<h2><SPAN name="XIII"></SPAN>XIII</h2>
<br/>
<p>Julie's curiosity--passing and perfunctory as it was--concerning
the persons and influences that had worked upon Jacob Delafield
since his college days, was felt in good earnest by not a few of
Delafield's friends. For he was a person rich in friends, reserved
as he generally was, and crotchety as most of them thought him. The
mixture of self-evident strength and manliness in his physiognomy
with something delicate and evasive, some hindering element of
reflection or doubt, was repeated in his character. On the one side
he was a robust, healthy Etonian, who could ride, shoot, and golf
like the rest of his kind, who used the terse, slangy ways of
speech of the ordinary Englishman, who loved the land and its
creatures, and had a natural hatred for a poacher; and on another
he was a man haunted by dreams and spiritual voices, a man for
whom, as he paced his tired horse homeward after a day's run, there
would rise on the grays and purples of the winter dusk far-shining
"cities of God" and visions of a better life for man. He read much
poetry, and the New Testament spoke to him imperatively, though in
no orthodox or accustomed way. Ruskin, and the earlier work of
Tolstoy, then just beginning to take hold of the English mind, had
affected his thought and imagination, as the generation before him
had been affected by Carlyle, Emerson, and George Sand.</p>
<p>This present phase of his life, however, was the outcome of much
that was turbulent and shapeless in his first youth. He seemed to
himself to have passed through Oxford under a kind of eclipse. All
that he could remember of two-thirds of his time there was an
immoderate amount of eating, drinking, and sleeping. A heavy animal
existence, disturbed by moments of unhappiness and remorse, or, at
best, lightened by intervals and gleams of friendship with two or
three men who tried to prod him out of his lethargy, and cherished
what appeared, to himself in particular, a strange and unreasonable
liking for him. Such, to his own thinking, had been his Oxford
life, up to the last year of his residence there.</p>
<p>Then, when he was just making certain of an ignominious failure
in the final schools, he became more closely acquainted with one of
the college tutors, whose influence was to be the spark which
should at last fire the clay. This modest, heroic, and learned man
was a paralyzed invalid, owing to an accident in the prime of life.
He had lost the use of his lower limbs--"dead from the waist down."
Yet such was the strength of his moral and intellectual life that
he had become, since the catastrophe, one of the chief forces of
his college. The invalid-chair on which he wheeled himself,
recumbent, from room to room, and from which he gave his lectures,
was, in the eyes of Oxford, a symbol not of weakness, but of
touching and triumphant victory. He gave himself no airs of
resignation or of martyrdom. He simply lived his life--except
during those crises of weakness or pain when his friends were shut
out--as though it were like any other life, save only for what he
made appear an insignificant physical limitation. Scholarship,
college business or college sports, politics and literature--his
mind, at least, was happy, strenuous, and at home in them all. To
have pitied him would have been a mere impertinence. While in his
own heart, which never grieved over himself, there were treasures
of compassion for the weak, the tempted, and the unsuccessful,
which spent themselves in secret, simple ways, unknown to his most
intimate friends.</p>
<p>This man's personality it was which, like the branch of healing
on bitter waters, presently started in Jacob Delafield's nature
obscure processes of growth and regeneration. The originator of
them knew little of what was going on. He was Delafield's tutor for
Greats, in the ordinary college routine; Delafield took essays to
him, and occasionally lingered to talk. But they never became
exactly intimate. A few conversations of "pith and moment"; a warm
shake of the hand and a keen look of pleasure in the blue eyes of
the recumbent giant when, after one year of superhuman but belated
effort, Delafield succeeded in obtaining a second class; a little
note of farewell, affectionate and regretful, when Delafield left
the university; an occasional message through a common
friend--Delafield had little more than these to look back upon,
outside the discussions of historical or philosophical subjects
which had entered into their relation as pupil and teacher.</p>
<p>And now the paralyzed tutor was dead, leaving behind him a
volume of papers on classical subjects, the reputation of an
admirable scholar, and the fragrance of a dear and honored name.
