BOOK FIRST
I
“NO, my lord,” Banks had replied,
“no stranger has yet arrived. But I’ll see if any one has come
in—or who has.” As he spoke, however, he observed Lady Sandgate’s
approach to the hall by the entrance giving upon the great terrace,
and addressed her on her passing the threshold. “Lord John, my
lady.” With which, his duty majestically performed, he retired to
the quarter—that of the main access to the spacious centre of the
house—from which he had ushered the visitor.
This personage, facing Lady
Sandgate as she paused there a moment framed by the large doorway
to the outer expanses, the small pinkish paper of a folded telegram
in her hand, had partly before him, as an immediate effect, the
high wide interior, still breathing the quiet air and the fair
pannelled security of the couple of hushed and stored centuries, in
which certain of the reputed treasures of Dedborough Place
beautifully disposed themselves; and then, through ample apertures
and beyond the stately stone outworks of the great seated and
supported house—uplifting terrace, balanced, balustraded steps and
containing basins where splash and spray were at rest—all the rich
composed extension of garden and lawn and park. An ancient, an
assured elegance seemed to reign; pictures and preserved “pieces,”
cabinets and tapestries, spoke, each for itself, of fine selection
and high distinction; while the originals of the old portraits, in
more or less deserved salience, hung over the happy scene as the
sworn members of a great guild might have sat, on the beautiful
April day, at one of their annual feasts.
Such was the setting confirmed by
generous time, but the handsome woman of considerably more than
forty whose entrance had all but coincided with that of Lord John
either belonged, for the eye, to no such complacent company or
enjoyed a relation to it in which the odd twists and turns of
history must have been more frequent than any dull avenue or easy
sequence. Lady Sandgate was shiningly modern, and perhaps at no
point more so than by the effect of her express repudiation of a
mundane future certain to be more and more offensive to women of
real quality and of formed taste. Clearly, at any rate, in her
hands, the clue to the antique confidence had lost itself, and
repose, however founded, had given way to curiosity—that is to
speculation—however disguised. She might have consented, or even
attained, to being but gracefully stupid, but she would presumably
have confessed, if put on her trial for restlessness or for
intelligence, that she was, after all, almost clever enough to be
vulgar. Unmistakably, moreover, she had still, with her fine
stature, her disciplined figure, her cherished complexion, her
bright important hair, her kind bold eyes and her large constant
smile, the degree of beauty that might pretend to put every other
question by.
Lord John addressed her as with a
significant manner that he might have had—that of a lack of need,
or even of interest, for any explanation about herself: it would
have been clear that he was apt to discriminate with sharpness
among possible claims on his attention. “I luckily find you at
least, Lady Sandgate—they tell me Theign’s off somewhere.”
She replied as with the general
habit, on her side, of bland reassurance; it mostly had easier
consequences—for herself— than the perhaps more showy creation of
alarm. “Only off in the park—open to-day for a school-feast from
Dedborough, as you may have made out from the avenue; giving good
advice, at the top of his lungs, to four hundred and fifty
children.”
It was such a scene, and such an
aspect of the personage so accounted for, as Lord John could easily
take in, and his recognition familiarly smiled. “Oh he’s so great
on such occasions that I’m sorry to be missing it.”
“I’ve had to miss it,” Lady
Sandgate sighed—“that is to miss the peroration. I’ve just left
them, but he had even then been going on for twenty minutes, and I
dare say that if you care to take a look you’ll find him, poor dear
victim of duty, still at it.”
“I’ll warrant—for, as I often
tell him, he makes the idea of one’s duty an awful thing to his
friends by the extravagance with which he always overdoes it.” And
the image itself appeared in some degree to prompt this particular
edified friend to look at his watch and consider. “I should like to
come in for the grand finale, but I rattled over in a great measure
to meet a party, as he calls himself—and calls, if you please, even
me!—who’s motoring down by appointment and whom I think I should be
here to receive; as well as a little, I confess, in the hope of a
glimpse of Lady Grace: if you can perhaps imagine that!”
