Sitting in his high-backed chair, Luke Claridge seemed a part of its dignified severity. In the sparsely furnished room with its uncarpeted floor, its plain teak table, its high wainscoting and undecorated walls, the old man had the look of one who belonged to some ancient consistory, a judge whose piety would march with an austerity that would save a human soul by destroying the body, if need be.
A crisis had come, vaguely foreseen, sombrely eluded. A questioner was before him who, poor, unheeded, an ancient victim of vice, could yet wield a weapon whose sweep of wounds would be wide. Stern and masterful as he looked in his arid isolation, beneath all was a shaking anxiety.
He knew well what the old chair-maker had come to say, but, in the prologue of the struggle before him, he was unwittingly manoeuvring for position.
“Speak,” he added presently, as Soolsby fumbled in his great loose pockets, and drew forth a paper. “What has thee to say?”
Without a word, Soolsby handed over the paper, but the other would not take it.
“What is it?” he asked, his lips growing pale. “Read—if thee can read.”
The gibe in the last words made the colour leap into Soolsby’s face, and a fighting look came. He too had staved off this inevitable hour, had dreaded it, but now his courage shot up high.
“Doost think I have forgotten how to read since the day I put my hand to a writing you’ve hid so long from them it most concerns? Ay, I can read, and I can write, and I will prove that I can speak too before I’ve done.”
“Read—read,” rejoined the old man hoarsely, his hands tightly gripping the chair-arm.
“The fever caught him at Shendy—that is the place—”
“He is not dead—David is not dead?” came the sharp, pained interruption. The old man’s head strained forward, his eyes were misty and dazed.
Soolsby’s face showed no pity for the other’s anxiety; it had a kind of triumph in it. “Nay, he is living,” he answered. “He got well of the fever, and came to Cairo, but he’s off again into the desert. It’s the third time. You can’t be tempting Providence for ever. This paper here says it’s too big a job for one man—like throwing a good life away. Here in England is his place, it says. And so say I; and so I have come to say, and to hear you say so, too. What is he there? One man against a million. What put it in his head that he thinks he can do it?”
His voice became lower; he fixed his eyes meaningly on the other. “When a man’s life got a twist at the start, no wonder it flies off madlike to do the thing that isn’t to be done, and leave undone the thing that’s here for it to do. Doost think a straight line could come from the crooked line you drew for him?”
“He is safe—he is well and strong again?” asked the old man painfully. Suddenly he reached out a hand for the paper. “Let me read,” he said, in a voice scarce above a whisper.
He essayed to take the paper calmly, but it trembled in his hands. He spread it out and fumbled for his glasses, but could not find them, and he gazed helplessly at the page before him. Soolsby took the paper from him and read slowly:
“... Claridge Pasha has done good work in Egypt, but he is a generation too soon, it may be two or three too soon. We can but regard this fresh enterprise as a temptation to Fate to take from our race one of the most promising spirits and vital personalities which this generation has produced. It is a forlorn hope. Most Englishmen familiar with Claridge Pasha’s life and aims will ask—”
An exclamation broke from the old man. In the pause which followed he said: “It was none of my doing. He went to Egypt against my will.”
“Ay, so many a man’s said that’s not wanted to look his own acts straight in the face. If Our Man had been started different, if he’d started in the path where God A’mighty dropped him, and not in the path Luke Claridge chose, would he have been in Egypt to-day wearing out his life? He’s not making carpets there, he’s only beating them.”
The homely illustration drawn from the business in which he had been interested so many years went home to Claridge’s mind. He shrank back, and sat rigid, his brows drawing over the eyes, till they seemed sunk in caverns of the head. Suddenly Soolsby’s voice rose angrily. Luke Claridge seemed so remorseless and unyielding, so set in his vanity and self-will! Soolsby misread the rigid look in the face, the pale sternness. He did not know that there had suddenly come upon Luke Claridge the full consciousness of an agonising truth—that all he had done where David was concerned had been a mistake. The hard look, the sternness, were the signals of a soul challenging itself.
“Ay, you’ve had your own will,” cried Soolsby mercilessly. “You’ve said to God A’mighty that He wasn’t able to work out to a good end what He’d let happen; and so you’d do His work for Him. You kept the lad hid away from the people that belonged to him, you kept him out of his own, and let others take his birthright. You put a shame upon him, hiding who his father and his father’s people were, and you put a shame upon her that lies in the graveyard—as sweet a lass, as good, as ever lived on earth. Ay, a shame and a scandal! For your eyes were shut always to the sidelong looks, your ears never heard the things people said—‘A good-for-nothing ship-captain, a scamp and a ne’er-do-weel, one that had a lass at every port, and, maybe, wives too; one that none knew or ever had seen—a pirate maybe, or a slave-dealer, or a jail-bird, for all they knew! Married—oh yes, married right enough, but nothing else—not even a home. Just a ring on the finger, and then, beyond and away!’ Around her life that brought into the world our lad yonder you let a cloud draw down; and you let it draw round his, too, for he didn’t even bear his father’s name—much less knew who his father was—or live in his father’s home, or come by his own in the end. You gave the lad shame and scandal. Do you think, he didn’t feel it, was it much or little? He wasn’t walking in the sun, but—”
“Mercy! Mercy!” broke in the old man, his hand before his eyes. He was thinking of Mercy, his daughter, of the words she had said to him when she died, “Set him in the sun, father, where God can find him,” and her name now broke from his lips.
