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<p class="ctr"><SPAN href="images/illus-000.jpg"><ANTIMG src=
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<b>"AS THOUGH SHE LISTENED STILL TO WORDS IN HER EARS"</b><br/>
[See page <SPAN href="#VIII">122</SPAN>]</p>
<h1>Lady Rose's Daughter</h1>
<h3>A Novel</h3>
<h4>BY</h4>
<h2>MRS. HUMPHRY WARD</h2>
<h5>Author of "Eleanor" "Robert Elsmere" etc. etc.</h5>
<br/>
<h4>ILLUSTRATED BY<br/>
HOWARD CHANDLER CHRISTY</h4>
<h5>1903</h5>
<center>[<SPAN href="#I">1</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#II">2</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#III">3</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#IV">4</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#V">5</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#VI">6</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#VII">7</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#VIII">8</SPAN>]
[<SPAN href="#IX">9</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#X">10</SPAN>]<br/>
[<SPAN href="#XI">11</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#XII">12</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#XIII">13</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#XIV">14</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#XV">15</SPAN>]
[<SPAN href="#XVI">16</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#XVII">17</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#XVIII">18</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#XIX">19</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#XX">20</SPAN>]<br/>
[<SPAN href="#XXI">21</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#XXII">22</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#XXIII">23</SPAN>] [<SPAN href="#XXIV">24</SPAN>]</center>
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<hr style="width: 35%;">
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<h2>ILLUSTRATION</h2>
<center>
<table summary="">
<tr>
<td>"AS THOUGH SHE LISTENED STILL TO WORDS IN HER EARS"</td>
<td align="right"><i><SPAN href="#illus-000.jpg">Frontispiece</SPAN></i></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>"LADY HENRY LISTENED EAGERLY"</td>
<td align="right"><i>Facing p</i>. <SPAN href="#illus-030.jpg">30</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>"'INDEED I WILL!' CRIED SIR WILFRID, AND THEY WALKED ON"</td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#illus-052.jpg">52</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>"LADY HENRY GASPED. SHE FELL BACK INTO HER CHAIR"</td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#illus-100.jpg">100</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>"HE ENTERED UPON A MERRY SCENE"</td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#illus-242.jpg">242</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>"'FOR MY ROSE'S CHILD,' HE SAID, GENTLY"</td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#illus-254.jpg">254</SPAN></td>
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<tr>
<td>"HER HANDS CLASPED IN FRONT OF HER"</td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#illus-356.jpg">356</SPAN></td>
</tr>
<tr>
<td>"SHE FOUND HERSELF KNEELING BESIDE HIM"</td>
<td align="right"><SPAN href="#illus-480.jpg">480</SPAN></td>
</tr>
</table>
</center>
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<hr style="width: 35%;">
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<br/>
<h1>LADY ROSE'S DAUGHTER</h1>
<br/>
<h2><SPAN name="I"></SPAN>I</h2>
<br/>
<p>"Hullo! No!--Yes!--upon my soul, it <i>is</i> Jacob! Why,
Delafield, my dear fellow, how are you?"</p>
<p>So saying--on a February evening a good many years ago--an
elderly gentleman in evening dress flung himself out of his cab,
which had just stopped before a house in Bruton Street, and hastily
went to meet a young man who was at the same moment stepping out of
another hansom a little farther down the pavement.</p>
<p>The pleasure in the older man's voice rang clear, and the
younger met him with an equal cordiality, expressed perhaps through
a manner more leisurely and restrained.</p>
<p>"So you <i>are</i> home, Sir Wilfrid? You were announced, I saw.
But I thought Paris would have detained you a bit."</p>
<p>"Paris? Not I! Half the people I ever knew there are dead, and
the rest are uncivil. Well, and how are you getting on? Making your
fortune, eh?"</p>
<p>And, slipping his arm inside the young man's, the speaker walked
back with him, along a line of carriages, towards a house which
showed a group of footmen at its open door. Jacob Delafield
smiled.</p>
<p>"The business of a land agent seems to be to spend some one
else's--as far as I've yet gone."</p>
<p>"Land agent! I thought you were at the bar?"</p>
<p>"I was, but the briefs didn't come in. My cousin offered me the
care of his Essex estates. I like the country--always have. So I
thought I'd better accept."</p>
<p>"What--the Duke? Lucky fellow! A regular income, and no
anxieties. I expect you're pretty well paid?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm not badly paid," replied the young man, tranquilly. "Of
course you're going to Lady Henry's?"</p>
<p>"Of course. Here we are."</p>
<p>The older man paused outside the line of servants waiting at the
door, and spoke in a lower tone. "How is she? Failing at all?"</p>
<p>Jacob Delafield hesitated. "She's grown very blind--and perhaps
rather more infirm, generally. But she is at home, as usual--every
evening for a few people, and for a good many on Wednesdays."</p>
<p>"Is she still alone--or is there any relation who looks after
her?"</p>
<p>"Relation? No. She detests them all."</p>
<p>"Except you?"</p>
<p>Delafield raised his shoulders, without an answering smile.
