by Ellen Wood
After all, Val had not quite “bottled it up.” He had made it known to his brother-in-law, Lord Kirton, and also to Mr. Carr. Both had agreed that nothing had better be said until the christening-day was over.
But there came a reaction. When Lady Hartledon had got over her first grief, the other annoyance returned to her, and she fell again to brooding over it in a very disturbing fashion. She merited blame for this in a degree; but not so much as appears on the surface. If that idea, which she was taking up very seriously, were correct — that her husband’s succession was imperilled — it would be the greatest misfortune that could happen to her in life. What had she married for but position? — rank, wealth, her title? any earthly misfortune would be less keen than this. Any earthly misfortune! Poor Maude!
It was a sombre dinner that evening; the news of Captain Kirton’s death making it so. Besides relatives, very few guests were staying in the house; and the large and elaborate dinner-party of the previous day was reduced to a small one on this. The first to come into the drawing-room afterwards, following pretty closely on the ladies, was Mr. Carr. The dowager, who rarely paid attention to appearances, or to anything else, except her own comfort, had her feet up on a sofa, and was fast asleep; two ladies were standing in front of the fire, talking in undertones; Lady Hartledon sat on a sofa a little apart, her baby on her knee; and her sister-in-law, Lady Kirton, a fragile and rather cross-looking young woman, who looked as if a breath would blow her away, was standing over her, studying the infant’s face. The latter lady moved away and joined the group at the fire as Mr. Carr approached Lady Hartledon.
“You have your little charge here, I see!”
“Please excuse it; I meant to have sent him away before any of you came up,” she said, quite pleadingly. “Sarah took upon herself to proclaim aloud that his eyes were not straight, and I could not help having him brought down to refute her words. Not straight, indeed! She’s only envious of him.”
Sarah was Lady Kirton. Mr. Carr smiled.
“She has no children herself. I think you might be proud of your godson, Mr. Carr. But he ought not to have been here to receive you, for all that.”
“I have come up soon to say good-bye, Lady Hartledon. In ten minutes I must be gone.”
“In all this snow! What a night to travel in!”
“Necessity has no law. So, sir, you’d imprison my finger, would you!”
He had touched the child’s hand, and in a moment it was clasped round his finger. Lady Hartledon laughed.
“Lady Kirton — the most superstitious woman in the world — would say that was an omen: you are destined to be his friend through life.”
“As I will be,” said the barrister, his tone more earnest than the occasion seemed to call for.
Lady Hartledon, with a graciousness she was little in the habit of showing to Mr. Carr, made room for him beside her, and he sat down. The baby lay on his back, his wide-open eyes looking upwards, good as gold.
“How quiet he is! How he stares!” reiterated the barrister, who did not understand much about babies, except for a shadowy idea that they lived in a state of crying for the first six months.
“He is the best child in the world; every one says so,” she returned. “He is not the least — Hey-day! what do you mean by contradicting mamma like that? Behave yourself, sir.”
For the infant, as if to deny his goodness, set up a sudden cry. Mr. Carr laughed. He put down his finger again, and the little fingers clasped round it, and the cry ceased.
“He does not like to lose his friend, you see, Lady Hartledon.”
“I wish you would be my friend as well as his,” she rejoined; and the low meaning tones struck on Mr. Carr’s ear.
“I trust I am your friend,” he answered.
She was still for a few moments; her pale beautiful face inclining towards the child’s; her large dark eyes bent upon him. She turned them on Mr. Carr.
“This has been a sad day.”
“Yes, for you. It is grievous to lose a brother.”
“And to lose him without the opportunity of a last look, a last farewell. Robert was my best and favourite brother. But the day has been marked as unhappy for other causes than that.”
Was it an uncomfortable prevision of what was coming that caused Mr. Carr not to answer her? He talked to the unconscious baby, and played with its cheeks.
“What secret is this that you and my husband have between you, Mr. Carr?” she asked abruptly.
