<h2><SPAN name="XVII"></SPAN>XVII</h2>
<br/>
<p>The Duchess and Julie were in the large room of Burlington
House. They had paused before a magnificent Turner of the middle
period, hitherto unseen by the public, and the Duchess was reading
from the catalogue in Julie's ear.</p>
<p>She had found Julie alone in Heribert Street, surrounded by
books and proofs, endeavoring, as she reported, to finish a piece
of work for Dr. Meredith. Distressed by her friend's pale cheeks,
the Duchess had insisted on dragging her from the prison-house and
changing the current of her thoughts. Julie, laughing, hesitating,
indignant, had at last yielded--probably in order to avoid another
<i>tête-à-tête</i> and another scene with the
little, impetuous lady, and now the Duchess had her safe and was
endeavoring to amuse her.</p>
<p>But it was not easy. Julie, generally so instructed and
sympathetic, so well skilled in the difficult art of seeing
pictures with a friend, might, to-day, never have turned a phrase
upon a Constable or a Romney before. She tried, indeed, to turn
them as usual; but the Duchess, sharply critical and attentive
where her beloved Julie was concerned, perceived the difference
acutely! Alack, what languor, what fatigue! Evelyn became more and
more conscious of an inward consternation.</p>
<p>"But, thank goodness, he goes to-morrow--the villain! And when
that's over, it will be all right."</p>
<p>Julie, meanwhile, knew that she was observed, divined, and
pitied. Her pride revolted, but it could wring from her nothing
better than a passive resistance. She could prevent Evelyn from
expressing her thoughts; she could not so command her own bodily
frame that the Duchess should not think. Days of moral and mental
struggle, nights of waking, combined with the serious and sustained
effort of a new profession, had left their mark. There are,
moreover, certain wounds to self-love and self-respect which poison
the whole being.</p>
<p>"Julie! you <i>must</i> have a holiday!" cried the Duchess,
presently, as they sat down to rest.</p>
<p>Julie replied that she, Madame Bornier, and the child were going
to Bruges for a week.</p>
<p>"Oh, but that won't be comfortable enough! I'm sure I could
arrange something. Think of all our tiresome houses--eating their
heads off!"</p>
<p>Julie firmly refused. She was going to renew old friendships at
Bruges; she would be made much of; and the prospect was as pleasant
as any one need wish.</p>
<p>"Well, of course, if you have made up your mind. When do you
go?"</p>
<p>"In three or four days--just before the Easter rush. And
you?"</p>
<p>"Oh, we go to Scotland to fish. We must, of course, be killing
something. How long, darling, will you be away?"</p>
<p>"About ten days." Julie pressed the Duchess's little hand in
acknowledgment of the caressing word and look.</p>
<p>"By-the-way, didn't Lord Lackington invite you? Ah, there he
is!"</p>
<p>And suddenly, Lord Lackington, examining with fury a picture of
his own which some rascally critic had that morning pronounced to
be "Venetian school" and not the divine Giorgione himself, lifted
an angry countenance to find the Duchess and Julie beside him.</p>
<p>The start which passed through him betrayed itself. He could not
yet see Julie with composure. But when he had pressed her hand and
inquired after her health, he went back to his grievance, being
indeed rejoiced to have secured a pair of listeners.</p>
<p>"Really, the insolence of these fellows in the press! I shall
let the Academy know what I think of it. Not a rag of mine shall
they ever see here again. Ears and little fingers, indeed! Idiots
and owls!"</p>
<p>Julie smiled. But it had to be explained to the Duchess that a
wise man, half Italian, half German, had lately arisen who proposed
to judge the authenticity of a picture by its ears, assisted by any
peculiarities of treatment in the little fingers.</p>
<p>"What nonsense!" said the Duchess, with a yawn. "If I were an
artist, I should always draw them different ways."</p>
<p>"Well, not exactly," said Lord Lackington, who, as an artist
himself, was unfortunately debarred from statements of this
simplicity. "But the <i>ludicrous</i> way in which these fools