His pupils had been many; they counted among the most distinguished
of England's youth; and all of them owed him much. Few people
thought of Delafield when the list of them was recited; and yet, in
truth, Jacob's debt was greater than any; for he owed this man
nothing less than his soul.</p>
<p>No doubt the period at Oxford had been rather a period of
obscure conflict than of mere idleness and degeneracy, as it had
seemed to be. But it might easily have ended in physical and moral
ruin, and, as it was--thanks to Courtenay--Delafield went out to
the business of life, a man singularly master of himself,
determined to live his own life for his own ends.</p>
<p>In the first place, he was conscious, like many other young men
of his time, of a strong repulsion towards the complexities and
artificialities of modern society. As in the forties, a time of
social stir was rising out of a time of stagnation. Social
settlements were not yet founded, but the experiments which led to
them were beginning. Jacob looked at the life of London, the clubs
and the country-houses, the normal life of his class, and turned
from it in aversion. He thought, sometimes, of emigrating, in
search of a new heaven and a new earth, as men emigrated in the
forties.</p>
<p>But his mother and sister were alone in the world--his mother a
somewhat helpless being, his sister still very young and unmarried.
He could not reconcile it to his conscience to go very far from
them.</p>
<p>He tried the bar, amid an inner revolt that only increased with
time. And the bar implied London, and the dinners and dances of
London, which, for a man of his family, the probable heir to the
lands and moneys of the Chudleighs, were naturally innumerable. He
was much courted, in spite, perhaps because, of his oddities; and
it was plain to him that with only a small exercise of those
will-forces he felt accumulating within him, most of the normal
objects of ambition were within his grasp. The English aristocratic
class, as we all know, is no longer exclusive. It mingles freely
with the commoner world on apparently equal terms. But all the
while its personal and family cohesion is perhaps greater than
ever. The power of mere birth, it seemed to Jacob, was hardly less
in the England newly possessed of household suffrage than in the
England of Charles James Fox's youth, though it worked through
other channels. And for the persons in command of this power, a
certain <i>appareil de vie</i> was necessary, taken for granted. So
much income, so many servants, such and such habits--these things
imposed themselves. Life became a soft and cushioned business, with
an infinity of layers between it and any hard reality--a round pea
in a silky pod.</p>
<p>And he meanwhile found himself hungry to throw aside these tamed
and trite forms of existence, and to penetrate to the harsh, true,
simple things behind. His imagination and his heart turned towards
the primitive, indispensable labors on which society rests--the
life of the husbandman, the laborer, the smith, the woodman, the
builder; he dreamed the old, enchanted dream of living with nature;
of becoming the brother not of the few, but of the many. He was
still reading in chambers, however, when his first cousin, the
Duke, a melancholy semi-invalid, a widower, with an only son
tuberculous almost from his birth, arrived from abroad. Jacob was
brought into new contact with him. The Duke liked him, and offered
him the agency of his Essex property. Jacob accepted, partly that
he might be quit of the law, partly that he might be in the country
and among the poor, partly for reasons, or ghosts of reasons,
unavowed even to himself. The one terror that haunted his life was
the terror of the dukedom. This poor, sickly lad, the heir, with
whom he soon made warm friends, and the silent, morbid Duke, with
the face of Charles V. at St. Just--he became, in a short time,
profoundly and pitifully attached to them. It pleased him to serve
them; above all did it please him to do all he could, and to incite
others to do all they could, to keep these two frail persons
cheered and alive. His own passionate dread lest he should suddenly
find himself in their place, gave a particular poignancy to the
service he was always ready to render them of his best.</p>
<p>The Duke's confidence in him had increased rapidly. Delafield
was now about to take over the charge of another of the Duke's
estates, in the Midlands, and much of the business connected with
some important London property was also coming into his hands. He
had made himself a good man of business where another's interests
were concerned, and his dreams did no harm to the Duke's revenues.