"Yes, she is good enough to except me. You're one of her trustees,
aren't you?"</p>
<p>"At present, the only one. But while I have been in Persia the
lawyers have done all that was necessary. Lady Henry herself never
writes a letter she can help. I really have heard next to nothing
about her for more than a year. This morning I arrived from
Paris--sent round to ask if she would be at home--and here I
am."</p>
<p>"Ah!" said Delafield, looking down. "Well, there is a lady who
has been with her, now, for more than two years--"</p>
<p>"Ah, yes, yes, I remember. Old Lady Seathwaite told me--last
year. Mademoiselle Le Breton--isn't that her name? What--she reads
to her, and writes letters for her--that kind of thing?"</p>
<p>"Yes--that kind of thing," said the other, after a moment's
hesitation. "Wasn't that a spot of rain? Shall I charge these
gentry?"</p>
<p>And he led the way through the line of footmen, which, however,
was not of the usual Mayfair density. For the party within was not
a "crush." The hostess who had collected it was of opinion that the
chief object of your house is not to entice the mob, but to keep it
out. The two men mounted the stairs together.</p>
<p>"What a charming house!" said the elder, looking round him. "I
remember when your uncle rebuilt it. And before that, I remember
his mother, the old Duchess here, with her swarm of parsons. Upon
my word, London tastes good--after Teheran!"</p>
<p>And the speaker threw back his fair, grizzled head, regarding
the lights, the house, the guests, with the air of a sensitive dog
on a familiar scent.</p>
<p>"Ah, you're fresh home," said Delafield, laughing. "But let's
just try to keep you here--"</p>
<p>"My dear fellow, who is that at the top of the stairs?"</p>
<p>The old diplomat paused. In front of the pair some half a dozen
guests were ascending, and as many coming down. At the top stood a
tall lady in black, receiving and dismissing.</p>
<p>Delafield looked up.</p>
<p>"That is Mademoiselle Le Breton," he said, quietly.</p>
<p>"She receives?"</p>
<p>"She distributes the guests. Lady Henry generally establishes
herself in the back drawing-room. It doesn't do for her to see too
many people at once. Mademoiselle arranges it."</p>
<p>"Lady Henry must indeed be a good deal more helpless that I
remember her," murmured Sir Wilfrid, in some astonishment.</p>
<p>"She is, physically. Oh, no doubt of it! Otherwise you won't
find much change. Shall I introduce you?"</p>
<p>They were approaching a woman whose tall slenderness, combined
with a remarkable physiognomy, arrested the old man's attention.
She was not handsome--that, surely, was his first impression? The
cheek-bones were too evident, the chin and mouth too strong. And
yet the fine pallor of the skin, the subtle black-and-white, in
which, so to speak, the head and face were drawn, the life, the
animation of the whole--were these not beauty, or more than beauty?
As for the eyes, the carriage of the head, the rich magnificence of
hair, arranged with an artful eighteenth-century freedom, as Madame
Vigée Le Brun might have worn it--with the second glance the
effect of them was such that Sir Wilfrid could not cease from
looking at the lady they adorned. It was an effect as of something
over-living, over-brilliant--an animation, an intensity, so strong
that, at first beholding, a by-stander could scarcely tell whether
it pleased him or no.</p>
<p>"Mademoiselle Le Breton--Sir Wilfrid Bury," said Jacob
Delafield, introducing them.</p>
<p>"<i>Is</i> she French?" thought the old diplomat, puzzled.