He ceased his laughing with the baby, said something about its soft face, was altogether easy and careless in his manner, and then answered in half-jesting tones:
“Which one, Lady Hartledon?”
“Which one! Have you more than one?” she continued, taking the words literally.
“We might count up half-a-dozen, I daresay. I cannot tell you how many things I have not confided to him. We are quite—”
“I mean the secret that affects him” she interrupted, in aggrieved tones, feeling that Mr. Carr was playing with her.
“There is some dread upon him that’s wearing him to a shadow, poisoning his happiness, making his days and nights one long restlessness. Do you think it right to keep it from me, Mr. Carr? Is it what you and he are both doing — and are in league with each other to do?”
“I am not keeping any secret from you, Lady Hartledon.”
“You know you are. Nonsense! Do you think I have forgotten that evening that was the beginning of it, when a tall strange man dressed as a clergyman, came here, and you both were shut up with him for I can’t tell how long, and Lord Hartledon came out from it looking like a ghost? You and he both misled me, causing me to believe that the Ashtons were entering an action against him for breach of promise; laying the damages at ten thousand pounds. I mean that secret, Mr. Carr,” she added with emphasis. “The same man was here on Friday night again; and when you came to the house afterwards, you and Lord Hartledon sat up until nearly daylight.”
Mr. Carr, who had his eyes on the exacting baby, shook his head, and intimated that he was really unable to understand her.
“When you are in town he is always at your chambers; when you are away he receives long letters from you that I may not read.”
“Yes, we have been on terms of close friendship for years. And Lord Hartledon is an idle man, you know, and looks me up.”
“He said you were arranging some business for him last autumn.”
“Last autumn? Let me see. Yes, I think I was.”
“Mr. Carr, is it of any use playing with me? Do you think it right or kind to do so?”
His manner changed at once; he turned to her with eyes as earnest as her own.
“Lady Hartledon, I would tell you anything that I could and ought to tell you. That your husband has been engaged in some complicated business, which I have been — which I have taken upon myself to arrange for him, is very true. I know that he does not wish it mentioned, and therefore my lips are sealed: but it is as well you did not know it, for it would give you no satisfaction.”
“Does it involve anything very frightful?”
“It might involve the — the loss of a large sum of money,” he answered, making the best reply he could.
Lady Hartledon sank her voice to a whisper. “Does it involve the possible loss of his title? — of Hartledon?”
“No,” said Mr. Carr, looking at her with surprise.
“You are sure?”
“Certain. I give you my word. What can have got into your head, Lady Hartledon?”
She gave a sigh of relief. “I thought it just possible — but I will not tell you why I thought it — that some claimant might be springing up to the title and property.”
Mr. Carr laughed. “That would be a calamity. Hartledon is as surely your husband’s as this watch” — taking it out to look at the time— “is mine. When his brother died, he succeeded to him of indisputable right. And now I must go, for my time is up; and when next I see you, young gentleman, I shall
expect a good account of your behaviour. Why, sir, the finger’s mine, not yours. Good-bye, Lady Hartledon.”
She gave him her hand coolly, for she was not pleased. The baby began to cry, and was sent away with its nurse.
And then Lady Hartledon sat on alone, feeling that if she were ever to arrive at the solution of the mystery, it would not be by the help of Mr. Carr. Other questions had been upon her lips — who the stranger was — what he wanted — five hundred of them: but she saw that she might as well have put them to the moon.
And Lord Hartledon went out with Mr. Carr in the inclement night, and saw him off by a Great-Western train.
CHAPTER XXX.
MAUDE’S DISOBEDIENCE.
Again the months went on, it may almost be said the years, and little took place worthy of record. Time obliterates as well as soothes; and Lady Hartledon had almost forgotten the circumstances which had perplexed and troubled her, for nothing more had come of them.