overdo their little discoveries!"</p>
<p>And he walked on, fuming, till the open and unmeasured
admiration of the two ladies for his great Rembrandt, the gem of
his collection, now occupying the place of honor in the large room
of the Academy, restored him to himself.</p>
<p>"Ah, even the biggest ass among them holds his tongue about
that!" he said, exultantly. "But, hallo! What does that call
itself?" He looked at a picture in front of him, then at the
catalogue, then at the Duchess.</p>
<p>"That picture is ours," said the Duchess. "Isn't it a dear? It's
a Leonardo da Vinci."</p>
<p>"Leonardo fiddlesticks!" cried Lord Lackington. "Leonardo,
indeed! What absurdity! Really, Duchess, you should tell
Crowborough to be more careful about his things. We mustn't give
handles to these fellows."</p>
<p>"What do you mean?" said the Duchess, offended. "If it isn't a
Leonardo, pray what is it?"</p>
<p>"Why, a bad school copy, of course!" said Lord Lackington,
hotly. "Look at the eyes"--he took out a pencil and pointed--"look
at the neck, look at the fingers!"</p>
<p>The Duchess pouted.</p>
<p>"Oh!" she said. "Then there is something in fingers!"</p>
<p>Lord Lackington's face suddenly relaxed. He broke into a shout
of laughter, <i>bon enfant</i> that he was; and the Duchess
laughed, too; but under cover of their merriment she, mindful of
quite other things, drew him a little farther away from Julie.</p>
<p>"I thought you had asked her to Nonpareil for Easter?" she said,
in his ear, with a motion of her pretty head towards Julie in the
distance.</p>
<p>"Yes, but, my dear lady, Blanche won't come home! She and Aileen
put it off, and put it off. Now she says they mean to spend May in
Switzerland--may perhaps be away the whole summer! I had counted on
them for Easter. I am dependent on Blanche for hostess. It is
really too bad of her. Everything has broken down, and William and
I (he named his youngest son) are going to the Uredales' for a
fortnight."</p>
<p>Lord Uredale, his eldest son, a sportsman and farmer, troubled
by none of his father's originalities, reigned over the second
family "place," in Herefordshire, beside the Wye.</p>
<p>"Has Aileen any love affairs yet?" said the Duchess, abruptly,
raising her face to his.</p>
<p>Lord Lackington looked surprised.</p>
<p>"Not that I know of. However, I dare say they wouldn't tell me.
I'm a sieve, I know. Have you heard of any? Tell me." He stooped to
her with roguish eagerness. "I like to steal a march on
Blanche."</p>
<p>So he knew nothing--while half their world was talking! It was
very characteristic, however. Except for his own hobbies, artistic,
medical, or military, Lord Lackington had walked through life as a
Johnny Head-in-Air, from his youth till now. His children had not
trusted him with their secrets, and he had never discovered them
for himself.</p>
<p>"Is there any likeness between Julie and Aileen?" whispered the
Duchess.</p>
<p>Lord Lackington started. Both turned their eyes towards Julie,
as she stood some ten yards away from them, in front of a refined
and mysterious profile of the cinque-cento--some lady, perhaps, of
the d'Este or Sforza families, attributed to Ambrogio da Predis. In
her soft, black dress, delicately folded and draped to hide her
excessive thinness, her small toque fitting closely over her wealth
of hair, her only ornaments a long and slender chain set with uncut
jewels which Lord Lackington had brought her the day before, and a
bunch of violets which the Duchess had just slipped into her belt,
she was as rare and delicate as the picture. But she turned her
face towards them, and Lord Lackington made a sudden
exclamation.</p>
<p>"No! Good Heavens, no! Aileen was a dancing-sprite when I saw
her last, and this poor girl!--Duchess, why does she look like
that? So sad, so bloodless!"</p>
<p>He turned upon her impetuously, his face frowning and
disturbed.</p>
<p>The Duchess sighed.</p>
<p>"You and I have just got to do all we can for her," she said,
relieved to see that Julie had wandered farther away, as though it
pleased her to be left to herself.</p>
<p>"But I would do anything--everything!" cried Lord Lackington.
