by Hugh Walpole
The serious illness of his grandfather still further complicated matters; he was not expected to live through the week. Robin was sorry, but he had never seen very much of his grandfather; and it was, after all, only fitting that such a very old man should die some time; no, the point really was that his father would in a week’s time be Sir Henry Trojan and head of the House — that was what mattered.
Now his father was the one person whom he could find no excuse whatever for blaming. He had stood entirely outside the affair from the beginning, and, as far as Robin could tell, knew nothing whatever about it. Robin, indeed, had taken care that he should not interfere; he had been kept outside from the first.
No, Robin could not blame his father for the state of things; perhaps, even, it might have been better if his advice had been asked.
But everything drove him back to the ultimate fact from which, indeed, there was no escaping — that there was every prospect of his finding himself, within a few weeks’ time, the interesting centre of a common affair in the Courts for Breach of Promise; and as this ultimate issue shone clearer and clearer Robin’s terror increased in volume. To his excited fancy, living and dead seemed to turn upon him. Country cousins — the Rev. George Trojan of West Taunton, a clergyman whose evangelical tendencies had been the mock of the House; Colonel Trojan of Cheltenham, a Port-and-Pepper Indian, as Robin had scornfully called him; the Misses Trojan of Southsea, ladies of advanced years and slender purses, who always sent him a card at Christmas; Mrs. Adeline Trojan of Teignmouth, who had spent her life in beating at the doors of London Society and had retired at last, defeated, to the provincial gentility of a seaside town — Oh! Robin had laughed at them all and scorned them again and again — and behold how the tables would be turned! And the Dead! Their scorn would be harder still to bear. He had thought of them often enough and had long ago known their histories by heart. He had gazed at their portraits in the Long Gallery until he knew every line of their faces: old Lady Trojan of 1640, a little like Rembrandt’s “Lady with the Ruff,” with her stern mouth and eyes and stiff white collar — she must have been a lady of character! Sir Charles Trojan, her son, who plotted for William of Orange and was rewarded royally after the glorious Revolution; Lady Gossiter Trojan, a woman who had taken active part in the ‘45, and used “The Flutes” as a refuge for intriguing Jacobites; and, best of all, a dim black picture of a man in armour that hung over the mantel-piece, a portrait of a certain Sir Robert Trojan who had fought in the Barons’ Wars and been a giant of his times; he had always been Robin’s hero and had formed the centre of many an imaginary tapestry worked by Robin’s brain — and now his descendant must pay costs in a Breach of Promise Case!
They had all had their faults, those Trojans; some of them had robbed and murdered with little compunction, but they had always had their pride, they had never done anything really low — what they had done they had done with a high hand; Robin would be the first of the family to let them down. And it was rather curious to think that, three weeks ago, it had been his father who was going to let them down. Robin remembered with what indignation he had heard of his father’s visits to the Cove, his friendship with Bethel and the rest — but surely it was they who had driven him out! It was their own doing from the first — or rather his aunt and uncle’s. He was beginning to be annoyed with his aunt and uncle. He felt vaguely that they had got him into the mess and were quite unable to pull him out again; which reflection brought him back to the original main business, namely, that there was a mess, and a bad one.
It was one of his qualities of youth that he could not wait; patience was an utterly unlearned virtue, and this desperate uncertainty, this sitting like Damocles under a sword suspended by a hair, was hard to bear. What was Dahlia doing? Had she already taken steps? He watched every post with terror lest it should contain a lawyer’s writ. He had the vaguest ideas about such things ... perhaps they would put him in prison. To his excited fancy the letters seemed enormous — horrible, black, menacing, large for all the world to see. What had Aunt Clare done? His uncle? And then, last of all, had his father any suspicions?
Whether it was the London tailor, or simply the reassuring hand of custom, his father was certainly not the uncouth person he had seemed three weeks ago; in fact, Robin was beginning to think him rather handsome — such muscles and such a chest! — and he really carried himself very well, and indeed, loose, badly-made clothes suited him rather well. And then he had changed so in other ways; there was none of that overwhelming cheerfulness, that terrible hail-fellow-well-met kind of manner now; he was brief and to the point, he seldom smiled, and surely it wasn’t to be wondered at after the way in which they had treated him at the family council a week ago.
There had been several occasions lately on which Robin would have liked to have spoken to his father. He had begun, once, after breakfast, a halting conversation, but he had only received monosyllables as a reply — the thing had broken down painfully. And so he went down to his aunt.
It was her room again, and she was having tea with Uncle Garrett. Robin remembered the last occasion, only a week ago, when he had made his confession. He had been afraid of hurting his aunt then, he remembered. He did not mind very much now ... he saw his aunt and uncle as two people suddenly grown effete, purposeless, incapable. They seemed to have changed altogether, which only meant that he was, at last, finding himself.
There hung a gloom over Clare’s tea-table, partly, no doubt, because of Sir Jeremy — the old man with the wrinkled hands and parchment face seemed to follow one, noiselessly, remorselessly, through every passage and into every room ... but there was also something else — that tension always noticeable in a room where people whose recent action towards some common goal is undeclared are gathered together; they were waiting for some one else to make the next move.
