<h2><SPAN name="II"></SPAN>II</h2>
<br/>
<p>It was a cold, clear morning in February, with a little pale
sunshine playing on the bare trees of the Park. Sir Wilfrid,
walking southward from the Marble Arch to his luncheon with Lady
Henry, was gladly conscious of the warmth of his fur-collared coat,
though none the less ready to envy careless youth as it crossed his
path now and then, great-coatless and ruddy, courting the keen
air.</p>
<p>Just as he was about to make his exit towards Mount Street he
became aware of two persons walking southward like himself, but on
the other side of the roadway. He soon identified Captain Warkworth
in the slim, soldierly figure of the man. And the lady? There also,
with the help of his glasses, he was soon informed. Her trim, black
hat and her black cloth costume seemed to him to have a becoming
and fashionable simplicity; and she moved in morning dress, with
the same ease and freedom that had distinguished her in Lady
Henry's drawing-room the night before.</p>
<p>He asked himself whether he should interrupt Mademoiselle Le
Breton with a view to escorting her to Bruton Street. He
understood, indeed, that he and Lady Henry were to be alone at
luncheon; Mademoiselle Julie had, no doubt, her own quarters and
attendants. But she seemed to be on her way home. An opportunity
for some perhaps exploratory conversation with her before he found
himself face to face with Lady Henry seemed to him not
undesirable.</p>
<p>But he quickly decided to walk on. Mademoiselle Le Breton and
Captain Warkworth paused in their walk, about no doubt to say
good-bye, but, very clearly, loath to say it. They were, indeed, in
earnest conversation. The Captain spoke with eagerness;
Mademoiselle Julie, with downcast eyes, smiled and listened.</p>
<p>"Is the fellow making love to her?" thought the old man, in some
astonishment, as he turned away. "Hardly the place for it either,
one would suppose."</p>
<p>He vaguely thought that he would both sound and warn Lady Henry.
Warn her of what? He happened on the way home to have been thrown
with a couple of Indian officers whose personal opinion of Harry
Warkworth was not a very high one, in spite of the brilliant
distinction which the young man had earned for himself in the
Afridi campaign just closed. But how was he to hand that sort of
thing on to Lady Henry?--and because he happened to have seen her
lady companion and Harry Warkworth together? No doubt Mademoiselle
Julie was on her employer's business.</p>
<p>Yet the little encounter added somehow to his already lively
curiosity on the subject of Lady Henry's companion. Thanks to a
remarkable physical resemblance, he was practically certain that he
had guessed the secret of Mademoiselle Le Breton's parentage. At
any rate, on the supposition that he had, his thoughts began to
occupy themselves with the story to which his guess pointed.</p>
<p>Some thirty years before, he had known, both in London and in
Italy, a certain Colonel Delaney and his wife, once Lady Rose
Chantrey, the favorite daughter of Lord Lackington. They were not a
happy couple. She was a woman of great intelligence, but endowed
with one of those natures--sensitive, plastic, eager to search out
and to challenge life--which bring their possessors some great
joys, hardly to be balanced against a final sum of pain. Her
husband, absorbed in his military life, silent, narrowly able, and
governed by a strict Anglicanism that seemed to carry with it
innumerable "shalts" and "shalt nots," disagreeable to the natural
man or woman, soon found her a tiring and trying companion. She
asked him for what he could not give; she coquetted with questions
he thought it impious to raise; the persons she made friends with
were distasteful to him; and, without complaining, he soon grew to
think it intolerable that a woman married to a soldier should care
so little for his professional interests and ambitions. Though when
she pretended to care for them she annoyed him, if possible, still
more.</p>
<p>As for Lady Rose, she went through all the familiar emotions of
the <i>femme incomprise</i>. And with the familiar result. There
presently appeared in the house a man of good family, thirty-five
or so, traveller, painter, and dreamer, with fine, long-drawn
features bronzed by the sun of the East, and bringing with him the
