<p><SPAN name="c46" id="c46"></SPAN> </p>
<p> </p>
<h3>CHAPTER XLVI</h3>
<h3>Lucy Morris in Brook Street<br/> </h3>
<p>Lucy Morris went to Lady Linlithgow early in October, and was still
with Lady Linlithgow when Lizzie Eustace returned to London in
January. During these three months she certainly had not been happy.
In the first place, she had not once seen her lover. This had aroused
no anger or suspicion in her bosom against him, because the old
countess had told her that she would have no lover come to the house,
and that, above all, she would not allow a young man with whom she
herself was connected to come in that guise to her companion. "From
all I hear," said Lady Linlithgow, "it's not at all likely to be a
match;—and at any rate it can't go on here." Lucy thought that she
would be doing no more than standing up properly for her lover by
asserting her conviction that it would be a match;—and she did
assert it bravely; but she made no petition for his presence, and
bore that trouble bravely. In the next place, Frank was not a
satisfactory correspondent. He did write to her occasionally;—and he
wrote also to the old countess immediately on his return to town from
Bobsborough a letter which was intended as an answer to that which
she had written to Mrs. Greystock. What was said in that letter Lucy
never knew;—but she did know that Frank's few letters to herself
were not full and hearty,—were not such thorough-going love-letters
as lovers write to each other when they feel unlimited satisfaction
in the work. She excused him,—telling herself that he was
overworked, that with his double trade of legislator and lawyer he
could hardly be expected to write letters,—that men, in respect of
letter-writing, are not as women are, and the like; but still there
grew at her heart a little weed of care, which from week to week
spread its noxious, heavy-scented leaves, and robbed her of her
joyousness. To be loved by her lover, and to feel that she was
his,—to have a lover of her own to whom she could thoroughly devote
herself,—to be conscious that she was one of those happy women in
the world who find a mate worthy of worship as well as love,—this to
her was so great a joy that even the sadness of her present position
could not utterly depress her. From day to day she assured herself
that she did not doubt and would not doubt,—that there was no cause
for doubt;—that she would herself be base were she to admit any
shadow of suspicion. But yet his absence,—and the shortness of those
little notes, which came perhaps once a fortnight, did tell upon her
in opposition to her own convictions. Each note as it came was
answered,—instantly; but she would not write except when the notes
came. She would not seem to reproach him by writing oftener than he
wrote. When he had given her so much, and she had nothing but her
confidence to give in return, would she stint him in that? There can
be no love, she said, without confidence, and it was the pride of her
heart to love him.</p>
<p>The circumstances of her present life were desperately weary to her.
She could hardly understand why it was that Lady Linlithgow should
desire her presence. She was required to do nothing. She had no
duties to perform, and, as it seemed to her, was of no use to any
one. The countess would not even allow her to be of ordinary service
in the house. Lady Linlithgow, as she had said of herself, poked her
own fires, carved her own meat, lit her own candles, opened and shut
the doors for herself, wrote her own letters,—and did not even like
to have books read to her. She simply chose to have some one sitting
with her to whom she could speak and make little cross-grained,
sarcastic, and ill-natured remarks. There was no company at the house
in Brook Street, and when the countess herself went out, she went out
alone. Even when she had a cab to go shopping, or to make calls, she
rarely asked Lucy to go with her,—and was benevolent chiefly in
this,—that if Lucy chose to walk round the square, or as far as the
park, her ladyship's maid was allowed to accompany her for
protection. Poor Lucy often told herself that such a life would be
unbearable,—were it not for the supreme satisfaction she had in
remembering her lover. And then the arrangement had been made only
for six months. She did not feel quite assured of her fate at the end
of those six months, but she believed that there would come to her a
residence in a sort of outer garden to that sweet Elysium in which
she was to pass her life. The Elysium would be Frank's house; and the
outer garden was the deanery at Bobsborough.</p>
<p>Twice during the three months Lady Fawn, with two of the girls, came
to call upon her. On the first occasion she was unluckily out, taking
advantage of the protection of her ladyship's maid in getting a
little air. Lady Linlithgow had also been away, and Lady Fawn had
seen no one. Afterwards, both Lucy and her ladyship were found at
home, and Lady Fawn was full of graciousness and affection. "I
daresay you've got something to say to each other," said Lady
Linlithgow, "and I'll go away."</p>
<p>"Pray don't let us disturb you," said Lady Fawn.</p>
<p>"You'd only abuse me if I didn't," said Lady Linlithgow.</p>
<p>As soon as she was gone Lucy rushed into her friend's arms.</p>
<p>"It is so nice to see you again."</p>
<p>"Yes, my dear, isn't it? I did come before, you know."</p>
<p>"You have been so good to me! To see you again is like the violets
and primroses." She was crouching close to Lady Fawn, with her hand
in that of her friend Lydia. "I haven't a word to say against Lady
Linlithgow, but it is like winter here, after dear Richmond."</p>
<p>"Well;—we think we're prettier at Richmond," said Lady Fawn.</p>
<p>"There were such hundreds of things to do there," said Lucy. "After
all, what a comfort it is to have things to do."</p>
<p>"Why did you come away?" said Lydia.</p>
<p>"Oh, I was obliged. You mustn't scold me now that you have come to
see me."</p>
<p>There were a hundred things to be said about Fawn Court and the
children, and a hundred more things about Lady Linlithgow and Bruton
Street. Then, at last, Lady Fawn asked the one important question.
