Little Lord Fauntleroy

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by Burnett, Frances Hodgson;


  The woman drove away; the look on her handsome common face half frightened, half fierce. Mr. Havisham had noticed, during his interviews with her, that though she had a passionate temper and a coarse, insolent manner, she was neither so clever nor so bold as she meant to be; she seemed sometimes to be almost overwhelmed by the position in which she had placed herself. It was as if she had not expected to meet with such opposition.

  “She is evidently,” the lawyer said to Mrs. Errol, “a person from the lower walks of life. She is uneducated and untrained in everything, and quite unused to meeting people like ourselves on any terms of equality. She does not know what to do. Her visit to the Castle quite cowed her. She was infuriated, but she was cowed. The Earl would not receive her, but I advised him to go with me to the Dorincourt Arms, where she is staying. When she saw him enter the room, she turned white, though she flew into a rage at once, and threatened and demanded in one breath.”

  The fact was that the Earl had stalked into the room and stood, looking like a venerable aristocratic giant, staring at the woman from under his beetling brows, and not condescending a word. He simply stared at her, taking her in from head to foot as if she were some repulsive curiosity. He let her talk and demand until she was tired without himself uttering a word, and then he said:

  “You say you are my eldest son’s wife. If that is true, and if the proof you offer is too much for us, the law is on your side. In that case your boy is Lord Fauntleroy. The matter will be sifted to the bottom, you may rest assured. If your claims are proved, you will be provided for. I want to see nothing of either you or the child so long as I live. The place will unfortunately have enough of you after my death. You are exactly the kind of person I should have expected my son Bevis to choose.”

  And then he turned his back upon her and stalked out of the room as he had stalked into it.

  Not many days after that a visitor was announced to Mrs. Errol, who was writing in her little morning-room. The maid who brought the message looked rather excited; her eyes were quite round with amazement in fact, and being young and inexperienced, she regarded her mistress with nervous sympathy.

  “It’s the Earl hisself, ma’am!” she said in tremulous awe.

  When Mrs. Errol entered the drawing-room a very tall, majestic-looking old man was standing on the tiger-skin rug. He had a handsome, grim old face, with an aquiline profile, a long white mustache and an obstinate look.

  “Mrs. Errol, I believe?” he said.

  “Mrs. Errol,” she answered.

  “I am the Earl of Dorincourt,” he said.

  He paused a moment, almost unconsciously, to look into her uplifted eyes. They were so like the big, affectionate, childish eyes he had seen uplifted to his own so often every day during the last few months, that they gave him a quite curious sensation.

  “The boy is very like you,” he said abruptly.

  “It has been often said so, my lord,” she replied, “but I have been glad to think him like his father also.”

  As Lady Lorridaile had told him, her voice was very sweet, and her manner was very simple and dignified. She did not seem in the least troubled by his sudden coming.

  “Yes,” said the Earl, “he is like—my son—too.” He put his hand up to his big white mustache and pulled it fiercely. “Do you know,” he said, “why I have come here?”

  “I have seen Mr. Havisham,” Mrs. Errol began, “and he has told me of the claims which have been made—”

  “I have come to tell you,” said the Earl, “that they will be investigated and contested, if a contest can be made. I have come to tell you that the boy shall be defended with all the power of the law. His rights—”

  The soft voice interrupted him.

  “He must have nothing that is not his by right, even if the law can give it to him,” she said.

  “Unfortunately the law cannot,” said the Earl. “If it could, it should. This outrageous woman and her child—”

  “Perhaps she cares for him as much as I care for Cedric, my lord,” said little Mrs. Errol. “And if she was your eldest son’s wife, her son is Lord Fauntleroy, and mine is not.”

  She was no more afraid of him than Cedric had been, and she looked at him just as Cedric would have looked, and he, having been an old tyrant all his life, was privately pleased by it. People so seldom dared to differ from him that there was an entertaining novelty in it.

  “I suppose,” he said, scowling slightly, “that you would much prefer that he should not be the Earl of Dorincourt?”

