<h2><SPAN name="IV"></SPAN>IV</h2>
<br/>
<p>"But, first of all," said Mademoiselle Le Breton, looking in
some annoyance at the brace of terriers circling and barking round
them, "we must take the dogs home, otherwise no talk will be
possible."</p>
<p>"You have no more business to do?"</p>
<p>His companion smiled.</p>
<p>"Everything Lady Henry wants is here," she said, pointing to the
bag upon her arm which had been handed to her, as Sir Wilfrid
remembered, after some whispered conversation, in the hall of
Crowborough House by an elegantly dressed woman, who was no doubt
the Duchess's maid.</p>
<p>"Allow me to carry it for you."</p>
<p>"Many thanks," said Mademoiselle Le Breton, firmly retaining it,
"but those are not the things I mind."</p>
<p>They walked on quickly to Bruton Street. The dogs made
conversation impossible. If they were on the chain it was one long
battle between them and their leader. If they were let loose, it
seemed to Sir Wilfrid that they ranged every area on the march, and
attacked all elderly gentlemen and most errand-boys.</p>
<p>"Do you always take them out?" he asked, when both he and his
companion were crimson and out of breath.</p>
<p>"Always."</p>
<p>"Do you like dogs?"</p>
<p>"I used to. Perhaps some day I shall again."</p>
<p>"As for me, I wish they had but one neck!" said Sir Wilfrid, who
had but just succeeded in dragging Max, the bigger of the two, out
of the interior of a pastry-cook's hand-cart which had been rashly
left with doors open for a few minutes in the street, while its
responsible guardian was gossiping in an adjacent kitchen.
Mademoiselle Julie meanwhile was wrestling with Nero, the younger,
who had dived to the very heart of a peculiarly unsavory dust-box,
standing near the entrance of a mews.</p>
<p>"So you commonly go through the streets of London in this
whirlwind?" asked Sir Wilfrid, again, incredulous, when at last
they had landed their charges safe at the Bruton Street door.</p>
<p>"Morning and evening," said Mademoiselle Julie, smiling. Then
she addressed the butler: "Tell Lady Henry, please, that I shall be
at home in half an hour."</p>
<p>As they turned westward, the winter streets were gay with lights
and full of people. Sir Wilfrid was presently conscious that among
all the handsome and well-dressed women who brushed past them,
Mademoiselle Le Breton more than held her own. She reminded him now
not so much of her mother as of Marriott Dalrymple. Sir Wilfrid had
first seen this woman's father at Damascus, when Dalrymple, at
twenty-six, was beginning the series of Eastern journeys which had
made him famous. He remembered the brillance of the youth; the
power, physical and mental, which radiated from him, making all
things easy; the scorn of mediocrity, the incapacity for
subordination.</p>
<p>"I should like you to understand," said the lady beside him,
"that I came to Lady Henry prepared to do my very best."</p>
<p>"I am sure of that," said Sir Wilfrid, hastily recalling his
thoughts from Damascus. "And you must have had a very difficult
task."</p>
<p>Mademoiselle Le Breton shrugged her shoulders.</p>
<p>"I knew, of course, it must be difficult. And as to the drudgery
of it--the dogs, and that kind of thing--nothing of that sort
matters to me in the least. But I cannot be humiliated before those
who have become my friends, entirely because Lady Henry wished it
to be so."</p>
<p>"Lady Henry at first showed you every confidence?"</p>
<p>"After the first month or two she put everything into my
hands--her household, her receptions, her letters, you may almost
say her whole social existence. She trusted me with all her
secrets." ("No, no, my dear lady," thought Sir Wilfrid.) "She let
me help her with all her affairs. And, honestly, I did all I could
to make her life easy."</p>
<p>"That I understand from herself."</p>
<p>"Then why," cried Mademoiselle Le Breton, turning round to him
with sudden passion--"why couldn't Lady Henry leave things alone?
Are devotion, and--and the kind of qualities she wanted, so common?