"And--have I ever seen her before?"</p>
<p>"Lady Henry will be so glad!" said a low, agreeable voice. "You
are one of the old friends, aren't you? I have often heard her talk
of you."</p>
<p>"You are very good. Certainly, I am an old friend--a connection
also." There was the slightest touch of stiffness in Sir Wilfrid's
tone, of which the next moment he was ashamed. "I am very sorry to
hear that Lady Henry has grown so much more helpless since I left
England."</p>
<p>"She has to be careful of fatigue. Two or three people go in to
see her at a time. She enjoys them more so."</p>
<p>"In my opinion," said Delafield, "one more device of milady's
for getting precisely what she wants."</p>
<p>The young man's gay undertone, together with the look which
passed between him and Mademoiselle Le Breton, added to Sir
Wilfrid's stifled feeling of surprise.</p>
<p>"You'll tell her, Jacob, that I'm here?" He turned abruptly to
the young man.</p>
<p>"Certainly--when mademoiselle allows me. Ah, here comes the
Duchess!" said Delafield, in another voice.</p>
<p>Mademoiselle Le Breton, who had moved a few steps away from the
stair-head with Sir Wilfrid Bury, turned hastily. A slight, small
woman, delicately fair and sparkling with diamonds, was coming up
the stairs alone.</p>
<p>"My dear," said the new-comer, holding out her hands eagerly to
Mademoiselle Le Breton, "I felt I must just run in and have a look
at you. But Freddie says that I've got to meet him at that tiresome
Foreign Office! So I can only stay ten minutes. How are
you?"--then, in a lower voice, almost a whisper, which, however,
reached Sir Wilfrid Bury's ears--"worried to death?"</p>
<p>Mademoiselle Le Breton raised eyes and shoulders for a moment,
then, smiling, put her finger to her lip.</p>
<p>"You're coming to me to-morrow afternoon?" said the Duchess, in
the same half-whisper.</p>
<p>"I don't think I can get away."</p>
<p>"Nonsense! My dear, you must have some air and exercise! Jacob,
will you see she comes?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I'm no good," said that young man, turning away. "Duchess,
you remember Sir Wilfrid Bury?"</p>
<p>"She would be an unnatural goddaughter if she didn't," said that
gentleman, smiling. "She may be your cousin, but I knew her before
you did."</p>
<p>The young Duchess turned with a start.</p>
<p>"Sir Wilfrid! A sight for sair een. When did you get back?"</p>
<p>She put her slim hands into both of his, and showered upon him
all proper surprise and the greetings due to her father's oldest
friend. Voice, gesture, words--all were equally amiable, well
trained, and perfunctory--Sir Wilfrid was well aware of it. He was
possessed of a fine, straw-colored mustache, and long eyelashes of
the same color. Both eyelashes and mustache made a screen behind
which, as was well known, their owner observed the world to
remarkably good purpose. He perceived the difference at once when
the Duchess, having done her social and family duty, left him to
return to Mademoiselle Le Breton.</p>
<p>"It <i>was</i> such a bore you couldn't come this afternoon! I
wanted you to see the babe dance--she's <i>too</i> great a duck!
And that Canadian girl came to sing. The voice is magnificent--but
she has some tiresome tricks!--and <i>I</i> didn't know what to say
to her. As to the other music on the 16th--I say, can't we find a
corner somewhere?" And the Duchess looked round the beautiful
drawing-room, which she and her companions had just entered, with a
dissatisfied air.</p>
<p>"Lady Henry, you'll remember, doesn't like corners," said
Mademoiselle Le Breton, smiling. Her tone, delicately free and
allusive, once more drew Sir Wilfrid's curious eyes to her, and he
caught also the impatient gesture with which the Duchess received
the remark.</p>
<p>"Ah, that's all right!" said Mademoiselle Le Breton, suddenly,
turning round to himself. "Here is Mr. Montresor--going on, too, I
suppose, to the Foreign Office. Now there'll be some chance of
getting at Lady Henry."</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid looked down the drawing-room, to see the famous War
Minister coming slowly through the well-filled but not crowded
room, stopping now and then to exchange a greeting or a farewell,
and much hampered, as it seemed, in so doing, by a pronounced and
disfiguring short-sight. He was a strongly built man of more than
middle height. His iron-gray hair, deeply carved features, and
cavernous black eyes gave him the air of power that his reputation
demanded. On the other hand, his difficulty of eyesight, combined
with the marked stoop of overwork, produced a qualifying
impression--as of power teased and fettered, a Samson among the
Philistines.</p>
<p>"My dear lady, good-night. I must go and fight with wild beasts
in Whitehall--worse luck! Ah, Duchess! All very well--but you can't
shirk either!"</p>
<p>So saying, Mr. Montresor shook hands with Mademoiselle Le Breton
and smiled upon the Duchess--both actions betraying precisely the
same degree of playful intimacy.</p>
<p>"How did you find Lady Henry?" said Mademoiselle Le Breton, in a
lowered voice.</p>
<p>"Very well, but very cross. She scolds me perpetually--I haven't
got a skin left. Ah, Sir Wilfrid!--<i>very</i> glad to see you!
