<h2><SPAN name="X"></SPAN>X</h2>
<br/>
<p>The Duchess was in her morning-room. On the rug, in marked and,
as it seemed to her plaintive eyes, brutal contrast with the
endless photographs of her babies and women friends which crowded
her mantel-piece, stood the Duke, much out of temper. He was a
powerfully built man, some twenty years older than his wife, with a
dark complexion, enlivened by ruddy cheeks and prominent, red lips.
His eyes were of a cold, clear gray; his hair very black, thick,
and wiry. An extremely vigorous person, more than adequately aware
of his own importance, tanned and seasoned by the life of his
class, by the yachting, hunting, and shooting in which his own
existence was largely spent, slow in perception, and of a sulky
temper--so one might have read him at first sight. But these
impressions only took you a certain way in judging the character of
the Duchess's husband.</p>
<p>As to the sulkiness, there could be no question on this
particular morning--though, indeed, his ill-humor deserved a more
positive and energetic name.</p>
<p>"You have got yourself and me," he was declaring, "into a most
disagreeable and unnecessary scrape. This letter of Lady
Henry's"--he held it up--"is one of the most annoying that I have
received for many a day. Lady Henry seems to me perfectly
justified. You <i>have</i> been behaving in a quite unwarrantable
way. And now you tell me that this woman, who is the cause of it
all, of whose conduct I thoroughly and entirely disapprove, is
coming to stay here, in my house, whether I like it or not, and you
expect me to be civil to her. If you persist, I shall go down to
Brackmoor till she is pleased to depart. I won't countenance the
thing at all, and, whatever you may do, <i>I</i> shall apologize to
Lady Henry."</p>
<p>"There's nothing to apologize for," cried the drooping Duchess,
plucking up a little spirit. "Nobody meant any harm. Why shouldn't
the old friends go in to ask after her? Hutton--that old butler
that has been with Aunt Flora for twenty years--<i>asked</i> us to
come in."</p>
<p>"Then he did what he had no business to do, and he deserves to
be dismissed at a day's notice. Why, Lady Henry tells me that it
was a regular party--that the room was all arranged for it by that
most audacious young woman--that the servants were ordered
about--that it lasted till nearly midnight, and that the noise you
all made positively woke Lady Henry out of her sleep. Really,
Evelyn, that you should have been mixed up in such an affair is
more unpalatable to me than I can find words to describe." And he
paced, fuming, up and down before her.</p>
<p>"Anybody else than Aunt Flora would have laughed," said the
Duchess, defiantly. "And I declare, Freddie, I won't be scolded in
such a tone. Besides, if you only knew--"</p>
<p>She threw back her head and looked at him, her cheeks flushed,
her lips quivering with a secret that, once out, would perhaps
silence him at once--would, at any rate, as children do when they
give a shake to their spillikins, open up a number of new chances
in the game.</p>
<p>"If I only knew what?"</p>
<p>The Duchess pulled at the hair of the little spitz on her lap
without replying.</p>
<p>"What is there to know that I don't know?" insisted the Duke.