I said to myself that, blind and helpless as she was, she should
lose nothing. Not only should her household be well kept, her
affairs well managed, but her salon should be as attractive, her
Wednesday evenings as brilliant, as ever. The world was deserting
her; I helped her to bring it back. She cannot live without social
success; yet now she hates me for what I have done. Is it sane--is
it reasonable?"</p>
<p>"She feels, I suppose," said Sir Wilfrid, gravely, "that the
success is no longer hers."</p>
<p>"So she says. But will you please examine that remark? When her
guests assemble, can I go to bed and leave her to grapple with
them? I have proposed it often, but of course it is impossible. And
if I am to be there I must behave, I suppose, like a lady, not like
the housemaid. Really, Lady Henry asks too much. In my mother's
little flat in Bruges, with the two or three friends who frequented
it, I was brought up in as good society and as good talk as Lady
Henry has ever known."</p>
<p>They were passing an electric lamp, and Sir Wilfrid, looking up,
was half thrilled, half repelled by the flashing energy of the face
beside him. Was ever such language on the lips of a paid companion
before? His sympathy for Lady Henry revived.</p>
<p>"Can you really give me no clew to the--to the sources of Lady
Henry's dissatisfaction?" he said, at last, rather coldly.</p>
<p>Mademoiselle Le Breton hesitated.</p>
<p>"I don't want to make myself out a saint," she said, at last, in
another voice and with a humility which was, in truth, hardly less
proud than her self-assertion. "I--I was brought up in poverty, and
my mother died when I was fifteen. I had to defend myself as the
poor defend themselves--by silence. I learned not to talk about my
own affairs. I couldn't afford to be frank, like a rich English
girl. I dare say, sometimes I have concealed things which had been
better made plain. They were never of any real importance, and if
Lady Henry had shown any consideration--"</p>
<p>Her voice failed her a little, evidently to her annoyance. They
walked on without speaking for a few paces. "Never of any real
importance?" Sir Wilfrid wondered.</p>
<p>Their minds apparently continued the conversation though their
lips were silent, for presently Julie Le Breton said, abruptly:</p>
<p>"Of course I am speaking of matters where Lady Henry might have
some claim to information. With regard to many of my thoughts and
feelings, Lady Henry has no right whatever to my confidence."</p>
<p>"She gives us fair warning," thought Sir Wilfrid.</p>
<p>Aloud he said:</p>
<p>"It is not a question of thoughts and feelings, I understand,
but of actions."</p>
<p>"Like the visit to the Duncombes'?" said Mademoiselle Le Breton,
impatiently. "Oh, I quite admit it--that's only one of several
instances Lady Henry might have brought forward. You see, she led
me to make these friendships; and now, because they annoy her, I am
to break them. But she forgets. Friends are too--too new in my
life, too precious--"</p>
<p>Again the voice wavered. How it thrilled and penetrated! Sir
Wilfrid found himself listening for every word.</p>
<p>"No," she resumed. "If it is a question of renouncing the
friends I have made in her house, or going--it will be going. That
may as well be quite clear."</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid looked up.</p>
<p>"Let me ask you one question, mademoiselle."</p>
<p>"Certainly. Whatever you like."</p>
<p>"Have you ever had, have you now, any affection for Lady
Henry?"</p>
<p>"Affection? I could have had plenty. Lady Henry is most
interesting to watch. It is magnificent, the struggles she makes
with her infirmities."</p>
<p>Nothing could have been more agreeable than the modulation of
these words, the passage of the tone from a first note of surprise
to its grave and womanly close. Again, the same suggestions of
veiled and vibrating feeling. Sir Wilfrid's nascent dislike
softened a little.</p>
<p>"After all," he said, with gentleness, "one must make allowance
for old age and weakness, mustn't one?"</p>
<p>"Oh, as to that, you can't say anything to me that I am not
perpetually saying to myself," was her somewhat impetuous reply.
