The doctor thought that he had sufficiently prepared Soane for a change in his patron"s appearance. Nevertheless, the younger man was greatly shocked when through the door, obsequiously opened--and held open while a man might count fifty, so that eye and mind grew expectant--the great statesman, the People"s Minister at length appeared. For the stooping figure that moved to a chair only by virtue of a servant"s arm, and seemed the taller for its feebleness, for dragging legs and shrunken, frame and features sharpened by illness and darkened by the great peruke it was the Earl"s fashion to wear, he was in a degree prepared. But for the languid expression of the face that had been so eloquent, for the lackl.u.s.tre eyes and the dulness of mind that noticed little and heeded less, he was not prepared; and these were so marked and so unlike the great minister--
"A daring pilot in extremity Pleased with the danger when the waves went high"
--so unlike the man whose eagle gaze had fluttered Courts and imposed the law on Senates, that it was only the presence of Lady Chatham, who followed her lord, a book and cushion in her hands, that repressed the exclamation which rose to Sir George"s lips. So complete was the change indeed that, as far as the Earl was concerned, he might have uttered it!
His lordship, led to the head of the table, sank without a word into the chair placed for him, and propping his elbow on the table and his head on his hand, groaned aloud.
Lady Chatham compressed her lips with evident annoyance as she took her stand behind her husband"s chair; it was plain from the glance she cast at Soane that she resented the presence of a witness. Even Dr.
Addington, with his professional _sang-froid_ and his knowledge of the invalid"s actual state, was put out of countenance for a moment. Then he signed to Sir George to be silent, and to the servant to withdraw.
At last Lord Chatham spoke. "This business?" he said in a hollow voice and without uncovering his eyes, "is it to be settled now?"
"If your lordship pleases," the doctor answered in a subdued tone.
"Sir George Soane is there?"
"Yes."
"Sir George," the Earl said with an evident effort, "I am sorry I cannot receive you better."
"My lord, as it is I am deeply indebted to your kindness."
"Dagge finds no flaw in their case," Lord Chatham continued apathetically. "Her ladyship has read his report to me. If Sir George likes to contest the claim, it is his right."
"I do not propose to do so."
Sir George had not this time subdued his voice to the doctor"s pitch; and the Earl, whose nerves seemed alive to the slightest sound, winced visibly. "That is your affair," he answered querulously. "At any rate the trustees do not propose to do so."
Sir George, speaking with more caution, replied that he acquiesced; and then for a few seconds there was silence in the room, his lordship continuing to sit in the same att.i.tude of profound melancholy, and the others to look at him with compa.s.sion, which they vainly strove to dissemble. At last, in a voice little above a whisper, the Earl asked if the man was there.
"He waits your lordship"s pleasure," Dr. Addington answered. "But before he is admitted," the physician continued diffidently and with a manifest effort, "may I say a word, my lord, as to the position in which this places Sir George Soane?"
"I was told this morning," Lord Chatham answered, in the same m.u.f.fled tone, "that a match had been arranged between the parties, and that things would remain as they were. It seemed to me, sir, a prudent arrangement."
Sir George was about to answer, but Dr. Addington made a sign to him to be silent. "That is so," the physician replied smoothly. "But your lordship is versed in Sir George Soane"s affairs, and knows that he must now go to his wife almost empty-handed. In these circ.u.mstances it has occurred rather to his friends than to himself, and indeed I speak against his will and by sufferance only, that--that, in a word, my lord--"
Lord Chatham lowered his hand as Dr. Addington paused. A faint flush darkened his lean aquiline features, set a moment before in the mould of hopeless depression. "What?" he said. And he raised himself sharply in his chair. "What has occurred to his friends?"
"That some provision might be made for him, my lord."
"From the public purse?" the Earl cried in a startling tone. "Is that your meaning, sir?" And, with the look in his eyes which had been more dreaded by the Rigbys and Dodingtons of his party than the most scathing rebuke from the lips of another, he fixed the unlucky doctor where he stood. "Is that your proposal, sir?" he repeated.