"And now, my dear, what about Mr. Greystock?"</p>
<p>"Oh,—I don't know;—nothing particular, Lady Fawn. It's just as it
was, and I am—quite satisfied."</p>
<p>"You see him sometimes?"</p>
<p>"No, never. I have not seen him since the last time he came down to
Richmond. Lady Linlithgow doesn't allow—followers." There was a
pleasant little spark of laughter in Lucy's eye as she said this,
which would have told to any bystander the whole story of the
affection which existed between her and Lady Fawn.</p>
<p>"That's very ill-natured," said Lydia.</p>
<p>"And he's a sort of cousin, too," said Lady Fawn.</p>
<p>"That's just the reason why," said Lucy, explaining. "Of course, Lady
Linlithgow thinks that her sister's nephew can do better than marry
her companion. It's a matter of course she should think so. What I am
most afraid of is that the dean and Mrs. Greystock should think so
too."</p>
<p>No doubt the dean and Mrs. Greystock would think so;—Lady Fawn was
very sure of that. Lady Fawn was one of the best women
breathing,—unselfish, motherly, affectionate, appreciative, and
never happy unless she was doing good to somebody. It was her nature
to be soft, and kind, and beneficent. But she knew very well that if
she had had a son,—a second son,—situated as was Frank Greystock,
she would not wish him to marry a girl without a penny, who was
forced to earn her bread by being a governess. The sacrifice on Mr.
Greystock's part would, in her estimation, be so great, that she did
not believe that it would be made. Woman-like, she regarded the man
as being so much more important than the woman, that she could not
think that Frank Greystock would devote himself simply to such a one
as Lucy Morris. Had Lady Fawn been asked which was the better
creature of the two, her late governess or the rising barrister who
had declared himself to be that governess's lover, she would have
said that no man could be better than Lucy. She knew Lucy's worth and
goodness so well that she was ready herself to do any act of
friendship on behalf of one so sweet and excellent. For herself and
her girls Lucy was a companion and friend in every way satisfactory.
But was it probable that a man of the world, such as was Frank
Greystock, a rising man, a member of Parliament, one who, as
everybody knew, was especially in want of money,—was it probable
that such a man as this would make her his wife just because she was
good, and worthy, and sweet-natured? No doubt the man had said that
he would do so,—and Lady Fawn's fears betrayed on her ladyship's
part a very bad opinion of men in general. It may seem to be a
paradox to assert that such bad opinion sprung from the high idea
which she entertained of the importance of men in general;—but it
was so. She had but one son, and of all her children he was the least
worthy; but he was more important to her than all her daughters.
Between her own girls and Lucy she hardly made any difference;—but
when her son had chosen to quarrel with Lucy it had been necessary to
send Lucy to eat her meals up-stairs. She could not believe that Mr.
Greystock should think so much of such a little girl as to marry her.
Mr. Greystock would no doubt behave very badly in not doing so;—but
then men do so often behave very badly! And at the bottom of her
heart she almost thought that they might be excused for doing so.
According to her view of things, a man out in the world had so many
things to think of, and was so very important, that he could hardly
be expected to act at all times with truth and sincerity.</p>
<p>Lucy had suggested that the dean and Mrs. Greystock would dislike the
marriage, and upon that hint Lady Fawn spoke. "Nothing is settled, I
suppose, as to where you are to go when the six months are over?"</p>
<p>"Nothing as yet, Lady Fawn."</p>
<p>"They haven't asked you to go to Bobsborough?"</p>
<p>Lucy would have given the world not to blush as she answered, but she
did blush. "Nothing is fixed, Lady Fawn."</p>
<p>"Something should be fixed, Lucy. It should be settled by this
time;—shouldn't it, dear? What will you do without a home, if at the
end of the six months Lady Linlithgow should say that she doesn't
want you any more?"</p>
<p>Lucy certainly did not look forward to a condition in which Lady
Linlithgow should be the arbitress of her destiny. The idea of
staying with the countess was almost as bad to her as that of finding
herself altogether homeless. She was still blushing, feeling herself
to be hot and embarrassed. But Lady Fawn sat, waiting for an answer.