"Something that makes the matter still worse, I suppose?"</p>
<p>"Well, that depends," said the Duchess, reflectively. A gleam of
mischief had slipped into her face, though for a moment the tears
had not been far off.</p>
<p>The Duke looked at his watch.</p>
<p>"Don't keep me here guessing riddles longer than you can help,"
he said, impatiently. "I have an appointment in the City at twelve,
and I want to discuss with you the letter that must be written to
Lady Henry."</p>
<p>"That's your affair," said the Duchess. "I haven't made up my
mind yet whether I mean to write at all. And as for the riddle,
Freddie, you've seen Miss Le Breton?"</p>
<p>"Once. I thought her a very pretentious person," said the Duke,
stiffly.</p>
<p>"I know--you didn't get on. But, Freddie, didn't she remind you
of somebody?"</p>
<p>The Duchess was growing excited. Suddenly she jumped up; the
little spitz rolled off her lap; she ran to her husband and took
him by the fronts of his coat.</p>
<p>"Freddie, you'll be very much astonished." And suddenly
releasing him, she began to search among the photographs on the
mantel-piece. "Freddie, you know who that is?" She held up a
picture.</p>
<p>"Of course I know. What on earth has that got to do with the
subject we have been discussing?"</p>
<p>"Well, it has a good deal to do with it," said the Duchess,
slowly. "That's my uncle, George Chantrey, isn't it, Lord
Lackington's second son, who married mamma's sister? Well--oh, you
won't like it, Freddie, but you've got to know--that's--Julie's
uncle, too!"</p>
<p>"What in the name of fortune do you mean?" said the Duke,
staring at her.</p>
<p>His wife again caught him by the coat, and, so imprisoning him,
she poured out her story very fast, very incoherently, and with a
very evident uncertainty as to what its effect might be.</p>
<p>And indeed the effect was by no means easy to determine. The
Duke was first incredulous, then bewildered by the very mixed facts
which she poured out upon him. He tried to cross-examine her <i>en
route</i>, but he gained little by that; she only shook him a
little, insisting the more vehemently on telling the story her own
way. At last their two impatiences had nearly come to a dead-lock.
But the Duke managed to free himself physically, and so regained a
little freedom of mind.</p>
<p>"Well, upon my word," he said, as he resumed his march up and
down--"upon my word!" Then, as he stood still before her, "You say
she is Marriott Dalrymple's daughter?"</p>
<p>"And Lord Lackington's granddaughter." said the Duchess, panting
a little from her exertions. "And, oh, what a blind bat you were
not to see it at once--from the likeness!"</p>
<p>"As if one had any right to infer such a thing from a likeness!"
said the Duke, angrily. "Really, Evelyn, your talk is most--most
unbecoming. It seems to me that Mademoiselle Le Breton has already
done you harm. All that you have told me, supposing it to be
true--oh, of course, I know you believe it to be true--only makes
me"--he stiffened his back--"the more determined to break off the
connection between her and you. A woman of such antecedents is not
a fit companion for my wife, independently of the fact that she
seems to be, in herself, an intriguing and dangerous
character."</p>
<p>"How could she help her antecedents?" cried the Duchess.</p>
<p>"I didn't say she could help them. But if they are what you say,
she ought--well, she ought to be all the more careful to live in a
modest and retired way, instead of, as I understand, making herself
the rival of Lady Henry. I never heard anything so
preposterous--so--so indecent! She shows no proper sense, and, as
for you, I deeply regret you should have been brought into any
contact with such a disgraceful story."</p>
<p>"Freddie!" The Duchess went into a helpless, half-hysterical fit
of laughter.</p>
<p>But the Duke merely expanded, as it seemed, still further--to
his utmost height and bulk. "Oh, dear," thought the Duchess, in
despair, "now he is going to be like his mother!" Her strictly
Evangelical mother-in-law, with whom the Duke had made his bachelor
home for many years, had been the scourge of her early married
life; and though for Freddie's sake she had shed a few tears over
her death, eighteen months before this date, the tears--as indeed
the Duke had thought at the time--had been only too quickly
dried.</p>
<p>There could be no question about it, the Duke was painfully like
his mother as he replied:</p>
<p>"I fear that your education, Evelyn, has led you to take such
things far more lightly than you ought. I am old-fashioned.
Illegitimacy with me <i>does</i> carry a stigma, and the sins of
the fathers <i>are</i> visited upon the children. At any rate, we
who occupy a prominent social place have no right to do anything
which may lead others to think lightly of God's law. I am sorry to
speak plainly, Evelyn. I dare say you don't like these sentiments,
but you know, at least, that I am quite honest in expressing
them."</p>
<p>The Duke turned to her, not without dignity. He was and had been
from his boyhood a person of irreproachable morals--earnest and
religious according to his lights, a good son, husband, and father.