"Only there is a point when ill-temper becomes not only tormenting
to me but degrading to herself.... Oh, if you only knew!"--the
speaker drew an indignant breath. "I can hardly bring myself to
speak of such <i>misères</i>. But everything excites her,
everything makes her jealous. It is a grievance that I should have
a new dress, that Mr. Montresor should send me an order for the
House of Commons, that Evelyn Crowborough should give me a
Christmas present. Last Christmas, Evelyn gave me these furs--she
is the only creature in London from whom I would accept a farthing
or the value of a farthing."</p>
<p>She paused, then rapidly threw him a question:</p>
<p>"Why, do you suppose, did I take it from her?"</p>
<p>"She is your kinswoman," said Wilfrid, quietly.</p>
<p>"Ah, you knew that! Well, then, mayn't Evelyn be kind to me,
though I am what I am? I reminded Lady Henry, but she only thought
me a mean parasite, sponging on a duchess for presents above my
station. She said things hardly to be forgiven. I was silent. But I
have never ceased to wear the furs."</p>
<p>With what imperious will did the thin shoulders straighten
themselves under the folds of chinchilla! The cloak became
symbolic, a flag not to be struck.</p>
<p>"I never answer back, please understand--never," she went on,
hurriedly. "You saw to-day how Lady Henry gave me her orders. There
is not a servant in the house with whom she would dare such a
manner. Did I resent it?"</p>
<p>"You behaved with great forbearance. I watched you with
admiration."</p>
<p>"Ah, <i>forbearance!</i> I fear you don't understand one of the
strangest elements in the whole case. I am <i>afraid</i> of Lady
Henry, mortally afraid! When she speaks to me I feel like a child
who puts up its hands to ward off a blow. My instinct is not merely
to submit, but to grovel. When you have had the youth that I had,
when you have existed, learned, amused yourself on sufferance, when
you have had somehow to maintain yourself among girls who had
family, friends, money, name, while you--"</p>
<p>Her voice stopped, resolutely silenced before it broke. Sir
Wilfrid uncomfortably felt that he had no sympathy to produce
worthy of the claim that her whole personality seemed to make upon
it. But she recovered herself immediately.</p>
<p>"Now I think I had better give you an outline of the last six
months," she said, turning to him. "Of course it is my side of the
matter. But you have heard Lady Henry's."</p>
<p>And with great composure she laid before him an outline of the
chief quarrels and grievances which had embittered the life of the
Bruton Street house during the period she had named. It was a
wretched story, and she clearly told it with repugnance and
disgust. There was in her tone a note of offended personal
delicacy, as of one bemired against her will.</p>
<p>Evidently, Lady Henry was hardly to be defended. The thing had
been "odious," indeed. Two women of great ability and different
ages, shut up together and jarring at every point, the elder
furiously jealous and exasperated by what seemed to her the affront
offered to her high rank and her past ascendency by the social
success of her dependant, the other defending herself, first by the
arts of flattery and submission, and then, when these proved
hopeless, by a social skill that at least wore many of the aspects
of intrigue--these were the essential elements of the situation;
and, as her narrative proceeded, Sir Wilfrid admitted to himself
that it was hard to see any way out of it. As to his own
sympathies, he did not know what to make of them.</p>
<p>"No. I have been only too yielding," said Mademoiselle Le
Breton, sorely, when her tale was done. "I am ashamed when I look
back on what I have borne. But now it has gone too far, and
something must be done. If I go, frankly, Lady Henry will
suffer."</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid looked at his companion.</p>
<p>"Lady Henry is well aware of it."</p>
<p>"Yes," was the calm reply, "she knows it, but she does not
realize it. You see, if it comes to a rupture she will allow no
half-measures. Those who stick to me will have to quarrel with her.