To Lucy there was only one answer possible. "I will ask Mr. Greystock
what I am to do." Lady Fawn shook her head. "You don't believe in Mr.
Greystock, Lady Fawn; but I do."</p>
<p>"My darling girl," said her ladyship, making the special speech for
the sake of making which she had travelled up from Richmond,—"it is
not exactly a question of belief, but one of common prudence. No girl
should allow herself to depend on a man before she is married to him.
By doing so she will be apt to lose even his respect."</p>
<p>"I didn't mean for money," said Lucy, hotter than ever, with her eyes
full of tears.</p>
<p>"She should not be in any respect at his disposal till he has bound
himself to her at the altar. You may believe me, Lucy, when I tell
you so. It is only because I love you so that I say so."</p>
<p>"I know that, Lady Fawn."</p>
<p>"When your time here is over, just put up your things and come back
to Richmond. You need fear nothing with us. Frederic quite liked your
way of parting with him at last, and all that little affair is
forgotten. At Fawn Court you'll be safe;—and you shall be happy,
too, if we can make you happy. It's the proper place for you."</p>
<p>"Of course you'll come," said Diana Fawn.</p>
<p>"You'll be the worst little thing in the world if you don't," said
Lydia. "We don't know what to do without you. Do we, mamma?"</p>
<p>"Lucy will please us all by coming back to her old home," said Lady
Fawn. The tears were now streaming down Lucy's face, so that she was
hardly able to say a word in answer to all this kindness. And she did
not know what word to say. Were she to accept the offer made to her,
and acknowledge that she could do nothing better than creep back
under her old friend's wing,—would she not thereby be showing that
she doubted her lover? And yet she could not go to the dean's house
unless the dean and his wife were pleased to take her; and,
suspecting as she did, that they would not be pleased, would it
become her to throw upon her lover the burthen of finding for her a
home with people who did not want her? Had she been welcome at
Bobsborough, Mrs. Greystock would surely have so told her before
this. "You needn't say a word, my dear," said Lady Fawn. "You'll
come, and there's an end of it."</p>
<p>"But you don't want me any more," said Lucy, from amidst her sobs.</p>
<p>"That's just all that you know about it," said Lydia. "We do want
you,—more than anything."</p>
<p>"I wonder whether I may come in now," said Lady Linlithgow, entering
the room. As it was the countess's own drawing-room, as it was now
mid-winter, and as the fire in the dining-room had been allowed, as
was usual, to sink almost to two hot coals, the request was not
unreasonable. Lady Fawn was profuse in her thanks, and immediately
began to account for Lucy's tears, pleading their dear friendship and
their long absence, and poor Lucy's emotional state of mind. Then she
took her leave, and Lucy, as soon as she had been kissed by her
friends outside the drawing-room door, took herself to her bedroom,
and finished her tears in the cold.</p>
<p>"Have you heard the news?" said Lady Linlithgow to her companion
about a month after this. Lady Linlithgow had been out, and asked the
question immediately on her return. Lucy, of course, had heard no
news. "Lizzie Eustace has just come back to London, and has had all
her jewels stolen on the road."</p>
<p>"The diamonds?" asked Lucy, with amaze.</p>
<p>"Yes,—the Eustace diamonds! And they didn't belong to her any more
than they did to you. They've been taken, anyway; and from what I
hear I shouldn't be at all surprised if she had arranged the whole
matter herself."</p>
<p>"Arranged that they should be stolen?"</p>
<p>"Just that, my dear. It would be the very thing for Lizzie Eustace to
do. She's clever enough for anything."</p>
<p>"But, Lady Linlithgow—"</p>
<p>"I know all about that. Of course, it would be very wicked, and if it
were found out she'd be put in the dock and tried for her life. It is
just what I expect she'll come to some of these days. She has gone
and got up a friendship with some disreputable people, and was
travelling with them. There was a man who calls himself Lord George
de Bruce Carruthers. I know him, and can remember when he was
errand-boy to a disreputable lawyer at Aberdeen." This assertion was
a falsehood on the part of the countess; Lord George had never been
an errand-boy, and the Aberdeen lawyer,—as provincial Scotch lawyers
go,—had been by no means disreputable. "I'm told that the police
think that he has got them."</p>
<p>"How very dreadful!"</p>
<p>"Yes;—it's dreadful enough. At any rate, men got into Lizzie's room
at night and took away the iron box and diamonds and all. It may be
she was asleep at the time;—but she's one of those who pretty nearly
always sleep with one eye open."</p>
<p>"She can't be so bad as that, Lady Linlithgow."</p>
<p>"Perhaps not. We shall see. They had just begun a lawsuit about the
diamonds,—to get them back. And then all at once,—they're stolen.