"Of course, none of us can undo the past. But I offered yesterday
to make full provision for her. She has refused. She has the most
Quixotic notions, poor child!"</p>
<p>"No, let her earn her own living yet awhile. It will do her
good. But--shall I tell you secrets?" The Duchess looked at him,
knitting her small brows.</p>
<p>"Tell me what I ought to know--no more," he said, gravely, with
a dignity contrasting oddly with his school-boy curiosity in the
matter of little Aileen's lover.</p>
<p>The Duchess hesitated. Just in front of her was a picture of the
Venetian school representing St. George, Princess Saba, and the
dragon. The princess, a long and slender victim, with bowed head
and fettered hands, reminded her of Julie. The dragon--perfidious,
encroaching wretch!--he was easy enough of interpretation. But from
the blue distance, thank Heaven! spurs the champion. Oh, ye
heavenly powers, give him wings and strength! "St. George--St.
George to the rescue!"</p>
<p>"Well," she said, slowly, "I can tell you of some one who is
very devoted to Julie--some one worthy of her. Come with me."</p>
<p>And she took him away into the next room, still talking in his
ear.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>When they returned, Lord Lackington was radiant. With a new
eagerness he looked for Julie's distant figure amid the groups
scattered about the central room. The Duchess had sworn him to
secrecy, indeed; and he meant to be discretion itself. But--Jacob
Delafield! Yes, that, indeed, would be a solution. His pride was
acutely pleased; his affection--of which he already began to feel
no small store for this charming woman of his own blood, this poor
granddaughter <i>de la main gauche</i>--was strengthened and
stimulated. She was sad now and out of spirits, poor thing,
because, no doubt, of this horrid business with Lady Henry, to
whom, by-the-way, he had written his mind. But time would see to
that--time--gently and discreetly assisted by himself and the
Duchess. It was impossible that she should finally hold out against
such a good fellow--impossible, and most unreasonable. No. Rose's
daughter would be brought back safely to her mother's world and
class, and poor Rose's tragedy would at last work itself out for
good. How strange, romantic, and providential!</p>
<p>In such a mood did he now devote himself to Julie. He chattered
about the pictures; he gossiped about their owners; he excused
himself for the absence of "that gad-about Blanche"; he made her
promise him a Whitsuntide visit instead, and whispered in her ear,
"You shall have <i>her</i> room"; he paid her the most handsome and
gallant attentions, natural to the man of fashion <i>par
excellence</i>, mingled with something intimate, brusque,
capricious, which marked her his own, and of the family.
Seventy-five!--with that step, that carriage of the shoulders, that
vivacity! Ridiculous!</p>
<p>And Julie could not but respond.</p>
<p>Something stole into her heart that had never yet lodged there.
She must love the old man--she did. When he left her for the
Duchess her eyes followed him--her dark-rimmed, wistful eyes.</p>
<p>"I must be off," said Lord Lackington, presently, buttoning up
his coat. "This, ladies, has been dalliance. I now go to my duties.
Read me in the <i>Times</i> to-morrow. I shall make a rattling
speech. You see, I shall rub it in."</p>
<p>"Montresor?" said the Duchess.</p>
<p>Lord Lackington nodded. That afternoon he proposed to strew the
floor of the House of Lords with the <i>débris</i> of
Montresor's farcical reforms.</p>
<p>Suddenly he pulled himself up.</p>
<p>"Duchess, look round you, at those two in the doorway. Isn't
it--by George, it is!--Chudleigh and his boy!"</p>
<p>"Yes--yes, it is," said the Duchess, in some excitement. "Don't
recognize them. Don't speak to him. Jacob implored me not."</p>
<p>And she hurried her companions along till they were well out of
the track of the new-comers; then on the threshold of another room
she paused, and, touching Julie on the arm, said, in a whisper:</p>
<p>"Now look back. That's Jacob's Duke, and his poor, poor
boy!"</p>
<p>Julie threw a hurried glance towards the two figures; but that
glance impressed forever upon her memory a most tragic sight.</p>
<p>A man of middle height, sallow, and careworn, with jet-black
hair and beard, supported a sickly lad, apparently about seventeen,
who clung to his arm and coughed at intervals. The father moved as
though in a dream. He looked at the pictures with unseeing,
lustreless eyes, except when the boy asked him a question. Then he
would smile, stoop his head and answer, only to resume again
immediately his melancholy passivity. The boy, meanwhile, his lips
gently parted over his white teeth, his blue eyes wide open and
intent upon the pictures, his emaciated cheeks deeply flushed, wore
an aspect of patient suffering, of docile dependence, peculiarly