“I can imagine it perfectly,”
said Lady Sandgate, whom evidently no perceptions of that general
order ever cost a strain. “It quite sticks out of you, and every
one moreover has for some time past been waiting to see. But you
haven’t then,” she added, “come from town?”
“No, I’m for three days at
Chanter with my mother; whom, as she kindly lent me her car, I
should have rather liked to bring.”
Lady Sandgate left the unsaid, in
this connection, languish no longer than was decent. “But whom you
doubtless had to leave, by her preference, just settling down to
bridge.”
“Oh, to sit down would imply that
my mother at some moment of the day gets up——!”
“Which the Duchess never
does?”—Lady Sand-gate only asked to be allowed to show how she saw
it. “She fights to the last, invincible; gathering in the spoils
and only routing her friends?” She abounded genially in her
privileged vision. “Ah yes—we know something of that!”
Lord John, who was a young man of
a rambling but not of an idle eye, fixed her an instant with a
surprise that was yet not steeped in compassion. “You too
then?”
She wouldn’t, however, too meanly
narrow it down. “Well, in this house generally; where I’m so often
made welcome, you see, and where——”
“Where,” he broke in at once,
“your jolly good footing quite sticks out of you, perhaps you’ll
let me say!”
She clearly didn’t mind his
seeing her ask herself how she should deal with so much rather
juvenile intelligence; and indeed she could only decide to deal
quite simply. “You can’t say more than I feel—and am proud to
feel!—at being of comfort when they’re worried.”
This but fed the light flame of
his easy perception—which lighted for him, if she would, all the
facts equally. “And they’re worried now, you imply, because my
terrible mother is capable of heavy gains and of making a great
noise if she isn’t paid? I ought to mind speaking of that truth,”
he went on as with a practised glance in the direction of delicacy;
“but I think I should like you to know that I myself am not a bit
ignorant of why it has made such an impression here.”
Lady Sandgate forestalled his
knowledge. “Because poor Kitty Imber—who should either never touch
a card or else learn to suffer in silence, as I’ve had to, goodness
knows!— has thrown herself, with her impossible big debt, upon her
father? whom she thinks herself entitled to ‘look to’ even more as
a lovely young widow with a good jointure than she formerly did as
the mere most beautiful daughter at home.”
She had put the picture a shade
interrogatively, but this was as nothing to the note of free
inquiry in Lord John’s reply. “You mean that our lovely young
widows—to say nothing of lovely young wives—ought by this time to
have made out, in predicaments, how to turn round?”
His temporary hostess, even with
his eyes on her, appeared to decide after a moment not wholly to
disown his thought. But she smiled for it. “Well, in that
set——!”
“My mother’s set?” However, if
she could smile he could laugh. “I’m much obliged!”
“Oh,” she qualified, “I don’t
criticise her Grace; but the ways and traditions and tone of this
house——”
“Make it”—he took her sense
straight from her—“the house in England where one feels most the
false note of a dishevelled and bankrupt elder daughter breaking in
with a list of her gaming debts—to say nothing of others!—and
wishing to have at least those wiped out in the interest of her
reputation? Exactly so,” he went on before she could meet it with a
diplomatic ambiguity; “and just that, I assure you, is a large part
of the reason I like to come here—since I personally don’t come
with any such associations.”
“Not the association of
bankruptcy—no; as you represent the payee!”
The young man appeared to regard
this imputation for a moment almost as a liberty taken. “How do you
know so well, Lady Sandgate, what I represent?”
She bethought herself—but briefly
and bravely. “Well, don’t you represent, by your own admission,
certain fond aspirations? Don’t you represent the belief—very
natural, I grant—that more than one perverse and extravagant flower
will be unlikely on such a fine healthy old stem; and, consistently
with that, the hope of arranging with our admirable host here that
he shall lend a helpful hand to your commending yourself to dear
Grace?”