It looks what the men call—fishy. I'm told that all the police in
London are up about it."</p>
<p>On the very next day who should come to Brook Street, but Lizzie
Eustace herself. She and her aunt had quarrelled, and they hated each
other;—but the old woman had called upon Lizzie, advising her, as
the reader will perhaps remember, to give up the diamonds, and now
Lizzie returned the visit. "So you're here, installed in poor
Macnulty's place," began Lizzie to her old friend, the countess at
the moment being out of the room.</p>
<p>"I am staying with your aunt for a few months,—as her companion. Is
it true, Lizzie, that all your diamonds have been stolen?" Lizzie
gave an account of the robbery, true in every respect, except in
regard to the contents of the box. Poor Lizzie had been wronged in
that matter by the countess, for the robbery had been quite genuine.
The man had opened her room and taken her box, and she had slept
through it all. And then the broken box had been found, and was in
the hands of the police, and was evidence of the fact.</p>
<p>"People seem to think it possible," said Lizzie, "that Mr. Camperdown
the lawyer arranged it all." As this suggestion was being made Lady
Linlithgow came in, and then Lizzie repeated the whole story of the
robbery. Though the aunt and niece were open and declared enemies,
the present circumstances were so peculiar and full of interest that
conversation, for a time almost amicable, took place between them.
"As the diamonds were so valuable, I thought it right, Aunt Susanna,
to come and tell you myself."</p>
<p>"It's very good of you, but I'd heard it already. I was telling Miss
Morris yesterday what very odd things there are being said about it."</p>
<p>"Weren't you very much frightened?" asked Lucy.</p>
<p>"You see, my child, I knew nothing about it till it was all over. The
man cut the bit out of the door in the most beautiful way, without my
ever hearing the least sound of the saw."</p>
<p>"And you that sleep so light," said the countess.</p>
<p>"They say that perhaps something was put into the wine at dinner to
make me sleep."</p>
<p>"Ah!" ejaculated the countess, who did not for a moment give up her
own erroneous suspicion;—"very likely."</p>
<p>"And they do say these people can do things without making the
slightest tittle of noise. At any rate, the box was gone."</p>
<p>"And the diamonds?" asked Lucy.</p>
<p>"Oh yes;—of course. And now there is such a fuss about it! The
police keep on coming to me almost every day."</p>
<p>"And what do the police think?" asked Lady Linlithgow. "I'm told that
they have their suspicions."</p>
<p>"No doubt they have their suspicions," said Lizzie.</p>
<p>"You travelled up with friends, I suppose."</p>
<p>"Oh yes,—with Lord George de Bruce Carruthers; and with Mrs.
Carbuncle,—who is my particular friend, and with Lucinda Roanoke,
who is just going to be married to Sir Griffin Tewett. We were quite
a large party."</p>
<p>"And Macnulty?"</p>
<p>"No. I left Miss Macnulty at Portray with my darling. They thought he
had better remain a little longer in Scotland."</p>
<p>"Ah, yes;—perhaps Lord George de Bruce Carruthers does not care for
babies. I can easily believe that. I wish Macnulty had been with
you."</p>
<p>"Why do you wish that?" said Lizzie, who already was beginning to
feel that the countess intended, as usual, to make herself
disagreeable.</p>
<p>"She's a stupid, dull, pig-headed creature; but one can believe what
she says."</p>
<p>"And don't you believe what I say?" demanded Lizzie.</p>
<p>"It's all true, no doubt, that the diamonds are gone."</p>
<p>"Indeed it is."</p>
<p>"But I don't know much about Lord George de Bruce Carruthers."</p>
<p>"He's the brother of a marquis, anyway," said Lizzie, who thought
that she might thus best answer the mother of a Scotch Earl.</p>
<p>"I remember when he was plain George Carruthers, running about the
streets of Aberdeen, and it was well with him when his shoes weren't
broken at the toes and down at heel. He earned his bread then, such
as it was;—nobody knows how he gets it now. Why does he call himself
de Bruce, I wonder?"</p>
<p>"Because his godfathers and godmothers gave him that name when he was
made a child of Christ, and an inheritor of the kingdom of heaven,"
said Lizzie, ever so pertly.</p>
<p>"I don't believe a bit of it."</p>
<p>"I wasn't there to see, Aunt Susanna; and therefore I can't swear to
it. That's his name in all the peerages, and I suppose they ought to
know."</p>
<p>"And what does Lord George de Bruce say about the diamonds?"</p>
<p>Now it had come to pass that Lady Eustace herself did not feel
altogether sure that Lord George had not had a hand in this robbery.
