"She may have desired to be away from her own people for a time: there may have been domestic differences. These cases are delicate."
"This case appears to have been so delicate that you had to lock out a fourth party."
"It is indelicate and base of Captain Baskelett to complain and to hint.
Nevil had to submit to the same; and Captain Baskelett took his revenge on the housedoor and the bells. The house was visited by the police next morning."
"Do you suspect him to have known you were inside the house that night?"
She could not say so: but hatred of Cecil urged her past the bounds of habitual reticence to put it to her lord whether he, imagining the worst, would have behaved like Cecil.
To this he did not reply, but remarked, "I am sorry he annoyed you, ma"am."
"It is not the annoyance to me; it is the shocking, the unmanly insolence to a lady, and a foreign lady."
"That"s a matter between him and Nevil. I uphold him."
"Then, my lord, I am silent."
Silent she remained; but Lord Romfrey was also silent: and silence being a weapon of offence only when it is practised by one out of two, she had to reflect whether in speaking no further she had finished her business.
"Captain Baskelett stays at the Castle?" she asked.
"He likes his quarters there."
"Nevil could not go down to Romfrey, my lord. He was obliged to wait, and see, and help me to entertain, her brother and her husband."
"Why, ma"am? But I have no objection to his making the marquis a happy husband."
"He has done what few men would have done, that she may be a self-respecting wife."
"The parson"s in that fellow!" Lord Romfrey exclaimed. "Now I have the story. She came to him, he declined the gift, and you were turned into the curtain for them. If he had only been off with her, he would have done the country good service. Here he"s a failure and a nuisance; he"s a common c.o.c.k-shy for the journals. I"m tired of hearing of him; he"s a stench in our nostrils. He"s tired of the woman."
"He loves her."
"Ma"am, you"re hoodwinked. If he refused to have her, there "s a something he loves better. I don"t believe we"ve bred a downright lackadaisical donkey in our family: I know him. He"s not a fellow for abstract morality: I know him. It"s bargain against bargain with him; I"ll do him that justice. I hear he has ordered the removal of the Jersey bull from Holdesbury, and the beast is mine," Lord Romfrey concluded in a lower key.
"Nevil has taken him."
"Ha! pull and pull, then!"
"He contends that he is bound by a promise to give an American gentleman the refusal of the bull, and you must sign an engagement to keep the animal no longer than two years."
"I sign no engagement. I stick to the bull."
"Consent to see Nevil to-night, my lord."
"When he has apologized to you, I may, ma"am."
"Surely he did more, in requesting me to render him a service."
"There"s not a creature living that fellow wouldn"t get to serve him, if he knew the trick. We should all of us be marching on London at Shrapnel"s heels. The political mania is just as incurable as hydrophobia, and he"s bitten. That"s clear."
"Bitten perhaps: but not mad. As you have always contended, the true case is incurable, but it is very rare: and is this one?"
"It"s uncommonly like a true case, though I haven"t seen him foam at the mouth, and shun water-as his mob does."
Rosamund restrained some tears, betraying the effort to hide the moisture. "I am no match for you, my lord. I try to plead on his behalf;--I do worse than if I were dumb. This I most earnestly say: he is the Nevil Beauchamp who fought for his country, and did not abandon her cause, though he stood there--we had it from Colonel Halkett--a skeleton: and he is the Nevil who--I am poorly paying my debt to him!--defended me from the aspersions of his cousin."
"Boys!" Lord Romfrey e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed.
"It is the same dispute between them as men."
"Have you forgotten my proposal to shield you from liars and scandalmongers?"
"Could I ever forget it?" Rosamund appeared to come shining out of a cloud. "Princeliest and truest gentleman, I thought you then, and I know you to be, my dear lord. I fancied I had lived the scandal down. I was under the delusion that I had grown to be past backbiting: and that no man could stand before me to insult and vilify me. But, for a woman in any so-called doubtful position, it seems that the coward will not be wanting to strike her. In quitting your service, I am able to affirm that only once during the whole term of it have I consciously overstepped the line of my duties: it was for Nevil: and Captain Baskelett undertook to defend your reputation, in consequence."
"Has the rascal been questioning your conduct?" The earl frowned.
"Oh, no! not questioning: he does not question, he accuses: he never doubted: and what he went shouting as a boy, is plain matter of fact to him now. He is devoted to you. It was for your sake that he desired me to keep my name from being mixed up in a scandal he foresaw the occurrence of in your house."
"He permitted himself to sneer at you?"
"He has the art of sneering. On this occasion he wished to be direct and personal."
"What sort of hints were they?"
Lord Romfrey strode away from her chair that the answer might be easy to her, for she was red, and evidently suffering from shame as well as indignation.
"The hints we call distinct." said Rosamund.
"In words?"
"In hard words."
"Then you won"t meet Cecil?"
Such a question, and the tone of indifference in which it came, surprised and revolted her so that the unreflecting reply leapt out:
"I would rather meet a devil."
Of how tremblingly, vehemently, and hastily she had said it, she was unaware. To her lord it was an outcry of nature, astutely touched by him to put her to proof.
He continued his long leisurely strides, nodding over his feet.
Rosamund stood up. She looked a very n.o.ble figure in her broad black-furred robe. "I have one serious confession to make, sir."
"What"s that?" said he.
"I would avoid it, for it cannot lead to particular harm; but I have an enemy who may poison your ear in my absence. And first I resign my position. I have forfeited it."