Soolsby misunderstood. “Ay, there’ll be mercy when right’s been done Our Man, and not till then. I’ve held my tongue for half a lifetime, but I’ll speak now and bring him back. Ay, he shall come back and take the place that is his, and all that belongs to him. That lordship yonder—let him go out into the world and make his place as the Egyptian did. He’s had his chance to help Our Man, and he has only hurt, not helped him. We’ve had enough of his second-best lordship and his ways.”
The old man’s face was painful in its stricken stillness now. He had regained control of himself, his brain had recovered greatly from its first suffusion of excitement.
“How does thee know my lord yonder has hurt and not helped him?” he asked in an even voice, his lips tightening, however. “How does thee know it surely?”
“From Kate Heaver, my lady’s maid. My lady’s illness—what was it? Because she would help Our Man, and, out of his hatred, yonder second son said that to her which no woman can bear that’s a true woman; and then, what with a chill and fever, she’s been yonder ailing these weeks past. She did what she could for him, and her husband did what he could against him.”
The old man settled back in his chair again. “Thee has kept silent all these years? Thee has never told any that lives?”
“I gave my word to her that died—to our Egyptian’s mother—that I would never speak unless you gave me leave to speak, or if you should die before me. It was but a day before the lad was born. So have I kept my word. But now you shall speak. Ay, then, but you shall speak, or I’ll break my word to her, to do right by her son. She herself would speak if she was here, and I’ll answer her, if ever I see her after Purgatory, for speaking now.”
The old man drew himself up in his chair as though in pain, and said very slowly, almost thickly: “I shall answer also for all I did. The spirit moved me. He is of my blood—his mother was dead—in his veins is the blood that runs in mine. His father—aristocrat, spendthrift, adventurer, renegade, who married her in secret, and left her, bidding her return to me, until he came again, and she to bear him a child—was he fit to bring up the boy?”
He breathed heavily, his face became wan and haggard, as he continued: “Restless on land or sea, for ever seeking some new thing, and when he found it, and saw what was therein, he turned away forgetful. God put it into my heart to abjure him and the life around him. The Voice made me rescue the child from a life empty and bare and heartless and proud. When he returned, and my child was in her grave, he came to me in secret; he claimed the child of that honest lass whom he had married under a false name. I held my hand lest I should kill him, man of peace as I am. Even his father—Quaker though he once became—did we not know ere the end that he had no part or lot with us, that he but experimented with his soul, as with all else? Experiment—experiment—experiment, until at last an Eglington went exploring in my child’s heart, and sent her to her grave—the God of Israel be her rest and refuge! What should such high-placed folk do stooping out of their sphere to us who walk in plain paths? What have we in common with them? My soul would have none of them—masks of men, the slaves of riches and titles, and tyrants over the poor.”
His voice grew hoarse and high, and his head bent forward. He spoke as though forgetful of Soolsby’s presence: “As the East is from the West, so were we separate from these lovers of this world, the self-indulgent, the hard-hearted, the proud. I chose for the child that he should stay with me and not go to him, to remain among his own people and his own class. He was a sinister, an evil man. Was the child to be trusted with him?”