His wife looked at him with mingled feelings.</p>
<p>"Well, all I know is," she said, passionately beating her little
foot on the carpet before her, "that, by all accounts, the only
thing to do with Colonel Delaney was to run away from him."</p>
<p>The Duke shrugged his shoulders.</p>
<p>"You don't expect me to be much moved by a remark of that kind?
As to this lady, your story does not affect me in her favor in the
smallest degree. She has had her education; Lord Lackington gives
her one hundred pounds a year; if she is a self-respecting woman
she will look after herself. I <i>don't</i> want to have her here,
and I beg you won't invite her. A couple of nights, perhaps--I
don't mind that--but not for longer."</p>
<p>"Oh, as to that, you may be very sure she won't stay here unless
you're very particularly nice to her. There'll be plenty of people
glad--enchanted--to have her! I don't care about that, but what I
<i>do</i> want is"--the Duchess looked up with calm audacity--"that
you should find her a house."</p>
<p>The Duke paused in his walk and surveyed his wife with
amazement.</p>
<p>"Evelyn, are you <i>quite</i> mad?"</p>
<p>"Not in the least. You have more houses than you know what to do
with, and a <i>great</i> deal more money than anybody in the world
ought to have. If they ever do set up the guillotine at Hyde Park
Corner, we shall be among the first--we ought to be!"</p>
<p>"What is the good of talking nonsense like this, Evelyn?" said
the Duke, once more consulting his watch. "Let's go back to the
subject of my letter to Lady Henry."</p>
<p>"It's most excellent sense!" cried the Duchess, springing up.
"You <i>have</i> more houses than you know what to do with; and you
have one house in particular--that little place at the back of
Cureton Street where Cousin Mary Leicester lived so long--which is
in your hands still, I know, for you told me so last week--which is
vacant and furnished--Cousin Mary left you the furniture, as if we
hadn't got enough!--and it would be the <i>very</i> thing for
Julie, if only you'd lend it to her till she can turn round."</p>
<p>The Duchess was now standing up, confronting her lord, her hands
grasping the chair behind her, her small form alive with eagerness
and the feminine determination to get her own way, by fair means or
foul.</p>
<p>"Cureton Street!" said the Duke, almost at the end of his
tether. "And how do you propose that this young woman is to
live--in Cureton Street, or anywhere else?"</p>
<p>"She means to write," said the Duchess, shortly. "Dr. Meredith
has promised her work."</p>
<p>"Sheer lunacy! In six months time you'd have to step in and pay
all her bills."</p>
<p>"I should like to see anybody dare to propose to Julie to pay
her bills!" cried the Duchess, with scorn. "You see, the great pity
is, Freddie, that you don't know anything at all about her. But
that house--wasn't it made out of a stable? It has got six rooms, I
know--three bedrooms up-stairs, and two sitting-rooms and a kitchen
below. With one good maid and a boy Julie could be perfectly
comfortable. She would earn four hundred pounds--Dr. Meredith has
promised her--she has one hundred pounds a year of her own. She
would pay no rent, of course. She would have just enough to live
on, poor, dear thing! And she would be able to gather her old
friends round her when she wanted them. A cup of tea and her
delightful conversation--that's all they'd ever want."</p>
<p>"Oh, go on--go on!" said the Duke, throwing himself exasperated
into an arm-chair; "the ease with which you dispose of my property
on behalf of a young woman who has caused me most acute annoyance,
who has embroiled us with a near relation for whom I have a very
particular respect! <i>Her friends</i>, indeed! Lady Henry's
friends, you mean. Poor Lady Henry tells me in this letter that her
circle will be completely scattered. This mischievous woman in
three years has destroyed what it has taken Lady Henry nearly
thirty to build up. Now look here, Evelyn"--the Duke sat up and
slapped his knee--"as to this Cureton Street plan, I will do
nothing of the kind. You may have Miss Le Breton here for two or
three nights if you like--I shall probably go down to the
country--and, of course, I have no objection to make if you wish to
help her find another situation--"</p>
<p>"Another situation!" cried the Duchess, beside herself.