touching.</p>
<p>It was evident the father and son thought of none but each
other. From time to time the man would make the boy rest on one of
the seats in the middle of the room, and the boy would look up and
chatter to his companion standing before him. Then again they would
resume their walk, the boy leaning on his father. Clearly the poor
lad was marked for death; clearly, also, he was the desire of his
father's heart.</p>
<p>"The possessor, and the heir, of perhaps the finest houses and
the most magnificent estates in England," said Lord Lackington,
with a shrug of pity. "And Chudleigh would gladly give them all to
keep that boy alive."</p>
<p>Julie turned away. Strange thoughts had been passing and
repassing through her brain.</p>
<p>Then, with angry loathing, she flung her thoughts from her. What
did the Chudleigh inheritance matter to her? That night she said
good-bye to the man she loved. These three miserable, burning weeks
were done. Her heart, her life, would go with Warkworth to Africa
and the desert. If at the beginning of this period of passion--so
short in prospect, and, to look back upon, an eternity--she had
ever supposed that power or wealth could make her amends for the
loss of her lover, she was in no mood to calculate such
compensations to-day. Parting was too near, the anguish in her
veins too sharp.</p>
<p>"Jacob takes them to Paris to-morrow," said the Duchess to Lord
Lackington. "The Duke has heard of some new doctor."</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>An hour or two later, Sir Wilfrid Bury, in the smoking-room of
his club, took out a letter which he had that morning received from
Lady Henry Delafield and gave it a second reading.</p>
<p>/# "So I hear that mademoiselle's social prospects are not,
after all, so triumphant as both she and I imagined. I gave the
world credit for more fools than it seems actually to possess; and
she--well, I own I am a little puzzled. Has she taken leave of her
senses? I am told that she is constantly seen with this man; that
in spite of all denials there can be no doubt of his engagement to
the Moffatt girl; and that <i>en somme</i> she has done herself no
good by the whole affair. But, after all, poor soul, she is
disinterested. She stands to gain nothing, as I understand; and she
risks a good deal. From this comfortable distance, I really find
something touching in her behavior.</p>
<p>"She gives her first 'Wednesday,' I understand, to-morrow.
'Mademoiselle Le Breton at home!' I confess I am curious. By all
means go, and send me a full report. Mr. Montresor and his wife
will certainly be there. He and I have been corresponding, of
course. He wishes to persuade me that he feels himself in some way
responsible for mademoiselle's position, and for my dismissal of
her; that I ought to allow him in consequence full freedom of
action. I cannot see matters in the same light. But, as I tell him,
the change will be all to his advantage. He exchanges a fractious
old woman, always ready to tell him unpleasant truths, for one who
has made flattery her <i>métier</i>. If he wants quantity
she will give it him. Quality he can dispense with--as I have seen
for some time past.</p>
<p>"Lord Lackington has written me an impertinent letter. It seems
she has revealed herself, and <i>il s'en prend à moi</i>,
because I kept the secret from him, and because I have now dared to
dismiss his granddaughter. I am in the midst of a reply which
amuses me. He is to cast off his belongings as he pleases; but when
a lady of the Chantrey blood--no matter how she came by
it--condescends to enter a paid employment, legitimate or
illegitimate, she must be treated <i>en reine</i>, or Lord L. will
know the reason why. 'Here is one hundred pounds a year, and let me
hear no more of you,' he says to her at sixteen. Thirteen years
later I take her in, respect his wishes, and keep the secret. She
misbehaves herself, and I dismiss her. Where is the grievance? He
himself made her a <i>lectrice</i>, and now complains that she is
expected to do her duty in that line of life. He himself banished
her from the family, and now grumbles that I did not at once foist
her upon him. He would like to escape the odium of his former
action by blaming me; but I am not meek, and I shall make him
regret his letter.</p>
<p>"As for Jacob Delafield, don't trouble yourself to write me any
further news of him. He has insulted me lately in a way I shall not
soon forgive--nothing to do, however, with the lady who says she
refused him. Whether her report be veracious or no matters nothing
to me, any more than his chances of succeeding to the Captain's
place. He is one of the ingenious fools who despise the old ways of
ruining themselves, and in the end achieve it as well as the
commoner sort. He owes me a good deal, and at one time it pleased
me to imagine that he was capable both of affection and gratitude.