“The child was his own child,” broke in Soolsby. “Your daughter was his lady—the Countess of Eglington! Not all the Quakers in heaven or earth could alter that. His first-born son is Earl of Eglington, and has been so these years past; and you, nor his second-best lordship there, nor all the courts in England can alter that.... Ay, I’ve kept my peace, but I will speak out now. I was with the Earl—James Fetherdon he called himself—when he married her that’s gone to heaven, if any ever went to heaven; and I can prove all. There’s proof aplenty, and ‘tis a pity, ay, God’s pity! that ‘twas not used long ago. Well I knew, as the years passed, that the Earl’s heart was with David, but he had not the courage to face it all, so worn away was the man in him. Ah, if the lad had always been with him—who can tell?—he might have been different! Whether so or not, it was the lad’s right to take his place his mother gave him, let be whatever his father was. ‘Twas a cruel thing done to him. His own was his own, to run his race as God A’mighty had laid the hurdles, not as Luke Claridge willed. I’m sick of seeing yonder fellow in Our Man’s place, he that will not give him help, when he may; he that would see him die like a dog in the desert, brother or no brother—”
“He does not know—Lord Eglington does not know the truth?” interposed the old man in a heavy whisper. “He does not know, but, if he knew, would it matter to him! So much the more would he see Our Man die yonder in the sands. I know the breed. I know him yonder, the skim-milk lord. There is no blood of justice, no milk of kindness in him. Do you think his father that I friended in this thing—did he ever give me a penny, or aught save that hut on the hill that was not worth a pound a year? Did he ever do aught to show that he remembered?—Like father like son. I wanted naught. I held my peace, not for him, but for her—for the promise I made her when she smiled at me and said: ‘If I shouldn’t be seeing thee again, Soolsby, remember; and if thee can ever prove a friend to the child that is to be, prove it.’ And I will prove it now. He must come back to his own. Right’s right, and I will have it so. More brains you may have, and wealth you have, but not more common sense than any common man like me. If the spirit moved you to hold your peace, it moves me to make you speak. With all your meek face you’ve been a hard, stiff-necked man, a tyrant too, and as much an aristocrat to such as me as any lord in the land. But I’ve drunk the mug of silence to the bottom. I’ve—” He stopped short, seeing a strange look come over the other’s face, then stepped forward quickly as the old man half rose from his chair, murmuring thickly:
“Mercy—David, my lord, come—!” he muttered, and staggered, and fell into Soolsby’s arms.
His head dropped forward on his breast, and with a great sigh he sank into unconsciousness. Soolsby laid him on a couch, and ran to the door and called aloud for help.
The man of silence was silent indeed now. In the room where paralysis had fallen on him a bed was brought, and he lay nerveless on the verge of a still deeper silence. The hours went by. His eyes opened, he saw and recognised them all, but his look rested only on Faith and Soolsby; and, as time went on, these were the only faces to which he gave an answering look of understanding. Days wore away, but he neither spoke nor moved.
People came and went softly, and he gave no heed. There was ever a trouble in his eyes when they were open. Only when Soolsby came did it seem to lessen. Faith saw this, and urged Soolsby to sit by him. She had questioned much concerning what had happened before the stroke fell, but Soolsby said only that the old man had been greatly troubled about David. Once Lady Eglington, frail and gentle and sympathetic, came, but the trouble deepened in his eyes, and the lids closed over them, so that he might not see her face.
When she had gone, Soolsby, who had been present and had interpreted the old man’s look according to a knowledge all his own, came over to the bed, leaned down and whispered: “I will speak now.”
Then the eyes opened, and a smile faintly flickered at the mouth.
“I will speak now,” Soolsby said again into the old man’s ear.
That night Soolsby tapped at the door of the lighted laboratory of the Cloistered House where Lord Eglington was at work; opened it, peered in, and stepped inside.
With a glass retort in his hand Eglington faced him. “What’s this—what do you want?” he demanded.
“I want to try an experiment,” answered Soolsby grimly.
“Ah, a scientific turn!” rejoined Eglington coolly—looking at him narrowly, however. He was conscious of danger of some kind.
Then for a minute neither spoke. Now that Soolsby had come to the moment for which he had waited for so many years, the situation was not what he had so often prefigured. The words he had chosen long ago were gone from his memory; in his ignorance of what had been a commonplace to Soolsby’s dark reflection so long, the man he had meant to bring low stood up before him on his own ground, powerful and unabashed.
Eglington wore a blue smock, and over his eyes was a green shade to protect them from the light, but they peered sharply out at the chair-maker, and were boldly alive to the unexpected. He was no physical coward, and, in any case, what reason had he for physical fear in the presence of this man weakened by vice and age? Yet ever since he was a boy there had existed between them an antagonism which had shown itself in many ways. There had ever been something sinister in Soolsby’s attitude to his father and himself.
Eglington vaguely knew that now he was to face some trial of mind and nerve, but with great deliberation he continued dropping liquid from a bottle into the glass retort he carried, his eyes, however, watchful of his visitor, who involuntarily stared around the laboratory.
It was fifteen years since Soolsby had been in this room; and then he had faced this man’s father with a challenge on his tongue such as he meant to speak now. The smell of the chemicals, the carboys filled with acids, the queer, tapering glasses with engraved measurements showing against the coloured liquids, the great blue bottles, the mortars and pestles, the microscopic instruments—all brought back the far-off, acrid scene between the late Earl and himself. Nothing had changed, except that now there were wires which gave out hissing sparks, electrical instruments invented since the earlier day; except that this man, gently dropping acids into the round white bottle upon a crystal which gave off musty fumes, was bolder, stronger, had more at stake than the other.
