The Castle Inn

Chapter 49

There was a brief silence. Mrs. Masterson sobbed querulously, or now and again uttered a wailing complaint: the other two stood sank in bitter retrospect. Presently, "What must we do?" Julia asked in a faint voice."

I mean, what step must we take? Will you let them know?"

"I will see them," Mr. Fishwick answered, wincing at the note of pain in her voice. "I--I was sent for this morning, for twelve o"clock. It is a quarter to eleven now."

She looked at him, startled, a spot of red in each cheek. "We must go away," she said hurriedly, "while we have money. Can we do better than return to Oxford?"

The attorney felt sure that at the worst Sir George would do something for her: that Mrs. Masterson need not lament for her fifty pounds. But he had the delicacy to ignore this. "I don"t know," he said mournfully.

"I dare not advise. You"d be sorry, Miss Julia--any one would be sorry who knew what I have gone through. I"ve suffered--I can"t tell you what I have suffered--the last twenty-four hours! I shall never have any opinion of myself again. Never!"

Julia sighed. "We must cut a month out of our lives," she murmured. But it was something else she meant--a month out of her heart!

CHAPTER x.x.xV

DORMITAT HOMERUS

If Julia"s return in the middle of the night balked the curiosity of some who would fain have had her set down at the door that they might enjoy her confusion as she pa.s.sed through the portico, it had the advantage, appreciated by others, of leaving room for conjecture. Before breakfast her return was known from, one end of the Castle Inn to the other; within half an hour a score had private information. Sir George had brought her back, after marrying her at Salisbury. The attorney had brought her back, and both were in custody, charged with stealing Sir George"s t.i.tle-deeds. Mr. Thoma.s.son had brought her back; he had wedded her at Calne, the reverend gentleman himself performing the ceremony with a curtain-ring at a quarter before midnight, in the presence of two chambermaids, in a room hung with drab moreen. Sir George"s servant had brought her back; he was the rogue in the play; it was Lady Harriet Wentworth and footman Sturgeon over again. She had come back in a Flemish hat and a white cloth Joseph with black facings; she had come back in her night-rail; she had come back in a tabby gauze, with a lace head and lappets. Nor were there wanting other rumours, of an after-dinner Wilkes-and-Lord-Sandwich flavour, which we refrain from detailing; but which the Castle Inn, after the mode of the eighteenth century, discussed with freedom in a mixed company.

Of all these reports and the excitement which they created in an a.s.semblage weary of waiting on the great man"s recovery and in straits for entertainment, the attorney knew nothing until he set forth to keep the appointment in Lord Chatham"s apartments; which, long the object of desire, now set his teeth on edge. Nor need he have learned much of them then; for he had only to cross the lobby of the east wing, and was in view of the hall barely three seconds. But, unluckily, Lady Dunborough, cackling shrewishly with a kindred dowager, caught sight of him as he pa.s.sed; and in a trice her old limbs bore her in pursuit. Mr. Fishwick heard his name called, had the weakness to turn, and too late found that he had fallen into the clutches of his ancient enemy.

The absence of her son"s name from the current rumours had relieved the Viscountess of her worst fears, and left her free to enjoy herself.

Seeing his dismay, "La, man! I am not going to eat you!" she cried; for the lawyer, nervous and profoundly dispirited, really shrank before her.

"So you have brought back your fine madam, I hear? And made an honest woman of her!"

Mr. Fishwick glared at her, but did not answer.

"I knew what would come of pushing out of your place, my lad!" she continued, nodding complacently. "It wasn"t likely she"d behave herself.

When the master is away the man will play, and the maid too. I mind me perfectly of the groom. A saucy fellow and a match for her; "tis to be hoped he"ll beat some sense into her. Was she tied up at Calne?"

"No!" Mr. Fishwick blurted, wincing under her words; which hurt him a hundred times more sharply than if the girl had been what he had thought her. Then he might have laughed at the sneer and the spite that dictated it. Now--something like this all the world would say.

The Viscountess eyed him cunningly, her head on one side. "Was it at Salisbury, then?" she cried. "Wherever "twas. I hear she had need of haste. Or was it at Bristol? D"you hear me speak to you, man?" she continued impatiently. "Out with it."

"At neither," he cried.

My lady"s eyes sparkled with rage. "Hoity-toity!" she answered. "D"you say No to me in that fashion? I"ll thank you to mend your manners, Fishwick, and remember to whom you are speaking. Hark ye, sirrah, is she Sir George"s cousin or is she not?"