That is the worst of being a woman; we pass from one illusion to
another; love is only the beginning; there are a dozen to come
after.</p>
<p>"You will scold me for a bitter tongue. Well, my dear Wilfrid, I
am not gay here. There are too many women, too many church
services, and I see too much of my doctor. I pine for London, and I
don't see why I should have been driven out of it by an
<i>intrigante</i>.</p>
<p>"Write to me, my dear Wilfrid. I am not quite so bad as I paint
myself; say to yourself she has arthritis, she is sixty-five, and
her new companion reads aloud with a twang; then you will only
wonder at my moderation." #/</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid returned the letter to his pocket. That day, at
luncheon with Lady Hubert, he had had the curiosity to question
Susan Delafield, Jacob's fair-haired sister, as to the reasons for
her brother's quarrel with Lady Henry.</p>
<p>It appeared that being now in receipt of what seemed to himself,
at any rate, a large salary as his cousin's agent, he had thought
it his duty to save up and repay the sums which Lady Henry had
formerly spent upon his education.</p>
<p>His letter enclosing the money had reached that lady during the
first week of her stay at Torquay. It was, no doubt, couched in
terms less cordial or more formal than would have been the case
before Miss Le Breton's expulsion. "Not that he defends her
altogether," said Susan Delafield, who was herself inclined to side
with Lady Henry; "but as Lady Henry has refused to see him since,
it was not much good being friendly, was it?"</p>
<p>Anyway, the letter and its enclosure had completed a breach
already begun. Lady Henry had taken furious offence; the check had
been insultingly returned, and had now gone to swell the finances
of a London hospital.</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid was just reflecting that Jacob's honesty had better
have waited for a more propitious season, when, looking up, he saw
the War Minister beside him, in the act of searching for a
newspaper.</p>
<p>"Released?" said Bury, with a smile.</p>
<p>"Yes, thank Heaven. Lackington is, I believe, still pounding at
me in the House of Lords. But that amuses him and doesn't hurt
me."</p>
<p>"You'll carry your resolutions?"</p>
<p>"Oh, dear, yes, with no trouble at all," said the Minister,
almost with sulkiness, as he threw himself into a chair and looked
with distaste at the newspaper he had taken up.</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid surveyed him.</p>
<p>"We meet to-night?" he said, presently.</p>
<p>"You mean in Heribert Street? I suppose so," said Montresor,
without cordiality.</p>
<p>"I have just got a letter from her ladyship."</p>
<p>"Well, I hope it is more agreeable than those she writes to me.
A more unreasonable old woman--"</p>
<p>The tired Minister took up <i>Punch</i>, looked at a page, and
flung it down again. Then he said:</p>
<p>"Are you going?"</p>
<p>"I don't know. Lady Henry gives me leave, which makes me feel
myself a kind of spy."</p>
<p>"Oh, never mind. Come along. Mademoiselle Julie will want all
our support. I don't hear her as kindly spoken of just now as I
should wish."</p>
<p>"No. Lady Henry has more personal hold than we thought."</p>
<p>"And Mademoiselle Julie less tact. Why, in the name of goodness,
does she go and get herself talked about with the particular man
who is engaged to her little cousin? You know, by-the-way, that the
story of her parentage is leaking out fast? Most people seem to
know something about it."</p>
<p>"Well, that was bound to come. Will it do her good or harm?"</p>
<p>"Harm, for the present. A few people are straitlaced, and a good
many feel they have been taken in. But, anyway, this flirtation is
a mistake."</p>
<p>"Nobody really knows whether the man is engaged to the Moffatt
girl or no. The guardians have forbidden it."</p>
<p>"At any rate, everybody is kind enough to say so. It's a blunder
on Mademoiselle Julie's part. As to the man himself, of course,
there is nothing to say. He is a very clever fellow." Montresor
looked at his companion with a sudden stiffness, as though defying
contradiction. "He will do this piece of work that we have given
him to do extremely well."</p>
<p>"The Mokembe mission?"</p>