Slowly Eglington moved back to put the retort on a long table against the wall, and Soolsby stepped forward till he stood where the electric sparks were gently hissing about him. Now Eglington leaned against the table, poured some alcohol on his fingers to cleanse the acid from them, and wiped them with a piece of linen, while he looked inquiringly at Soolsby. Still, Soolsby did not speak. Eglington lit a cigarette, and took away the shade from his eyes.
“Well, now, what is your experiment?” he asked, “and why bring it here? Didn’t you know the way to the stables or the scullery?”
“I knew my way better here,” answered Soolsby, steadying himself.
“Ah, you’ve been here often?” asked Eglington nonchalantly, yet feeling for the cause of this midnight visit.
“It is fifteen years since I was here, my lord. Then I came to see the Earl of Eglington.”
“And so history repeats itself every fifteen years! You came to see the Earl of Eglington then; you come to see the Earl of Eglington again—after fifteen years!”
“I come to speak with him that’s called the Earl of Eglington.”
Eglington’s eyes half closed, as though the light hurt them. “That sounds communistic, or is it pure Quakerism? I believe they used to call my father Friend Robert till he backslided. But you are not a Quaker, Soolsby, so why be too familiar? Or is it merely the way of the old family friend?”
“I knew your father before you were born, my lord—he troosted me then.”
“So long? And fifteen years ago—here?” He felt a menace, vague and penetrating. His eyes were hard and cruel.
“It wasn’t a question of troost then; ‘twas one of right or wrong—naught else.”
“Ah—and who was right, and what was wrong?” At that moment there came a tap at the door leading into the living part of the house, and the butler entered. “The doctor—he has used up all his oxygen, my lord. He begs to know if you can give him some for Mr. Claridge. Mr. Claridge is bad to-night.”
A sinister smile passed over Eglington’s face. “Who brings the message, Garry?”
“A servant—Miss Claridge’s, my lord.”
An ironical look came into Eglington’s eyes; then they softened a little. In a moment he placed a jar of oxygen in the butler’s hands.
“My compliments to Miss Claridge, and I am happy to find my laboratory of use at last to my neighbours,” he said, and the door closed upon the man.
Then he came back thoughtfully. Soolsby had not moved.
“Do you know what oxygen’s for, Soolsby?” he asked quizzically.
“No, my lord, I’ve never heerd tell of it.”
“Well, if you brought the top of Ben Lomond to the bottom of a coal-mine—breath to the breathless—that’s it.
“You’ve been doing that to Mr. Claridge, my lord?”
“A little oxygen more or less makes all the difference to a man—it probably will to neighbour Claridge, Soolsby; and so I’ve done him a good turn.”
A grim look passed over Soolsby’s face. “It’s the first, I’m thinking, my lord, and none too soon; and it’ll be the last, I’m thinking, too. It’s many a year since this house was neighbourly to that.”
Eglington’s eyes almost closed, as he studied the other’s face; then he said: “I asked you a little while ago who was right and what was wrong when you came to see my father here fifteen years ago. Well?”
Suddenly a thought flashed into his eyes, and it seemed to course through his veins like some anaesthetic, for he grew very still, and a minute passed before he added quietly: “Was it a thing between my father and Luke Claridge? There was trouble—well, what was it?” All at once he seemed to rise above the vague anxiety that possessed him, and he fingered inquiringly a long tapering glass of acids on the bench beside him. “There’s been so much mystery, and I suppose it was nothing, after all. What was it all about? Or do you know—eh? Fifteen years ago you came to see my father, and now you have come to see me—all in the light o’ the moon, as it were; like a villain in a play. Ah, yes, you said it was to make an experiment—yet you didn’t know what oxygen was! It’s foolish making experiments, unless you know what you are playing with, Soolsby. See, here are two glasses.” He held them up. “If I poured one into the other, we’d have an experiment—and you and I would be picked up in fragments and carried away in a basket. And that wouldn’t be a successful experiment, Soolsby.”
“I’m not so sure of that, my lord. Some things would be put right then.”
“H’m, there would be a new Under-Secretary for Foreign Affairs, and—”
“And Claridge Pasha would come back from Egypt, my lord,” was the sharp interjection. Suddenly Soolsby’s anger flared up, his hands twitched. “You had your chance to be a friend to him, my lord. You promised her yonder at the Red Mansion that you would help him—him that never wronged you, him you always wronged, and you haven’t lifted hand to help him in his danger. A moment since you asked me who was right and what was wrong. You shall know. If you had treated him right, I’d have held my peace, and kept my word to her that’s gone these thirty-odd years. I’ll hold it no more, and so I told Luke Claridge. I’ve been silent, but not for your father’s sake or yours, for he was as cruel as you, with no heart, and a conscience like a pin’s head, not big enough for use... Ay, you shall know. You are no more the Earl of Eglington than me.
