<h2><SPAN name="IX"></SPAN>IX</h2>
<br/>
<p>When Miss Le Breton reached the hall, a footman was at the outer
door reciting Lady Henry's excuses as each fresh carriage drove up;
while in the inner vestibule, which was well screened from the view
of the street, was a group of men, still in their hats and
over-coats, talking and laughing in subdued voices.</p>
<p>Julie Le Breton came forward. The hats were removed, and the
tall, stooping form of Montresor advanced.</p>
<p>"Lady Henry is <i>so</i> sorry," said Julie, in a soft, lowered
voice. "But I am sure she would like me to give you her message and
to tell you how she is. She would not like her old friends to be
alarmed. Would you come in for a moment? There is a fire in the
library. Mr. Delafield, don't you think that would be best?... Will
you tell Hutton not to let in <i>anybody</i> else?"</p>
<p>She looked at him uncertainly, as though appealing to him, as a
relation of Lady Henry's, to take the lead.</p>
<p>"By all means," said that young man, after perhaps a moment's
hesitation, and throwing off his coat.</p>
<p>"Only <i>please</i> make no noise!" said Miss Le Breton, turning
to the group. "Lady Henry might be disturbed."</p>
<p>Every one came in, as it were, on tiptoe. In each face a sense
of the humor of the situation fought with the consciousness of its
dangers. As soon as Montresor saw the little Duchess by the fire,
he threw up his hands in relief.</p>
<p>"I breathe again," he said, greeting her with effusion.
"Duchess, where thou goest, I may go. But I feel like a boy robbing
a hen-roost. Let me introduce my friend, General Fergus. Take us
both, pray, under your protection!"</p>
<p>"On the contrary," said the Duchess, as she returned General
Fergus's bow, "you are both so magnificent that no one would dare
to protect you."</p>
<p>For they were both in uniform, and the General was resplendent
with stars and medals.</p>
<p>"We have been dining with royalty." said Montresor. "We want
some relaxation."</p>
<p>He put on his eye-glasses, looked round the room, and gently
rubbed his hands.</p>
<p>"How very agreeable this is! What a charming room! I never saw
it before. What are we doing here? Is it a party? Why shouldn't it
be? Meredith, have you introduced M. du Bartas to the Duchess? Ah,
I see--"</p>
<p>For Julie Le Breton was already conversing with the
distinguished Frenchman wearing the rosette of the Legion of Honor
in his button-hole, who had followed Dr. Meredith into the room. As
Montresor spoke, however, she came forward, and in a French which
was a joy to the ear, she presented M. du Bartas, a tall,
well-built Norman with a fair mustache, first to the Duchess and
then to Lord Lackington and Jacob.</p>
<p>"The director of the French Foreign Office," said Montresor, in
an aside to the Duchess. "He hates us like poison. But if you
haven't already asked him to dinner--I warned you last week he was
coming--pray do it at once!"</p>
<p>Meanwhile the Frenchman, his introductions over, looked
curiously round the room, studied its stately emptiness, the books
on the walls under a trellis-work, faintly gilt, the three fine
pictures; then his eyes passed to the tall and slender lady who had
addressed him in such perfect French, and to the little Duchess in
her flutter of lace and satin, the turn of her small neck, and the
blaze of her jewels. "These Englishwomen overdo their jewels," he
thought, with distaste. "But they overdo everything. That is a
handsome fellow, by-the-way, who was with <i>la petite
fée</i> when we arrived."</p>
<p>And his shrewd, small eyes travelled from Warkworth to the
Duchess, his mind the while instinctively assuming some hidden
relation between them.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Montresor was elaborately informing himself as to
Lady Henry.</p>
<p>"This is the first time for twenty years that I have not found
her on a Wednesday evening," he said, with a sudden touch of
feeling which became him. "At our age, the smallest break in the
old habit--"</p>
<p>He sighed, and then quickly threw off his depression.</p>
<p>"Nonsense! Next week she will be scolding us all with double
energy. Meanwhile, may we sit down, mademoiselle? Ten minutes? And,
upon my word, the very thing my soul was longing for--a cup of
coffee!"</p>
<p>For at the moment Hutton and two footmen entered with trays
containing tea and coffee, lemonade and cakes.</p>
<p>"Shut the door, Hutton, <i>please</i>," Mademoiselle Le Breton
implored, and the door was shut at once.</p>
<p>"We mustn't, <i>mustn't</i> make any noise!" she said, her
finger on her lip, looking first at Montresor and then at
Delafield. The group laughed, moved their spoons softly, and once
more lowered their voices.</p>
<p>But the coffee brought a spirit of festivity. Chairs were drawn
up. The blazing fire shone out upon a semicircle of people
representing just those elements of mingled intimacy and novelty
which go to make conversation. And in five minutes Mademoiselle Le
Breton was leading it as usual. A brilliant French book had
recently appeared dealing with certain points of the Egyptian
question in a manner so interesting, supple, and apparently
impartial that the attention of Europe had been won. Its author had
been formerly a prominent official of the French Foreign Office,
and was now somewhat out of favor with his countrymen. Julie put
some questions about him to M. du Bartas.</p>
<p>The Frenchman feeling himself among comrades worthy of his
steel, and secretly pricked by the presence of an English cabinet
minister, relinquished the half-disdainful reserve with which he
had entered, and took pains. He drew the man in question, <i>en
silhouette</i>, with a hostile touch so sure, an irony so light,
that his success was instant and great.</p>
<p>Lord Lackington woke up. Handsome, white-haired dreamer that he
was, he had been looking into the fire, half--smiling, more
occupied, in truth, with his own thoughts than with his companions.