When did you arrive? I thought I might perhaps find you at the
Foreign Office."</p>
<p>"I'm going on there presently," said Sir Wilfrid.</p>
<p>"Ah, but that's no good. Dine with me to-morrow night?--if you
are free? Excellent!--that's arranged. Meanwhile--send him in,
mademoiselle--send him in! He's fresh--let him take his turn." And
the Minister, grinning, pointed backward over his shoulder towards
an inner drawing-room, where the form of an old lady, seated in a
wheeled invalid-chair between two other persons, could be just
dimly seen.</p>
<p>"When the Bishop goes," said Mademoiselle Le Breton, with a
laughing shake of the head. "But I told him not to stay long."</p>
<p>"He won't want to. Lady Henry pays no more attention to his
cloth than to my gray hairs. The rating she has just given me for
my speech of last night! Well, good-night, dear lady--good-night.
You <i>are</i> better, I think?"</p>
<p>Mr. Montresor threw a look of scrutiny no less friendly than
earnest at the lady to whom he was speaking; and immediately
afterwards Sir Wilfrid, who was wedged in by an entering group of
people, caught the murmured words:</p>
<p>"Consult me when you want me--at any time."</p>
<p>Mademoiselle Le Breton raised her beautiful eyes to the speaker
in a mute gratitude.</p>
<p>"And five minutes ago I thought her plain!" said Sir Wilfrid to
himself as he moved away. "Upon my word, for a <i>dame de
compagnie</i> that young woman is at her ease! But where the deuce
have I seen her, or her double, before?"</p>
<p>He paused to look round the room a moment, before yielding
himself to one of the many possible conversations which, as he saw,
it contained for him. It was a stately panelled room of the last
century, furnished with that sure instinct both for comfort and
beauty which a small minority of English rich people have always
possessed. Two glorious Gainsboroughs, clad in the subtlest
brilliance of pearly white and shimmering blue, hung on either side
of the square opening leading to the inner room. The fair, clouded
head of a girl, by Romney, looked down from the panelling above the
hearth. A gowned abbé, by Vandyck, made the centre of
another wall, facing the Gainsboroughs. The pictures were all
famous, and had been associated for generations with the Delafield
name. Beneath them the carpets were covered by fine
eighteenth-century furniture, much of it of a florid Italian type
subdued to a delicate and faded beauty by time and use. The room
was cleverly broken into various circles and centres for
conversation; the chairs were many and comfortable; flowers
sheltered tête-à-têtes or made a setting for
beautiful faces; the lamps were soft, the air warm and light. A
cheerful hum of voices rose, as of talk enjoyed for talking's sake;
and a general effect of intimacy, or gayety, of an unfeigned social
pleasure, seemed to issue from the charming scene and communicate
itself to the onlooker.</p>
<p>And for a few moments, before he was discovered and tumultuously
annexed by a neighboring group, Sir Wilfrid watched the progress of
Mademoiselle Le Breton through the room, with the young Duchess in
her wake. Wherever she moved she was met with smiles, deference,
and eager attention. Here and there she made an introduction, she
redistributed a group, she moved a chair. It was evident that her
eye was everywhere, that she knew every one; her rule appeared to
be at once absolute and welcome. Presently, when she herself
accepted a seat, she became, as Sir Wilfrid perceived in the
intervals of his own conversation, the leader of the most animated
circle in the room. The Duchess, with one delicate arm stretched
along the back of Mademoiselle Le Breton's chair, laughed and
chattered; two young girls in virginal white placed themselves on
big gilt footstools at her feet; man after man joined the group
that stood or sat around her; and in the centre of it, the
brilliance of her black head, sharply seen against a background of
rose brocade, the grace of her tall form, which was thin almost to
emaciation, the expressiveness of her strange features, the
animation of her gestures, the sweetness of her voice, drew the
eyes and ears of half the room to Lady Henry's "companion."</p>
<p>Presently there was a movement in the distance. A man in
knee-breeches and silver-buckled shoes emerged from the back
drawing-room. Mademoiselle Le Breton rose at once and went to meet
him.</p>
<p>"The Bishop has had a long innings," said an old general to Sir
Wilfrid Bury. "And here is Mademoiselle Julie coming for you."</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid rose, in obedience to a smiling sign from the lady
thus described, and followed her floating black draperies towards
the farther room.</p>
<p>"Who are those two persons with Lady Henry?" he asked of his
guide, as they approached the <i>penetralia</i> where reigned the
mistress of the house. "Ah, I see!--one is Dr. Meredith--but the
other?"</p>
<p>"The other is Captain Warkworth," said Mademoiselle Le Breton.