reputation of having plotted and fought for most of the "lost
causes" of our generation, including several which had led him into
conflict with British authorities and British officials. To Colonel
Delaney he was an "agitator," if not a rebel; and the careless
pungency of his talk soon classed him as an atheist besides. In the
case of Lady Rose, this man's free and generous nature, his
independence of money and convention, his passion for the things of
the mind, his contempt for the mode, whether in dress or politics,
his light evasions of the red tape of life as of something that no
one could reasonably expect of a vagabond like himself--these
things presently transformed a woman in despair to a woman in
revolt. She fell in love with an intensity befitting her true
temperament, and with a stubbornness that bore witness to the
dreary failure of her marriage. Marriott Dalrymple returned her
love, and nothing in his view of life predisposed him to put what
probably appeared to him a mere legality before the happiness of
two people meant for each other. There were no children of the
Delaney marriage; and in his belief the husband had enjoyed too
long a companionship he had never truly deserved.</p>
<p>So Lady Rose faced her husband, told him the truth, and left
him. She and Dalrymple went to live in Belgium, in a small
country-house some twenty or thirty miles from Brussels. They
severed themselves from England; they asked nothing more of English
life. Lady Rose suffered from the breach with her father, for Lord
Lackington never saw her again. And there was a young sister whom
she had brought up, whose image could often rouse in her a sense of
loss that showed itself in occasional spells of silence and tears.
But substantially she never repented what she had done, although
Colonel Delaney made the penalties of it as heavy as he could. Like
Karennine in Tolstoy's great novel, he refused to sue for a
divorce, and for something of the same reasons. Divorce was in
itself impious, and sin should not be made easy. He was at any time
ready to take back his wife, so far as the protection of his name
and roof were concerned, should she penitently return to him.</p>
<p>So the child that was presently born to Lady Rose could not be
legitimized.</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid stopped short at the Park end of Bruton Street, with
a start of memory.</p>
<p>"I saw it once! I remember now--perfectly."</p>
<p>And he went on to recall a bygone moment in the Brussels
Gallery, when, as he was standing before the great Quintin Matsys,
he was accosted with sudden careless familiarity by a thin,
shabbily dressed man, in whose dark distinction, made still more
fantastic and conspicuous by the fever and the emaciation of
consumption, he recognized at once Marriott Dalrymple.</p>
<p>He remembered certain fragments of their talk about the
pictures--the easy mastery, now brusque, now poetic, with which
Dalrymple had shown him the treasures of the gallery, in the manner
of one whose learning was merely the food of fancy, the stuff on
which imagination and reverie grew rich.</p>
<p>Then, suddenly, his own question--"And Lady Rose?"</p>
<p>And Dalrymple's quiet, "Very well. She'd see you, I think, if
you want to come. She has scarcely seen an English person in the
last three years."</p>
<p>And as when a gleam searches out some blurred corner of a
landscape, there returned upon him his visit to the pair in their
country home. He recalled the small eighteenth-century house, the
"château" of the village, built on the French model, with its
high <i>mansarde</i> roof; the shabby stateliness of its
architecture matching plaintively with the field of beet-root that
grew up to its very walls; around it the flat, rich fields, with
their thin lines of poplars; the slow, canalized streams; the
unlovely farms and cottages; the mire of the lanes; and, shrouding
all, a hot autumn mist sweeping slowly through the damp meadows and
blotting all cheerfulness from the sun. And in the midst of this
pale landscape, so full of ragged edges to an English eye, the
English couple, with their books, their child, and a pair of
Flemish servants.</p>
<p>It had been evident to him at once that their circumstances were
those of poverty. Lady Rose's small fortune, indeed, had been
already mostly spent on "causes" of many kinds, in many countries.