“The Earl of Eglington is your elder brother, called David Claridge.”
As Soolsby’s words poured forth passionately, weighty, Eglington listened like one in a dream. Since this man entered the laboratory fifty reasons for his coming had flashed across his mind; he had prepared himself at many corners for defence, he had rallied every mental resource, he had imagined a dozen dangerous events which his father and Luke Claridge shared—with the balance against his father; but this thing was beyond all speculation. Yet on the instant the words were said he had a conviction of their inevitable truth. Even as they were uttered, kaleidoscopic memories rushed in, and David’s face, figure, personal characteristics, flashed before him. He saw, he felt, the likeness to his father and himself; a thousand things were explained that could only be explained by this fatal fact launched at him without warning. It was as though, fully armed for his battle of life, he had suddenly been stripped of armour and every weapon, and left naked on the field. But he had the mind of the gamester, and the true gamester’s self-control. He had taken chances so often that the tornado of ill-luck left him standing.
“What proof have you?” he asked quietly. Soolsby’s explicit answer left no ground for doubt. He had not asked the question with any idea of finding gaps in the evidence, but rather to find if there were a chance for resistance, of escape, anywhere. The marriage certificate existed; identification of James Fetherdon with his father could be established by Soolsby and Luke Claridge.
Soolsby and Luke Claridge! Luke Claridge—he could not help but smile cynically, for he was composed and calculating now. A few minutes ago he had sent a jar of oxygen to keep Luke Claridge alive! But for it one enemy to his career, to his future, would be gone. He did not shrink from the thought. Born a gentleman, there were in him some degenerate characteristics which heart could not drown or temperament refine. Selfishness was inwoven with every fibre of his nature.
Now, as he stood with eyes fixed on Soolsby, the world seemed to narrow down to this laboratory. It was a vacuum where sensation was suspended, and the million facts of ordinary existence disappeared into inactivity. There was a fine sense of proportion in it all. Only the bare essential things that concerned him remained: David Claridge was the Earl of Eglington, this man before him knew, Luke Claridge knew; and there was one thing yet to know! When he spoke his voice showed no excitement—the tones were even, colourless.
“Does he know?” In these words he acknowledged that he believed the tale told him.
Soolsby had expected a different attitude; he was not easier in mind because his story had not been challenged. He blindly felt working in the man before him a powerful mind, more powerful because it faced the truth unflinchingly; but he knew that this did not mean calm acceptance of the consequences. He, not Eglington, was dazed and embarrassed, was not equal to the situation. He moved uneasily, changed his position.
“Does he know?” Eglington questioned again quietly. There was no need for Eglington to explain who he was.
“Of course he does not know—I said so. If he knew, do you think he’d be in Egypt and you here, my lord?”
Eglington was very quiet. His intellect more than his passions were now at work.
“I am not sure. You never can tell. This might not mean much to him. He has got his work cut out; he wasn’t brought up to this. What he has done is in line with the life he has lived as a pious Quaker. What good would it do to bring him back? I have been brought up to it; I am used to it; I have worked things out ‘according to the state of life to which I was called.’ Take what I’ve always had away from me, and I am crippled; give him what he never had, and it doesn’t work into his scheme. It would do him no good and me harm—Where’s the use? Besides, I am still my father’s son. Don’t you see how unreasonable you are? Luke Claridge was right. He knew that he and his belonged to a different sphere. He didn’t speak. Why do you speak now after all these years when we are all set in our grooves? It’s silly to disturb us, Soolsby.”
The voice was low, persuasive, and searching; the mind was working as it had never worked before, to achieve an end by peaceful means, when war seemed against him. And all the time he was fascinated by the fact that Soolsby’s hand was within a few inches of a live electric wire, which, if he touched, would probably complete “the experiment” he had come to make; and what had been the silence of a generation would continue indefinitely. It was as though Fate had deliberately tempted him and arranged the necessary conditions, for Soolsby’s feet were in a little pool of liquid which had been spilled on the floor—the experiment was exact and real.
For minutes he had watched Soolsby’s hand near the wire-had watched as he talked, and his talk was his argument for non-interference against warning the man who had come to destroy him and his career. Why had Fate placed that hand so near the wire there, and provided the other perfect conditions for tragedy? Why should he intervene? It would never have crossed his mind to do Soolsby harm, yet here, as the man’s arm was stretched out to strike him, Fate offered an escape. Luke Claridge was stricken with paralysis, no doubt would die; Soolsby alone stood in his way.