"Do you know him?"</p>
<p>"Warkworth--Warkworth? Ah--of course--the man who distinguished
himself in the Mahsud expedition. But why is he home again so
soon?"</p>
<p>Mademoiselle Le Breton smiled uncertainly.</p>
<p>"I think he was invalided home," she said, with that manner, at
once restrained and gracious, that Sir Wilfrid had already observed
in her. It was the manner of some one who <i>counted</i>;
and--through all outward modesty--knew it.</p>
<p>"He wants something out of the ministry. I remember the man,"
was Sir Wilfrid's unspoken comment.</p>
<p>But they had entered the inner room. Lady Henry looked round.
Over her wrinkled face, now parchment-white, there shone a ray of
pleasure--sudden, vehement, and unfeigned.</p>
<p>"Sir Wilfrid!"</p>
<p>She made a movement as though to rise from her chair, which was
checked by his gesture and her helplessness.</p>
<p>"Well, this is good fortune," she said, as she put both her
hands into both of his. "This morning, as I was dressing, I had a
feeling that something agreeable was going to happen at last--and
then your note came. Sit down there. You know Dr. Meredith. He's as
quarrelsome as ever. Captain Warkworth--Sir Wilfrid Bury."</p>
<p>The square-headed, spectacled journalist addressed as Dr.
Meredith greeted the new-comer with the quiet cordiality of one for
whom the day holds normally so many events that it is impossible to
make much of any one of them. And the man on the farther side of
Lady Henry rose and bowed. He was handsome, and slenderly built.
The touch of impetuosity in his movement, and the careless ease
with which he carried his curly head, somehow surprised Sir
Wilfrid. He had expected another sort of person.</p>
<p>"I will give you my chair," said the Captain, pleasantly. "I
have had more than my turn."</p>
<p>"Shall I bring in the Duchess?" said Mademoiselle Le Breton, in
a low tone, as she stooped over the back of Lady Henry's chair.</p>
<p>That lady turned abruptly to the speaker.</p>
<p>"Let her do precisely as she pleases," said a voice, sharp,
lowered also, but imperious, like the drawing of a sword. "If she
wants me, she knows where I am."</p>
<p>"She would be so sorry--"</p>
<p>"Ne jouez pas la comédie, ma chère! Where is
Jacob?"</p>
<p>"In the other room. Shall I tell him you want him?"</p>
<p>"I will send for him when it suits me. Meanwhile, as I
particularly desired you to let me know when he arrived--"</p>
<p>"He has only been here twenty minutes," murmured Mademoiselle Le
Breton. "I thought while the Bishop was here you would not like to
be disturbed--"</p>
<p>"You thought!" The speaker raised her shoulders fiercely. "Comme
toujours, vous vous êtes trop bien amusée pour vous
souvenir de mes instructions--voilà la vérité!
