Janet had a difficulty in resuming her command of him. The mention of the private band made him very restive.
"I "m not acting on my own judgement at all in going to these foreign people," he said to Janet. "Why go? I can have it out here and an end to it, without bothering them and their interpreters."
He sang out to me: "Harry, do you want me to go through this form for you?--mn"d unpleasant!"
My aunt Dorothy whispered in my ear: "Yes! yes!"
"I feel tricked!" he muttered, and did not wait for me to reply before he was again questioning my aunt Dorothy concerning Mr. Bannerbridge, and my father as to "that sum of money." But his method of interrogation was confused and pointless. The drift of it was totally obscure.
"I"m off my head to-day," he said to Janet, with a sideshot of his eye at my father.
"You waste time and trouble, grandada," said she.
He vowed that he was being bewildered, bothered by us all; and I thought I had never seen him so far below his level of energy; but I had not seen him condescend to put himself upon a moderately fair footing with my father. The truth was, that Janet had rigorously schooled him to bridle his temper, and he was no match for the voluble easy man without the freest play of his tongue.
"This prince!" he kept ejaculating.
"Won"t you understand, grandada, that you relieve him, and make things clear by going?" Janet said.
He begged her fretfully not to be impatient, and hinted that she and he might be acting the part of dupes, and was for pursuing his inauspicious cross-examination in spite of his blundering, and the "Where am I now?"
which pulled him up. My father, either talking to my aunt Dorothy, to Janet, or to me, on ephemeral topics, scarcely noticed him, except when he was questioned, and looked secure of success in the highest degree consistent with perfect calmness.
"So you say you tell me to go, do you?" the squire called to me. "Be good enough to stay here and wait. I don"t see that anything"s gained by my going: it"s d.a.m.ned hard on me, having to go to a man whose language I don"t know, and he don"t know mine, on a business we"re all of us in a muddle about. I"ll do it if it"s right. You"re sure?"
He glanced at Janet. She nodded.
I was looking for this quaint and, to me, incomprehensible interlude to commence with the departure of the squire and Janet, when a card was handed in by one of the hotel-waiters.
"Another prince!" cried the squire. "These Germans seem to grow princes like potatoes--dozens to a root! Who"s the card for? Ask him to walk up.
Show him into a quiet room. Does he speak English?"
"Does Prince Hermann of--I can"t p.r.o.nounce the name of the place--speak English, Harry?" Janet asked me.
"As well as you or I," said I, losing my inattention all at once with a mad leap of the heart.
Hermann"s presence gave light, fire, and colour to the scene in which my destiny had been wavering from hand to hand without much more than amusedly interesting me, for I was sure that I had lost Ottilia; I knew that too well, and worse could not happen. I had besides lost other things that used to sustain me, and being reckless, I was contemptuous, and listened to the talk about money with sublime indifference to the subject: with an att.i.tude, too, I daresay. But Hermann"s name revived my torment. Why had he come? to persuade the squire to control my father?
Nothing but that would suffer itself to be suggested, though conjectures lying in shadow underneath pressed ominously on my mind.
My father had no doubts.
"A word to you, Mr. Beltham, before you go to Prince Hermann. He is an emissary, we treat him with courtesy, and if he comes to diplomatize we, of course, give a patient hearing. I have only to observe in the most emphatic manner possible that I do not retract one step. I will have this marriage: I have spoken! It rests with Prince Ernest."
The squire threw a hasty glare of his eyes back as he was hobbling on Janet"s arm. She stopped short, and replied for him.
"Mr. Beltham will speak for himself, in his own name. We are not concerned in any unworthy treatment of Prince Ernest. We protest against it."
"Dear young lady!" said my father, graciously. "I meet you frankly. Now tell me. I know you a gallant horsewoman: if you had la.s.soed the n.o.ble horse of the desert would you let him run loose because of his remonstrating? Side with me, I entreat you! My son is my first thought.
The pride of princes and wild horses you will find wonderfully similar, especially in the way they take their taming when once they feel they are positively caught. We show him we have him fast--he falls into our paces on the spot! For Harry"s sake--for the princess"s, I beg you exert your universally--deservedly acknowledged influence. Even now--and you frown on me!--I cannot find it in my heart to wish you the sweet and admirable woman of the world you are destined to be, though you would comprehend me and applaud me, for I could not--no, not to win your favourable opinion!--consent that you should be robbed of a single ray of your fresh maidenly youth. If you must misjudge me, I submit. It is the price I pay for seeing you young and lovely. Prince Ernest is, credit me, not unworthily treated by me, if life is a battle, and the prize of it to the General"s head. I implore you"--he lured her with the dimple of a lurking smile--"do not seriously blame your afflicted senior, if we are to differ. I am vastly your elder: you instil the doubt whether I am by as much the wiser of the two; but the father of Harry Richmond claims to know best what will ensure his boy"s felicity.