“You see, Soolsby, it has gone on too long,” he added, in a low, penetrating tone. “It would be a crime to alter things now. Give him the earldom and the estates, and his work in Egypt goes to pieces; he will be spoiled for all he wants to do. I’ve got my faults, but, on the whole, I’m useful, and I play my part here, as I was born to it, as well as most. Anyhow, it’s no robbery for me to have what has been mine by every right except the accident of being born after him. I think you’ll see that you will do a good thing to let it all be. Luke Claridge, if he was up and well, wouldn’t thank you for it—have you got any right to give him trouble, too? Besides, I’ve saved his life to-night, and... and perhaps I might save yours, Soolsby, if it was in danger.”
Soolsby’s hand had moved slightly. It was only an inch from the wire. For an instant the room was terribly still.
An instant, and it might be too late. An instant, and Soolsby would be gone. Eglington watched the hand which had been resting on the table turn slowly over to the wire. Why should he intervene? Was it his business? This thing was not his doing. Destiny had laid the train of circumstance and accident, and who was stronger than Destiny? In spite of himself his eyes fixed themselves on Soolsby’s hand. It was but a hair’s breadth from the wire. The end would come now. Suddenly a voice was heard outside the door. “Eglington!” it called.
Soolsby started, his hand drew spasmodically away from the wire, and he stepped back quickly.
The door opened, and Hylda entered.
“Mr. Claridge is dead, Eglington,” she said. Destiny had decided.
Beside the grave under the willow-tree another grave had been made. It was sprinkled with the fallen leaves of autumn. In the Red Mansion Faith’s delicate figure moved forlornly among relics of an austere, beloved figure vanished from the apricot-garden and the primitive simplicity of wealth combined with narrow thought.
Since her father’s death, the bereaved girl had been occupied by matters of law and business, by affairs of the estate; but the first pressure was over, long letters had been written to David which might never reach him; and now, when the strain was withdrawn, the gentle mind was lost in a grey mist of quiet suffering. In Hamley there were but two in whom she had any real comfort and help—Lady Eglington and the old chair-maker. Of an afternoon or evening one or the other was to be seen in the long high-wainscoted room, where a great fire burned, or in the fruitless garden where the breeze stirred the bare branches.
Almost as deep a quiet brooded in the Cloistered House as in the home where mourning enjoined movement in a minor key. Hylda had not recovered wholly from the illness which had stricken her down on that day in London when she had sought news of David from Eglington, at such cost to her peace and health and happiness. Then had come her slow convalescence in Hamley, and long days of loneliness, in which Eglington seemed to retreat farther and farther from her inner life. Inquiries had poured in from friends in town, many had asked to come and see her; flowers came from one or two who loved her benignly, like Lord Windlehurst; and now and then she had some cheerful friend with her who cared for music or could sing; and then the old home rang; but she was mostly alone, and Eglington was kept in town by official business the greater part of each week. She did not gain strength as quickly as she ought to have done, and this was what brought the Duchess of Snowdon down on a special mission one day of early November.
Ever since the night she had announced Luke Claridge’s death to Eglington, had discovered Soolsby with him, had seen the look in her husband’s face and caught the tension of the moment on which she had broken, she had been haunted by a hovering sense of trouble. What had Soolsby been doing in the laboratory at that time of night? What was the cause of this secret meeting? All Hamley knew—she had long known—how Luke Claridge had held the Cloistered House in abhorrence, and she knew also that Soolsby worshipped David and Faith, and, whatever the cause of the family antipathy, championed it. She was conscious of a shadow somewhere, and behind it all was the name of David’s father, James Fetherdon. That last afternoon when she had talked with him, and he had told her of his life, she had recalled the name as one she had seen or heard, and it had floated into her mind at last that she had seen it among the papers and letters of the late Countess of Eglington.
As the look in Eglington’s face the night she came upon him and Soolsby in the laboratory haunted her, so the look in her own face had haunted Soolsby. Her voice announcing Luke Claridge’s death had suddenly opened up a new situation to him. It stunned him; and afterwards, as he saw Hylda with Faith in the apricot-garden, or walking in the grounds of the Cloistered House hour after hour alone or with her maid, he became vexed by a problem greater than had yet perplexed him. It was one thing to turn Eglington out of his lands and home and title; it was another thing to strike this beautiful being, whose smile had won him from the first, whose voice, had he but known, had saved his life. Perhaps the truth in some dim way was conveyed to him, for he came to think of her a little as he thought of Faith.