And Lord Hartledon? But for a certain restlessness, a hectic flush and a worn frame, betraying that the inward fever was not quenched, a startled movement if approached or spoken to unexpectedly, it might be thought that he also was at rest. There were no more anxious visits to Thomas Carr’s chambers; he went about his ordinary duties, sat out his hours in the House of Lords, and did as other men. There was nothing very obvious to betray mental apprehension; and Maude had certainly dismissed the past, so far, from her mind.
Not again had Val gone down to Hartledon. With the exception of that short visit of a day or two, already recorded, he had not been there since his marriage. He would not go: his wife, though she had her way in most things, could not induce him to go. She went once or twice, in a spirit of defiance, it may be said, and meanwhile he remained in London, or took a short trip to the Continent, as the whim prompted him. Once they had gone abroad together, and remained for some months; taking servants and the children, for there were two children now; and the little fellow who had clasped the finger of Mr. Carr was a sturdy boy of three years old.
Lady Hartledon’s health was beginning to fail. The doctors told her she must be more quiet; she went out a great deal, and seemed to live only in the world. Her husband remonstrated with her on the score of health; but she laughed, and said she was not going to give up pleasure just yet. Of course these gay habits are more easily acquired than relinquished. Lady Hartledon had fainting-fits; she felt occasional pain and palpitation in the region of the heart; and she grew thin without apparent cause. She said nothing about it, lest it should be made a plea for living more quietly; never dreaming of danger. Had she known what caused her brother’s death her fears might possibly have been awakened. Lord Hartledon suspected mischief might be arising, and cautiously questioned her; she denied that anything was the matter, and he felt reassured. His chief care was to keep her free from excitement; and in this hope he gave way to her more than he would otherwise have done. But alas! the moment was approaching when all his care would be in vain; when the built-up security of years was destroyed by a single act of wilful disobedience to him. The sword so long suspended over his head, was to fall on hers at last.
One spring afternoon, in London, he was in his wife’s sitting-room; the little room where you have seen her before, looking upon the Park. The children were playing on the carpet — two pretty little things; the girl eighteen months old.
“Take care!” suddenly called out Lady Hartledon.
Some one was opening the door, and the little Maude was too near to it. She ran and picked up the child, and Hedges came in with a card for his master, saying at the same time that the gentleman was waiting. Lord Hartledon held it to the fire to read the name.
“Who is it?” asked Lady Hartledon, putting the little girl down by the window, and approaching her husband. But there came no answer.
Whether the silence aroused her suspicions — whether any look in her husband’s face recalled that evening of terror long ago — or whether some malicious instinct whispered the truth, can never be known. Certain it was that the past rose up as in a mirror before Lady Hartledon’s imagination, and she connected this visitor with the former. She bent over his shoulder to peep at the card; and her husband, startled out of his presence of mind, tore it in two and threw the pieces into the fire.
“Oh, very well!” she exclaimed, mortally offended. “But you cannot blind me: it is your mysterious visitor again.”
“I don’t know what you mean, Maude. It is only someone on business.”
“Then I will go and ask him his business,” she said, moving to the door with angry resolve.
Val was too quick for her. He placed his back against the door, and lifted his hands in agitation. It was a great fault of his, or perhaps a misfortune — for he could not help it — this want of self-control in moments of emergency.
“Maude, I forbid you to interfere in this; you must not. For Heaven’s sake, sit down and remain quiet.”
“I’ll see your visitor, and know, at last, what this strange trouble is. I will, Lord Hartledon.”
“You must not: do you hear me?” he reiterated with deep emotion, for she was trying to force her way out of the room. “Maude — listen — I do not mean to be harsh, but for your own good I conjure you to be still. I forbid you, by the obedience you promised me before God, to inquire into or stir in this matter. It is a private affair of my own, and not yours. Stay here until I return.”
Maude drew back, as if in compliance; and Lord Hartledon, supposing he had prevailed, quitted the room and closed the door. He was quite mistaken. Never had her solemn vows of obedience been so utterly despised; never had the temptation to evil been so rife in her heart.