Delafield had brought him in; he did not exactly know why he was
there, except that he liked Mademoiselle Le Breton, and often
wondered how the deuce Lady Henry had ever discovered such an
interesting and delightful person to fill such an uncomfortable
position. But this Frenchman challenged and excited him. He, too,
began to talk French, and soon the whole room was talking it, with
an advantage to Julie Le Breton which quickly made itself apparent.
In English she was a link, a social conjunction; she eased all
difficulties, she pieced all threads. But in French her tongue was
loosened, though never beyond the point of grace, the point of
delicate adjustment to the talkers round her.</p>
<p>So that presently, and by insensible gradations, she was the
queen of the room. The Duchess in ecstasy pinched Jacob Delafield's
wrist, and forgetting all that she ought to have remembered,
whispered, rapturously, in his ear, "Isn't she
enchanting--Julie--to-night?" That gentleman made no answer. The
Duchess, remembering, shrank back, and spoke no more, till Jacob
looked round upon her with a friendly smile which set her tongue
free again.</p>
<p>M. du Bartas, meanwhile, began to consider this lady in black
with more and more attention. The talk glided into a general
discussion of the Egyptian position. Those were the days before
Arabi, when elements of danger and of doubt abounded, and none knew
what a month might bring forth. With perfect tact Julie guided the
conversation, so that all difficulties, whether for the French
official or the English statesman, were avoided with a skill that
no one realized till each separate rock was safely passed.
Presently Montresor looked from her to Du Bartas with a grin. The
Frenchman's eyes were round with astonishment. Julie had been
saying the lightest but the wisest things; she had been touching
incidents and personalities known only to the initiated with a
restrained gayety which often broke down into a charming shyness,
which was ready to be scared away in a moment by a tone--too
serious or too polemical--which jarred with the general key of the
conversation, which never imposed itself, and was like the ripple
on a summer sea. But the summer sea has its depths, and this modest
gayety was the mark of an intimate and first-hand knowledge.</p>
<p>"Ah, I see," thought Montresor, amused. "P---- has been writing
to her, the little minx. He seems to have been telling her all the
secrets. I think I'll stop it. Even she mayn't quite understand
what should and shouldn't be said before this gentleman."</p>
<p>So he gave the conversation a turn, and Mademoiselle Le Breton
took the hint at once. She called others to the front--it was like
a change of dancers in the ballet--while she rested, no less
charming as a listener than as a talker, her black eyes turning
from one to another and radiant with the animation of success.</p>
<p>But one thing--at last--she had forgotten. She had forgotten to
impose any curb upon the voices round her. The Duchess and Lord
Lackington were sparring like a couple of children, and Montresor
broke in from time to time with his loud laugh and gruff throat
voice. Meredith, the Frenchman, Warkworth, and General Fergus were
discussing a grand review which had been held the day before.