Lord John might, in the light of
these words, have felt any latent infirmity in such a pretension
exposed; but as he stood there facing his chances he would have
struck a spectator as resting firmly enough on some felt residuum
of advantage: whether this were cleverness or luck, the strength of
his backing or that of his sincerity. Even with the young woman to
whom our friends’ reference thus broadened still a vague quantity
for us, you would have taken his sincerity as quite possible—and
this despite an odd element in him that you might have described as
a certain delicacy of brutality. This younger son of a noble matron
recognised even by himself as terrible enjoyed in no immediate or
aggressive manner any imputable private heritage or privilege of
arrogance. He would on the contrary have irradiated fineness if his
lustre hadn’t
been a little prematurely dimmed.
Active yet insubstantial, he was slight and short and a trifle too
punctually, though not yet quite lamentably, bald. Delicacy was in
the arch of his eyebrow, the finish of his facial line, the economy
of “treatment” by which his negative nose had been enabled to look
important and his meagre mouth to smile its spareness away.
He had pleasant but hard little
eyes—they glittered, handsomely, without promise—and a neatness, a
coolness and an ease, a clear instinct for making point take, on
his behalf, the place of weight and immunity that of capacity,
which represented somehow the art of living at a high pitch and yet
at a low cost. There was that in his satisfied air which still
suggested sharp wants—and this was withal the ambiguity; for the
temper of these appetites or views was certainly, you would have
concluded, not such as always to sacrifice to form. If he really,
for instance, wanted Lady Grace, the passion or the sense of his
interest in it would scarce have been considerately
irritable.
“May I ask what you mean,” he
inquired of Lady Sandgate, “by the question of my
‘arranging’?”
“I mean that you’re the very
clever son of a very clever mother.”
“Oh, I’m less clever than you
think,” he replied—“if you really think it of me at all; and
mamma’s a good sight cleverer!”
“Than I think?” Lady Sandgate
echoed. “Why, she’s the person in all our world I would gladly most
resemble—for her general ability to put what she wants through.”
But she at once added: “That is if—!” pausing on it with a
smile.
“If what then?”
“Well, if I could be absolutely
certain to have all in her kinds of cleverness without
exception—and to have them,” said Lady Sandgate, “to the very
end.”
He definitely, he almost
contemptuously declined to follow her. “The very end of
what?”
She took her choice as amid all
the wonderful directions there might be, and then seemed both to
risk and to reserve something. “Say of her so wonderfully
successful general career.”
It doubtless, however, warranted
him in appearing to cut insinuations short. “When you’re as clever
as she you’ll be as good.” To which he subjoined: “You don’t begin
to have the opportunity of knowing how good she is.” This
pronouncement, to whatever comparative obscurity it might appear to
relegate her, his interlocutress had to take—he was so prompt with
a more explicit challenge. “What is it exactly that you suppose
yourself to know?”
Lady Sandgate had after a moment,
in her supreme good humour, decided to take everything. “I always
proceed on the assumption that I know everything, because that
makes people tell me.”
“It wouldn’t make we,” he quite
rang out, “if I didn’t want to! But as it happens,” he allowed,
“there’s a question it would be convenient to me to put to you. You
must be, with your charming unconventional relation with him,
extremely in Theign’s confidence.”
She waited a little as for more.
“Is that your question—
whether I am?”
“No, but if you are you’ll the
better answer it”
She had no objection then to
answering it beautifully. “We’re the best friends in the world; he
has been really my providence, as a lone woman with almost nobody
and nothing of her own, and I feel my footing here, as so frequent
and yet so discreet a visitor, simply perfect But I’m happy to say
that
—for my pleasure when I’m really
curious—this doesn’t close to me the sweet resource of occasionally
guessing things.”
“Then I hope you’ve ground for
believing that if I go the right way about it he’s likely to listen
to me.”