  Her fair young face flushed.

  “It is a very magnificent thing to be the Earl of Dorincourt, my lord,” she said. “I know that, but I care most that he should be what his father was—brave and just and true always.”

  “In striking contrast to what his grandfather was, eh?” said his lordship sardonically.

  “I have not had the pleasure of knowing his grandfather,” replied Mrs. Errol, “but I know my little boy believes—” She stopped short a moment, looking quietly into his face, and then she added: “I know that Cedric loves you.”

  “Would he have loved me,” said the Earl dryly, “if you had told him why I did not receive you at the Castle?”

  “No,” answered Mrs. Errol, “I think not. That was why I did not wish him to know.”

  “Well,” said my lord brusquely, “there are few women who would not have told him.”

  He suddenly began to walk up and down the room, pulling his great mustache more violently than ever.

  “Yes, he is fond of me,” he said, “and I am fond of him. I can’t say I ever was fond of anything before. I am fond of him. He pleased me from the first. I am an old man, and was tired of my life. He has given me something to live for, I am proud of him. I was satisfied to think of his taking his place some day as the head of the family.”

  He came back and stood before Mrs. Errol.

  “I am miserable,” he said. “Miserable!”

  He looked as if he was. Even his pride could not keep his voice steady or his hands from shaking. For a moment it almost seemed as if his deep, fierce eyes had tears in them. “Perhaps it is because I am miserable that I have come to you,” he said, quite glaring down at her. “I used to hate you; I have been jealous of you. This wretched, disgraceful business has changed that. After seeing that repulsive woman who calls herself the wife of my son Bevis, I actually felt it would be a relief to look at you. I have been an obstinate old fool, and I suppose I have treated you badly. You are like the boy, and the boy is the first object in my life. I am miserable, and I came to you merely because you are like the boy, and he cares for you, and I care for him. Treat me as well as you can, for the boy’s sake.”

  He said it all in his harsh voice, and almost roughly, but somehow he seemed so broken down for the time that Mrs. Errol was touched to the heart. She got up and moved an armchair a little forward.

  “I wish you would sit down,” she said in a soft, pretty, sympathetic way. “You have been so much troubled that you are very tired, and you need all your strength.”

  It was just as new to him to be spoken to and cared for in that gentle, simple way as it was to be contradicted. He was reminded of “the boy” again, and he actually did as she asked him. Perhaps his disappointment and wretchedness were good discipline for him; if he had not been wretched he might have continued to hate her, but just at present he found her a little soothing. Almost anything would have seemed pleasant by contrast with Lady Fauntleroy; and this one had so sweet a face and voice, and a pretty dignity when she spoke or moved. Very soon, by the quiet magic of these influences, he began to feel less gloomy, and then he talked still more.

  “Whatever happens,” he said, “the boy shall be provided for. He shall be taken care of, now and in the future.”

  Before he went away he glanced around the room.

  “Do you like the house?” he demanded.

  “Very much,” she answered.

  “This is a cheerful room,” he sa
id. “May I come here again and talk this matter over?”

  “As often as you wish, my lord,” she replied.

  And then he went out to his carriage and drove away, Thomas and Henry almost stricken dumb upon the box at the turn affairs had taken.