Delafield had moved round to the back of Julie's chair, and she was
talking to him, while all the time her eyes were on General Fergus
and her brain was puzzling as to how she was to secure the five
minutes' talk with him she wanted. He was one of the intimates of
the Commander-in-Chief. She herself had suggested to Montresor, of
course in Lady Henry's name, that he should be brought to Bruton
Street some Wednesday evening.</p>
<p>Presently there was a little shifting of groups. Julie saw that
Montresor and Captain Warkworth were together by the fireplace,
that the young man with his hands held out to the blaze and his
back to her was talking eagerly, while Montresor, looking outward
into the room, his great black head bent a little towards his
companion, was putting sharp little questions from time to time,
with as few words as might be. Julie understood that an important
conversation was going on--that Montresor, whose mind various
friends of hers had been endeavoring to make up for him, was now
perhaps engaged in making it up for himself.</p>
<p>With a quickened pulse she turned to find General Fergus beside
her. What a frank and soldierly countenance!--a little roughly cut,
with a strong mouth slightly underhung, and a dogged chin, the
whole lit by eyes that were the chosen homes of truth, humanity,
and will. Presently she discovered, as they drew their chairs a
little back from the circle, that she, too, was to be encouraged to
talk about Warkworth. The General was, of course, intimately
'acquainted with his professional record; but there were certain
additional Indian opinions--a few incidents in the young man's
earlier career, including, especially, a shooting expedition of
much daring in the very district to which the important Mokembe
mission was now to be addressed, together with some quotations from
private letters of her own, or Lady Henry's, which Julie, with her
usual skill, was able to slip into his ear, all on the assumption,
delicately maintained, that she was merely talking of a friend of
Lady Henry's, as Lady Henry herself would have talked, to much
better effect, had she been present.</p>
<p>The General gave her a grave and friendly attention. Few men had
done sterner or more daring feats in the field. Yet here he sat,
relaxed, courteous, kind, trusting his companions simply, as it was
his instinct to trust all women. Julie's heart beat fast. What an
exciting, what an important evening!...</p>
<p>Suddenly there was a voice in her ear.</p>
<p>"Do you know, I think we ought to clear out. It must be close on
midnight."</p>
<p>She looked up, startled, to see Jacob Delafield. His
expression--of doubt or discomfort--recalled her at once to the
realities of her own situation.</p>
<p>But before she could reply, a sound struck on her ear. She
sprang to her feet.</p>
<p>"What was that?" she said.</p>
<p>A voice was heard in the hall.</p>
<p>Julie Le Breton caught the chair behind her, and Delafield saw
her turn pale. But before she or he could speak again, the door of
the library was thrown open.</p>
<p>"Good Heavens!" said Montresor, springing to his feet. "Lady
Henry!"</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>M. du Bartas lifted astonished eyes. On the threshold of the
room stood an old lady, leaning heavily on two sticks. She was
deathly pale, and her fierce eyes blazed upon the scene before her.
Within the bright, fire-lit room the social comedy was being played
at its best; but here surely was Tragedy--or Fate. Who was she?
What did it mean?</p>
<p>The Duchess rushed to her, and fell, of course, upon the one
thing she should not have said.</p>
<p>"Oh, Aunt Flora, dear Aunt Flora! But we thought you were too
ill to come down!"</p>
<p>"So I perceive," said Lady Henry, putting her aside. "So you,
and this lady"--she pointed a shaking finger at Julie--"have held
my reception for me. I am enormously obliged. You have also"--she
looked at the coffee-cups--"provided my guests with refreshment. I
thank you. I trust my servants have given you satisfaction.</p>
<p>"Gentlemen"--she turned to the rest of the company, who stood
stupefied--"I fear I cannot ask you to remain with me longer. The
hour is late, and I am--as you see--indisposed. But I trust, on
some future occasion, I may have the honor--"</p>
<p>She looked round upon them, challenging and defying them
all.</p>
<p>Montresor went up to her.</p>
<p>"My dear old friend, let me introduce to you M. du Bartas, of
the French Foreign Office."</p>
<p>At this appeal to her English hospitality and her social
chivalry, Lady Henry looked grimly at the Frenchman.</p>
<p>"M. du Bartas, I am charmed to make your acquaintance. With your
leave, I will pursue it when I am better able to profit by it.
To-morrow I will write to you to propose another meeting--should my
health allow."</p>
<p>"Enchanté, madame," murmured the Frenchman, more
embarrassed than he had ever been in his life. "Permettez--moi de
vous faire mes plus sincères excuses."</p>
<p>"Not at all, monsieur, you owe me none."</p>
<p>Montresor again approached her.</p>
<p>"Let me tell you," he said, imploringly, "how this has
happened--how innocent we all are--"</p>
<p>"Another time, if you please," she said, with a most cutting
calm. "As I said before, it is late. If I had been equal to
entertaining you"--she looked round upon them all--"I should not
have told my butler to make my excuses. As it is, I must beg you to
allow me to bid you good-night. Jacob, will you kindly get the
Duchess her cloak? Good-night. Good-night. As you see"--she pointed
to the sticks which supported her--"I have no hands to-night. My
infirmities have need of them."</p>
<p>Montresor approached her again, in real and deep distress.</p>
<p>"Dear Lady Henry--"</p>
<p>"Go!" she said, under her breath, looking him in the eyes, and
he turned and went without a word. So did the Duchess, whimpering,
her hand in Delafield's arm. As she passed Julie, who stood as
though turned to stone, she made a little swaying movement towards
her.</p>
<p>"Dear Julie!" she cried, imploringly.</p>
<p>But Lady Henry turned.</p>
<p>"You will have every opportunity to-morrow," she said. "As far
as I am concerned, Miss Le Breton will have no engagements."</p>
<p>Lord Lackington quietly said, "Good-night, Lady Henry," and,
without offering to shake hands, walked past her. As he came to the
spot where Julie Le Breton stood, that lady made a sudden,
impetuous movement towards him. Strange words were on her lips, a
strange expression in her eyes.</p>
<p>"<i>You</i> must help me," she said, brokenly. "It is my
right!"</p>
<p>Was that what she said? Lord Lackington looked at her in
astonishment. He did not see that Lady Henry was watching them with
eagerness, leaning heavily on her sticks, her lips parted in a keen
expectancy.</p>
<p>Then Julie withdrew.</p>
<p>"I beg your pardon," she said, hurriedly. "I beg your pardon.