"Freddie, you really are impossible! Do you understand that I
regard Julie Le Breton as <i>my relation</i>, whatever you may
say--that I love her dearly--that there are fifty people with money
and influence ready to help her if you won't, because she is one of
the most charming and distinguished women in London--that you ought
to be <i>proud</i> to do her a service--that I want you to have the
<i>honor</i> of it--there! And if you won't do this little favor
for me--when I ask and beg it of you--I'll make you remember it for
a very long time to come--you may be sure of that!"</p>
<p>And his wife turned upon him as an image of war, her fair hair
ruffling about her ears, her cheeks and eyes brilliant with
anger--and something more.</p>
<p>The Duke rose in silent ferocity and sought for some letters
which he had left on the mantel-piece.</p>
<p>"I had better leave you to come to your senses by yourself, and
as quickly as possible," he said, as he put them into his pockets.
"No good can come of any more discussion of this sort."</p>
<p>The Duchess said nothing. She looked out of the window busily,
and bit her lip. Her silence served her better than her speech, for
suddenly the Duke looked round, hesitated, threw down a book he
carried, walked up to her, and took her in his arms.</p>
<p>"You are a very foolish child," he declared, as he held her by
main force and kissed away her tears. "You make me lose my
temper--and waste my time--for nothing."</p>
<p>"Not at all," said the sobbing Duchess, trying to push herself
away, and denying him, as best she could, her soft, flushed face.
"You don't, or you won't, understand! I was--I was very fond of
Uncle George Chantrey. <i>He</i> would have helped Julie if he were
alive. And as for you, you're Lord Lackington's godson, and you're
always preaching what he's done for the army, and what the nation
owes him--and--and--"</p>
<p>"Does he know?" said the Duke, abruptly, marvelling at the
irrelevance of these remarks.</p>
<p>"No, not a word. Only six people in London know--Aunt Flora, Sir
Wilfrid Bury"--the Duke made an exclamation--"Mr. Montresor, Jacob,
you, and I."</p>
<p>"Jacob!" said the Duke. "What's he got to do with it?"</p>
<p>The Duchess suddenly saw her opportunity, and rushed upon
it.</p>
<p>"Only that he's madly in love with her, that's all. And, to my
knowledge, she has refused him both last year and this. Of course,
naturally, if you won't do anything to help her, she'll probably
marry him--simply as a way out."</p>
<p>"Well, of all the extraordinary affairs!"</p>
<p>The Duke released her, and stood bewildered. The Duchess watched
him in some excitement. He was about to speak, when there was a
sound in the anteroom. They moved hastily apart. The door was
thrown open, and the footman announced, "Miss Le Breton."</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Julie Le Breton entered, and stood a moment on the threshold,
looking, not in embarrassment, but with a certain hesitation, at
the two persons whose conversation she had disturbed. She was pale
with sleeplessness; her look was sad and weary. But never had she
been more composed, more elegant. Her closely fitting black cloth
dress; her strangely expressive face, framed by a large hat, very
simple, but worn as only the woman of fashion knows how; her
miraculous yet most graceful slenderness; the delicacy of her
hands; the natural dignity of her movements--these things produced
an immediate, though, no doubt, conflicting impression upon the
gentleman who had just been denouncing her. He bowed, with an
involuntary deference which he had not at all meant to show to Lady
Henry's insubordinate companion, and then stood frowning.</p>
<p>But the Duchess ran forward, and, quite heedless of her husband,
threw herself into her friend's arms.</p>
<p>"Oh, Julie, is there anything left of you? I hardly slept a wink
for thinking of you. What did that old--oh, I forgot--do you know
my husband? Freddie, this is my <i>great</i> friend, Miss Le
Breton."</p>
<p>The Duke bowed again, silently. Julie looked at him, and then,
still holding the Duchess by the hand, she approached him, a pair
of very fine and pleading eyes fixed upon his face.</p>
<p>"You have probably heard from Lady Henry, have you not?" she
said, addressing him. "In a note I had from her this morning she
told me she had written to you. I could not help coming to-day,
because Evelyn has been so kind. But--is it your wish that I should
come here?"</p>
<p>The Christian name slipped out unawares, and the Duke winced at
it. The likeness to Lord Lackington--it was certainly astonishing.