Lady Sandgate measured her
ground—which scarce seemed extensive. “The person he most listens
to just now—and in fact at any time, as you must have seen for
yourself—is that
arch-tormentor, or at least
beautiful wheedler, his elder daughter.”
“Lady Imber’s here?” Lord John
alertly asked.
“She arrived last night and—as
we’ve other visitors—seems to have set up a side-show in the
garden.”
“Then she’ll ‘draw’ of course
immensely, as she always does. But her sister won’t be in that case
with her,” the young man supposed.
“Because Grace feels herself
naturally an independent show? So she well may,” said Lady
Sandgate, “but I must tell you that when I last noticed them there
Kitty was in the very act of leading her away.”
Lord John figured it a moment.
“Lady Imber”—he ironically enlarged the figure—“can lead people
away.”
“Oh, dear Grace,” his companion
returned, “happens fortunately to be firm!”
This seemed to strike him for a
moment as equivocal. “Not against me, however—you don’t mean? You
don’t think she has a beastly prejudice——?”
“Surely you can judge about it;
as knowing best what may
—or what mayn’t—have happened
between you.”
“Well, I try to judge”—and such
candour as was possible to Lord John seemed to sit for a moment on
his brow. “But I’m in fear of seeing her too much as I want to see
her.”
There was an appeal in it that
Lady Sandgate might have been moved to meet “Are you absolutely in
earnest about her?”
“Of course I am—why shouldn’t I
be? But,” he said with impatience, “I want help.”
“Very well then, that’s what Lady
Imber’s giving you.” And as it appeared to take him time to read
into these words their full sense, she produced others, and so far
did help him— though the effort was in a degree that of her
exhibiting with some complacency her own unassisted control of
stray signs and shy lights. “By telling her, by bringing it home to
her, that
if she’ll make up her mind to
accept you the Duchess will do the handsome thing. Handsome, I
mean, by Kitty.”
Lord John, appropriating for his
convenience the truth in this, yet regarded it as open to a
becoming, an improving touch from himself. “Well, and by me.” To
which he added with more of a challenge in it: “But you really know
what my mother will do?”
“By my system,” Lady Sandgate
smiled, “you see I’ve guessed. What your mother will do is what
brought you over!”
“Well, it’s that,” he
allowed—“and something else.” “Something else?” she derisively
echoed. “I should think
‘that,’ for an ardent lover,
would have been enough.”
“Ah, but it’s all one Job! I mean
it’s one idea,” he hastened to explain—“if you think Lady Imber’s
really acting on her.”
“Mightn’t you go and see?”
“I would in a moment if I hadn’t
to look out for another matter too.” And he renewed his attention
to his watch. “I mean getting straight at my American, the party I
just mentioned———”
But she had already taken him up.
“You too have an American and a ‘party,’ and yours also motors
down——?”
“Mr. Breckenridge Bender.” Lord
John named him with a shade of elation.
She gaped at the fuller light
“You know my Breckenridge?
—who I hoped was coming for
me!”
Lord John as freely, but more
gaily, wondered. “Had he told you so?”
She held out, opened, the
telegram she had kept folded in her hand since her entrance. “He
has sent me that—which, delivered to me ten minutes ago out there,
has brought me in to receive him.”
The young man read out this
missive. “‘Failing to find you in Bruton Street, start in pursuit
and hope to overtake you about four.’” It did involve an ambiguity.
“Why, he has been
engaged these three days to
coincide with myself, and not to fail of him has been part of my
business.”
Lady Sandgate, in her
demonstrative way, appealed to the general rich scene. “Then why
does he say it’s me he’s pursuing?”
He seemed to recognise promptly
enough in her the sense of a menaced monopoly. “My dear lady, he’s
pursuing expensive works of art.”
“By which you imply that I’m
one?” She might have been wound up by her disappointment to almost
any irony.
“I imply—or rather I affirm—that
every handsome woman is! But what he arranged with me about,” Lord
John explained, “was that he should see the Dedborough pictures in
general and the great Sir Joshua in particular—of which he had
heard so much and to which I’ve been thus glad to assist
him.”