Good-night."</p>
<p>Lord Lackington hesitated. His face took a puzzled expression.
Then he held out his hand, and she placed hers in it
mechanically.</p>
<p>"It will be all right," he whispered, kindly. "Lady Henry will
soon be herself again. Shall I tell the butler to call for some
one--her maid?"</p>
<p>Julie shook her head, and in another moment he, too, was gone.
Dr. Meredith and General Fergus stood beside her. The General had a
keen sense of humor, and as he said good-night to this unlawful
hostess, whose plight he understood no more than his own, his mouth
twitched with repressed laughter. But Dr. Meredith did not laugh.
He pressed Julie's hand in both of his. Looking behind him, he saw
that Jacob Delafield, who had just returned from the hall, was
endeavoring to appease Lady Henry. He bent towards Julie.</p>
<p>"Don't deceive yourself," he said, quickly, in a low voice;
"this is the end. Remember my letter. Let me hear to-morrow."</p>
<p>As Dr. Meredith left the room, Julie lifted her eyes. Only Jacob
Delafield and Lady Henry were left.</p>
<p>Harry Warkworth, too, was gone--without a word? She looked round
her piteously. She could not remember that he had spoken--that he
had bade her farewell. A strange pang convulsed her. She scarcely
heard what Lady Henry was saying to Jacob Delafield. Yet the words
were emphatic enough.</p>
<p>"Much obliged to you, Jacob. But when I want your advice in my
household affairs, I will ask it. You and Evelyn Crowborough have
meddled a good deal too much in them already. Good-night. Hutton
will get you a cab."</p>
<p>And with a slight but imperious gesture, Lady Henry motioned
towards the door. Jacob hesitated, then quietly took his departure.
He threw Julie a look of anxious appeal as he went out. But she did
not see it; her troubled gaze was fixed on Lady Henry.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>That lady eyed her companion with composure, though by now even
the old lips were wholly blanched.</p>
<p>"There is really no need for any conversation between us, Miss
Le Breton," said the familiar voice. "But if there were, I am not
to-night, as you see, in a condition to say it. So--when you came
up to say good-night to me--you had determined on this adventure?
You had been good enough, I see, to rearrange my room--to give my
servants your orders."</p>
<p>Julie stood stonily erect. She made her dry lips answer as best
they could.</p>
<p>"We meant no harm," she said, coldly. "It all came about very
simply. A few people came in to inquire after you. I regret they
should have stayed talking so long."</p>
<p>Lady Henry smiled in contempt.</p>
<p>"You hardly show your usual ability by these remarks. The room
you stand in"--she glanced significantly at the lights and the
chairs--"gives you the lie. You had planned it all with Hutton, who
has become your tool, before you came to me. Don't contradict. It
distresses me to hear you. Well, now we part."</p>
<p>"Of course. Perhaps to-morrow you will allow me a few last
words?"</p>
<p>"I think not. This will cost me dear," said Lady Henry, her
white lips twitching. "Say them now, mademoiselle."</p>
<p>"You are suffering." Julie made an uncertain step forward. "You
ought to be in bed."</p>
<p>"That has nothing to do with it. What was your object
to-night?"</p>
<p>"I wished to see the Duchess--"</p>
<p>"It is not worth while to prevaricate. The Duchess was not your
first visitor."</p>
<p>Julie flushed.</p>
<p>"Captain Warkworth arrived first; that was a mere chance."</p>
<p>"It was to see him that you risked the whole affair. You have
used my house for your own intrigues."</p>
<p>Julie felt herself physically wavering under the lash of these
sentences. But with a great effort she walked towards the
fireplace, recovered her gloves and handkerchief, which were on the
mantel-piece, and then turned slowly to Lady Henry.</p>
<p>"I have done nothing in your service that I am ashamed of. On
the contrary, I have borne what no one else would have borne. I
have devoted myself to you and your interests, and you have
trampled upon and tortured me. For you I have been merely a
servant, and an inferior--"</p>
<p>Lady Henry nodded grimly.</p>
<p>"It is true," she said, interrupting, "I was not able to take
your romantic view of the office of companion."</p>
<p>"You need only have taken a human view," said Julie, in a voice
that pierced; "I was alone, poor--worse than motherless. You might
have done what you would with me. A little indulgence, and I should
have been your devoted slave. But you chose to humiliate and crush
me; and in return, to protect myself, I, in defending myself, have
been led, I admit it, into taking liberties. There is no way out of
it. I shall, of course, leave you to-morrow morning."</p>
<p>"Then at last we understand each other," said Lady Henry, with a
laugh. "Good-night, Miss Le Breton."</p>
<p>She moved heavily on her sticks. Julie stood aside to let her
pass. One of the sticks slipped a little on the polished floor.