Is he rash? p.r.o.nounce me guilty of an excessive anxiety for my son"s welfare; say that I am too old to read the world with the accuracy of a youthful intelligence: call me indiscreet: stigmatize me unlucky; the severest sentence a judge"--he bowed to her deferentially--"can utter; only do not cast a gaze of rebuke on me because my labour is for my son--my utmost devotion. And we know, Miss Ilchester, that the princess honours him with her love. I protest in all candour, I treat love as love; not as a weight in the scale; it is the heavenly power which dispenses with weighing! its ascendancy..."
The squire could endure no more, and happily so, for my father was losing his remarkably moderated tone, and threatening polysyllables.
He had followed Janet, step for step, at a measured distance, drooping toward her with his winningest air, while the old man pulled at her arm to get her out of hearing of the obnoxious flatterer. She kept her long head in profile, trying creditably not to appear discourteous to one who addressed her by showing an open ear, until the final bolt made by the frenzied old man dragged her through the doorway. His neck was shortened behind his collar as though he shrugged from the blast of a bad wind. I believe that, on the whole, Janet was pleased. I will wager that, left to herself, she would have been drawn into an answer, if not an argument. Nothing would have made her resolution swerve, I admit.
They had not been out of the room three seconds when my aunt Dorothy was called to join them. She had found time to say that she hoped the money was intact.
CHAPTER LII. STRANGE REVELATIONS, AND MY GRANDFATHER HAS HIS LAST OUTBURST
My father and I stood at different windows, observing the unconcerned people below.
"Did you scheme to bring Prince Hermann over here as well?" I asked him.
He replied laughing: "I really am not the wonderful wizard you think me, Richie. I left Prince Ernest"s address as mine with Waddy in case the Frau Feld-Marschall should take it into her head to come. Further than that you must question Providence, which I humbly thank for its unfailing support, down to unexpected trifles. Only this--to you and to all of them: nothing bends me. I will not be robbed of the fruit of a lifetime."
"Supposing I refuse?"
"You refuse, Richie, to restore the princess her character and the prince his serenity of mind at their urgent supplication? I am utterly unable to suppose it. You are married in the papers this morning.
I grieve to say that the position of Prince Hermann is supremely ridiculous. I am bound to add he is a bold boy. It requires courage in one of the pretenders to the hand of the princess to undertake the office of intercessor, for he must know--the man must know in his heart that he is doing her no kindness. He does not appeal to me, you see. I have shown that my arrangements are unalterable. What he will make of your grandad!... Why on earth he should have been sent to--of all men in the world--your grandad, Richie!"
I was invited to sympathetic smiles of shrewd amus.e.m.e.nt.
He caught sight of friends, and threw up the window, saluting them.
The squire returned with my aunt Dorothy and Janet to behold the detested man communicating with the outer world from his own rooms. He shouted unceremoniously, "Shut that window!" and it was easy to see that he had come back heavily armed for the offensive. "Here, Mr. Richmond, I don"t want all men to know you"re in my apartments."
"I forgot, sir, temporarily," said my father, "I had vacated the rooms for your convenience--be a.s.sured."
An explanation on the subject of the rooms ensued between the old man and the ladies;--it did not improve his temper.
His sense of breeding, nevertheless, forced him to remark, "I can"t thank you, sir, for putting me under an obligation I should never have incurred myself."
"Oh, I was happy to be of use to the ladies, Mr. Beltham, and require no small coin of exchange," my father responded with the flourish of a pacifying hand. "I have just heard from a posse of friends that the marriage is signalled in this morning"s papers--numberless congratulations, I need not observe."
"No, don"t," said the squire. "n.o.body"ll understand them here, and I needn"t ask you to sit down, because I don"t want you to stop. I"ll soon have done now; the game"s played. Here, Harry, quick; has all that money been spent--no offence to you, but as a matter of business?"
"Not all, sir," I was able to say.
"Half?"
"Yes, I think so."
"Three parts?"
"It may be."
"And liabilities besides?"