He gave, indeed, a liberal direction to the whole policy of the
estate, and, as he had said to Julie, the Duke did not forbid
experiments.</p>
<p>As to his own money, he gave it away as wisely as he could,
which is, perhaps, not saying very much for the schemes and
Quixotisms of a young man of eight-and-twenty. At any rate, he gave
it away--to his mother and sister first, then to a variety of
persons and causes. Why should he save a penny of it? He had some
money of his own, besides his income from the Duke. It was
disgusting that he should have so much, and that it should be,
apparently, so very easy for him to have indefinitely more if he
wanted it.</p>
<p>He lived in a small cottage, in the simplest, plainest way
compatible with his work and with the maintenance of two decently
furnished rooms for any friend who might chance to visit him. He
read much and thought much. But he was not a man of any commanding
speculative or analytic ability. It would have been hard for him to
give any very clear or logical account of himself and his deepest
beliefs. Nevertheless, with every year that passed he became a more
remarkable <i>character</i>--his will stronger, his heart gentler.
In the village where he lived they wondered at him a good deal, and
often laughed at him. But if he had left them, certainly the
children and the old people would have felt as though the sun had
gone out.</p>
<p>In London he showed little or nothing of his peculiar ways and
pursuits; was, in fact, as far as anybody knew--outside half a
dozen friends--just the ordinary, well-disposed young man, engaged
in a business that every one understood. With Lady Henry, his
relations, apart from his sympathy with Julie Le Breton, had been
for some time rather difficult. She made gratitude hard for one of
the most grateful of men. When the circumstances of the Hubert
Delafields had been much straitened, after Lord Hubert's death,
Lady Henry had come to their aid, and had, in particular, spent
fifteen hundred pounds on Jacob's school and college education. But
there are those who can make a gift burn into the bones of those
who receive it. Jacob had now saved nearly the whole sum, and was
about to repay her. Meanwhile his obligation, his relationship, and
her age made it natural, or rather imperative, that he should be
often in her house; but when he was with her the touch of arrogant
brutality in her nature, especially towards servants and
dependants, roused him almost to fury. She knew it, and would often
exercise her rough tongue merely for the pleasure of tormenting
him.</p>
<p>No sooner, therefore, had he come to know the fragile,
distinguished creature whom Lady Henry had brought back with her
one autumn as her companion than his sympathies were instantly
excited, first by the mere fact that she was Lady Henry's
dependant, and then by the confidence, as to her sad story and
strange position, which she presently reposed in him and his cousin
Evelyn. On one or two occasions, very early in his acquaintance
with her, he was a witness of some small tyranny of Lady Henry's
towards her. He saw the shrinking of the proud nature, and the pain
thrilled through his own nerves as though the lash had touched
himself. Presently it became a joy to him whenever he was in town
to conspire with Evelyn Crowborough for her pleasure and relief. It
was the first time he had ever conspired, and it gave him sometimes
a slight shock to see how readily these two charming women lent
themselves, on occasion, to devices that had the aspect of
intrigue, and involved a good deal of what, in his own case, he
would have roundly dubbed lying. And, in truth, if he had known,
they did not find him a convenient ally, and he was by no means
always in their confidence.</p>
<p>Once, about six months after Julie's arrival in Bruton Street,
he met her on a spring morning crossing Kensington Gardens with the
dogs. She looked startlingly white and ill, and when he spoke to
her with eager sympathy her mouth quivered and her dark eyes
clouded with tears. The sight produced an extraordinary effect on a
man large-hearted and simple, for whom women still moved in an
atmosphere of romance. His heart leaped within him as she let
herself be talked with and comforted. And when her delicate hand
rested in his as they said good-bye, he was conscious of
feelings--wild, tumultuous feelings--to which, in his walk homeward
through the spring glades of the park, he gave impetuous
course.</p>
<p>Romantic, indeed, the position was, for romance rests on
contrast. Jacob, who knew Julie Le Breton's secret, was thrilled or
moved by the contrasts of her existence at every turn. Her success
and her subjection; the place in Lady Henry's circle which Lady
Henry had, in the first instance, herself forced her to take,
contrasted with the shifts and evasions, the poor, tortuous ways by
which, alas! she must often escape Lady Henry's later jealousy; her
intellectual strength and her most feminine weaknesses; these
things stirred and kept up in Jacob a warm and passionate pity. The
more clearly he saw the specks in her glory, the more vividly did
she appear to him a princess in distress, bound by physical or
moral fetters not of her own making. None of the well-born,
well-trained damsels who had been freely thrown across his path had
so far beguiled him in the least. Only this woman of doubtful birth
and antecedents, lonely, sad, and enslaved amid what people called
her social triumphs, stole into his heart--beautified by what he
chose to consider her misfortunes, and made none the less
attractive by the fact that as he pursued, she retreated; as he
pressed, she grew cold.</p>
<p>When, indeed, after their friendship had lasted about a year, he
proposed to her and she refused him, his passion, instead of
cooling, redoubled. It never occurred to him to think that she had
done a strange thing from the worldly point of view--that would
have involved an appreciation of himself, as a prize in the
marriage market, he would have loathed to make. But he was one of
the men for whom resistance enhances the value of what they desire,
and secretly he said to himself, "Persevere!" When he was repelled
or puzzled by certain aspects of her character, he would say to
himself:</p>
<p>"It is because she is alone and miserable. Women are not meant
to be alone. What soft, helpless creatures they are!--even when
intellectually they fly far ahead of us. If she would but put her
hand in mine I would so serve and worship her, she would have no
need for these strange things she does--the doublings and ruses of
the persecuted." Thus the touches of falsity that repelled Wilfrid
Bury were to Delafield's passion merely the stains of rough travel
on a fair garment.</p>
<p>But she refused him, and for another year he said no more. Then,
as things got worse and worse for her, he spoke
again--ambiguously--a word or two, thrown out to sound the waters.
Her manner of silencing him on this second occasion was not what it
had been before. His suspicions were aroused, and a few days later
he divined the Warkworth affair.</p>
<p>When Sir Wilfrid Bury spoke to him of the young officer's
relations to Mademoiselle Le Breton, Delafield's stiff defence of
Julie's prerogatives in the matter masked the fact that he had just
gone through a week of suffering, wrestling his heart down in
country lanes; a week which had brought him to somewhat curious
results.</p>
<p>In the first place, as with Sir Wilfrid, he stood up stoutly for
her rights. If she chose to attach herself to this man, whose
business was it to interfere? If he was worthy and loved her, Jacob
himself would see fair play, would be her friend and supporter.</p>
<p>But the scraps of gossip about Captain Warkworth which the
Duchess--who had disliked the man at first sight--gathered from
different quarters and confided to Jacob were often disquieting. It
was said that at Simla he had entrapped this little heiress, and
her obviously foolish and incapable mother, by devices generally
held to be discreditable; and it had taken two angry guardians to
warn him off. What was the state of the case now no one exactly
knew; though it was shrewdly suspected that the engagement was only
dormant. The child was known to have been in love with him; in two
years more she would be of age; her fortune was enormous, and
Warkworth was a poor and ambitious man.</p>
<p>There was also an ugly tale of a civilian's wife in a hill
station, referring to a date some years back; but Delafield did not
think it necessary to believe it.</p>
<p>As to his origins--there again, Delafield, making cautious
inquiries, came across some unfavorable details, confided to him by
a man of Warkworth's own regiment. His father had retired from the
army immediately after the Mutiny, broken in health, and much
straitened in means. Himself belonging to a family of the poorer
middle class, he had married late, a good woman not socially his
equal, and without fortune. They settled in the Isle of Wight, on
his half-pay, and harassed by a good many debts. Their two
children, Henry and Isabella, were then growing up, and the
parents' hopes were fixed upon their promising and good-looking
son. With difficulty they sent him to Charterhouse and a "crammer."
The boy coveted a "crack" regiment; by dint of mustering all the
money and all the interest they could, they procured him his
heart's desire. He got unpardonably into debt; the old people's
resources were lessening, not expanding; and ultimately the poor
father died broken down by the terror of bankruptcy for himself and
disgrace for Henry. The mother still survived, in very straitened
circumstances.</p>
<p>"His sister," said Delafield's informant, "married one of the
big London tailors, whom she met first on the Ryde pier. I happen
to know the facts, for my father and I have been customers of his
for years, and one day, hearing that I was in Warkworth's regiment,
he told me some stories of his brother-in-law in a pretty hostile
tone. His sister, it appears, has often financed him of late. She
must have done. How else could he have got through? Warkworth may
be a fine, showy fellow when there's fighting about. In private
life he's one of the most self-indulgent dogs alive. And yet he's
ashamed of the sister and her husband, and turns his back on them
whenever he can. Oh, he's not a person of nice feeling, is
Warkworth--but, mark my words, he'll be one of the most successful
men in the army."</p>
<p>There was one side. On the other was to be set the man's
brilliant professional record; his fine service in this recent
campaign; the bull-dog defence of an isolated fort, which insured
the safety of most important communications; contempt of danger,
thirst, exposure; the rescue of a wounded comrade from the glacis
of the fort, under a murderous fire; facts, all of them, which had
fired the public imagination and brought his name to the front. No
such acts as these could have been done by any mere self-indulgent
pretender.</p>
<p>Delafield reserved his judgment. He set himself to watch. In his
inmost heart there was a strange assumption of the right to watch,
and, if need be, to act. Julie's instinct had told her truly.
Delafield, the individualist, the fanatic for freedom--he, also,
had his instinct of tyranny. She should not destroy herself, the
dear, weak, beloved woman! He would prevent it.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Thus, during these hours of transition, Delafield thought much
of Julie. Julie, on the other hand, had no sooner said good-night
to him after the conversation described in the last chapter than
she drove him from her thoughts--one might have said, with
vehemence.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>The <i>Times</i> of the following morning duly contained the
announcement of the appointment of Captain Warkworth, D.S.O., of
the Queen's Grays, to the command of the military mission to
Mokembe recently determined on by her Majesty's government. The
mission would proceed to Mokembe as soon as possible, but of two
officers who on the ground of especial knowledge would form part of
it, under Captain Warkworth's command, one was at present in Canada
and the other at the Cape. It would, therefore, hardly be possible
for the mission to start from the coast for the interior before the
beginning of May. In the same paper certain promotions and
distinctions on account of the recent Mahsud campaign were
reprinted from the <i>Gazette</i>. Captain Henry Warkworth's brevet
majority was among them.</p>
<p>The <i>Times</i> leader on the announcement pointed out that the
mission would be concerned with important frontier questions, still
more with the revival of the prestige of England in regions where a
supine government had allowed it to wither unaccountably. Other
powers had been playing a filching and encroaching game at the
expense of the British lion in these parts, and it was more than
time that he should open his sleepy eyes upon what was going on. As
to the young officer who was to command the mission, the great
journal made a few civil though guarded remarks. His record in the
recent campaign was indeed highly distinguished; still it could
hardly be said that, take it as a whole, his history so far gave
him a claim to promotion so important as that which he had now
obtained.</p>
<p>Well, now he had his chance. English soldiers had a way of
profiting by such chances. The <i>Times</i> courteously gave him
the benefit of the doubt, prophesying that he would rise to the
occasion and justify the choice of his superiors.</p>
<p>The Duchess looked over Julie's shoulder as she read.</p>
<p>"Schemer," she said, as she dropped a kiss on the back of
Julie's neck, "I hope you're satisfied. The <i>Times</i> doesn't
know what to make of it."</p>
<p>Julie put down the paper with a glowing cheek.</p>
<p>"They'll soon know," she said, quietly.</p>
<p>"Julie, do you believe in him so much?"</p>
<p>"What does it matter what I think? It is not I who have
appointed him."</p>
<p>"Not so sure," laughed the Duchess. "As if he would have had a
chance without you. Whom did he know last November when you took
him up?"</p>
<p>Julie moved to and fro, her hands behind her. The tremor on her
lip, the light in her eye showed her sense of triumph.</p>
<p>"What have I done," she said, laughing, "but push a few stones
out of the way of merit?"</p>
<p>"Some of them were heavy," said the Duchess, making a little
face. "Need I invite Lady Froswick any more?"</p>
<p>Julie threw her arms about her.</p>
<p>"Evelyn, what a darling you've been! Now I'll never worry you
again."</p>
<p>"Oh, for some people I would do ten times as much!" cried the
Duchess. "But, Julie, I wish I knew why you think so well of this
man. I--I don't always hear very nice things about him."</p>
<p>"I dare say not," said Julie, flushing. "It is easy to hate
success."</p>
<p>"No, come, we're not as mean as that!" cried the Duchess. "I vow
that all the heroes I've ever known had a ripping time. Julie"--she
kissed her friend impulsively--"Julie, don't like him too much. I
don't think he's good enough."</p>
<p>"Good enough for what?" said Julie's bitter voice. "Make
yourself easy about Captain Warkworth, Evelyn; but please
understand--<i>anything</i> is good enough for me. Don't let your
dear head be troubled about my affairs. They are never serious, and
nothing counts--except," she added, recklessly, "that I get a
little amusement by the way."</p>
<p>"Julie," cried the Duchess, "as if Jacob--"</p>
<p>Julie frowned and released herself; then she laughed.</p>
<p>"Nothing that one ever says about ordinary mortals applies to
Mr. Delafield. He is, of course, <i>hors concours</i>."</p>
<p>"Julie!"</p>
<p>"It is you, Evelyn, who make me <i>méchante</i>. I could
be grateful--and excellent friends with that young man--in my own
way."</p>
<p>The Duchess sighed, and held her tongue with difficulty.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>When the successful hero arrived that night for dinner he found
a solitary lady in the drawing-room.</p>
<p>Was this, indeed, Julie Le Breton--this soft, smiling vision in
white?</p>
<p>He expected to have found a martyr, pale and wan from the shock
of the catastrophe which had befallen her, and, even amid the
intoxication of his own great day, he was not easy as to how she
might have taken his behavior on the fatal night. But here was some
one, all joy, animation, and indulgence--a glorified Julie who trod
on air. Why? Because good-fortune had befallen her friend? His
heart smote him. He had never seen her so touching, so charming.
Since the incubus of Lady Henry's house and presence had been
removed she seemed to have grown years younger. A white muslin
dress of her youth, touched here and there by the Duchess's maid,
replaced the familiar black satin. When Warkworth first saw her he
paused unconsciously in surprise.</p>
<p>Then he advanced to meet her, broadly smiling, his blue eyes
dancing.</p>
<p>"You got my note this morning?"</p>
<p>"Yes," she said, demurely. "You were much too kind, and
much--much too absurd. I have done nothing."</p>
<p>"Oh, nothing, of course." Then, after a moment: "Are you going
to tie me to that fiction, or am I to be allowed a little decent
sincerity? You know perfectly well that you have done it all.
There, there; give me your hand."</p>
<p>She gave it, shrinking, and he kissed it joyously.</p>
<p>"Isn't it jolly!" he said, with a school-boy's delight as he
released her hand. "I saw Lord M---- this morning." He named the
Prime Minister. "Very civil, indeed. Then the
Commander-in-Chief--and Montresor gave me half an hour. It is all
right. They are giving me a capital staff. Excellent fellows, all
of them. Oh, you'll see, I shall pull it through--I shall pull it
through. By George! it is a chance!"</p>
<p>And he stood radiant, rubbing his hands over the blaze.</p>
<p>The Duchess came in accompanied by an elderly cousin of the
Duke's, a white-haired, black-gowned spinster, Miss Emily
Lawrence--one of those single women, travelled, cultivated, and
good, that England produces in such abundance.</p>
<p>"Well, so you're going," said the Duchess, to Warkworth. "And I
hear that we ought to think you a lucky man."</p>
<p>"Indeed you ought, and you must," he said, gayly. "If only the
climate will behave itself. The blackwater fever has a way of
killing you in twenty-four hours if it gets hold of you; but short
of that--"</p>
<p>"Oh, you will be quite safe," said the Duchess. "Let me
introduce you to Miss Lawrence. Emily, this is Captain
Warkworth."</p>
<p>The elderly lady gave a sudden start. Then she quietly put on
her spectacles and studied the young soldier with a pair of
intelligent gray eyes.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Nothing could have been more agreeable than Warkworth at dinner.
Even the Duchess admitted as much. He talked easily, but not too
much, of the task before him; told amusing tales of his sporting
experience of years back in the same regions which were now to be
the scene of his mission; discussed the preparations he would have
to make at Denga, the coast town, before starting on his five
weeks' journey to the interior; drew the native porter and the
native soldier, not to their advantage, and let fall, by the way,
not a few wise or vivacious remarks as to the races, resources, and
future of this illimitable and mysterious Africa--this cavern of
the unknown, into which the waves of white invasion, one upon
another, were now pressing fast and ceaselessly, towards what goal,
only the gods knew.</p>
<p>A few other men were dining; among them two officers from the
staff of the Commander-in-Chief. Warkworth, much their junior,
treated them with a skilful deference; but through the talk that
prevailed his military competence and prestige appeared plainly
enough, even to the women. His good opinion of himself was indeed
sufficiently evident; but there was no crude vainglory. At any
rate, it was a vainglory of youth, ability, and good looks,
ratified by these budding honors thus fresh upon him, and no one
took it amiss.</p>
<p>When the gentlemen returned to the drawing-room, Warkworth and
Julie once more found themselves together, this time in the
Duchess's little sitting-room at the end of the long suite of
rooms.</p>
<p>"When do you go?" she asked him, abruptly.</p>
<p>"Not for about a month." He mentioned the causes of delay.</p>
<p>"That will bring you very late--into the worst of the heat?" Her
voice had a note of anxiety.</p>
<p>"Oh, we shall all be seasoned men. And after the first few days
we shall get into the uplands."</p>
<p>"What do your home people say?" she asked him, rather shyly. She
knew, in truth, little about them.</p>
<p>"My mother? Oh, she will be greatly pleased. I go down to the
Isle of Wight for a day or two to see her to-morrow. But now, dear
lady, that is enough of my wretched self. You--do you stay on here
with the Duchess?"</p>
<p>She told him of the house in Heribert Street. He listened with
attention.</p>
<p>"Nothing could be better. You will have a most distinguished
little setting of your own, and Lady Henry will repent at leisure.
You won't be lonely?"</p>
<p>"Oh no!" But her smile was linked with a sigh.</p>
<p>He came nearer to her.</p>
<p>"You should never be lonely if I could help it," he said, in a
low voice.</p>
<p>"When people are nameless and kinless," was her passionate
reply, in the same undertone as his, "they must be lonely."</p>
<p>He looked at her with eagerness. She lay back in the firelight,
her beautiful brow and eyes softly illuminated. He felt within him
a sudden snapping of restraints. Why--why refuse what was so
clearly within his grasp? Love has many manners--many
entrances--and many exits.</p>
<p>"When will you tell me all that I want to know about you?" he
said, bending towards her with tender insistence. "There is so much
I have to ask."</p>
<p>"Oh, some time," she said, hurriedly, her pulses quickening.
"Mine is not a story to be told on a great day like this."</p>
<p>He was silent a moment, but his face spoke for him.</p>
<p>"Our friendship has been a beautiful thing, hasn't it?" he said,
at last, in a voice of emotion. "Look here!" He thrust his hand
into his breast-pocket and half withdrew it. "Do you see where I
carry your letters?"</p>
<p>"You shouldn't--they are not worthy."</p>
<p>"How charming you are in that dress--in that light! I shall
always see you as you are to-night."</p>
<p>A silence. Excitement mounted in their veins. Suddenly he
stooped and kissed her hands. They looked into each other's eyes,
and the seconds passed like hours.</p>
<p>Presently, in the nearer drawing-room, there was a sound of
approaching voices and they moved apart.</p>
<p>"Julie, Emily Lawrence is going," said the Duchess's voice,
pitched in what seemed to Julie a strange and haughty note.
"Captain Warkworth, Miss Lawrence thinks that you and she have
common friends--Lady Blanche Moffatt and her daughter."</p>
<p>Captain Warkworth murmured some conventionality, and passed into
the next drawing-room with Miss Lawrence.</p>
<p>Julie rose to her feet, the color dying out of her face, her
passionate eyes on the Duchess, who stood facing her friend,
guiltily pale, and ready to cry.</p>
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