Julie, with a cry, ran forward, but Lady Henry fiercely motioned
her aside.</p>
<p>"Don't touch me! Don't come near me!"</p>
<p>She paused a moment to recover breath and balance. Then she
resumed her difficult walk. Julie followed her.</p>
<p>"Kindly put out the electric lights," said Lady Henry, and Julie
obeyed.</p>
<p>They entered the hall in which one little light was burning.
Lady Henry, with great difficulty, and panting, began to pull
herself up the stairs.</p>
<p>"Oh, <i>do</i> let me help you!" said Julie, in an agony. "You
will kill yourself. Let me at least call Dixon."</p>
<p>"You will do nothing of the kind," said Lady Henry, indomitable,
though tortured by weakness and rheumatism. "Dixon is in my room,
where I bade her remain. You should have thought of the
consequences of this before you embarked upon it. If I were to die
in mounting these stairs, I would not let you help me."</p>
<p>"Oh!" cried Julie, as though she had been struck, and hid her
eyes with her hand.</p>
<p>Slowly, laboriously, Lady Henry dragged herself from step to
step. As she turned the corner of the staircase, and could
therefore be no longer seen from below, some one softly opened the
door of the dining-room and entered the hall.</p>
<p>Julie looked round her, startled. She saw Jacob Delafield, who
put his finger to his lip.</p>
<p>Moved by a sudden impulse, she bowed her head on the banister of
the stairs against which she was leaning and broke into stifled
sobs.</p>
<p>Jacob Delafield came up to her and took her hand. She felt his
own tremble, and yet its grasp was firm and supporting.</p>
<p>"Courage!" he said, bending over her. "Try not to give way. You
will want all your fortitude."</p>
<p>"Listen!" She gasped, trying vainly to control herself, and they
both listened to the sounds above them in the dark house--the
labored breath, the slow, painful step.</p>
<p>"Oh, she wouldn't let me help her. She said she would rather
die. Perhaps I have killed her. And I could--I could--yes, I
<i>could</i> have loved her."</p>
<p>She was in an anguish of feeling--of sharp and penetrating
remorse.</p>
<p>Jacob Delafield held her hand close in his, and when at last the
sounds had died in the distance he lifted it to his lips.</p>
<p>"You know that I am your friend and servant," he said, in a
queer, muffled voice. "You promised I should be."</p>
<p>She tried to withdraw her hand, but only feebly. Neither
physically nor mentally had she the strength to repulse him. If he
had taken her in his arms, she could hardly have resisted. But he
did not attempt to conquer more than her hand. He stood beside her,
letting her feel the whole mute, impetuous offer of his
manhood--thrown at her feet to do what she would with.</p>
<p>Presently, when once more she moved away, he said to her, in a
whisper:</p>
<p>"Go to the Duchess to-morrow morning, as soon as you can get
away. She told me to say that--Hutton gave me a little note from
her. Your home must be with her till we can all settle what is
best. You know very well you have devoted friends. But now
good-night. Try to sleep. Evelyn and I will do all we can with Lady
Henry."</p>
<p>Julie drew herself out of his hold. "Tell Evelyn I will come to
see her, at any rate, as soon as I can put my things together.
Good-night."</p>
<p>And she, too, dragged herself up-stairs sobbing, starting at
every shadow. All her nerve and daring were gone. The thought that
she must spend yet another night under the roof of this old woman
who hated her filled her with terror. When she reached her room she
locked her door and wept for hours in a forlorn and aching
misery.</p>
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