But Mrs. Vine, the landlady, she saw her twice; and she told me what a pretty young creeter she was--and a lady, if there ever was a lady yet."
"Then the child was born in Berkshire--how was it?"
"Well, your ladyship, it was an accident, seeing as how the carriage broke down with Mr. Vyking and the lady, a-driving furious to catch the last London train. The lady was so hurted that she had to be carried to the inn, and went quite out of her head, raving and dangerous like. Mr.
Vyking had the landlady to wait upon her until he could telegraph to London for a nurse, which one came down next day and took charge of her.
The baby wasn"t two days old when he brought it to me, and the poor young mother was dreadful low and out of her head all the time. Mr.
Vyking and the nurse were all that saw her, and the doctor, of course; but she didn"t die, as the doctor thought she would, but got well, and before she came right to her senses Mr. Vyking paid the doctor and told him he needn"t come back. And then, a little more than a fortnight after, they took her away, all sly and secret-like, and what they told her about her poor baby I don"t know. I always thought there was something dreadful wrong about the whole thing."
"And this Mr. Vyking--was he the child"s father--the woman"s husband?"
Martha Brand looked sharply at the speaker, as if she suspected _she_ could answer that question best herself.
"n.o.body knew, but everybody thought who. I"ve always been of opinion myself that Guy"s father and mother were gentlefolks, and I always shall be."
"Does the boy know his own story?"
"Yes, your ladyship--all I"ve told you."
"Where is he? I should like to see him."
Mrs. Brand"s daughter, all this time hushing her baby, started up.
"I"ll fetch him. He"s up-stairs in Legard"s, I know."
She left the room and ran up-stairs. The painter, Legard, still was touching up Miss Jenkins, and the bright-haired boy stood watching the progress of that work of art.
"Guy! Guy!" she cried breathlessly, "come down-stairs at once. You"re wanted."
"Who wants me, Ellen?"
"A lady, dressed in the most elegant and expensive mourning--a real lady, Guy; and she has come about that advertis.e.m.e.nt, and she wants to see you."
"What is she like, Mrs. Darking?" inquired the painter--"young or old?"
"Young, I should think; but she hides her face behind a thick veil, as if she didn"t want to be known. Come, Guy."
She hurried the lad down-stairs and into their little room. The veiled lady still sat talking to the old woman, her back to the dim daylight, and that disguising veil still down. She turned slightly at their entrance, and looked at the boy through it. Guy stood in the middle of the floor, his fearless blue eyes fixed on the hidden face. Could he have seen it he might have started at the grayish pallor which overspread it at sight of him.
"So like! So like!" the lady was murmuring between her set teeth. "It is terrible--it is marvelous!"
"This is Guy, your ladyship," said Martha Brand. "I"ve done what I could for him for the last ten years, and I"m almost as sorry to part with him as if he were my own. Is your ladyship going to take him away with you now?"
"No," said her ladyship, sharply; "I have no such intention. Have you no neighbor or friend who would be willing to take and bring him up, if well paid for the trouble? This time the money shall be paid without fail."
"There"s Legard"s," cried the boy, eagerly. "I"ll go to Legard"s, granny. I"d rather be with Joe than anywhere else."
"It"s a neighbor that lives up-stairs," murmured Martha, in explanation.
"He always took to Guy and Guy to him in a way that"s quite wonderful.
He"s a very decent man, your ladyship--a painter for a theatre; and Guy takes kindly to the business, and would like to be one himself. If you don"t want to take away the boy, you couldn"t leave him in better hands."
"I am glad to hear it. Can I see the man?"
"I"ll fetch him!" cried Guy, and ran out of the room. Two minutes later came Mr. Legard, paper cap and shirt-sleeves, bowing very low to the grand, black-robed lady, and only too delighted to strike a bargain. The lady offered liberally; Mr. Legard closed with the offer at once.