And there will be a great many who will stick to me."</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid's little smile was not friendly.</p>
<p>"It is indeed evident," he said, "that you have thought it all
out."</p>
<p>Mademoiselle Le Breton did not reply. They walked on a few
minutes in silence, till she said, with a suddenness and in a low
tone that startled her companion:</p>
<p>"If Lady Henry could ever have felt that she <i>humbled</i> me,
that I acknowledged myself at her mercy! But she never could. She
knows that I feel myself as well born as she, that I am <i>not</i>
ashamed of my parents, that my principles give me a free mind about
such things."</p>
<p>"Your principles?" murmured Sir Wilfrid.</p>
<p>"You were right," she turned upon him with a perfectly quiet but
most concentrated passion. "I have <i>had</i> to think things out.
I know, of course, that the world goes with Lady Henry. Therefore I
must be nameless and kinless and hold my tongue. If the world knew,
it would expect me to hang my head. I <i>don't!</i> I am as proud
of my mother as of my father. I adore both their memories.
Conventionalities of that kind mean nothing to me."</p>
<p>"My dear lady--"</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't expect you or any one else to feel with me," said
the voice which for all its low pitch was beginning to make him
feel as though he were in the centre of a hail-storm. "You are a
man of the world, you knew my parents, and yet I understand
perfectly that for you, too, I am disgraced. So be it! So be it! I
don't quarrel with what any one may choose to think, but--"</p>
<p>She recaptured herself with difficulty, and there was silence.
They were walking through the purple February dusk towards the
Marble Arch. It was too dark to see her face under its delicate
veil, and Sir Wilfrid did not wish to see it. But before he had
collected his thoughts sufficiently his companion was speaking
again, in a wholly different manner.</p>
<p>"I don't know what made me talk in this way. It was the contact
with some one, I suppose, who had seen us at Gherardtsloo." She
raised her veil, and he thought that she dashed away some tears.
"That never happened to me before in London. Well, now, to return.
If there is a breach--"</p>
<p>"Why should there be a breach?" said Sir Wilfrid. "My dear Miss
Le Breton, listen to me for a few minutes. I see perfectly that you
have a great deal to complain of, but I also see that Lady Henry
has something of a case."</p>
<p>And with a courteous authority and tact worthy of his trade, the
old diplomat began to discuss the situation.</p>
<p>Presently he found himself talking with an animation, a
friendliness, an intimacy that surprised himself. What was there in
the personality beside him that seemed to win a way inside a man's
defences in spite of him? Much of what she had said had seemed to
him arrogant or morbid. And yet as she listened to him, with an
evident dying down of passion, an evident forlornness, he felt in
her that woman's weakness and timidity of which she had accused
herself in relation to Lady Henry, and was somehow, manlike,
softened and disarmed. She had been talking wildly, because no
doubt she felt herself in great difficulties. But when it was his
turn to talk she neither resented nor resisted what he had to say.
The kinder he was, the more she yielded, almost eagerly at times,
as though the thorniness of her own speech had hurt herself most,
and there were behind it all a sad life, and a sad heart that only
asked in truth for a little sympathy and understanding.</p>
<p>"I shall soon be calling her 'my dear' and patting her hand,"
thought the old man, at last, astonished at himself. For the
dejection in her attitude and gait began to weigh upon him; he felt
a warm desire to sustain and comfort her. More and more thought,
more and more contrivance did he throw into the straightening out
of this tangle between two excitable women, not, it seemed, for
Lady Henry's sake, not, surely, for Miss Le Breton's sake. But--ah!
those two poor, dead folk, who had touched his heart long ago, did
he feel the hovering of their ghosts beside him in the wintry
wind?</p>
<p>At any rate, he abounded in shrewd and fatherly advice, and
Mademoiselle Le Breton listened with a most flattering
meekness.</p>
<p>"Well, now I think we have come to an understanding," he urged,
hopefully, as they turned down Bruton Street again.</p>
<p>Mademoiselle Le Breton sighed.</p>
<p>"It is very kind of you. Oh, I will do my best. But--"</p>
<p>She shook her head uncertainly.</p>
<p>"No--no 'buts,'" cried Sir Wilfrid, cheerfully. "Suppose, as a
first step," he smiled at his companion, "you tell Lady Henry about
the bazaar?"</p>
<p>"By all means. She won't let me go. But Evelyn will find some
one else."</p>
<p>"Oh, we'll see about that," said the old man, almost crossly.