She and Dalrymple were almost vegetarians, and wine never entered
the house save for the servants, who seemed to regard their
employers with a real but half-contemptuous affection. He
remembered the scanty, ill-cooked luncheon; the difficulty in
providing a few extra knives and forks; the wrangling with the old
<i>bonne</i>-housekeeper, which was necessary before
<i>serviettes</i> could be produced.</p>
<p>And afterwards the library, with its deal shelves from floor to
ceiling put up by Dalrymple himself, its bare, polished floor,
Dalrymple's table and chair on one side of the open hearth, Lady
Rose's on the other; on his table the sheets of verse translation
from Æschylus and Euripides, which represented his favorite
hobby; on hers the socialist and economical books they both studied
and the English or French poets they both loved. The walls, hung
with the faded damask of a past generation, were decorated with a
strange crop of pictures pinned carelessly into the
silk--photographs or newspaper portraits of modern men and women
representing all possible revolt against authority, political,
religious, even scientific, the Everlasting No of an untiring and
ubiquitous dissent.</p>
<p>Finally, in the centre of the polished floor, the strange child,
whom Lady Rose had gone to fetch after lunch, with its high crest
of black hair, its large, jealous eyes, its elfin hands, and the
sudden smile with which, after half an hour of silence and apparent
scorn, it had rewarded Sir Wilfrid's advances. He saw himself
sitting bewitched beside it.</p>
<p>Poor Lady Rose! He remembered her as he and she parted at the
gate of the neglected garden, the anguish in her eyes as they
turned to look after the bent and shrunken figure of Dalrymple
carrying the child back to the house.</p>
<p>"If you meet any of his old friends, don't--don't say anything!
We've just saved enough money to go to Sicily for the
winter--that'll set him right."</p>
<p>And then, barely a year later, the line in a London newspaper
which had reached him at Madrid, chronicling the death of Marriott
Dalrymple, as of a man once on the threshold of fame, but long
since exiled from the thoughts of practical men. Lady Rose, too,
was dead--many years since; so much he knew. But how, and where?
And the child?</p>
<p>She was now "Mademoiselle Le Breton "?--the centre and
apparently the chief attraction of Lady Henry's once famous
salon?</p>
<p>"And, by Jove! several of her kinsfolk there, relations of the
mother or the father, if what I suppose is true!" thought Sir
Wilfrid, remembering one or two of the guests. "Were they--was
she--aware of it?"</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>The old man strode on, full of a growing eagerness, and was soon
on Lady Henry's doorstep.</p>
<p>"Her ladyship is in the dining-room," said the butler, and Sir
Wilfrid was ushered there straight.</p>
<p>"Good-morning, Wilfrid," said the old lady, raising herself on
her silver--headed sticks as he entered. "I prefer to come
down-stairs by myself. The more infirm I am, the less I like
it--and to be helped enrages me. Sit down. Lunch is ready, and I
give you leave to eat some."</p>
<p>"And you?" said Sir Wilfrid, as they seated themselves almost
side by side at the large, round table in the large, dingy
room.</p>
<p>The old lady shook her head.</p>
<p>"All the world eats too much. I was brought up with people who
lunched on a biscuit and a glass of sherry."</p>
<p>"Lord Russell?--Lord Palmerston?" suggested Sir Wilfrid,
attacking his own lunch meanwhile with unabashed vigor.</p>
<p>"That sort. I wish we had their like now."</p>
<p>"Their successors don't please you?"</p>
<p>Lady Henry shook her head.</p>
<p>"The Tories have gone to the deuce, and there are no longer
enough Whigs even to do that. I wouldn't read the newspapers at all
if I could help it. But I do."</p>
<p>"So I understand," said Sir Wilfrid; "you let Montresor know it
last night."</p>
<p>"Montresor!" said Lady Henry, with a contemptuous movement.