There ran through his mind the memory of a visit paid long ago to
his early home by Lord Lackington and two daughters, Rose and
Blanche. He, the Duke, had then been a boy home from school. The
two girls, one five or six years older than the other, had been the
life and charm of the party. He remembered hunting with Lady
Rose.</p>
<p>But the confusion in his mind had somehow to be mastered, and he
made an effort.</p>
<p>"I shall be glad if my wife is able to be of any assistance to
you, Miss Le Breton," he said, coldly; "but it would not be honest
if I were to conceal my opinion--so far as I have been able to form
it--that Lady Henry has great and just cause of complaint."</p>
<p>"You are quite right--quite right," said Julie, almost with
eagerness. "She has, indeed."</p>
<p>The Duke was taken by surprise. Imperious as he was, and
stiffened by a good many of those petty prides which the spoiled
children of the world escape so hardly, he found himself
hesitating--groping for his words.</p>
<p>The Duchess meanwhile drew Julie impulsively towards a
chair.</p>
<p>"Do sit down. You look so tired."</p>
<p>But Julie's gaze was still bent upon the Duke. She restrained
her friend's eager hand, and the Duke collected himself. <i>He</i>
brought a chair, and Julie seated herself.</p>
<p>"I am deeply, deeply distressed about Lady Henry," she said, in
a low voice, by which the Duke felt himself most unwillingly
penetrated. "I don't--oh no, indeed, I don't defend last night.
Only--my position has been very difficult lately. I wanted very
much to see the Duchess--and--it was natural--wasn't it?--that the
old friends should like to be personally informed about Lady
Henry's illness? But, of course, they stayed too long; it was my
fault--I ought to have prevented it."</p>
<p>She paused. This stern-looking man, who stood with his back to
the mantel-piece regarding her, Philistine though he was, had yet a
straight, disinterested air, from which she shrank a little.
Honestly, she would have liked to tell him the truth. But how could
she? She did her best, and her account certainly was no more untrue
than scores of narratives of social incident which issue every day
from lips the most respected and the most veracious. As for the
Duchess, she thought it the height of candor and generosity. The
only thing she could have wished, perhaps, in her inmost heart, was
that she had <i>not</i> found Julie alone with Harry Warkworth. But
her loyal lips would have suffered torments rather than accuse or
betray her friend.</p>
<p>The Duke meanwhile went through various phases of opinion as
Julie laid her story before him. Perhaps he was chiefly affected by
the tone of quiet independence--as from equal to equal--in which
she addressed him. His wife's cousin by marriage; the granddaughter
of an old and intimate friend of his own family; the daughter of a
man known at one time throughout Europe, and himself amply well
born--all these facts, warm, living, and still efficacious, stood,
as it were, behind this manner of hers, prompting and endorsing it.
But, good Heavens! was illegitimacy to be as legitimacy?--to carry
with it no stains and penalties? Was vice to be virtue, or as good?