"If you'll allow me I'll try my hand."</p>
<p>Julie Le Breton did not reply, but her face glimmered upon him
with a wistful friendliness that did not escape him, even in the
darkness. In this yielding mood her voice and movements had so much
subdued sweetness, so much distinction, that he felt himself more
than melting towards her.</p>
<p>Then, of a sudden, a thought--a couple of thoughts--sped across
him. He drew himself rather sharply together.</p>
<p>"Mr. Delafield, I gather, has been a good deal concerned in the
whole matter?"</p>
<p>Mademoiselle Le Breton laughed and hesitated.</p>
<p>"He has been very kind. He heard Lady Henry's language once when
she was excited. It seemed to shock him. He has tried once or twice
to smooth her down. Oh, he has been most kind!"</p>
<p>"Has he any influence with her?"</p>
<p>"Not much."</p>
<p>"Do you think well of him?"</p>
<p>He turned to her with a calculated abruptness. She showed a
little surprise.</p>
<p>"I? But everybody thinks well of him. They say the Duke trusts
everything to him."</p>
<p>"When I left England he was still a rather lazy and
unsatisfactory undergraduate. I was curious to know how he had
developed. Do you know what his chief interests are now?"</p>
<p>Mademoiselle Le Breton hesitated.</p>
<p>"I'm really afraid I don't know," she said, at last, smiling,
and, as it were, regretful. "But Evelyn Crowborough, of course,
could tell you all about him. She and he are very old friends."</p>
<p>"No birds out of that cover," was Sir Wilfrid's inward
comment.</p>
<p>The lamp over Lady Henry's door was already in sight when Sir
Wilfrid, after some talk of the Montresors, with whom he was going
to dine that night, carelessly said:</p>
<p>"That's a very good-looking fellow, that Captain Warkworth, whom
I saw with Lady Henry last night."</p>
<p>"Ah, yes. Lady Henry has made great friends with him," said
Mademoiselle Julie, readily. "She consults him about her memoir of
her husband."</p>
<p>"Memoir of her husband!" Sir Wilfrid stopped short. "Heavens
above! Memoir of Lord Henry?"</p>
<p>"She is half-way through it. I thought you knew."</p>
<p>"Well, upon my word! Whom shall we have a memoir of next? Henry
Delafield! Henry Delafield! Good gracious!"</p>
<p>And Sir Wilfrid walked along, slashing at the railings with his
stick, as though the action relieved him. Julie Le Breton quietly
resumed:</p>
<p>"I understand that Lord Henry and Captain Warkworth's father
went through the Indian Mutiny together, and Captain Warkworth has
some letters--"</p>
<p>"Oh, I dare say--I dare say," muttered Sir Wilfrid. "What's this
man home for just now?"</p>
<p>"Well, I <i>think</i> Lady Henry knows," said Mademoiselle
Julie, turning to him an open look, like one who, once more, would
gladly satisfy a questioner if they could. "He talks to her a great
deal. But why shouldn't he come home?"</p>
<p>"Because he ought to be doing disagreeable duty with his
regiment instead of always racing about the world in search of
something to get his name up," said Sir Wilfrid, rather sharply.