"What a <i>poseur</i>! He lets the army go to ruin, I understand,
while he joins Dante societies."</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid raised his eyebrows.</p>
<p>"I think, if I were you, I should have some lunch," he said,
gently pushing the admirable <i>salmi</i> which the butler had left
in front of him towards his old friend.</p>
<p>Lady Henry laughed.</p>
<p>"Oh, my temper will be better presently, when those men are
gone"--she nodded towards the butler and footman in the
distance--"and I can have my say."</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid hurried his meal as much as Lady Henry--who, as it
turned out, was not at all minded to starve him--would allow. She
meanwhile talked politics and gossip to him, with her old, caustic
force, nibbling a dry biscuit at intervals and sipping a cup of
coffee. She was a wilful, characteristic figure as she sat there,
beneath her own portrait as a bride, which hung on the wall behind
her. The portrait represented a very young woman, with plentiful
brown hair gathered into a knot on the top of her head, a high
waist, a blue waist-ribbon, and inflated sleeves. Handsome,
imperious, the corners of the mouth well down, the look straight
and daring--the Lady Henry of the picture, a bride of nineteen, was
already formidable. And the old woman sitting beneath it, with the
strong, white hair, which the ample cap found some difficulty even
now in taming and confining, the droop of the mouth accentuated,
the nose more masterful, the double chin grown evident, the light
of the eyes gone out, breathed pride and will from every feature of
her still handsome face, pride of race and pride of intellect,
combined with a hundred other subtler and smaller prides that only
an intimate knowledge of her could detect. The brow and eyes, so
beautiful in the picture, were, however, still agreeable in the
living woman; if generosity lingered anywhere, it was in them.</p>
<p>The door was hardly closed upon the servants when she bent
forward.</p>
<p>"Well, have you guessed?"</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid looked at her thoughtfully as he stirred the sugar
in his coffee.</p>
<p>"I think so," he said. "She is Lady Rose Delaney's
daughter."</p>
<p>Lady Henry gave a sudden laugh.</p>
<p>"I hardly expected you to guess! What helped you?"</p>
<p>"First your own hints. Then the strange feeling I had that I had
seen the face, or some face just like it, before. And, lastly, at
the Foreign Office I caught sight, for a moment, of Lord
Lackington. That finished it."</p>
<p>"Ah!" said Lady Henry, with a nod. "Yes, that likeness is
extraordinary. Isn't it amazing that that foolish old man has never
perceived it?"</p>
<p>"He knows nothing?"</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing! Nobody does. However, that'll do presently. But
Lord Lackington comes here, mumbles about his music and his
water-colors, and his flirtations--seventy-four, if you please,
last birthday!--talks about himself endlessly to Julie or to
me--whoever comes handy--and never has an inkling, an idea."</p>
<p>"And she?"</p>
<p>"Oh, <i>she</i> knows. I should rather think she does." And Lady
Henry pushed away her coffee-cup with the ill-suppressed vehemence
which any mention of her companion seemed to produce in her. "Well,
now, I suppose you'd like to hear the story."</p>
<p>"Wait a minute. It'll surprise you to hear that I not only knew
this lady's mother and father, but that I've seen her, herself,
before."</p>
<p>"You?" Lady Henry looked incredulous.</p>
<p>"I never told you of my visit to that <i>ménage</i>,
four-and-twenty years ago?"</p>
<p>"Never, that I remember. But if you had I should have forgotten.
What did they matter to me then? I myself only saw Lady Rose once,
so far as I remember, before she misconducted herself. And
afterwards--well, one doesn't trouble one's self about the women
that have gone under."</p>
<p>Something lightened behind Sir Wilfrid's straw-colored lashes.
He bent over his coffee-cup and daintily knocked off the end of his
cigarette with a beringed little finger.</p>
<p>"The women who have--not been able to pull up?"</p>
<p>Lady Henry paused.</p>
<p>"If you like to put it so," she said, at last. Sir Wilfrid did
not raise his eyes. Lady Henry took up her strongest glasses from
the table and put them on. But it was pitifully evident that even
so equipped she saw but little, and that her strong nature fretted
perpetually against the physical infirmity that teased it.