"You will clothe him better, and you will educate him and give him your name. I wish him to drop that of Vyking. The same amount I give you now will be sent you this time every year. If you change your residence in the meantime, or wish to communicate with me on any occurrence of consequence, you can address Madam Ada, post office, Plymouth."
She rose as she spoke, stately and tall, and motioned Mr. Legard to withdraw. The painter gathered up the money she laid on the table, and bowed himself, with a radiant face, out of the room.
"As for you," turning to old Martha, and taking out of her purse a roll of crisp, Bank of England notes, "I think this will pay you for the trouble you have had with the boy during the last ten years. No thanks--you have earned the money."
She moved to the door, made a slight, proud gesture with her gloved hand in farewell, took a last look at the golden haired, blue eyed, handsome boy, and was gone. A moment later and her cab rattled out of the murky street, and the trio were alone staring at one another, and at the bulky roll of notes.
"I should think it was a dream only for this," murmured old Martha, looking at the roll with glistening eyes. "A great lady--a great lady, surely! Guy, I shouldn"t wonder if that was your mother."
CHAPTER VII.
COLONEL JOCYLN.
Five miles away from Thetford Towers, where the mult.i.tudinous waves leaped and glistened all day in the sun-light, as if a-glitter with diamonds, stood Jocyln Hall. An imposing structure of red brick, not yet one hundred years old, with sloping meadows spreading away into the blue horizon, and densely wooded plantations gliding down to the wide sea.
Colonel Jocyln, the lord of the boundless meadows and miles of woodland, where the red deer disported in the green arcades, was absent in India, and had been for the past nine years. They were an old family, the Jocylns, as old as any in Devon, and with a pride that bore no proportion to their purse, until the present Jocyln, had, all at once become a millionaire. A penniless young lieutenant in a cavalry regiment, quartered somewhere in Ireland, with a handsome face and dashing manners, he had captivated, at first sight, a wild, young Irish heiress of fabulous wealth and beauty. It was a love-match on her side--n.o.body knew exactly what it was on his; but they made a moonlight flitting of it, for the lady"s friends were grievously wroth. Lieutenant Jocyln liked his profession for its own sake, and took his Irish bride to India, and there an heiress and only child was born to him. The climate disagreed with the young wife--she sickened and died; but the young officer and his baby girl remained in India. In the fullness of time he became Colonel Jocyln; and one day electrified his housekeeper by a letter announcing his intention of returning to England with his little daughter Aileen for good.
That same month of December, which took Lady Thetford on that mysterious London journey, brought this letter from Calcutta. Five months after, when the May primroses and hyacinths were all abloom in the green seaside woodlands, Colonel Jocyln and his little daughter came home.
Early on the day succeeding his arrival, Colonel Jocyln rode through the bright spring sunshine, along the pleasant high road between Jocyln Hall and Thetford Towers. He had met the late Sir Noel and his bride once or twice previous to his departure for India; but there had been no acquaintance sufficiently close to warrant this speedy call.
Lady Thetford, sitting alone in her boudoir, looked in surprise at the card the servant brought.
"Colonel Jocyln," she said, "I did not even know he had arrived. And to call so soon--ah! perhaps he fetches me letters from India."
She rose at the thought, her pale cheeks flushing a little with expectation. Mail after mail had arrived from that distant land, bringing her no letter from Captain Everard.
Lady Thetford descended at once. She had few callers; but she was always exquisitely dressed and ready to receive at a moment"s notice. Colonel Jocyln--tall and sallow and soldierly--rose at her entrance.
"Lady Thetford? Ah, yes! Most happy to see your ladyship once more.
Permit me to apologize for this very early call--you will overlook my haste when you hear my reason."
Lady Thetford held out her white hand.
"Allow me to welcome you back to England, Colonel Jocyln. You have come for good this time, I hope. And little Aileen is well, I trust?"
"Very well, and very glad to be released from shipboard. I need not ask for young Sir Rupert--I saw him with his nurse in the park as I rode up.
A fine boy, and like you, my lady."
"Yes, Rupert is like me. And now--how are our mutual friends in India?"