"At least, that's the view his brother officers mostly take of
him."</p>
<p>"Oh," said Mademoiselle Julie, with amiable vagueness, "is there
anything particular that you suppose he wants?"</p>
<p>"I am not at all in the secret of his ambitions," said Sir
Wilfrid, lifting his shoulders. "But you and Lady Henry seemed well
acquainted with him."</p>
<p>The straw-colored lashes veered her way.</p>
<p>"I had some talk with him in the Park this morning," said Julie
Le Breton, reflectively. "He wants me to copy his father's letters
for Lady Henry, and to get her to return the originals as soon as
possible. He feels nervous when they are out of his hands."</p>
<p>"Hm!" said Sir Wilfrid.</p>
<p>At that moment Lady Henry's door-bell presented itself. The
vigor with which Sir Wilfrid rang it may, perhaps, have expressed
the liveliness of his unspoken scepticism. He did not for one
moment believe that General Warkworth's letters had been the
subject of the conversation he had witnessed that morning in the
Park, nor that filial veneration had had anything whatever to say
to it.</p>
<p>Julie Le Breton gave him her hand.</p>
<p>"Thank you very much," she said, gravely and softly.</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid at the moment before had not meant to press it at
all. But he did press it, aware the while of the most mingled
feelings.</p>
<p>"On the contrary, you were very good to allow me this
conversation. Command me at any time if I can be useful to you and
Lady Henry."</p>
<p>Julie Le Breton smiled upon him and was gone.</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid ran down the steps, chafing at himself.</p>
<p>"She somehow gets round one," he thought, with a touch of
annoyance. "I wonder whether I made any real impression upon her.
Hm! Let's see whether Montresor can throw any more light upon her.
He seemed to be pretty intimate. Her 'principles,' eh? A dangerous
view to take, for a woman of that <i>provenance.</i>"</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>An hour or two later Sir Wilfrid Bury presented himself in the
Montresors' drawing-room in Eaton Place. He had come home feeling
it essential to impress upon the cabinet a certain line of action
with regard to the policy of Russia on the Persian Gulf. But the
first person he perceived on the hearth-rug, basking before the
Minister's ample fire, was Lord Lackington. The sight of that
vivacious countenance, that shock of white hair, that tall form
still boasting the spareness and almost the straightness of youth,
that unsuspecting complacency, confused his ideas and made him
somehow feel the whole world a little topsy-turvy.</p>
<p>Nevertheless, after dinner he got his fifteen minutes of private
talk with his host, and conscientiously made use of them. Then,
after an appointment had been settled for a longer conversation on
another day, both men felt that they had done their duty, and, as
it appeared, the same subject stirred in both their minds.</p>
<p>"Well, and what did you think of Lady Henry?" said Montresor,
with a smile, as he lighted another cigarette.</p>
<p>"She's very blind," said Sir Wilfrid, "and more rheumatic. But
else there's not much change. On the whole she wears wonderfully
well."</p>
<p>"Except as to her temper, poor lady!" laughed the Minister. "She
has really tried all our nerves of late. And the worst of it is
that most of it falls upon that poor woman who lives with her"--the
Minister lowered his voice--"one of the most interesting and
agreeable creatures in the world."</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid glanced across the table. Lord Lackington was
telling scandalous tales of his youth to a couple of Foreign Office
clerks, who sat on either side of him, laughing and spurring him
on. The old man's careless fluency and fun were evidently
contagious; animation reigned around him; he was the spoiled child
of the dinner, and knew it.</p>
<p>"I gather that you have taken a friendly interest in Miss Le
Breton," said Bury, turning to his host.</p>
<p>"Oh, the Duchess and Delafield and I have done our best to
protect her, and to keep the peace. I am quite sure Lady Henry has
poured out her grievances to you, hasn't she?"</p>
<p>"Alack, she has!"</p>
<p>"I knew she couldn't hold her tongue to you, even for a day. She
has really been losing her head over it. And it is a thousand
pities."</p>
<p>"So you think all the fault's on Lady Henry's side?"</p>
<p>The Minister gave a shrug.</p>
<p>"At any rate, I have never myself seen anything to justify Lady
Henry's state of feeling. On the famous Wednesdays, Mademoiselle
Julie always appears to make Lady Henry her first thought. And in
other ways she has really worn herself to death for the old lady.