The Duke rebelled.</p>
<p>"It is a most unfortunate affair, of that there can be no
doubt," he said, after a moment's silence, when Julie had brought
her story to an end; and then, more sternly, "I shall certainly
apologize for my wife's share in it."</p>
<p>"Lady Henry won't be angry with the Duchess long," said Julie Le
Breton. "As for me"--her voice sank--"my letter this morning was
returned to me unopened."</p>
<p>There was an uncomfortable pause; then Julie resumed, in another
tone:</p>
<p>"But what I am now chiefly anxious to discuss is, how can we
save Lady Henry from any further pain or annoyance? She once said
to me in a fit of anger that if I left her in consequence of a
quarrel, and any of her old friends sided with me, she would never
see them again."</p>
<p>"I know," said the Duke, sharply. "Her salon will break up. She
already foresees it."</p>
<p>"But why?--why?" cried Julie, in a most becoming distress.
"Somehow, we must prevent it. Unfortunately I must live in London.
I have the offer of work here--journalist's work which cannot be
done in the country or abroad. But I would do all I could to shield
Lady Henry."</p>
<p>"What about Mr. Montresor?" said the Duke, abruptly. Montresor
had been the well-known Châteaubriand to Lady Henry's Madame
Récamier for more than a generation.</p>
<p>Julie turned to him with eagerness.</p>
<p>"Mr. Montresor wrote to me early this morning. The letter
reached me at breakfast. In Mrs. Montresor's name and his own, he
asked me to stay with them till my plans developed. He--he was kind
enough to say he felt himself partly responsible for last
night."</p>
<p>"And you replied?" The Duke eyed her keenly.</p>
<p>Julie sighed and looked down.</p>
<p>"I begged him not to think any more of me in the matter, but to
write at once to Lady Henry. I hope he has done so."</p>
<p>"And so you refused--excuse these questions--Mrs. Montresor's
invitation?"</p>
<p>The working of the Duke's mind was revealed in his drawn and
puzzled brows.</p>
<p>"Certainly." The speaker looked at him with surprise. "Lady
Henry would never have forgiven that. It could not be thought of.
Lord Lackington also"--but her voice wavered.</p>
<p>"Yes?" said the Duchess, eagerly, throwing herself on a stool at
Julie's feet and looking up into her face.</p>
<p>"He, too, has written to me. He wants to help me. But--I can't
let him."</p>
<p>The words ended in a whisper. She leaned back in her chair, and
put her handkerchief to her eyes. It was very quietly done, and
very touching. The Duchess threw a lightning glance at her husband;
and then, possessing herself of one of Julie's hands, she kissed it
and murmured over it.</p>
<p>"Was there ever such a situation?" thought the Duke, much
shaken. "And she has already, if Evelyn is to be believed, refused
the chance--the practical certainty--of being Duchess of
Chudleigh!"</p>
<p>He was a man with whom a <i>gran rifiuto</i> of this kind
weighed heavily. His moral sense exacted such things rather of
other people than himself. But, when made, he could appreciate
them.</p>
<p>After a few turns up and down the room, he walked up to the two
women.</p>
<p>"Miss Le Breton," he said, in a far more hurried tone than was
usual to him, "I cannot approve--and Evelyn ought not to
approve--of much that has taken place during your residence with
Lady Henry. But I understand that your post was not an easy one,
and I recognize the forbearance of your present attitude. Evelyn is
much distressed about it all. On the understanding that you will do
what you can to soften this breach for Lady Henry, I shall be, glad
if you will allow me to come partially to your assistance."</p>
<p>Julie looked up gravely, her eyebrows lifting. The Duke found
himself reddening as he went on.</p>
<p>"I have a little house near here--a little furnished
house--Evelyn will explain to you. It happens to be vacant. If you
will accept a loan of it, say for six months"--the Duchess
frowned--"you will give me pleasure. I will explain my action to
Lady Henry, and endeavor to soften her feelings."</p>
<p>He paused. Miss Le Breton's face was grateful, touched with
emotion, but more than hesitating.</p>
<p>"You are very good. But I have no claim upon you at all. And I
can support myself."</p>
<p>A touch of haughtiness slipped into her manner as she gently
rose to her feet. "Thank God, I did not offer her money!" thought
the Duke, strangely perturbed.</p>
<p>"Julie, dear Julie," implored the Duchess. "It's such a tiny
little place, and it is quite musty for want of living in. Nobody
has set foot in it but the caretaker for two years, and it would be
really a kindness to us to go and live there--wouldn't it, Freddie?