<p>Montresor nodded.</p>
<p>"He had very considerable claims, and was appointed entirely on
his military record. All the tales as to Mademoiselle's
influence--with me, for instance--that Lady Henry has been putting
into circulation are either absurd fiction or have only the very
smallest foundation in fact."</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid smiled amicably and diverted the conversation.</p>
<p>"Warkworth starts at once?"</p>
<p>"He goes to Paris to-morrow. I recommended him to see Pattison,
the Military Secretary there, who was in the expedition of five
years back."</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>"This hasn't gone as well as it ought," said Dr. Meredith, in
the ear of the Duchess.</p>
<p>They were standing inside the door of Julie's little
drawing-room. The Duchess, in a dazzling frock of white and silver,
which placed Clarisse among the divinities of her craft, looked
round her with a look of worry.</p>
<p>"What's the matter with the tiresome creatures? Why is everybody
going so early? And there are not half the people here who ought to
be here."</p>
<p>Meredith shrugged his shoulders.</p>
<p>"I saw you at Chatton House the other night," he said, in the
same tone.</p>
<p>"Well?" said the Duchess, sharply.</p>
<p>"It seemed to me there was something of a demonstration."</p>
<p>"Against Julie? Let them try it!" said the little lady, with
evasive defiance. "We shall be too strong for them."</p>
<p>"Lady Henry is putting her back into it. I confess I never
thought she would be either so venomous or so successful."</p>
<p>"Julie will come out all right."</p>
<p>"She would--triumphantly--if--"</p>
<p>The Duchess glanced at him uneasily.</p>
<p>"I believe you are overworking her. She looks skin and
bone."</p>
<p>Dr. Meredith shook his head.</p>
<p>"On the contrary, I have been holding her back. But it seems she
wants to earn a good deal of money."</p>
<p>"That's so absurd," cried the Duchess, "when there are people
only pining to give her some of theirs."</p>
<p>"No, no," said the journalist, brusquely. "She is quite right
there. Oh, it would be all right if she were herself. She would
make short work of Lady Henry. But, Mademoiselle Julie"--for she
glided past them, and he raised his voice--"sit down and rest
yourself. Don't take so much trouble."</p>
<p>She flung them a smile.</p>
<p>"Lord Lackington is going," and she hurried on.</p>
<p>Lord Lackington was standing in a group which contained Sir
Wilfrid Bury and Mr. Montresor.</p>
<p>"Well, good-bye, good-bye," he said, as she came up to him. "I
must go. I'm nearly asleep."</p>
<p>"Tired with abusing me?" said Montresor, nonchalantly, turning
round upon him.</p>
<p>"No, only with trying to make head or tail of you," said
Lackington, gayly. Then he stooped over Julie.</p>
<p>"Take care of yourself. Come back rosier--and
<i>fatter</i>."</p>
<p>"I'm perfectly well. Let me come with you."</p>
<p>"No, don't trouble yourself." For she had followed him into the
hall and found his coat for him. All the arrangements for her
little "evening" had been of the simplest. That had been a point of
pride with her. Madame Bornier and Thérèse dispensing
tea and coffee in the dining-room, one hired parlor-maid, and she
herself active and busy everywhere. Certain French models were in
her head, and memories of her mother's bare little salon in Bruges,
with its good talk, and its thinnest of thin refreshments--a few
cups of weak tea, or glasses of <i>eau sucrée</i>, with a
plate of <i>patisserie</i>.</p>
<p>The hired parlor-maid was whistling for a cab in the service of
some other departing guest; so Julie herself put Lord Lackington
into his coat, much to his discomfort.</p>
<p>"I don't think you ought to have come," she said to him, with
soft reproach. "Why did you have that fainting fit before
dinner?"</p>
<p>"I say! Who's been telling tales?"</p>
<p>"Sir Wilfrid Bury met your son, Mr. Chantrey, at dinner."</p>
<p>"Bill can never hold his tongue. Oh, it was nothing; not with
the proper treatment, mind you. Of course, if the allopaths were to
get their knives into me--but, thank God! I'm out of that
<i>galère</i>. Well, in a fortnight, isn't it? We shall both
be in town again. I don't like saying good-bye."</p>