Dr. Meredith," the whole imperious form swung round again towards
the journalist, "unless you forbid me, I shall tell Sir Wilfrid who
it was reviewed his book for you."</p>
<p>"Oh, good Heavens! I forbid you with all the energy of which I
am capable," said the startled journalist, raising appealing hands,
while Lady Henry, delighted with the effect produced by her sudden
shaft, sank back in her chair and grimly smiled.</p>
<p>Meanwhile Sir Wilfrid Bury's attention was still held by
Mademoiselle Le Breton. In the conversation between her and Lady
Henry he had noticed an extraordinary change of manner on the part
of the younger lady. Her ease, her grace had disappeared. Her tone
was humble, her manner quivering with nervous anxiety. And now, as
she stood a moment behind Lady Henry's chair, one trembling hand
steadying the other, Sir Wilfrid was suddenly aware of yet another
impression. Lady Henry had treated her companion with a
contemptuous and haughty ill-humor. Face to face with her mistress,
Mademoiselle Le Breton had borne it with submission, almost with
servility. But now, as she stood silent behind the blind old lady
who had flouted her, her wonderfully expressive face, her delicate
frame, spoke for her with an energy not to be mistaken. Her dark
eyes blazed. She stood for anger; she breathed humiliation.</p>
<p>"A dangerous woman, and an extraordinary situation," so ran his
thought, while aloud he was talking Central Asian politics and the
latest Simla gossip to his two companions.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Captain Warkworth and Mademoiselle Le Breton returned
together to the larger drawing-room, and before long Dr. Meredith
took his leave. Lady Henry and her old friend were left alone.</p>
<p>"I am sorry to hear that your sight troubles you more than of
old," said Sir Wilfrid, drawing his chair a little nearer to
her.</p>
<p>Lady Henry gave an impatient sigh. "Everything troubles me more
than of old. There is one disease from which no one recovers, my
dear Wilfrid, and it has long since fastened upon me."</p>
<p>"You mean old age? Oh, you are not so much to be pitied for
that," said Sir Wilfrid, smiling. "Many people would exchange their
youth for your old age."</p>
<p>"Then the world contains more fools than even I give it credit
for!" said Lady Henry, with energy. "Why should any one exchange
with me--a poor, blind, gouty old creature, with no chick or child
to care whether she lives or dies?"</p>
<p>"Ah, well, that's a misfortune--I won't deny that," said Sir
Wilfrid, kindly. "But I come home after three years. I find your
house as thronged as ever, in the old way. I see half the most
distinguished people in London in your drawing-room. It is sad that
you can no longer receive them as you used to do: but here you sit
like a queen, and people fight for their turn with you."</p>
<p>Lady Henry did not smile. She laid one of her wrinkled hands
upon his arm.</p>
<p>"Is there any one else within hearing?" she said, in a quick
undertone. Sir Wilfrid was touched by the vague helplessness of her
gesture, as she looked round her.</p>
<p>"No one--we are quite alone."</p>
<p>"They are not here for <i>me</i>--those people," she said,
quivering, with a motion of her hand towards the large
drawing-room.</p>
<p>"My dear friend, what do you mean?"</p>
<p>"They are here--come closer, I don't want to be overheard--for a
<i>woman</i>--whom I took in, in a moment of lunacy--who is now
robbing me of my best friends and supplanting me in my own
house."</p>
<p>The pallor of the old face had lost all its waxen dignity. The
lowered voice hissed in his ear. Sir Wilfrid, startled and
repelled, hesitated for his reply. Meanwhile, Lady Henry, who could
not see it, seemed at once to divine the change in his
expression.</p>
<p>"Oh, I suppose you think I'm mad," she said, impatiently, "or
ridiculous. Well, see for yourself, judge for yourself. In fact, I
have been looking, hungering, for your return. You have helped me
through emergencies before now. And I am in that state at present
that I trust no one, talk to no one, except of
<i>banalités</i>. But I should be greatly obliged if
<i>you</i> would come and listen to me, and, what is more, advise
me some day."</p>
<p>"Most gladly," said Sir Wilfrid, embarrassed; then, after a
pause, "Who is this lady I find installed here?"</p>
<p>Lady Henry hesitated, then shut her strong mouth on the
temptation to speak.</p>
<p>"It is not a story for to-night," she said; "and it would upset
me. But, when you first saw her, how did she strike you?"</p>
<p>"I saw at once," said her companion after a pause, "that you had
caught a personality."</p>
<p>"A personality!" Lady Henry gave an angry laugh. "That's one way
of putting it. But physically--did she remind you of no one?"</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid pondered a moment.</p>
<p>"Yes. Her face haunted me, when I first saw it. But--no; no, I
can't put any names."</p>
<p>Lady Henry gave a little snort of disappointment.</p>
<p>"Well, think. You knew her mother quite well. You have known her
grandfather all your life. If you're going on to the Foreign
Office, as I suppose you are, you'll probably see him to-night. She
is uncannily like him. As to her father, I don't know--but he was a
rolling-stone of a creature; you very likely came across him."</p>
<p>"I knew her mother and her father?" said Sir Wilfrid, astonished
and pondering.</p>
<p>"They had no right to be her mother and her father," said Lady
Henry, with grimness.</p>
<p>"Ah! So if one does guess--"</p>
<p>"You'll please hold your tongue."</p>
<p>"But at present I'm completely mystified," said Sir Wilfrid.</p>
<p>"Perhaps it'll come to you later. You've a good memory generally
for such things. Anyway, I can't tell you anything now. But when'll
you come again? To-morrow--luncheon? I really want you."</p>
<p>"Would you be alone?"</p>
<p>"Certainly. <i>That</i>, at least, I can still do--lunch as I
please, and with whom I please. Who is this coming in? Ah, you
needn't tell me."</p>
<p>The old lady turned herself towards the entrance, with a
stiffening of the whole frame, an instinctive and passionate
dignity in her whole aspect, which struck a thrill through her
companion.</p>
<p>The little Duchess approached, amid a flutter of satin and lace,
heralded by the scent of the Parma violets she wore in profusion at
her breast and waist. Her eye glanced uncertainly, and she
approached with daintiness, like one stepping on mined ground.</p>
<p>"Aunt Flora, I must have just a minute."</p>
<p>"I know no reason against your having ten, if you want them,"
said Lady Henry, as she held-out three fingers to the new-comer.