Since the moment when he had left the laboratory and made his way to the Red Mansion, he and Eglington had never met face to face; and he avoided a meeting. He was not a blackmailer, he had no personal wrongs to avenge, he had not sprung the bolt of secrecy for evil ends; and when he saw the possible results of his disclosure, he was unnerved. His mind had seen one thing only, the rights of “Our Man,” the wrong that had been done him and his mother; but now he saw how the sword of justice, which he had kept by his hand these many years, would cut both ways. His mind was troubled, too, that he had spoken while yet Luke Claridge lived, and so broken his word to Mercy Claridge. If he had but waited till the old man died—but one brief half-hour—his pledge would have been kept. Nothing had worked out wholly as he expected. The heavens had not fallen. The “second-best lordship” still came and went, the wheels went round as usual. There was no change; yet, as he sat in his hut and looked down into the grounds of the Cloistered House, he kept saying to himself.
“It had to be told. It’s for my lord now. He knows the truth. I’ll wait and see. It’s for him to do right by Our Man that’s beyond and away.”
The logic and fairness of this position, reached after much thinking, comforted him. He had done his duty so far. If, in the end, the “second-best lordship” failed to do his part, hid the truth from the world, refused to do right by his half-brother, the true Earl, then would be time to act again. Also he waited for word out of Egypt; and he had a superstitious belief that David would return, that any day might see him entering the door of the Red Mansion.
Eglington himself was haunted by a spectre which touched his elbow by day, and said: “You are not the Earl of Eglington,” and at night laid a clammy finger on his forehead, waking him, and whispering in his ear: “If Soolsby had touched the wire, all would now be well!” And as deep as thought and feeling in him lay, he felt that Fate had tricked him—Fate and Hylda. If Hylda had not come at that crucial instant, the chairmaker’s but on the hill would be empty. Why had not Soolsby told the world the truth since? Was the man waiting to see what course he himself would take? Had the old chair-maker perhaps written the truth to the Egyptian—to his brother David.
His brother! The thought irritated every nerve in him. No note of kindness or kinship or blood stirred in him. If, before, he had had innate antagonism and a dark, hovering jealousy, he had a black repugnance now—the antipathy of the lesser to the greater nature, of the man in the wrong to the man in the right.
And behind it all was the belief that his wife had set David above him—by how much or in what fashion he did not stop to consider; but it made him desire that death and the desert would swallow up his father’s son and leave no trace behind.
Policy? His work in the Foreign Office now had but one policy so far as Egypt was concerned. The active sophistry in him made him advocate non-intervention in Egyptian affairs as diplomatic wisdom, though it was but personal purpose; and he almost convinced himself that he was acting from a national stand-point. Kaid and Claridge Pasha pursued their course of civilisation in the Soudan, and who could tell what danger might not bring forth? If only Soolsby held his peace yet a while!
Did Faith know? Luke Claridge was gone without speaking, but had Soolsby told Faith? How closely had he watched the faces round him at Luke Claridge’s funeral, to see if they betrayed any knowledge!
Anxious days had followed that night in the laboratory. His boundless egotism had widened the chasm between Hylda and himself, which had been made on the day when she fell ill in London, with Lacey’s letter in her hand. It had not grown less in the weeks that followed. He nursed a grievance which had, so far as he knew, no foundation in fact; he was vaguely jealous of a man—his brother—thousands of miles away; he was not certain how far Hylda had pierced the disguise of sincerity which he himself had always worn, or how far she understood him. He thought that she shrank from what she had seen of his real self, much or little, and he was conscious of so many gifts and abilities and attractive personal qualities that he felt a sense of injury. Yet what would his position be without her? Suppose David should return and take the estates and titles, and suppose that she should close her hand upon her fortune and leave him, where would he be?
He thought of all this as he sat in his room at the Foreign Office and looked over St. James’s Park, his day’s work done. He was suddenly seized by a new-born anxiety, for he had been so long used to the open purse and the unchecked stream of gold, had taken it so much as a matter of course, as not to realise the possibility of its being withdrawn. He was conscious of a kind of meanness and ugly sordidness in the suggestion; but the stake—his future, his career, his position in the world—was too high to allow him to be too chivalrous. His sense of the real facts was perverted. He said to himself that he must be practical.
Moved by the new thought, he seized a time-table and looked up the trains. He had been ten days in town, receiving every morning a little note from Hylda telling of what she had done each day; a calm, dutiful note, written without pretence, and out of a womanly affection with which she surrounded the man who, it seemed once—such a little while ago—must be all in all to her. She had no element of pretence in her. What she could give she gave freely, and it was just what it appeared to be. He had taken it all as his due, with an underlying belief that, if he chose to make love to her again, he could blind her to all else in the world. Hurt vanity and egotism and jealousy had prevented him from luring her back to that fine atmosphere in which he had hypnotised her so few years ago. But suddenly, as he watched the swans swimming in the pond below, a new sense of approaching loss, all that Hylda had meant in his march and progress, came upon him; and he hastened to return to Hamley.
