence.
This is the first and last time as long as we both
live I will speak with you on the subject. So
we may as well understand one another, once and for
ever. For my mother’s sake, as I said, there
need be just at present no open disclosure. You
have years to live yet; and as long as you live, these
Waring people have no claim upon the estate in any
way. You’ve given them as much as they’ve
any right to expect. Let them wait for the rest
till, in the course of nature, they come into possession.
As for me, I will go to carve out for myself a place
in the world elsewhere by my own exertions. Perhaps,
before my mother need know her son was left a beggar
by the father who brought him up like the heir to
a large estate, I may have been able to carve out
that place for myself so well that she need never
really feel the difference. I’m a Kelmscott,
and can fight the world on my own account. But,
in any case, I must go. Tilgate’s no longer
a fit home for me. I leave it to those who have
a better right to it.”
He rose as if to depart, with the
air of a man who sets forth upon the world to seek
his fortune. Colonel Kelmscott rose too, and
faced him, all broken.
“Granville,” he said,
in a voice scarcely audible through the stifled sobs
he was too proud to give vent to, “you’re
not going like this. You’re not going without
at least shaking hands with your father! You’re
not going without saying good-bye to your mother!”
Granville turned, with hot tears standing
dim in his eyes—like his father, he was
too proud to let them trickle down his cheek—and
taking the Colonel’s weather-beaten hand in his,
wrung it silently for some minutes with profound emotion.
Then he looked at the white moustache,
the grizzled hair, the bright brown eyes suffused
with answering dimness, and said, almost remorsefully,
“Father, good-bye. You meant me well, no
doubt. You thought you were befriending me.
But I wish to Heaven in my soul you had meant me worse.
It would have been easier for me to bear in the end.
If you’d brought me up as a nobody—as
a younger son’s accustomed—”
He paused and drew back, for he could see his words
were too cruel for that proud man’s heart.
Then he broke off suddenly.
“But I can’t say
good-bye to my mother,” he went on, with a piteous
look. “If I tried to say good-bye to her,
I must tell her all. I’d break down in
the attempt. I’ll write to her from the
Cape. It’ll be easier so. She won’t
feel it so much then.”
“From the Cape!” Colonel
Kelmscott exclaimed, drawing back in horror.
“Oh, Granville, don’t tell me you’re
going away from us to Africa!”
“Where else?” his son
asked, looking him back in the face steadily.
“Africa it is! That’s the only opening
left nowadays for a man of spirit. There, I may
be able to hew out a place for myself at last, worthy
of Lady Emily Kelmscott’s son. I won’t
come back till I come back able to hold my own in
the world with the best of them. These Warings
shan’t crow over the younger son. Good-bye,
once more, father.” He wrung his hand hard.
“Think kindly of me when I’m gone; and
don’t forget altogether I once loved Tilgate.”
He opened the door and went up to
his own room again. His mind was resolved.
He wouldn’t even say good-bye to Gwendoline Gildersleeve.
He’d pack a few belongings in a portmanteau in
haste, and go forth upon the world to seek his fortune
in the South African diamond fields.
But Colonel Kelmscott sat still in
the library, bowed down in his chair, with his head
between his hands, in abject misery. A strange
feeling seemed to throb through his weary brain; he
had a sensation as though his skull were opening and
shutting. Great veins on his forehead beat black
and swollen. The pressure was almost more than
the vessels would stand. He held his temples between
his two palms as if to keep them from bursting.
All ahead looked dark as night; the ground was cut
from under him. The punishment of his sin was
too heavy for him to bear. How could he ever tell
Emily now that Granville was gone? A horrible
numbness oppressed his brain. Oh, mercy! mercy!
his head was flooded.