Nevertheless, some unspoken communication passed between them, and
Sir Wilfrid knew that he had effectually held up a protecting hand
for Lady Rose.</p>
<p>"Well, let me tell you my tale first," he said; and gave the
little reminiscence in full. When he described the child, Lady
Henry listened eagerly.</p>
<p>"Hm," she said, when he came to an end; "she was jealous, you
say, of her mother's attentions to you? She watched you, and in the
end she took possession of you? Much the same creature, apparently,
then as now."</p>
<p>"No moral, please, till the tale is done," said Sir Wilfrid,
smiling. "It's your turn."</p>
<p>Lady Henry's face grew sombre.</p>
<br/>
<SPAN name="illus-030.jpg"></SPAN>
<p class="ctr"><SPAN href="images/illus-030.jpg"><ANTIMG src=
"images/illus-030.jpg" width="45%" alt=""></SPAN><br/>
<b>"LADY HENRY LISTENED EAGERLY"</b></p>
<br/>
<p>"All very well," she said. "What did your tale matter to you? As
for mine--"</p>
<p>The substance of hers was as follows, put into chronological
order:</p>
<p>Lady Rose had lived some ten years after Dalrymple's death. That
time she passed in great poverty in some <i>chambres garnies</i> at
Bruges, with her little girl and an old Madame Le Breton, the maid,
housekeeper, and general factotum who had served them in the
country. This woman, though of a peevish, grumbling temper, was
faithful, affectionate, and not without education. She was
certainly attached to little Julie, whose nurse she had been during
a short period of her infancy. It was natural that Lady Rose should
leave the child to her care. Indeed, she had no choice. An old
Ursuline nun, and a kind priest who at the nun's instigation
occasionally came to see her, in the hopes of converting her, were
her only other friends in the world. She wrote, however, to her
father, shortly before her death, bidding him good-bye, and asking
him to do something for the child. "She is wonderfully like you,"
so ran part of the letter. "You won't ever acknowledge her, I know.
That is your strange code. But at least give her what will keep her
from want, till she can earn her living. Her old nurse will take
care of her, I have taught her, so far. She is already very clever.
When I am gone she will attend one of the convent schools here. And
I have found an honest lawyer who will receive and pay out
money."</p>
<p>To this letter Lord Lackington replied, promising to come over
and see his daughter. But an attack of gout delayed him, and,
before he was out of his room, Lady Rose was dead. Then he no
longer talked of coming over, and his solicitors arranged matters.
An allowance of a hundred pounds a year was made to Madame Le
Breton, through the "honest lawyer" whom Lady Rose had found, for
the benefit of "Julie Dalrymple," the capital value to be handed
over to that young lady herself on the attainment of her eighteenth
birthday--always provided that neither she nor anybody on her
behalf made any further claim on the Lackington family, that her
relationship to them was dropped, and her mother's history buried
in oblivion.</p>
<p>Accordingly the girl grew to maturity in Bruges. By the lawyer's
advice, after her mother's death, she took the name of her old
<i>gouvernante</i>, and was known thenceforward as Julie Le Breton.
The Ursuline nuns, to whose school she was sent, took the
precaution, after her mother's death, of having her baptized
straightway into the Catholic faith, and she made her
<i>première communion</i> in their church. In the course of
a few years she became a remarkable girl, the source of many
anxieties to the nuns. For she was not only too clever for their
teaching, and an inborn sceptic, but wherever she appeared she
produced parties and the passions of parties. And though, as she
grew older, she showed much adroitness in managing those who were
hostile to her, she was never without enemies, and intrigues
followed her.</p>
<p>"I might have been warned in time," said Lady Henry, in whose
wrinkled cheeks a sharp and feverish color had sprung up as her
story approached the moment of her own personal acquaintance with
Mademoiselle Le Breton. "For one or two of the nuns when I saw them
in Bruges, before the bargain was finally struck, were candid
enough. However, now I come to the moment when I first set eyes on
her. You know my little place in Surrey? About a mile from me is a
manor-house belonging to an old Catholic family, terribly devout
and as poor as church-mice. They sent their daughters to school in
Bruges. One summer holiday these girls brought home with them Julie
Dalrymple as their quasi-holiday governess. It was three years ago.