<p>And he took both her hands in his.</p>
<p>"It all seems so strange to me still--so strange!" he
murmured.</p>
<p>"Next week I shall see mamma's grave," said Julie, under her
breath. "Shall I put some flowers there for you?"</p>
<p>The fine blue eyes above her wavered. He bent to her.</p>
<p>"Yes. And write to me. Come back soon. Oh, you'll see. Things
will all come right, perfectly right, in spite of Lady Henry."</p>
<p>Confidence, encouragement, a charming raillery, an enthusiastic
tenderness--all these beamed upon her from the old man's tone and
gesture. She was puzzled. But with another pressure of the hand he
was gone. She stood looking after him. And as the carriage drove
away, the sound of the wheels hurt her. It was the withdrawal of
something protecting--something more her own, when all was said,
than anything else which remained to her.</p>
<p>As she returned to the drawing-room, Dr. Meredith intercepted
her.</p>
<p>"You want me to send you some work to take abroad?" he said, in
a low voice. "I shall do nothing of the kind."</p>
<p>"Why?"</p>
<p>"Because you ought to have a complete holiday."</p>
<p>"Very well. Then I sha'n't be able to pay my way," she said,
with a tired smile.</p>
<p>"Remember the doctor's bills if you fall ill."</p>
<p>"Ill! I am never ill," she said, with scorn. Then she looked
round the room deliberately, and her gaze returned to her
companion. "I am not likely to be fatigued with society, am I?" she
added, in a voice that did not attempt to disguise the bitterness
within.</p>
<p>"My dear lady, you are hardly installed."</p>
<p>"I have been here a month--the critical month. Now was the
moment to stand by me, or throw me over--n'est-ce pas? This is my
first party, my house-warming. I gave a fortnight's notice; I asked
about sixty people, whom I knew <i>well</i>. Some did not answer at
all. Of the rest, half declined--rather curtly, in many instances.
And of those who accepted, not all are here. And, oh, how it
dragged!"</p>
<p>Meredith looked at her rather guiltily, not knowing what to say.
It was true the evening had dragged. In both their minds there rose
the memory of Lady Henry's "Wednesdays," the beautiful rooms, the
varied and brilliant company, the power and consideration which had
attended Lady Henry's companion.</p>
<p>"I suppose," said Julie, shrugging her shoulders, "I had been
thinking of the French <i>maîtresses de salon</i>, like a
fool; of Mademoiselle de l'Espinasse--or Madame Mohl--imagining
that people would come to <i>me</i> for a cup of tea and an
agreeable hour. But in England, it seems, people must be paid to
talk. Talk is a business affair--you give it for a
consideration."</p>
<p>"No, no! You'll build it up," said Meredith. In his heart of
hearts he said to himself that she had not been herself that night.
Her wonderful social instincts, her memory, her adroitness, had
somehow failed her. And from a hostess strained, conscious, and
only artificially gay, the little gathering had taken its note.</p>
<p>"You have the old guard, anyway," added the journalist, with a
smile, as he looked round the room. The Duchess, Delafield,
Montresor and his wife, General McGill, and three or four other old
<i>habitués</i> of the Bruton Street evenings were scattered
about the little drawing-room. General Fergus, too, was there--had
arrived early, and was staying late. His frank soldier's face, the
accent, cheerful, homely, careless, with which he threw off talk
full of marrow, talk only possible--for all its simplicity--to a
man whose life had been already closely mingled with the fortunes
of his country, had done something to bind Julie's poor little
party together. Her eye rested on him with gratitude. Then she
replied to Meredith.</p>
<p>"Mr. Montresor will scarcely come again."</p>
<p>"What do you mean? Ungrateful lady! Montresor! who has already
sacrificed Lady Henry and the habits of thirty years to your
<i>beaux yeux</i>!"</p>
<p>"That is what he will never forgive me," said Julie, sadly. "He
has satisfied his pride, and I--have lost a friend."</p>
<p>"Pessimist! Mrs. Montresor seemed to me most friendly."</p>
<p>Julie laughed.</p>
<p>"<i>She</i>, of course, is enchanted. Her husband has never been
her own till now. She married him, subject to Lady Henry's rights.