It makes one rather savage sometimes to see it."</p>
<p>"So in your eyes she is a perfect companion?"</p>
<p>Montresor laughed.</p>
<p>"Oh, as to perfection--"</p>
<p>"Lady Henry accuses her of intrigue. You have seen no traces of
it?"</p>
<p>The Minister smiled a little oddly.</p>
<p>"Not as regards Lady Henry. Oh, Mademoiselle Julie is a very
astute lady."</p>
<p>A ripple from some source of secret amusement spread over the
dark-lined face.</p>
<p>"What do you mean by that?"</p>
<p>"She knows how to help her friends better than most people. I
have known three men, at least, <i>made</i> by Mademoiselle Le
Breton within the last two or three years. She has just got a fresh
one in tow."</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid moved a little closer to his host. They turned
slightly from the table and seemed to talk into their cigars.</p>
<p>"Young Warkworth?" said Bury.</p>
<p>The Minister smiled again and hesitated.</p>
<p>"Oh, she doesn't bother me, she is much too clever. But she gets
at me in the most amusing, indirect ways. I know perfectly well
when she has been at work. There are two or three men--high up, you
understand--who frequent Lady Henry's evenings, and who are her
very good friends.... Oh, I dare say she'll get what she wants," he
added, with nonchalance.</p>
<p>"Between you and me, do you suspect any direct interest in the
young man?"</p>
<p>Montresor shrugged his shoulders.</p>
<p>"I don't know. Not necessarily. She loves to feel herself a
power--all the more, I think, because of her anomalous position. It
is very curious--at bottom very feminine and amusing--and quite
harmless."</p>
<p>"You and others don't resent it?"</p>
<p>"No, not from her," said the Minister, after a pause. "But she
is rather going it, just now. Three or four batteries have opened
upon me at once. She must be thinking of little else."</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid grew a trifle red. He remembered the comedy of the
door-step. "Is there anything that he particularly wants?" His tone
assumed a certain asperity.</p>
<p>"Well, as for me, I cannot help feeling that Lady Henry has
something to say for herself. It is very strange--mysterious
even--the kind of ascendency this lady has obtained for herself in
so short a time."</p>
<p>"Oh, I dare say it's hard for Lady Henry to put up with," mused
Montresor. "Without family, without connections--"</p>
<p>He raised his head quietly and put on his eye-glasses. Then his
look swept the face of his companion.</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid, with a scarcely perceptible yet significant
gesture, motioned towards Lord Lackington. Mr. Montresor started.
The eyes of both men travelled across the table, then met
again.</p>
<p>"You know?" said Montresor, under his breath.</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid nodded. Then some instinct told him that he had now
exhausted the number of the initiated.</p>
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<p>When the men reached the drawing-room, which was rather emptily
waiting for the "reception" Mrs. Montresor was about to hold in it,
Sir Wilfrid fell into conversation with Lord Lackington. The old
man talked well, though flightily, with a constant reference of all
topics to his own standards, recollections, and friendships, which
was characteristic, but in him not unattractive. Sir Wilfrid
noticed certain new and pitiful signs of age. The old man was still
a rattle. But every now and then the rattle ceased abruptly and a
breath of melancholy made itself felt--like a chill and sudden gust
from some unknown sea.</p>
<p>They were joined presently, as the room filled up, by a young
journalist--an art critic, who seemed to know Lord Lackington and
his ways. The two fell eagerly into talk about pictures, especially
of an exhibition at Antwerp, from which the young man had just
returned.</p>
<p>"I looked in at Bruges on the way back for a few hours," said
the new-comer, presently. "The pictures there are much better seen
than they used to be. When were you there last?" He turned to Lord
Lackington.</p>
<p>"Bruges?" said Lord Lackington, with a start. "Oh, I haven't
been there for twenty years."</p>
<p>And he suddenly sat down, dangling a paper-knife between his
hands, and staring at the carpet. His jaw dropped a little. A cloud
seemed to interpose between him and his companions.</p>
<p>Sir Wilfrid, with Lady Henry's story fresh in his memory, was
somehow poignantly conscious of the old man. Did their two minds
hold the same image--of Lady Rose drawing her last breath in some
dingy room beside one of the canals that wind through Bruges,
laying down there the last relics of that life, beauty, and
intelligence that had once made her the darling of the father, who,
for some reason still hard to understand, had let her suffer and
die alone?</p>
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