And it was Robin who made it, asking at once, as he dropped the sugar into his cup and balanced for a moment the tongs in the air: “Well, Aunt Clare, what have you done?”
She noticed at once that he asked it a little scornfully, as though assured beforehand that she had done very little. There was a note of antagonism in the way that he had spoken, a hint, even, of challenge. She knew at once that he had changed during the last week, and again, knowing as she did of her failure with the girl, and guessing perhaps at its probable sequence, she hated Harry from the bottom of her heart.
“Done? Why, how, Robin dear? I don’t advise those tea-cakes — they’re heavy. I must speak to Wilson — she’s been a little careless lately; those biscuits are quite nice. Done, dear?”
“Yes, aunt — about Miss Feverel. No, I don’t want anything to eat, thanks — it seems only an hour or so since lunch — yes — about — well, those letters?”
Clare looked up at him pleadingly. He was speaking a little like Harry; she had noticed during the last week that he had several things in common with his father — little things, the way that he wrinkled his forehead, pushed back his hair with his hand; she was not sure that it was not conscious imitation, and indeed it had seemed to her during the last week that every day drew him further from herself and nearer to Harry. She had counted on this affair as a means of reclaiming him, and now she must confess failure — Oh! it was hard!
“Well, Robin, I have tried — —” She paused.
“Well?” he said drily, waiting.
“I’m afraid it wasn’t much of a success,” she said, trying to laugh. “I suppose that really I’m not good at that sort of thing.”
“At what sort of thing?”
He stood over her like a judge, the certainty of her failure the only thing that he could grasp. He did not recognise her own love for him, her fear lest he should be angry; he was merciless as he had been three weeks ago with his father, as he had been with Dahlia Feverel, and for the same reason — because each had taken from him some of that armour of self-confidence in which he had so greatly trusted; the winds of the heath were blowing about him and he stood, stripp
ed, shivering, before the world.
“She was not good at that sort of thing” — that was exactly it, exactly the summary of his new feeling about his aunt and uncle; they were not able to cope with that hard, new world into which he had been so suddenly flung — they were, he scornfully considered, “tea-table” persons, and in so judging them he condemned himself.
“I’m so very sorry, dear. I did my very best. I went to see the — um — Miss Feverel, and we talked about them. But I’m afraid that I couldn’t persuade her — she seemed determined — —”
“What did she say?”
“Oh, very little — only that she considered that the letters were hers and that therefore she had every right to keep them if she liked. She seemed to attach some especial, rather sentimental value to them, and considered, apparently, that it would be quite impossible to give them up.”
“How was she looking — ill?” It had been one of Robin’s consolations during these weeks to imagine her pale, wretched, broken down.
“Oh no, extremely well. She seemed rather amused at the whole affair. I was not there very long.”
“And is that all you have done? Have you, I mean, taken any other steps?”
“Yes — I wrote yesterday morning. I got an answer this morning.”
“What was it?” Robin spoke eagerly. Perhaps his aunt had some surprise in store and would produce the letters suddenly; surely Dahlia would not have written unless she had relented.
Clare went to her writing-table and returned with the letter, held gingerly between finger and thumb.
“I’m afraid it’s not very long,” she said, laughing nervously, and again looking at Robin appealingly. “I had written asking her to think over what she had said to me the day before. She says:
“‘DEAR Miss TROJAN — Surely the matter is closed after what happened the other day? I am extremely sorry that you should be troubled by my decision; but it is, I am afraid, unalterable. — Yours truly,
D. FEVEREL.’”
“Her decision?” cried Robin quickly. “Had she told you anything? Had she decided anything?”
“Only that she would keep the letters,” answered Clare slowly. “You couldn’t expect me, Robin dear, to argue with her about it. One had, after all, one’s dignity.”
“Oh! it’s no use!” cried Robin. “She means to use them — of course, it’s all plain enough; we’ve just got to face it, I suppose”; and then, as a forlorn hope, turning to his uncle —
“You’ve done nothing, I suppose, Uncle Garrett?”
His uncle had hitherto taken no part in the discussion, but sat intent on the book that he was reading. Now he answered, without looking up —
“Yes — I saw the girl.”
“You saw her?” from Clare.
“What! Dahlia!” from Robin.
“Yes, I called.” He laid the book down on his knee and enjoyed the effect of his announcement. He could be important for a moment at any rate, although he must, with his next words, confess failure, so he prolonged the situation. “Some more tea, Clare, please, and not quite so strong this time — you might speak about the tea — why not make it yourself?”
She took his cup and went over to the tea-table. She knew how to play the game as well as he did, and she showed no astonishment or vulgar curiosity, but if he had succeeded where she had failed she must change her hand. She had never thought very much about Garrett; he was a thorough Trojan — for that she was very grateful, but he had always been more of an emblem to her than a man. Now if he had got the letters she was humiliated indeed. Robin would despise her for having failed where his uncle had succeeded.
“Well, have you got them?”
Robin bent forward eagerly.