"She is not, my lady," the attorney muttered miserably.

"But she is married?"

"No," he said; and with that, unable to bear more, he turned to fly.

She caught him by the sleeve. "Not married?" she cried, grinning with ill-natured glee. "Not married? And been of three days with a man! Lord, "tis a story as bald as Granby! She ought to be whipped, the hussy! Do you hear? She ought to the Roundhouse, and you with her, sirrah, for pa.s.sing her of on us!"

But that was more than the attorney, his awe of the peerage notwithstanding, could put up with. "G.o.d forgive you!" he cried. "G.o.d forgive you, ma"am, your hard heart!"

She was astonished. "You impudent fellow!" she exclaimed. "What do you know of G.o.d? And how dare you name Him in the same breath with me? D"you think He"d have people of quality be Methodists and live as the like of you? G.o.d, indeed! Hang your impudence! I say, she should to the Roundhouse--and you, too, for a vagabond! And so you shall!"

The lawyer shook with rage. "The less your ladyship talks of the Roundhouse," he answered, his voice trembling, "the better! There"s one is in it now who may go farther and fare worse--to your sorrow, my lady!"

You rogue!" she cried. "Do you threaten me?"

"I threaten no one," he answered. "But your son, Mr. Dunborough, killed a man last night, and lies in custody at Chippenham at this very time! I say no more, my lady!"

He had said enough. My lady glared; then began to shake in her turn. Yet her spirit was not easily quelled; "You lie!" she cried shrilly, the stick, with which she vainly strove to steady herself, rattling on the floor." Who dares to say that my son has killed a man?"

"It is known," the attorney answered.

"Who--who is it?"

"Mr. Pomeroy of Bastwick, a gentleman living near Calne."

"In a duel! "Twas in a duel, you lying fool!" she retorted hoa.r.s.ely.

"You are trying to scare me! Say "twas in a duel and I--I"ll forgive you."

"They shut themselves up in a room, and there were no seconds," the lawyer answered, beginning to pity her. "I believe that Mr. Pomeroy gave the provocation, and that may bring your ladyship"s son off. But, on the other hand--"

"On the other hand, what? What?" she muttered.

"Mr. Dunborough had horsewhipped a man that was in the other"s company."

"A man?"

"It was Mr. Thoma.s.son."

Her ladyship"s hands went up. Perhaps she remembered that but for her the tutor would not have been there. Then "Sink you! I wish he had flogged you all!" she shrieked, and, turning stiffly, she went mumbling and cursing down the stairs, the lace lappets of her head trembling, and her gold-headed cane now thumping the floor, now waving uncertainly in the air.

A quarter of an hour earlier, in the apartments for which Mr. Fishwick was bound when her ladyship intercepted him, two men stood talking at a window. The room was the best in the Castle Inn--a lofty panelled chamber with a southern aspect looking upon the smooth sward and sweet-briar hedges of Lady Hertford"s terrace, and commanding beyond these a distant view of the wooded slopes of Savernake. The men spoke in subdued tones, and more than once looked towards the door of an adjacent room, as if they feared to disturb some one.

"My dear Sir George," the elder said, after he had listened patiently to a lengthy relation, in the course of which he took snuff a dozen times, "your mind is quite made up, I suppose?"

"Absolutely."

"Well, it is a remarkable series of events; a--most remarkable series,"

Dr. Addington answered with professional gravity. "And certainly, if the lady is all you paint her--and she seems to set you young bloods on fire--no ending could well be more satisfactory. With the addition of a comfortable place in the Stamps or the Pipe Office, if we can take his lordship the right way--it should do. It should do handsomely. But", with a keen glance at his companion, "even without that--you know that he is still far from well?"

"I know that all the world is of one of two opinions," Sir George answered, smiling. "The first, that his lordship ails nothing save politically; the other, that he is at death"s door and will not have it known."

The physician shrugged his shoulders contemptuously. "Neither is true,"

he said. "The simple fact is, he has the gout; and the gout is an odd thing, Sir George, as you"ll know one of these days," with another sharp glance at his companion. "It flies here and there, and everywhere."

"And where is it now?" Soane asked innocently.

"It has gone to his head," Addington answered, in a tone so studiously jejune that Sir George glanced at him. The doctor, however, appeared unaware of the look, and merely continued: "So, if he does not take things quite as you wish, Sir George, you"ll--but here his lordship comes!"

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