"You promised yesterday to come and give me a full account of the
Devonshire House ball. But it doesn't matter--and you have
forgotten."</p>
<p>"No, indeed, I haven't," said the Duchess, embarrassed. "But you
seemed so well employed to-night, with other people. And now--"</p>
<p>"Now you are going on," said Lady Henry, with a most unfriendly
suavity.</p>
<p>"Freddie says I must," said the other, in the attitude of a
protesting child.</p>
<p>"<i>Alors</i>!" said Lady Henry, lifting her hand. "We all know
how obedient you are. Good-night!"</p>
<p>The Duchess flushed. She just touched her aunt's hand, and then,
turning an indignant face on Sir Wilfrid, she bade him farewell
with an air which seemed to him intended to avenge upon his neutral
person the treatment which, from Lady Henry, even so spoiled a
child of fortune as herself could not resent.</p>
<p>Twenty minutes later, Sir Wilfrid entered the first big room of
the Foreign Office party. He looked round him with a revival of the
exhilaration he had felt on Lady Henry's staircase, enjoying, after
his five years in Teheran, after his long homeward journey by
desert and sea, even the common trivialities of the scene--the
lights, the gilding, the sparkle of jewels, the scarlet of the
uniforms, the noise and movement of the well-dressed crowd. Then,
after this first physical thrill, began the second stage of
pleasure--the recognitions and the greetings, after long absence,
which show a man where he stands in the great world, which sum up
his past and forecast his future. Sir Wilfrid had no reason to
complain. Cabinet ministers and great ladies, members of Parliament
and the permanent officials who govern but do not rule, soldiers,
journalists, barristers--were all glad, it seemed, to grasp him by
the hand. He had returned with a record of difficult service
brilliantly done, and the English world rewarded him in its
accustomed ways.</p>
<p>It was towards one o'clock that he found himself in a crowd
pressing towards the staircase in the wake of some departing
royalties. A tall man in front turned round to look for some ladies
behind him from whom he had been separated in the crush. Sir
Wilfrid recognized old Lord Lackington, the veteran of marvellous
youth, painter, poet, and sailor, who as a gay naval lieutenant had
entertained Byron in the Ægean; whose fame as one of the
raciest of naval reformers was in all the newspapers; whose
personality was still, at seventy-five, charming to most women and
challenging to most men.</p>
<p>As the old man turned, he was still smiling, as though in unison
with something which had just been said to him; and his black eyes
under his singularly white hair searched the crowd with the
animation of a lad of twenty. Through the energy of his aspect the
flame of life still burned, as the evening sun through a fine sky.
The face had a faulty yet most arresting brilliance. The mouth was
disagreeable, the chin common. But the general effect was still
magnificent.</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid started. He recalled the drawing-room in Bruton
Street; the form and face of Mademoiselle Le Breton; the sentences
by which Lady Henry had tried to put him on the track. His mind ran
over past years, and pieced together the recollections of a
long-past scandal. "Of course! <i>Of course!</i>" he said to
himself, not without excitement. "She is not like her mother, but
she has all the typical points of her mother's race."</p>
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