I had just seen Liebreich. He told me that I should soon be blind,
and, naturally, it was a blow to me."</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid made a murmur of sympathy.</p>
<p>"Oh, don't pity me! I don't pity other people. This odious body
of ours has got to wear out sometime--it's in the bargain. Still,
just then I was low. There are two things I care about--one is
talk, with the people that amuse me, and the other is the reading
of French books. I didn't see how I was going to keep my circle
here together, and my own mind in decent repair, unless I could
find somebody to be eyes for me, and to read to me. And as I'm a
bundle of nerves, and I never was agreeable to illiterate people,
nor they to me, I was rather put to it. Well, one day these girls
and their mother came over to tea, and, as you guess, of course,
they brought Mademoiselle Le Breton with them. I had asked them to
come, but when they arrived I was bored and cross, and like a sick
dog in a hole. And then, as you have seen her, I suppose you can
guess what happened."</p>
<p>"You discovered an exceptional person?"</p>
<p>Lady Henry laughed.</p>
<p>"I was limed, there and then, old bird as I am. I was first
struck with the girl's appearance--<i>une belle laide</i>--with
every movement just as it ought to be; infinitely more attractive
to me than any pink-and-white beauty. It turned out that she had
just been for a month in Paris with another school-fellow.
Something she said about a new play--suddenly--made me look at her.
'Venez vous asseoir ici, mademoiselle, s'il vous
plaît--près de moi,' I said to her--I can hear my own
voice now, poor fool, and see her flush up. Ah!" Lady Henry's
interjection dropped to a note of rage that almost upset Sir
Wilfrid's gravity; but he restrained himself, and she resumed: "We
talked for two hours; it seemed to me ten minutes. I sent the
others out to the gardens. She stayed with me. The new French
books, the theatre, poems, plays, novels, memoirs, even politics,
she could talk of them all; or, rather--for, mark you, that's her
gift--she made <i>me</i> talk. It seemed to me I had not been so
brilliant for months. I was as good, in fact, as I had ever been.
The difficulty in England is to find any one to keep up the ball.
She does it to perfection. She never throws to win--never!--but so
as to leave you all the chances. You make a brilliant stroke; she
applauds, and in a moment she has arranged you another. Oh, it is
the most extraordinary gift of conversation--and she never says a
thing that you want to remember."</p>
<p>There was a silence. Lady Henry's old fingers drummed restlessly
on the table. Her memory seemed to be wandering angrily among her
first experiences of the lady they were discussing.</p>
<p>"Well," said Sir Wilfrid, at last, "so you engaged her as
<i>lectrice</i>, and thought yourself very lucky?"</p>
<p>"Oh, don't suppose that I was quite an idiot. I made some
inquiries--I bored myself to death with civilities to the stupid
family she was staying with, and presently I made her stay with me.
And of course I soon saw there was a history. She possessed jewels,
laces, little personal belongings of various kinds, that wanted
explaining. So I laid traps for her; I let her also perceive
whither my own plans were drifting. She did not wait to let me
force her hand. She made up her mind. One day I found, left
carelessly on the drawing-room table, a volume of Saint-Simon,
beautifully bound in old French morocco, with something thrust
between the leaves. I opened it. On the fly-leaf was written the
name Marriott Dalrymple, and the leaves opened, a little farther,
on a miniature of Lady Rose Delaney. So--"</p>
<p>"Apparently it was <i>her</i> traps that worked," said Sir
Wilfrid, smiling. Lady Henry returned the smile unwillingly, as one
loath to acknowledge her own folly.</p>
<p>"I don't know that I was trapped. We both desired to come to
close quarters. Anyway, she soon showed me books, letters--from
Lady Rose, from Dalrymple, Lord Lackington--the evidence was
complete....</p>
<p>"'Very well,' I said; 'it isn't your fault. All the better if
you are well born--I am not a person of prejudices. But understand,
if you come to me, there must be no question of worrying your
relations. There are scores of them in London. I know them all, or
nearly all, and of course you'll come across them. But unless you
can hold your tongue, don't come to me. Julie Dalrymple has
disappeared, and I'll be no party to her resurrection. If Julie Le