It would have been a trick worthy of a genuine Corsair to arrange and
carry out such a scheme for the appropriation of so rich a spoil. A
watch or a brooch would, of course, be beneath the notice of a good
genuine Corsair,—of a Corsair who was written down in the peerage as
a marquis's brother;—but diamonds worth ten thousand pounds are not
to be had every day. A Corsair must live, and if not by plunder rich
as that,—how then? If Lord George had concocted this little scheme,
he would naturally be ignorant of the true event of the robbery till
he should meet the humble executors of his design, and would, as
Lizzie thought, have remained unaware of the truth till his arrival
in London. That he had been ignorant of the truth during the journey
was evident to her. But they had now been three days in London,
during which she had seen him once. At that interview he had been
sullen and almost cross,—and had said next to nothing about the
robbery. He made but one remark about it. "I have told the chief man
here," he said, "that I shall be ready to give any evidence in my
power when called upon. Till then I shall take no further steps in
the matter. I have been asked questions that should not have been
asked." In saying this he had used a tone which prevented further
conversation on the subject, but Lizzie, as she thought of it all,
remembered his jocular remark, made in the railway carriage, as to
the suspicion which had already been expressed on the matter in
regard to himself. If he had been the perpetrator, and had then found
that he had only stolen the box, how wonderful would be the mystery!
"He hasn't got anything to say," replied Lizzie to the question of
the countess.</p>
<p>"And who is your Mrs. Carbuncle?" asked the old woman.</p>
<p>"A particular friend of mine with whom I am staying at present. You
don't go about a great deal, Aunt Linlithgow, but surely you must
have met Mrs. Carbuncle."</p>
<p>"I'm an ignorant old woman, no doubt. My dear, I'm not at all
surprised at your losing your diamonds. The pity is that they weren't
your own."</p>
<p>"They were my own."</p>
<p>"The loss will fall on you, no doubt, because the Eustace people will
make you pay for them. You'll have to give up half your jointure for
your life. That's what it will come to. To think of your travelling
about with those things in a box!"</p>
<p>"They were my own, and I had a right to do what I liked with them.
Nobody accuses you of taking them."</p>
<p>"That's quite true. Nobody will accuse me. I suppose Lord George has
left England for the benefit of his health. It would not at all
surprise me if I were to hear that Mrs. Carbuncle had followed
him;—not in the least."</p>
<p>"You're just like yourself, Aunt Susanna," said Lizzie, getting up
and taking her leave. "Good-bye, Lucy,—I hope you're happy and
comfortable here. Do you ever see a certain friend of ours now?"</p>
<p>"If you mean Mr. Greystock, I haven't seen him since I left Fawn
Court," said Lucy, with dignity.</p>
<p>When Lizzie was gone, Lady Linlithgow spoke her mind freely about her
niece. "Lizzie Eustace won't come to any good. When I heard that she
was engaged to that prig, Lord Fawn, I had some hopes that she might
be kept out of harm. That's all over, of course. When he heard about
the necklace he wasn't going to put his neck into that scrape. But
now she's getting among such a set that nothing can save her. She has
taken to hunting, and rides about the country like a madwoman."</p>
<p>"A great many ladies hunt," said Lucy.</p>
<p>"And she's got hold of this Lord George, and of that horrid American
woman that nobody knows anything about. They've got the diamonds
between them, I don't doubt. I'll bet you sixpence that the police
find out all about it, and that there is some terrible scandal. The
diamonds were no more hers than they were mine, and she'll be made to
pay for them."</p>
<p>The necklace, the meanwhile, was still locked up in Lizzie's
desk,—with a patent Bramah key,—in Mrs. Carbuncle's house, and was
a terrible trouble to our unhappy friend.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />