<h2><SPAN name="XX"></SPAN>XX</h2>
<br/>
<p>"Jacob, what brings you back so soon?" The Duchess ran into the
room, a trim little figure in her morning dress of blue-and-white
cloth, with her small spitz leaping beside her.</p>
<p>Delafield advanced.</p>
<p>"I came to tell you that I got your telegram yesterday, and that
in the evening, by an extraordinary and fortunate chance, I met
Miss Le Breton in Paris--"</p>
<p>"You met Julie in Paris?" echoed the Duchess, in
astonishment.</p>
<p>"She had come to spend a couple of days with some friends there
before going on to Bruges. I gave her the news of Lord Lackington's
illness, and she at once turned back. She was much fatigued and
distressed, and the night was stormy. I put her into the
sleeping-car, and came back myself to see if I could be any
assistance to her. And at Calais I was of some use. The crossing
was very rough."</p>
<p>"Julie was in Paris?" repeated the Duchess, as though she had
heard nothing else of what he had been saying.</p>
<p>Her eyes, so blue and large in her small, irregular face, sought
those of her cousin and endeavored to read them.</p>
<p>"It seems to have been a rapid change of plan. And it was a
great stroke of luck my meeting her."</p>
<p>"But how--and where?"</p>
<p>"Oh, there is no time for going into that," said Delafield,
impatiently. "But I knew you would like to know that she was
here--after your message yesterday. We arrived a little after six
this morning. About nine I went for news to St. James's Square.
There is a slight rally."</p>
<p>"Did you see Lord Uredale? Did you say anything about Julie?"
asked the Duchess, eagerly.</p>
<p>"I merely asked at the door, and took the bulletin to Miss Le
Breton. Will you see Uredale and arrange it? I gather you saw him
yesterday."</p>
<p>"By all means," said the Duchess, musing. "Oh, it was so curious
yesterday. Lord Lackington had just told them. You should have seen
those two men."</p>
<p>"The sons?"</p>
<p>The Duchess nodded.</p>
<p>"They don't like it. They were as stiff as pokers. But they will
do absolutely the right thing. They see at once that she must be
provided for. And when he asked for her they told me to telegraph,
if I could find out where she was. Well, of all the extraordinary
chances."</p>
<p>She looked at him again, oddly, a spot of red on either small
cheek. Delafield took no notice. He was pacing up and down,
apparently in thought.</p>
<p>"Suppose you take her there?" he said, pausing abruptly before
her.</p>
<p>"To St. James's Square? What did you tell her?"</p>
<p>"That he was a trifle better, and that you would come to
her."</p>
<p>"Yes, it would be hard for her to go alone," said the Duchess,
reflectively. She looked at her watch. "Only a little after eleven.
Ring, please, Jacob."</p>
<p>The carriage was ordered. Meanwhile the little lady inquired
eagerly after her Julie. Had she been exhausted by the double
journey? Was she alone in Paris, or was Madame Bornier with
her?</p>
<p>Jacob had understood that Madame Bornier and the little girl had
gone straight to Bruges.</p>
<p>The Duchess looked down and then looked up.</p>
<p>"Did--did you come across Major Warkworth?"</p>
<p>"Yes, I saw him for a moment in the Rue de la Paix, He was
starting for Rome."</p>
<p>The Duchess turned away as though ashamed of her question, and
gave her orders for the carriage. Then her attention was suddenly
drawn to her cousin. "How pale you look, Jacob," she said,
approaching him. "Won't you have something--some wine?"</p>
<p>Delafield refused, declaring that all he wanted was an hour or
two's sleep.</p>
<p>"I go back to Paris to-morrow," he said, as he prepared to take
his leave. "Will you be here to-night if I look in?"</p>
<p>"Alack! we go to Scotland to-night! It was just a piece of luck
that you found me this morning. Freddie is fuming to get away."</p>
<p>Delafield paused a moment. Then he abruptly shook hands and
went.</p>
<p>"He wants news of what happens at St. James's Square," thought
the Duchess, suddenly, and she ran after him to the top of the
stairs. "Jacob! If you don't mind a horrid mess to-night, Freddie
and I shall be dining alone--of course we must have something to
eat. Somewhere about eight. Do look in. There'll be a cutlet--on a
trunk--anyway."</p>
<p>Delafield laughed, hesitated, and finally accepted.</p>
<p>The Duchess went back to the drawing-room, not a little puzzled
and excited.</p>
<p>"It's very, <i>very</i> odd," she said to herself. "And what
<i>is</i> the matter with Jacob?"</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Half an hour later she drove to the splendid house in St.
James's Square where Lord Lackington lay dying.</p>
<p>She asked for Lord Uredale, the eldest son, and waited in the
library till he came.</p>
<p>He was a tall, squarely built man, with fair hair already gray,
and somewhat absent and impassive manners.</p>
<p>At sight of him the Duchess's eyes filled with tears. She
hurried to him, her soft nature dissolved in sympathy.</p>
<p>"How is your father?"</p>
<p>"A trifle easier, though the doctors say there is no real
improvement. But he is quite conscious--knows us all. I have just
been reading him the debate."</p>
<p>"You told me yesterday he had asked for Miss Le Breton," said
the Duchess, raising herself on tiptoe as though to bring her low
tones closer to his ear. "She's here--in town, I mean. She came
back from Paris last night."</p>
<p>Lord Uredale showed no emotion of any kind. Emotion was not in
his line.</p>
<p>"Then my father would like to see her," he said, in a dry,
ordinary voice, which jarred upon the sentimental Duchess.</p>
<p>"When shall I bring her?"</p>
<p>"He is now comfortable and resting. If you are free--"</p>
<p>The Duchess replied that she would go to Heribert Street at
once. As Lord Uredale took her to her carriage a young man ran down
the steps hastily, raised his hat, and disappeared.</p>
<p>Lord Uredale explained that he was the husband of the famous
young beauty, Mrs. Delaray, whose portrait Lord Lackington had been
engaged upon at the time of his seizure. Having been all his life a
skilful artist, a man of fashion, and a harmless haunter of lovely
women, Lord Lackington, as the Duchess knew, had all but completed
a gallery of a hundred portraits, representing the beauty of the
reign. Mrs. Delaray's would have been the hundredth in a series of
which Mrs. Norton was the first.</p>
<p>"He has been making arrangements with the husband to get it
finished," said Lord Uredale; "it has been on his mind."</p>
<p>The Duchess shivered a little.</p>
<p>"He knows he won't finish it?"</p>
<p>"Quite well."</p>
<p>"And he still thinks of those things?"</p>
<p>"Yes--or politics," said Lord Uredale, smiling faintly. "I have
written to Mr. Montresor. There are two or three points my father
wants to discuss with him."</p>
<p>"And he is not depressed, or troubled about himself?"</p>
<p>"Not in the least. He will be grateful if you will bring him
Miss Le Breton."</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>"Julie, my darling, are you fit to come with me?"</p>
<p>The Duchess held her friend in her arms, soothing and caressing
her. How forlorn was the little house, under its dust-sheets, on
this rainy, spring morning! And Julie, amid the dismantled
drawing-room, stood spectrally white and still, listening, with
scarcely a word in reply, to the affection, or the pity, or the
news which the Duchess poured out upon her.</p>
<p>"Shall we go now? I am quite ready."</p>
<p>And she withdrew herself from the loving grasp which held her,
and put on her hat and gloves.</p>
<p>"You ought to be in bed," said the Duchess. "Those night
journeys are too abominable. Even Jacob looks a wreck. But what an
extraordinary chance, Julie, that Jacob should have found you! How
did you come across each other?"</p>
<p>"At the Nord Station," said Julie, as she pinned her veil before
the glass over the mantel-piece.</p>
<p>Some instinct silenced the Duchess. She asked no more questions,
and they started for St. James's Square.</p>
<p>"You won't mind if I don't talk?" said Julie, leaning back and
closing her eyes. "I seem still to have the sea in my ears."</p>
<p>The Duchess looked at her tenderly, clasping her hand close, and
the carriage rolled along. But just before they reached St. James's
Square, Julie hastily raised the fingers which held her own and
kissed them.</p>
<p>"Oh, Julie," said the Duchess, reproachfully, "I don't like you
to do that!"</p>
<p>She flushed and frowned. It was she who ought to pay such acts
of homage, not Julie.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>"Father, Miss Le Breton is here."</p>
<p>"Let her come in, Jack--and the Duchess, too."</p>
<p>Lord Uredale went back to the door. Two figures came noiselessly
into the room, the Duchess in front, with Julie's hand in hers.</p>
<p>Lord Lackington was propped up in bed, and breathing fast. But
he smiled as they approached him.</p>
<p>"This is good-bye, dear Duchess," he said, in a whisper, as she
bent over him. Then, with a spark of his old gayety in the eyes, "I
should be a cur to grumble. Life has been very agreeable. Ah,
Julie!"</p>
<p>Julie dropped gently on her knees beside him and laid her cheek
against his arm. At the mention of her name the old man's face had
clouded as though the thoughts she called up had suddenly rebuked
his words to the Duchess. He feebly moved his hands towards hers,
and there was silence in the room for a few moments.</p>
<p>"Uredale!"</p>
<p>"Yes, father."</p>
<p>"This is Rose's daughter."</p>
<p>His eyes lifted themselves to those of his son.</p>
<p>"I know, father. If Miss Le Breton will allow us, we will do
what we can to be of service to her."</p>
<p>Bill Chantrey, the younger brother, gravely nodded assent. They
were both men of middle age, the younger over forty. They did not
resemble their father, nor was there any trace in either of them of
his wayward fascination. They were a pair of well-set-up, well-bred
Englishmen, surprised at nothing, and quite incapable of showing
any emotion in public; yet just and kindly men. As Julie entered
the house they had both solemnly shaken hands with her, in a manner
which showed at once their determination, as far as they were
concerned, to avoid anything sentimental or in the nature of a
scene, and their readiness to do what could be rightly demanded of
them.</p>
<p>Julie hardly listened to Lord Uredale's little speech. She had
eyes and ears only for her grandfather. As she knelt beside him,
her face bowed upon his hand, the ice within her was breaking up,
that dumb and straitening anguish in which she had lived since that
moment at the Nord Station in which she had grasped the meaning and
the implications of Delafield's hurried words. Was everything to be
swept away from her at once--her lover, and now this dear old man,
to whom her heart, crushed and bleeding as it was, yearned with all
its strength?</p>
<p>Lord Lackington supposed that she was weeping.</p>
<p>"Don't grieve, my dear," he murmured. "It must come to an end
some time--'<i>cette charmante promenade à travers la
réalité</i>!'"</p>
<p>And he smiled at her, agreeably vain to the last of that French
accent and that French memory which--so his look implied--they two
could appreciate, each in the other. Then he turned to the
Duchess.</p>
<p>"Duchess, you knew this secret before me. But I forgive
<i>you</i>, and thank you. You have been very good to Rose's child.
Julie has told me--and--I have observed--"</p>
<p>"Oh, dear Lord Lackington!" Evelyn bent over him. "Trust her to
me," she said, with a lovely yearning to comfort and cheer him
breathing from her little face.</p>
<p>He smiled.</p>
<p>"To you--and--"</p>
<p>He did not finish the sentence.</p>
<p>After a pause he made a little gesture of farewell which the
Duchess understood. She kissed his hand and turned away
weeping.</p>
<p>"Nurse--where is nurse?" said Lord Lackington.</p>
<p>Both the nurse and the doctor, who had withdrawn a little
distance from the family group, came forward.</p>
<p>"Doctor, give me some strength," said the laboring voice, not
without its old wilfulness of accent.</p>
<p>He moved his arm towards the young homoeopath, who injected
strychnine. Then he looked at the nurse.</p>
<p>"Brandy--and--lift me."</p>
<p>All was done as he desired.</p>
<p>"Now go, please," he said to his sons. "I wish to be left with
Julie."</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>For some moments, that seemed interminable to Julie, Lord
Lackington lay silent. A feverish flush, a revival of life in the
black eyes had followed on the administration of the two
stimulants. He seemed to be gathering all his forces.</p>
<p>At last he laid his hand on her arm. "You shouldn't be alone,"
he said, abruptly.</p>
<p>His expression had grown anxious, even imperious. She felt a
vague pang of dread as she tried to assure him that she had kind
friends, and that her work would be her resource.</p>
<p>Lord Lackington frowned.</p>
<p>"That won't do," he said, almost vehemently. "You have great
talents, but you are weak--you are a woman--you must marry."</p>
<p>Julie stared at him, whiter even than when she had entered his
room--helpless to avert what she began to foresee.</p>
<p>"Jacob Delafield is devoted to you. You should marry him,
dear--you should marry him."</p>
<p>The room seemed to swim around her. But his face was still
plain--the purpled lips and cheeks, the urgency in the eyes, as of
one pursued by an overtaking force, the magnificent brow, the crown
of white hair.</p>
<p>She summoned all her powers and told him hurriedly that he was
mistaken--entirely mistaken. Mr. Delafield had, indeed, proposed to
her, but, apart from her own unwillingness, she had reason to know
that his feelings towards her were now entirely changed. He neither
loved her nor thought well of her.</p>
<p>Lord Lackington lay there, obstinate, patient, incredulous. At
last he interrupted her.</p>
<p>"You make yourself believe these things. But they are not true.
Delafield is attached to you. I know it."</p>
<p>He nodded to her with his masterful, affectionate look. And
before she could find words again he had resumed.</p>
<p>"He could give you a great position. Don't despise it. We
English big-wigs have a good time."</p>
<p>A ghostly, humorous ray shot out upon her; then he felt for her
hand.</p>
<p>"Dear Julie, why won't you?"</p>
<p>"If you were to ask him," she cried, in despair, "he would tell
you as I do."</p>
<p>And across her miserable thoughts there flashed two mingled
images--Warkworth waiting, waiting for her at the Sceaux Station,
and that look of agonized reproach in Delafield's haggard face as
he had parted from her in the dawn of this strange, this incredible
day.</p>
<p>And here beside her, with the tyranny of the dying, this dear
babbler wandered on in broken words, with painful breath, pleading,
scolding, counselling. She felt that he was exhausting himself. She
begged him to let her recall nurse and doctor. He shook his head,
and when he could no longer speak, he clung to her hand, his gaze
solemnly, insistently, fixed upon her.</p>
<p>Her spirit writhed and rebelled. But she was helpless in the
presence of this mortal weakness, this affection, half earthly,
half beautiful, on its knees before her.</p>
<p>A thought struck her. Why not content him? Whatever pledges she
gave would die with him. What did it matter? It was cruelty to deny
him the words--the mere empty words--he asked of her.</p>
<p>"I--I would do anything to please you!" she said, with a sudden
burst of uncontrollable tears, as she laid her head down beside him
on the pillow. "If he <i>were</i> to ask me again, of course, for
your sake, I would consider it once more. Dear, dear friend, won't
that satisfy you?"</p>
<p>Lord Lackington was silent a few moments, then he smiled.</p>
<p>"That's a promise?"</p>
<p>She raised herself and looked at him, conscious of a sick
movement of terror. What was there in his mind, still so quick,
fertile, ingenious, under the very shadow of death?</p>
<p>He waited for her answer, feebly pressing her hand.</p>
<p>"Yes," she said, faintly, and once more hid her face beside
him.</p>
<p>Then, for some little time, the dying man neither stirred nor
spoke. At last Julie heard:</p>
<p>"I used to be afraid of death--that was in middle life. Every
night it was a torment. But now, for many years, I have not been
afraid at all.... Byron--Lord Byron--said to me, once, he would not
change anything in his life; but he would have preferred not to
have lived at all. I could not say that. I have enjoyed it
all--being an Englishman, and an English peer--pictures, politics,
society--everything. Perhaps it wasn't fair. There are so many poor
devils."</p>
<p>Julie pressed his hand to her lips. But in her thoughts there
rose the sudden, sharp memory of her mother's death--of that bitter
stoicism and abandonment in which the younger life had closed, in
comparison with this peace, this complacency.</p>
<p>Yet it was a complacency rich in sweetness. His next words were
to assure her tenderly that he had made provision for her. "Uredale
and Bill--will see to it. They're good fellows. Often--they've
thought me--a pretty fool. But they've been kind to
me--always."</p>
<p>Then, after another interval, he lifted himself in bed, with
more strength than she had supposed he could exert, looked at her
earnestly, and asked her, in the same painful whisper, whether she
believed in another life.</p>
<p>"Yes," said Julie. But her shrinking, perfunctory manner
evidently distressed him. He resumed, with a furrowed brow:</p>
<p>"You ought. It is good for us to believe it."</p>
<p>"I must hope, at any rate, that I shall see you again--and
mamma," she said, smiling on him through her tears.</p>
<p>"I wonder what it will be like," he replied, after a pause. His
tone and look implied a freakish, a whimsical curiosity, yet full
of charm. Then, motioning to her to come nearer, and speaking into
her ear:</p>
<p>"Your poor mother, Julie, was never happy--never! There must be
laws, you see--and churches--and religious customs. It's
because--we're made of such wretched stuff. My wife, when she
died--made me promise to continue going to church--and praying.
And--without it--I should have been a bad man. Though I've had
plenty of sceptical thoughts--plenty. Your poor parents
rebelled--against all that. They suffered--they suffered. But
you'll make up--you're a noble woman--you'll make up."</p>
<p>He laid his hand on her head. She offered no reply; but through
the inner mind there rushed the incidents, passions, revolts of the
preceding days.</p>
<p>But for that strange chance of Delafield's appearance in her
path--a chance no more intelligible to her now, after the pondering
of several feverish hours, than it had been at the moment of her
first suspicion--where and what would she be now? A dishonored
woman, perhaps, with a life-secret to keep; cut off, as her mother
had been, from the straight-living, law-abiding world.</p>
<p>The touch of the old man's hand upon her hair roused in her a
first recoil, a first shattering doubt of the impulse which had
carried her to Paris. Since Delafield left her in the early dawn
she had been pouring out a broken, passionate heart in a letter to
Warkworth. No misgivings while she was writing it as to the
all-sufficing legitimacy of love!</p>
<p>But here, in this cold neighborhood of the grave--brought back
to gaze in spirit; on her mother's tragedy--she shrank, she
trembled. Her proud intelligence denied the stain, and bade her
hate and despise her rescuer. And, meanwhile, things also inherited
and inborn, the fruit of a remoter ancestry, rising from the
dimmest and deepest caverns of personality, silenced the clamor of
the naturalist mind. One moment she felt herself seized with terror
lest anything should break down the veil between her real self and
this unsuspecting tenderness of the dying man; the next she rose in
revolt against her own fear. Was she to find herself, after all, a
mere weak penitent--meanly grateful to Jacob Delafield? Her heart
cried out to Warkworth in a protesting anguish.</p>
<p>So absorbed in thought was she that she did not notice how long
the silence had lasted.</p>
<p>"He seems to be sleeping," said a low voice beside her.</p>
<p>She looked up to see the doctor, with Lord Uredale. Gently
releasing herself, she kissed Lord Lackington's forehead, and rose
to her feet.</p>
<p>Suddenly the patient opened his eyes, and as he seemed to become
aware of the figures beside him, he again lifted himself in bed,
and a gleam most animated, most vivacious, passed over his
features.</p>
<p>"Brougham's not asked," he said, with a little chuckle of
amusement. "Isn't it a joke?"</p>
<p>The two men beside him looked at each other. Lord Uredale
approached the bed.</p>
<p>"Not asked to what, father?" he said, gently.</p>
<p>"Why, to the Queen's fancy ball, of course," said Lord
Lackington, still smiling. "Such a to-do! All the elderly sticks
practising minuets for their lives!"</p>
<p>A voluble flow of talk followed--hardly intelligible. The words
"Melbourne" and "Lady Holland" emerged--the fragment, apparently,
of a dispute with the latter, in which "Allen" intervened--the
names of "Palmerston" and "that dear chap, Villiers."</p>
<p>Lord Uredale sighed. The young doctor looked at him
interrogatively.</p>
<p>"He is thinking of his old friends," said the son. "That was the
Queen's ball, I imagine, of '42. I have often heard him describe my
mother's dress."</p>
<p>But while he was speaking the fitful energy died away. The old
man ceased to talk; his eyelids fell. But the smile still lingered
about his mouth, and as he settled himself on his pillows, like one
who rests, the spectators were struck by the urbane and
distinguished beauty of his aspect. The purple flush had died again
into mortal pallor. Illness had masked or refined the weakness of
mouth and chin; the beautiful head and countenance, with their
characteristic notes of youth, impetuosity, a kind of gay
detachment, had never been more beautiful.</p>
<p>The young doctor looked stealthily from the recumbent figure to
the tall and slender woman standing absorbed and grief-stricken
beside the bed. The likeness was as evident to him as it had been,
in the winter, to Sir Wilfrid Bury.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>As he was escorting her down-stairs, Lord Uredale said to his
companion, "Foster thinks he may still live twenty-four hours."</p>
<p>"If he asks for me again," said Julie, now shrouded once more
behind a thick, black veil, "you will send?"</p>
<p>He gravely assented.</p>
<p>"It is a great pity," he said, with a certain stiffness--did it
unconsciously mark the difference between her and his legitimate
kindred?--"that my sister Lady Blanche and her daughter cannot be
with us."</p>
<p>"They are in Italy?"</p>
<p>"At Florence. My niece has had an attack of diphtheria. She
could neither travel nor could her mother leave her."</p>
<p>Then pausing in the hall, he added in a low voice, and with some
embarrassment:</p>
<p>"My father has told you, I believe, of the addition he has made
to his will?"</p>
<p>Julie drew back.</p>
<p>"I neither asked for it nor desired it," she said, in her
coldest and clearest voice.</p>
<p>"That I quite understand," said Lord Uredale. "But--you cannot
hurt him by refusing."</p>
<p>She hesitated.</p>
<p>"No. But afterwards--I must be free to follow my own
judgment."</p>
<p>"We cannot take what does not belong to us," he said, with some
sharpness. "My brother and I are named as your trustees. Believe
me, we will do our best."</p>
<p>Meanwhile the younger brother had come out of the library to bid
her farewell. She felt that she was under critical observation,
though both pairs of gray eyes refrained from any appearance of
scrutiny. Her pride came to her aid, and she did not shrink from
the short conversation which the two brothers evidently desired.
When it was over, and the brothers returned to the hall after
putting her into the Duchess's carriage, the younger said to the
elder:</p>
<p>"She can behave herself, Johnnie."</p>
<p>They looked at each other, with their hands in their pockets. A
little nod passed between them--an augur-like acceptance of this
new and irregular member of the family.</p>
<p>"Yes, she has excellent manners," said Uredale. "And really,
after the tales Lady Henry has been spreading--that's
something!"</p>
<p>"Oh, I always thought Lady Henry an old cat," said Bill,
tranquilly. "That don't matter."</p>
<p>The Chantrey brothers had not been among Lady Henry's
<i>habitués</i>. In her eyes, they were the dull sons of an
agreeable father. They were humorously aware of it, and bore her
little malice.</p>
<p>"No," said Uredale, raising his eyebrows; "but the 'affaire
Warkworth'? If there's any truth in what one hears, that's deuced
unpleasant."</p>
<p>Bill Chantrey whistled.</p>
<p>"It's hard luck on that poor child Aileen that it should be her
own cousin interfering with her preserves. By-the-way"--he stooped
to look at the letters on the hall table--"do you see there's a
letter for father from Blanche? And in a letter I got from her by
the same post, she says that she has told him the whole story.
According to her, Aileen's too ill to be thwarted, and she wants
the governor to see the guardians. I say, Johnnie"--he looked at
his brother--"we'll not trouble the father with it now?"</p>
<p>"Certainly not," said Uredale, with a sigh. "I saw one of the
trustees--Jack Underwood--yesterday. He told me Blanche and the
child were more infatuated than ever. Very likely what one hears is
a pack of lies. If not, I hope this woman will have the good taste
to drop it. Father has charged me to write to Blanche and tell her
the whole story of poor Rose, and of this girl's revealing herself.
Blanche, it appears, is just as much in the dark as we were."</p>
<p>"If this gossip has got round to her, her feelings will be
mixed. Oh, well, I've great faith in the money," said Bill
Chantrey, carelessly, as they began to mount the stairs again. "It
sounds disgusting; but if the child wants him I suppose she must
have him. And, anyway, the man's off to Africa for a twelvemonth at
least. Miss Le Breton will have time to forget him. One can't say
that either he or she has behaved with delicacy--unless, indeed,
she knew nothing of Aileen, which is quite probable."</p>
<p>"Well, don't ask me to tackle her," said Uredale. "She has the
ways of an empress."</p>
<p>Bill Chantrey shrugged his shoulders. "And, by George! she looks
as if she could fall in love," he said, slowly. "Magnificent eyes,
Johnnie. I propose to make a study of our new niece."</p>
<p>"Lord Uredale!" said a voice on the stairs.</p>
<p>The young doctor descended rapidly to meet them.</p>
<p>"His lordship is asking for some one," he said. "He seems
excited. But I cannot catch the name."</p>
<p>Lord Uredale ran up-stairs.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>Later in the day a man emerged from Lackington House and walked
rapidly towards the Mall. It was Jacob Delafield.</p>
<p>He passed across the Mall and into St. James's Park. There he
threw himself on the first seat he saw, in an absorption so deep
that it excited the wondering notice of more than one
passer-by.</p>
<p>After about half an hour he roused himself, and walked, still in
the same brown study, to his lodgings in Jermyn Street. There he
found a letter which he eagerly opened.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>"DEAR JACOB,--Julie came back this morning about one o'clock. I
waited for her--and at first she seemed quite calm and composed.
But suddenly, as I was sitting beside her, talking, she fainted
away in her chair, and I was terribly alarmed. We sent for a doctor
at once. He shakes his head over her, and says there are all the
signs of a severe strain of body and mind. No wonder, indeed--our
poor Julie! Oh, how I <i>loathe</i> some people! Well, there she is
in bed, Madame Bornier away, and everybody. I simply <i>can't</i>
go to Scotland. But Freddie is just mad. Do, Jacob, there's a dear,
go and dine with him to-night and cheer him up. He vows he won't go
north without me. <i>Perhaps</i> I'll come to-morrow. I could no
more leave Julie to-night than fly.</p>
<p>"She'll be ill for weeks. What I ought to do is to take her
abroad. She's <i>very</i> dear and good; but, oh, Jacob, as she
lies there I <i>feel</i> her heart's broken. And it's not Lord
Lackington. Oh no! though I'm sure she loved him. <i>Do</i> go to
Freddie, there's a dear."</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<p>"No, that I won't!" said Delafield, with a laugh that choked
him, as he threw the letter down.</p>
<p>He tried to write an answer, but could not achieve even the
simplest note. Then he began a pacing of his room, which lasted
till he dropped into his chair, worn out with the sheer physical
exhaustion of the night and day. When his servant came in he found
his master in a heavy sleep. And, at Crowborough House, the Duke
dined and fumed alone.</p>
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