Breton becomes an inmate of my house, there shall be no raking up
of scandals much better left in their graves. If you haven't got a
proper parentage, consistently thought out, we must invent
one--'"</p>
<p>"I hope I may some day be favored with it," said Sir
Wilfrid.</p>
<p>Lady Henry laughed uncomfortably.</p>
<p>"Oh, I've had to tell lies," she said, "plenty of them."</p>
<p>"What! It was <i>you</i> that told the lies?"</p>
<p>Lady Henry's look flashed.</p>
<p>"The open and honest ones," she said, defiantly.</p>
<p>"Well," said Sir Wilfrid, regretfully, "<i>some</i> sort were
indispensable. So she came. How long ago?"</p>
<p>"Three years. For the first half of that time I did nothing but
plume myself on my good fortune. I said to myself that if I had
searched Europe through I could not have fared better. My
household, my friends, my daily ways, she fitted into them all to
perfection. I told people that I had discovered her through a
Belgian acquaintance. Every one was amazed at her manners, her
intelligence. She was perfectly modest, perfectly well behaved. The
old Duke--he died six months after she came to me--was charmed with
her. Montresor, Meredith, Lord Robert, all my
<i>habitués</i> congratulated me. 'Such cultivation, such
charm, such <i>savoir-faire!</i> Where on earth did you pick up
such a treasure? What are her antecedents?' etc., etc. So then, of
course--"</p>
<p>"I hope no more than were absolutely necessary!" said Sir
Wilfrid, hastily.</p>
<p>"I had to do it well," said Lady Henry, with decision; "I can't
say I didn't. That state of things lasted, more or less, about a
year and a half. And by now, where do you think it has all worked
out?"</p>
<p>"You gave me a few hints last night," said Sir Wilfrid,
hesitating.</p>
<p>Lady Henry pushed her chair back from the table. Her hands
trembled on her stick.</p>
<p>"Hints!" she said, scornfully. "I'm long past hints. I told you
last night--and I repeat--that woman has stripped me of all my
friends! She has intrigued with them all in turn against me. She
has done the same even with my servants. I can trust none of them
where she is concerned. I am alone in my own house. My blindness
makes me her tool, her plaything. As for my salon, as you call it,
it has become hers. I am a mere courtesy-figurehead--her chaperon,
in fact. I provide the house, the footmen, the champagne; the
guests are hers. And she has done this by constant intrigue and
deception--by flattery--by lying!"</p>
<p>The old face had become purple. Lady Henry breathed hard.</p>
<p>"My dear friend," said Sir Wilfrid, quickly, laying a calming
hand on her arm, "don't let this trouble you so. Dismiss her."</p>
<p>"And accept solitary confinement for the rest of my days? I
haven't the courage--yet," said Lady Henry, bitterly. "You don't
know how I have been isolated and betrayed! And I haven't told you
the worst of all. Listen! Do you know whom she has got into her
toils?"</p>
<p>She paused, drawing herself rigidly erect. Sir Wilfrid, looking
up sharply, remembered the little scene in the Park, and
waited.</p>
<p>"Did you have any opportunity last night," said Lady Henry,
slowly, "of observing her and Jacob Delafield?"</p>
<p>She spoke with passionate intensity, her frowning brows meeting
above a pair of eyes that struggled to see and could not. But the
effect she listened for was not produced. Sir Wilfrid drew back
uncertainly.</p>
<p>"Jacob Delafield?" he said. "Jacob Delafield? Are you sure?"</p>
<p>"Sure?" cried Lady Henry, angrily. Then, disdaining to support
her statement, she went on: "He hesitates. But she'll soon make an
end of that. And do you realize what that means--what Jacob's
possibilities are? Kindly recollect that Chudleigh has one boy--one
sickly, tuberculous boy--who might die any day. And Chudleigh
himself is a poor life. Jacob has more than a good chance--ninety
chances out of a hundred"--she ground the words out with
emphasis--"of inheriting the dukedom."</p>
<p>"Good gracious!" said Sir Wilfrid, throwing away his
cigarette.</p>
<p>"There!" said Lady Henry, in sombre triumph. "Now you can
understand what I have brought on poor Henry's family."</p>
<p>A low knock was heard at the door.</p>
<p>"Come in," said Lady Henry, impatiently.</p>
<p>The door opened, and Mademoiselle Le Breton appeared on the
threshold, carrying a small gray terrier under each arm.</p>
<p>"I thought I had better tell you," she said, humbly, "that I am
taking the dogs out. Shall I get some fresh wool for your
knitting?"</p>
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