But all that she will soon forget--and my existence with it."</p>
<p>"I won't argue. It only makes you more stubborn," said Meredith.
"Ah, still they come!"</p>
<p>For the door opened to admit the tall figure of Major
Warkworth.</p>
<p>"Am I very late?" he said, with a surprised look as he glanced
at the thinly scattered room. Julie greeted him, and he excused
himself on the ground of a dinner which had begun just an hour
late, owing to the tardiness of a cabinet minister.</p>
<p>Meredith observed the young man with some attention, from the
dark corner in which Julie had left him. The gossip of the moment
had reached him also, but he had not paid much heed to it. It
seemed to him that no one knew anything first-hand of the Moffatt
affair. And for himself, he found it difficult to believe that
Julie Le Breton was any man's dupe.</p>
<p>She must marry, poor thing! Of course she must marry. Since it
had been plain to him that she would never listen to his own suit,
this great-hearted and clear-brained man had done his best to
stifle in himself all small or grasping impulses. But this
fellow--with his inferior temper and morale--alack! why are the
clever women such fools?</p>
<p>If only she had confided in him--her old and tried friend--he
thought he could have put things before her, so as to influence
without offending her. But he suffered--had always suffered--from
the jealous reserve which underlay her charm, her inborn tendency
to secretiveness and intrigue.</p>
<p>Now, as he watched her few words with Warkworth, it seemed to
him that he saw the signs of some hidden relation. How flushed she
was suddenly, and her eyes so bright!</p>
<p>He was not allowed much time or scope, however, for observation.
Warkworth took a turn round the room, chatted a little with this
person and that, then, on the plea that he was off to Paris early
on the following morning, approached his hostess again to take his
leave.</p>
<p>"Ah, yes, you start to-morrow," said Montresor, rising. "Well,
good luck to you--good luck to you."</p>
<p>General Fergus, too, advanced. The whole room, indeed, awoke to
the situation, and all the remaining guests grouped themselves
round the young soldier. Even the Duchess was thawed a little by
this actual moment of departure. After all, the man was going on
his country's service.</p>
<p>"No child's play, this mission, I can assure you," General
McGill had said to her. "Warkworth will want all the powers he
has--of mind or body."</p>
<p>The slim, young fellow, so boyishly elegant in his well-cut
evening-dress, received the ovation offered to him with an evident
pleasure which tried to hide itself in the usual English ways. He
had been very pale when he came in. But his cheek reddened as
Montresor grasped him by the hand, as the two generals bade him a
cordial godspeed, as Sir Wilfrid gave him a jesting message for the
British representative in Egypt, and as the ladies present accorded
him those flattering and admiring looks that woman keeps for
valor.</p>
<p>Julie counted for little in these farewells. She stood
<i>apart</i> and rather silent. "<i>They</i> have had their
good-bye," thought the Duchess, with a thrill she could not
help.</p>
<p>"Three days in Paris?" said Sir Wilfrid. "A fortnight to
Denga--and then how long before you start for the interior?"</p>
<p>"Oh, three weeks for collecting porters and supplies. They're
drilling the escort already. We should be off by the middle of
May."</p>
<p>"A bad month," said General Fergus, shrugging his shoulders.</p>
<p>"Unfortunately, affairs won't wait. But I am already stiff with
quinine," laughed Warkworth--"or I shall be by the time I get to
Denga. Good-bye--good-bye."</p>
<p>And in another moment he was gone. Miss Le Breton had given him
her hand and wished him "Bon voyage," like everybody else.</p>
<p>The party broke up. The Duchess kissed her Julie with peculiar
tenderness; Delafield pressed her hand, and his deep, kind eyes
gave her a lingering look, of which, however, she was quite
unconscious; Meredith renewed his half-irritable, half-affectionate
counsels of rest and recreation; Mrs. Montresor was conventionally
effusive; Montresor alone bade the mistress of the house a somewhat
cold and perfunctory farewell. Even Sir Wilfrid was a little
touched, he knew not why; he vowed to himself that his report to
Lady Henry on the morrow should contain no food for malice, and
inwardly he forgave Mademoiselle Julie the old romancings.</p>
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