This news, however, with its
lively interest, but deepened the listener’s mystification. “Then
why—this whole week that I’ve been in the house—hasn’t our good
friend here mentioned to me his coming?”
“Because our good friend here has
had no reason”—Lord John could treat it now as simple enough. “Good
as he is in all ways, he’s so best of all about showing the house
and its contents that I haven’t even thought necessary to write him
that I’m introducing Breckenridge.”
“I should have been happy to
introduce him,” Lady Sandgate just quavered—“if I had at all known
he wanted it.”
Her companion weighed the
difference between them and appeared to pronounce it a trifle he
didn’t care a fig for. “I surrender you that privilege then—of
presenting him to his host—if I’ve seemed to you to snatch it from
you.” To which Lord John added, as with liberality unrestricted,
“But I’ve been taking him about to see what’s worth while—as only
last week to Lady Lappington’s Longhi.”
This revelation, though so casual
in its form, fairly drew from Lady Sandgate, as she took it in, an
interrogative wail. “Her Longhi?”
“Why, don’t you know her great
Venetian family group, the What-do-you-call-’ems?—seven full-length
figures, each one a gem, for which he paid her her price before he
left the house.”
She could but make it more richly
resound—almost stricken, lost in her wistful thought: “Seven
full-length figures? Her price?”
“Eight thousand—slap down. Bender
knows,” said Lord John, “what he wants.”
“And does he want only”—her
wonder grew and grew— “What-do-you-call-’ems’?”
“He most usually wants what he
can’t have.” Lord John made scarce more of it than that. “But,
awfully hard up as I fancy her, Lady Lappington went at him.”
It determined in his friend a
boldly critical attitude. “How horrible—at the rate things are
leaving us!” But this was far from the end of her interest. “And is
that the way he pays?”
“Before he leaves the house?”
Lord John lived it amusedly over. “Well, she took care of
that.”
“How incredibly vulgar!” It all
had, however, for Lady Sandgate, still other connections—which
might have attenuated Lady Lappington’s case, though she didn’t
glance at this. “He makes the most scandalous eyes—the ruffian!—at
my great-grandmother.” And then as richly to enlighten any
blankness: “My tremendous Lawrence, don’t you know?—in her
wedding-dress, down to her knees; with such extraordinarily
speaking eyes, such lovely arms and hands, such wonderful
flesh-tints: universally considered the masterpiece of the
artist.”
Lord John seemed to look a moment
not so much at the image evoked, in which he wasn’t interested, as
at certain possibilities lurking behind it. “And are you going to
sell the masterpiece of the artist?”
She held her head high. “I’ve
indignantly refused—for all his pressing me so hard.”
“Yet that’s what he nevertheless
pursues you to-day to keep up?”
The question had a little the
ring of those of which the occupant of a witness-box is mostly the
subject, but Lady Sandgate was so far as this went an imperturbable
witness. “I need hardly fear it perhaps if—in the light of what you
tell me of your arrangement with him—his pursuit becomes, where I
am concerned, a figure of speech.”
“Oh,” Lord John returned, “he
kills two birds with one stone
—he sees both Sir Joshua and
you.”
This version of the case had its
effect, for the moment, on his fair associate. “Does he want to buy
their pride and glory?”
The young man, however, struck on
his own side, became at first but the bright reflector of her
thought. “Is that wonder for sale?”
She closed her eyes as with the
shudder of hearing such words. “Not, surely, by any monstrous
chance! Fancy dear, proud Theign———!”
“I can’t fancy him—no!” And Lord
John appeared to renounce the effort. “But a cat may look at a king
and a sharp funny Yankee at anything.”
These things might be, Lady
Sandgate’s face and gesture apparently signified; but another
question diverted her. “You’re clearly a wonderful showman, but do
you mind my asking you whether you’re on such an occasion a—well, a
closely interested one?”