  13. Dick to the Rescue

  OF course as soon as the story of Lord Fauntleroy and the difficulties of the Earl of Dorincourt were discussed in the English newspapers, they were discussed in the American newspapers. The story was too interesting to be passed over lightly, and it was talked of a great deal. There were so many versions of it that it would have been an edifying thing to buy all the papers and compare them. Mr. Hobbs read so much about it that he became quite bewildered. One paper described his young friend Cedric as an infant in arms—another as a young man at Oxford, winning all the honors, and distinguishing himself by writing Greek poems; one said he was engaged to a young lady of great beauty, who was the daughter of a duke; another said he had just been married; the only thing, in fact, which was not said was that he was a little boy between seven and eight, with handsome legs and curly hair. One said he was no relation to the Earl of Dorincourt at all, but was a small impostor who had sold newspapers and slept in the streets of New York before his mother imposed upon the family lawyer, who came to America to look for the Earl’s heir. Then came the descriptions of the new Lord Fauntleroy and his mother. Sometimes she was a gypsy, sometimes an actress, sometimes a beautiful Spaniard; but it was always agreed that the Earl of Dorincourt was her deadly enemy, and would not acknowledge her son as his heir if he could help it; and as there seemed to be some slight flaw in the papers she had produced, it was expected that there would be a long trial, which would be far more interesting than anything ever carried into court before. Mr. Hobbs used to read the papers until his head was in a whirl, and in the evening he and Dick would talk it all over. They found out what an important personage an Earl of Dorincourt was, and what a magnificent income he possessed, and how many estates he owned, and how stately and beautiful was the Castle in which he lived; and the more they learned the more excited they became.

  “Seems like somethin’ orter be done,” said Mr. Hobbs. “Things like them orter be held on to—earls or no earls.”

  But there really was nothing they could do but each write a letter to Cedric, containing assurances of their friendship and sympathy. They wrote those letters as soon as they could after receiving the news; and after having written them, they handed them over to each other to be read.

  This is what Mr. Hobbs read in Dick’s letter:

  DERE FREND,—i got ure letter an Mr. Hobbs got his an we are sorry u are down on ure luck an we say hold on as longs u kin an dont let no one git ahed of u. There is a lot of ole theves wil make al they kin of u ef u dont kepe ure i skinned. But this is mosly to say that ive not forgot wot u did for me an if there aint no better way cum over here an go in pardners with me. Biznes is fine an ile see no harm cums to u. Enny big feler that trise to cum it over u wil hafter setle it fust with Perfessor Dick Tipton. So no more at present

  DICK

  And this was what Dick read in Mr. Hobbs’s letter:

  DEAR SIR,—Yrs received and wd say things looks bad. I believe its a put up job and them thats done it ought to be looked after sharp. And what I write to say is two things. I’m going to look this thing up. Keep quiet and I’ll see a lawyer and do all I can. And if the worst happens and them earls is too many for us theres a partnership in the grocery business ready for you when yure old enough and a home and a friend in

  Yrs truly,

  SILAS HOBBS

  “Well,” said Mr. Hobbs, “he’s pervided for between us, if he aint a earl.”

  “So he is,” said Dick. “I’d ha’ stood by him. Blest if I didn’t like that little feller fust rate.”

  The very next morning one of Dick’s customers was rather surprised. He was a young lawyer just beginning practice; as poor as a very young lawyer can possibly be, but a bright, energetic young fellow, with sharp wit and a good temper. He had a shabby office near Dick’s stand, and every morning Dick blacked his boots for him, and quite often they were not exactly watertight, but he always had a friendly word or a joke for Dick.

  That particular morning, when he put his foot on the rest, he had an illustrated paper in his hand—an enterprising paper, with pictures in it of conspicuous people and things. He had just finished looking it over, and when the last boot was polished, he handed it over to the boy.

  “Here’s a paper for you, Dick,” he said; “you can look it over when you drop in at Delmonico’s for your breakfast. Picture of an English castle in it, and an English earl’s daughter-in-law. Fine young woman too—lots of hair—though she seems to be raising rather a row. You ought to become familiar with the nobility and gentry, Dick. Begin on the Right Honorable the Earl of Dorincourt and Lady Fauntleroy. Hello! I say, what’s the matter?”

  The pictures he spoke of were on the front page, and Dick was staring at one of them with his eyes and mouth open, and his sharp face almost pale with excitement.

  “What’s to pay, Dick?” said the young man. “What has paralyzed you?”

  Dick really did look as if something tremendous had happened. He pointed to the picture, under which was written: “Mother of Claimant (Lady Fauntleroy).”

  It was the picture of a handsome woman, with large eyes and heavy braids of black hair wound around her head.

  “Her!” said Dick. “My, I know her better’n I know you!”

  The young man began to laugh.