Getting out of the train at Heddington, he made up his mind to walk home by the road that David had taken on his return from Egypt, and he left word at the station that he would send for his luggage.
His first objective was Soolsby’s hut, and, long before he reached it, darkness had fallen. From a light shining through the crack of the blind he knew that Soolsby was at home. He opened the door and entered without knocking. Soolsby was seated at a table, a map and a newspaper spread out before him. Egypt and David, always David and Egypt!
Soolsby got to his feet slowly, his eyes fixed inquiringly on his visitor.
“I didn’t knock,” said Eglington, taking off his greatcoat and reaching for a chair; then added, as he seated himself: “Better sit down, Soolsby.”
After a moment he continued: “Do you mind my smoking?”
Soolsby did not reply, but sat down again. He watched Eglington light a cigar and stretch out his hands to the wood fire with an air of comfort.
A silence followed. Eglington appeared to forget the other’s presence, and to occupy himself with thoughts that glimmered in the fire.
At last Soolsby said moodily: “What have you come for, my lord?”
“Oh, I am my lord still, am I?” Eglington returned lazily. “Is it a genealogical tree you are studying there?” He pointed to the map.
“I’ve studied your family tree with care, as you should know, my lord; and a map of Egypt”—he tapped the parchment before him—“goes well with it. And see, my lord, Egypt concerns you too. Lord Eglington is there, and ‘tis time he was returning-ay, ‘tis time.”
There was a baleful look in Soolsby’s eyes. Whatever he might think, whatever considerations might arise at other times, a sinister feeling came upon him when Eglington was with him.
“And, my lord,” he went on, “I’d be glad to know that you’ve sent for him, and told him the truth.”
“Have you?” Eglington flicked the ash from his cigar, speaking coolly.
Soolsby looked at him with his honest blue eyes aflame, and answered deliberately: “I was not for taking your place, my lord. ‘Twas my duty to tell you, but the rest was between you and the Earl of Eglington.”
“That was thoughtful of you, Soolsby. And Miss Claridge?”
“I told you that night, my lord, that only her father and myself knew; and what was then is now.”
A look of relief stole across Eglington’s face. “Of course—of course. These things need a lot of thought, Soolsby. One must act with care—no haste, no flurry, no mistakes.”
“I would not wait too long, my lord, or be too careful.” There was menace in the tone.
“But if you go at things blind, you’re likely to hurt where you don’t mean to hurt. When you’re mowing in a field by a school-house, you must look out for the children asleep in the grass. Sometimes the longest way round is the shortest way home.”
“Do you mean to do it or not, my lord? I’ve left it to you as a gentleman.”
“It’s going to upset more than you think, Soolsby. Suppose he, out there in Egypt”—he pointed again to the map—“doesn’t thank me for the information. Suppose he says no, and—”
“Right’s right. Give him the chance, my lord. How can you know, unless you tell him the truth?”
“Do you like living, Soolsby?”
“Do you want to kill me, my lord?”
There was a dark look in Eglington’s face. “But answer me, do you want to live?”
“I want to live long enough to see the Earl of Eglington in his own house.”
“Well, I’ve made that possible. The other night when you were telling me your little story, you were near sending yourself into eternity—as near as I am knocking this ash off my cigar.” His little finger almost touched the ash. “Your hand was as near touching a wire charged with death. I saw it. It would have been better for me if you had gone; but I shut off the electricity. Suppose I hadn’t, could I have been blamed? It would have been an accident. Providence did not intervene; I did. You owe me something, Soolsby.”
Soolsby stared at him almost blindly for a moment. A mist was before his eyes; but through the mist, though he saw nothing of this scene in which he now was, he saw the laboratory, and himself and Eglington, and Eglington’s face as it peered at him, and, just before the voice called outside, Eglington’s eyes fastened on his hand. It all flashed upon him now, and he saw himself starting back at the sound of the voice.
Slowly he got up now, went to the door, and opened it. “My lord, it is not true,” he said. “You have not spoken like a gentleman. It was my lady’s voice that saved me. This is my castle, my lord—you lodge yonder.” He pointed down into the darkness where the lights of the village shone. “I owe you nothing. I pay my debts. Pay yours, my lord, to him that’s beyond and away.”
Eglington kept his countenance as he drew on his great-coat and slowly passed from the house.
“I ought to have let you die, Soolsby. Y’ou’ll think better of this soon. But it’s quite right to leave the matter to me. It may take a little time, but everything will come right. Justice shall be done. Well, good night, Soolsby. You live too much alone, and imagination is a bad thing for the lonely. Good night-good night.”
Going down the hill quickly, he said to himself: “A sort of second sight he had about that wire. But time is on my side, time and the Soudan—and ‘The heathen in his blindness....’ I will keep what is mine. I will keep it!”