And there's all the furniture just as it was, down to the bellows
and the snuffers. If you'd only use it and take care of it; Freddie
hasn't liked to sell it, because it's all old family stuff, and he
was very fond of Cousin Mary Leicester. Oh, do say yes, Julie! They
shall light the fires, and I'll send in a few sheets and things,
and you'll feel as though you'd been there for years. Do,
Julie!"</p>
<p>Julie shook her head.</p>
<p>"I came here," she said, in a voice that was still unsteady, "to
ask for advice, not favors. But it's very good of you."</p>
<p>And with trembling fingers she began to refasten her veil.</p>
<p>"Julie!--where are you going?" cried the Duchess "You're staying
here."</p>
<p>"Staying here?" said Julie, turning round upon her. "Do you
think I should be a burden upon you, or any one?"</p>
<p>"But, Julie, you told Jacob you would come."</p>
<p>"I have come. I wanted your sympathy, and your counsel. I wished
also to confess myself to the Duke, and to point out to him how
matters could be made easier for Lady Henry."</p>
<p>The penitent, yet dignified, sadness of her manner and voice
completed the discomfiture--the temporary discomfiture--of the
Duke.</p>
<p>"Miss Le Breton," he said, abruptly, coming to stand beside her,
"I remember your mother."</p>
<p>Julie's eyes filled. Her hand still held her veil, but it paused
in its task.</p>
<p>"I was a small school-boy when she stayed with us," resumed the
Duke. "She was a beautiful girl. She let me go out hunting with
her. She was very kind to me, and I thought her a kind of goddess.
When I first heard her story, years afterwards, it shocked me
awfully. For her sake, accept my offer. I don't think lightly of
such actions as your mother's--not at all. But I can't bear to
think of her daughter alone and friendless in London."</p>
<p>Yet even as he spoke he seemed to be listening to another
person. He did not himself understand the feelings which animated
him, nor the strength with which his recollections of Lady Rose had
suddenly invaded him.</p>
<p>Julie leaned her arms on the mantel-piece, and hid her face. She
had turned her back to them, and they saw that she was crying
softly.</p>
<p>The Duchess crept up to her and wound her arms round her.</p>
<p>"You will, Julie!--you will! Lady Henry has turned you
out-of-doors at a moment's notice. And it was a great deal my
fault. You <i>must</i> let us help you!"</p>
<p>Julie did not answer, but, partially disengaging herself, and
without looking at him, she held out her hand to the Duke.</p>
<p>He pressed it with a cordiality that amazed him.</p>
<p>"That's right--that's right. Now, Evelyn, I leave you to make
the arrangements. The keys shall be here this afternoon. Miss Le
Breton, of course, stays here till things are settled. As for me, I
must really be off to my meeting. One thing, Miss Le Breton--"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"I think," he said, gravely, "you ought to reveal yourself to
Lord Lackington."</p>
<p>She shrank.</p>
<p>"You'll let me take my own time for that?" was her appealing
reply.</p>
<p>"Very well--very well. We'll speak of it again."</p>
<p>And he hurried away. As he descended his own stairs astonishment
at what he had done rushed upon him and overwhelmed him.</p>
<p>"How on earth am I ever to explain the thing to Lady Henry?"</p>
<p>And as he went citywards in his cab, he felt much more guilty
than his wife had ever done. What <i>could</i> have made him behave
in this extraordinary, this preposterous way? A touch of foolish
romance--immoral romance--of which he was already ashamed? Or the
one bare fact that this woman had refused Jacob Delafield?</p>
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