  “Where did you meet her, Dick?” he said. “At Newport? Or when you ran over to Paris the last time?”

  Dick actually forgot to grin. He began to gather his brushes and things together, as if he had something to do which would put an end to his business for the present.

  “Never mind,” he said. “I know her! An’ I’ve struck work for this morning.”

  And in less than five minutes from that time he was tearing through the streets on his way to Mr. Hobbs and the corner store. Mr. Hobbs could scarcely believe the evidence of his senses when he looked across the counter and saw Dick rush in with the paper in his hand. The boy was out of breath with running; so much out of breath, in fact, that he could scarcely speak as he threw the paper down on the counter.

  “Hello!” exclaimed Mr. Hobbs. “Hello! What you got there?”

  “Look at it!” panted Dick. “Look at that woman in the picture! That’s what you look at! She aint no ’ristocrat, she ain’t!” with withering scorn. “She’s no lord’s wife. You may eat me, if it ain’t Minna—Minna! I’d know her anywheres, an’ so’d Ben. Jest ax him.”

  Mr. Hobbs dropped into his seat.

  “I knowed it was a put-up job,” he said. “I knowed it; and they done it on account o’ him bein’ a ’Merican!”

  “Done it!” cried Dick with disgust. “She done it, that’s who done it. She was allers up to her tricks; an’ I’ll tell yer wot come to me, the minnit I saw her pictur’. There was one o’ them papers we saw had a letter in it that said somethin’ ’bout her boy, an’ it said he had a scar on his chin. Put ’em together—he ’n’ that there scar! Why that there boy o’ hers ain’t no more a lord than I am! It’s Ben’s boy—the little chap she hit when she let fly that plate at me.”

  Professor Dick Tipton had always been a sharp boy, and earning his living in the streets of a big city had made him still sharper. He had learned to keep his eyes open and his wits about him, and it must be confessed he enjoyed immensely the excitement and impatience of the moment. If little Lord Fauntleroy could only have looked into the store that morning he would certainly have been interested, even if all the discussion and plans had been intended to decide the fate of some other boy than himself.

  Mr. Hobbs was almost overwhelmed by his sense of responsibility, and Dick was all alive and full of energy. He began to write a letter to Ben, and he cut out the picture and enclosed it to him, and Mr. Hobbs wrote a letter to Cedric
and one to the Earl. They were in the midst of this letter-writing when a new idea came to Dick.

  “Say,” he said, “the feller that give me the paper, he’s a lawyer. Let’s ax him what we’d better do. Lawyers knows it all.”

  Mr. Hobbs was immensely impressed by this suggestion and Dick’s business capacity.

  “That’s so!” he replied. “This here calls for lawyers.”

  And leaving the store in care of a substitute, he struggled into his coat and marched down town with Dick, and the two presented themselves with their romantic story in Mr. Harrison’s office, much to that young man’s astonishment.

  If he had not been a very young lawyer, with a very enterprising mind and a great deal of spare time on his hands, he might not have been so readily interested in what they had to say, for it all certainly sounded very wild and queer; but he chanced to want something to do very much, and he chanced to know Dick, and Dick chanced to say his say in a very sharp, telling sort of way.

  “And,” said Mr. Hobbs, “say what your time’s worth a’ hour and look into this thing thorough, and I’ll pay the damage—Silas Hobbs, corner of Blank Street, Vegetables and Fancy Groceries.”

  “Well,” said Mr. Harrison, “it will be a big thing if it turns out all right, and it will be almost as big a thing for me as for Lord Fauntleroy; and at any rate, no harm can be done by investigating. It appears there has been some dubiousness about the child. The woman contradicted herself in some of her statements about his age, and aroused suspicion. The first persons to be written to are Dick’s brother and the Earl of Dorincourt’s family lawyer.”

  And actually, before the sun went down, two letters had been written and sent in two different directions—one speeding out of New York harbor on a mail steamer on its way to England, and the other on a train carrying letters and passengers bound for California. And the first was addressed to “T. Havisham, Esq.,” and the second to “Benjamin Tipton.”

 

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