“No, not precisely,” Garrett answered deliberately. “But I went to see her — —”
“With what result?”
“With no precise result — that is to say, she did not promise to surrender them — not immediately. But I have every hope — —” He paused mysteriously.
“Of what?” If his uncle had really a chance of getting them, he was not such a fool after all. Perhaps he was a cleverer man than one gave him credit for being.
“Well, of course, one has very little ground for any real assertion, but we discussed the matter at some length. I think I convinced her that it would be her wisest course to deliver up the letters as soon as might be, and I assured her that we would let the matter rest there and take no further steps. I think she was impressed,” and he sipped his tea slowly and solemnly.
“Impressed! Yes, but what has she promised?” Robin cried impatiently. He knew Dahlia better than they did, and he did not feel somehow that she was very likely to be impressed with Uncle Garrett. He was not the kind of man.
“Promised? No, not a precise promise — but she was quite pleasant and seemed to be open to argument — quite a nice young person.”
“Ah! you have done nothing!” There was a note of relief in Clare’s exclamation. “Why not say so at once, Garrett, instead of beating about the bush? There is an end of it. We have failed, Robin, both of us; we are where we were before, and what to do next I really don’t know.”
It was rather a comfort to drag Garrett into it as well. She was glad that he had tried; it made her own failure less noticeable.
Robin looked at both of them, gloomily, from the fireplace. Aunt Clare, handsome, aristocratic, perfectly well fitted to pour out tea in any society, but useless, useless, useless when it came to the real thing; Uncle Garrett and his eyeglass, trying to make the most of a situation in which he had most obviously failed — no, they were no good either of them, and three weeks ago they had seemed the ultimate standard by which his own life was to be tested. How quickly one learnt!
“Well, what is to be done?” he said desperately. “It’s plain enough that she means to stick to the things; and, after all, there can only be one reason for her doing it — she means to use them. I can see no way out of it at all — one must just stand up to it.”
“We’ll think, dear, we’ll think,” said Clare eagerly. “Ideas are sure to come if we only wait.”
“Wait! But we can’t wait!” cried Robin. “She’ll move at once. Probably the letters are in the lawyer’s hands already.”
“Then there’s nothing to be done,” said Garrett comfortably, settling back again into his book — he was, he flattered himself, a man of most excellent practical sense.
“No, it really seems, Robin, as if we had better wait,” said Clare. “We must have patience. Perhaps after all she has taken no steps.”
But Robin was angry. He had long ago forgotten his share in the business; he had adopted so successfully the rôle of injured sufferer that his own actions seemed to him almost meritorious. But he was very angry with them. Here they were, in the face of a family crisis, deliberately adopting a policy of laissez-faire; he had done his best and had failed, but he was young and ignorant of the world (that at least he now admitted), but they were old, experienced, wise — or, at least, they had always seemed to him to stand for experience and wisdom, and yet they could do nothing — nay, worse — they seemed to wish to do nothing — Oh! he was angry with them!
The whole room with its silver and knick-knacks — its beautifully worked cushions and charming water-colours, its shining rows of complete editions and dainty china stood to him now for incapacity. Three weeks ago it had seemed his Holy of Holies.
“But we can’t wait,” he repeated— “we can’t! Don’t you see, Aunt Clare, she isn’t the sort of girl that waiting does for? She’d never dream of waiting herself.” Dahlia seemed, by contrast with their complacent acquiescence, almost admirable.
“Well, dear,” Clare answered, “your uncle and I have both tried — I think that we may be alarming ourselves unnecessarily. I must say she didn’t seem to me to bear any grudge against you. I daresay she will leave things as they are — —”
“Then why keep the letters?”
“Oh, sentime
nt. It would remind her, you see — —”
But Robin could only repeat— “No, she’s not that kind of girl,” and marvel, perplexedly, at their short-sightedness.
And then he approached the point —
“There is, of course,” he said slowly, “one other person who might help us — —” He paused.
Garrett put his book down and looked up. Clare leaned towards him.
“Yes?” Clare looked slightly incredulous of any suggested remedy — but apparently composed and a little tired of all this argument. But, in reality, her heart was beating furiously. Had it come at last? — that first mention of his father that she had dreaded for so many days.
“I really cannot think — —” from Garrett.
“Why not my father?”
Again it seemed to Clare that she and Harry were struggling for Robin ... since that first moment of his entry they had struggled — she with her twenty years of faithful service, he with nothing — Oh! it was unfair!
“But, Robin,” she said gently— “you can’t — not, at least, after what has happened. This is an affair for ourselves — for the family.”
“But he is the family!”
“Well, in a sense, yes. But his long absence — his different way of looking at things — make it rather hard. It would be better, wouldn’t it, to settle it here, without its going further.”
“To settle it, yes — but we can’t — we don’t — we are leaving things quite alone — waiting — when we ought to do something.”
Robin knew that she was showing him that his father was still outside the circle — that for herself and Uncle Garrett recent events had made no difference.
But was he outside the circle? Why should he be? At any rate he would soon be head of the House, and then it would matter very little ——