“‘Interested’?” he echoed; though
it wasn’t to gain time, he showed, for he would in that case have
taken more. “To the extent, you mean, of my little percentage?” And
then as in silence she but kept a slightly grim smile on him: “Why
do you ask if—with your high delicacy about your great-
grandmother—you’ve nothing to place?”
It took her a minute to say,
while her fine eye only rolled; but when she spoke that organ
boldly rested and the truth vividly appeared. “I ask because people
like you, Lord John, strike me as dangerous to the—how shall I name
it?—the
common weal; and because of my
general strong feeling that we don’t want any more of our national
treasures (for I regard my great-grandmother as national) to be
scattered about the world.”
“There’s much in this country and
age,” he replied in an off- hand manner, “to be said about that,”
The present, however, was not the time to say it all; so he said
something else instead, accompanying it with a smile that signified
sufficiency. “To my friends, I need scarcely remark to you, I’m all
the friend.”
She had meanwhile seen the butler
reappear by the door that opened to the terrace, and though the
high, bleak, impersonal approach of this functionary was ever, and
more and more at every step, a process to defy interpretation, long
practice evidently now enabled her to suggest, as she turned again
to her fellow-visitor a reading of it. “It’s the friend then
clearly who’s wanted in the park.”
She might, by the way Banks
looked at her, have snatched from his hand a missive addressed to
another; though while he addressed himself to her companion he
allowed for her indecorum sufficiently to take it up where she had
left it. “By her ladyship, my lord, who sends to hope you’ll join
them below the terrace.”
“Ah, Grace hopes,” said Lady
Sandgate for the young man’s encouragement. “There you are!”
Lord John took up the motor-cap
he had lain down on coming in. “I rush to Lady Grace, but don’t
demoralise Bender!” And he went forth to the terrace and the
gardens.
Banks looked about as for some
further exercise of his high function. “Will you have tea, my
lady?”
This appeared to strike her as
premature. “Oh, thanks— when they all come in.”
“They’ll scarcely all, my
lady”—he indicated respectfully that he knew what he was talking
about. “There’s tea in her ladyship’s tent; but,” he qualified, “it
has also been ordered for the saloon.”
“Ah then,” she said cheerfully,
“Mr. Bender will be glad
—!” And she became, with this,
aware of the approach of another visitor. Banks considered, up and
down, the gentleman ushered in, at the left, by the footman who had
received him at the main entrance to the house. “Here he must be,
my lady.” With which he retired to the spacious opposite quarter,
where he vanished, while the footman, his own office performed,
retreated as he had come, and Lady Sandgate, all hospitality,
received the many-sided author of her specious telegram, of Lord
John’s irritating confidence and of Lady Lappington’s massive
cheque.
II
Having greeted him with an
explicitly gracious welcome and both hands out, she had at once
gone on: “You’ll of course have tea?—in the saloon.”
But his mechanism seemed of the
type that has to expand and revolve before sounding. “Why; the very
first thing?”
She only desired, as her laugh
showed, to accommodate. “Ah, have it the last if you like!”
“You see your English teas—!” he
pleaded as he looked about him, so immediately and frankly
interested in the place and its contents that his friend could only
have taken this for the very glance with which he must have swept
Lady Lappington’s inferior scene.
“They’re too much for you?”
“Well, they’re too many. I think
I’ve had two or three on the road—at any rate my man did. I like to
do business before—” But his sequence dropped as his eye caught
some object across the wealth of space.
She divertedly picked it up.
“Before tea, Mr. Bender?”
“Before everything, Lady
Sandgate.” He was immensely genial, but a queer, quaint,
rough-edged distinctness somehow kept it safe—for himself.
“Then you’ve come to do
business?” Her appeal and her emphasis melted as into a
caress—which, however, spent itself on his large high person as he
consented, with less of demonstration but more of attention, to
look down upon her. She could therefore but reinforce it by an
intenser note. “To tell me you will treat?”