She unlatched the door and listened. Lord Hartledon went downstairs and into the library, just as he had done the evening before the christening. And Lady Hartledon was certain the same man awaited him there. Ringing the nursery-bell, she took off her slippers, unseen, and hid them under a chair.
“Remain here with the children,” was her order to the nurse who appeared, as she shut the woman into the room.
Creeping down softly she opened the door of the room behind the library, and glided in. It was a small room, used exclusively by Lord Hartledon, where he kept a heterogeneous collection of things — papers, books, cigars, pipes, guns, scientific models, anything — and which no one but himself ever attempted to enter. The intervening door between that and the library was not quite closed; and Lady Hartledon, cautiously pushed it a little further open. Wilful, unpardonable disobedience! when he had so strongly forbidden her! It was the same tall stranger. He was speaking in low tones, and Lord Hartledon leaned against the wall with a blank expression of face.
She saw; and heard. But how she controlled her feelings, how she remained and made no sign, she never knew. But that the instinct of self-esteem was one of her strongest passions, the dread of detection in proportion to it, she never had remained. There she was, and she could not get away again. The subtle dexterity which had served her in coming might desert her in returning. Had their senses been on the alert they might have heard her poor heart beating.
The interview did not last long — about twenty minutes; and whilst Lord Hartledon was attending his visitor to the door she escaped upstairs again, motioned away the nurse, and resumed her shoes. But what did she look like? Not like Maude Hartledon. Her face was as that of one upon whom some awful doom has fallen; her breath was coming painfully; and she kneeled down on the carpet and clasped her children to her beating heart with an action of wild despair.
“Oh, my boy! my boy! Oh, my little Maude!”
Suddenly she heard her husband’s step approaching, and pushing them from her, rose and stood at the window, apparently looking out on the darkening world.
Lord Hartledon came in, gaily and cheerily, his manner lighter than it had been for years.
“Well, Maude, I have not been long, you see. Why don’t you have lights?”
She did not answer: only stared st
raight out. Her husband approached her. “What are you looking at, Maude?”
“Nothing,” she answered: “my head aches. I think I shall lie down until dinner-time. Eddie, open the door, and call Nurse, as loud as you can call.”
The little boy obeyed, and the nurse returned, and was ordered to take the children. Lady Hartledon was following them to go to her own room, when she fell into a chair and went off in a dead faint.
“It’s that excitement,” said Val. “I do wish Maude would be reasonable!”
The illness, however, appeared to be more serious than an ordinary fainting-fit; and Lord Hartledon, remembering the suspicion of heart-disease, sent for the family doctor Sir Alexander Pepps, an oracle in the fashionable world.
A different result showed itself — equally caused by excitement — and the countess-dowager arrived in a day or two in hot haste. Lady Hartledon lay in bed, and did not attempt to get up or to get better. She lay almost as one without life, taking no notice of any one, turning her head from her husband when he entered, refusing to answer her mother, keeping the children away from the room.
“Why doesn’t she get up, Pepps?” demanded the dowager, wrathfully, pouncing upon the physician one day, when he was leaving the house.
Sir Alexander, who might have been supposed to have received his baronetcy for his skill, but that titles, like kissing, go by favour, stopped short, took off his hat, and presumed that Lady Hartledon felt more comfortable in bed.
“Rubbish! We might all lie in bed if we studied comfort. Is there any earthly reason why she should stay there, Pepps?”
“Not any, except weakness.”
“Except idleness, you mean. Why don’t you order her to get up?”
“I have advised Lady Hartledon to do so, and she does not attend to me,” replied Sir Alexander.
“Oh,” said the dowager. “She was always wilful. What about her heart?”
“Her heart!” echoed Sir Alexander, looking up now as if a little aroused.
“Dear me, yes; her heart; I didn’t say her liver. Is it sound, Pepps?”