The physician saw too late that he had ventured farther than his interest would support him; and he quailed. On the other hand, it is possible he had been neither so confident before, nor was so entirely crushed now, as appeared. "Well, my lord, it did occur to me," he stammered, "as not inconsistent with the public welfare."
"The public welfare!" the minister cried in biting accents. "The public plunder, sir, you mean! It were not inconsistent with that to quarter on the nation as many ruined gentlemen as you please! But you mistake if you bring the business to me to do--you mistake. I have dispersed thirteen millions of His Majesty"s money in a year, and would have spent as much again and as much to that, had the affairs of this nation required it; but the gentleman is wrong if he thinks it has gone to my friends. My hands are clean," his lordship continued with an expressive gesture. "I have said, in another place, none of it sticks to them.
_Virtute me involvo_!" And then, in a lower tone, but still with a note of austerity in his voice, M rejoice to think," he continued, "that the gentleman was not himself the author of this application. I rejoice to think that it did not come from him. These things have been done freely; it concerns me not to deny it; but since I had to do with His Majesty"s exchequer, less freely. And that only concerns me!"
Sir George Soane bit his lip. He felt keenly the humiliation of his position. But it was so evident that the Earl was not himself--so evident that the tirade to which he had just listened was one of those outbursts, n.o.ble in sentiment, but verging on the impracticable and the ostentatious, in which Lord Chatham was p.r.o.ne to indulge in his weaker moments, that he felt little inclination to resent it. Yet to let it pa.s.s unnoticed was impossible.
"My lord," he said firmly, but with respect, "it is permitted to all to make an application which the custom of the time has sanctioned. That is the extent of my action--at the highest. The propriety of granting such requests is another matter and rests with your lordship. I have nothing to do with that."
The Earl appeared to be as easily disarmed as he had been lightly aroused. "Good lad! good lad!" he muttered. "Addington is a fool!" Then drowsily, as his head sunk on his hand again, "The man may enter. I will tell him!"
CHAPTER x.x.xVI
THE ATTORNEY SPEAKS
It was into an atmosphere highly charged, therefore, in which the lightning had scarcely ceased to play, and might at any moment dart its fires anew, that Mr. Fishwick was introduced. The lawyer did not know this; yet it was to be expected that without that knowledge he would bear himself but ill in the company in which he now found himself. But the task which he had come to perform raised him above himself; moreover, there is a point of depression at which timidity ceases, and he had reached this point. Admitted by Dr. Addington, he looked round, bowed stiffly to the physician, and lowly and with humility to Lord Chatham and her ladyship; then, taking his stand at the foot of the table, he produced his papers with an air of modest self-possession.
Lord Chatham did not look up, but he saw what was pa.s.sing. "We have no need of doc.u.ments," he said in the frigid tone which marked his dealings with all save a very few. "Your client"s suit is allowed, sir, so far as the trustees are concerned. That is all it boots me to say."
"I humbly thank your lordship," the attorney answered, speaking with an air of propriety which surprised Sir George. "Yet I have with due submission to crave your lordship"s leave to say somewhat."
"There is no need," the Earl answered, "the claim being allowed, sir."
"It is on that point, my lord."
The Earl, his eyes smouldering, looked his displeasure, but controlled himself. "What is it?" he said irritably.
"Some days ago, I made a singular discovery, my lord," the attorney answered sorrowfully. "I felt it necessary to communicate it to my client, and I am directed by her to convey it to your lordship and to all others concerned." And the lawyer bowed slightly to Sir George Soane.
Lord Chatham raised his head, and for the first time since the attorney"s entrance looked at him with a peevish attention. "If we are to go into this, Dagge should be here," he said impatiently. "Or your lawyer, Sir George." with a look as fretful in that direction. "Well, man, what is it?"
"My lord," Mr. Fish wick answered, "I desire first to impress upon your lordship and Sir George Soane that this claim was set on foot in good faith on the part of my client, and on my part; and, as far as I was concerned, with no desire to promote useless litigation. That was the position up to Tuesday last, the day on which the lady was forcibly carried off. I repeat, my lord, that on that day I had no more doubt of the justice of our claim than I have to-day that the sky is above us.
But on Wednesday I happened in a strange way--at Bristol, my lord, whither but for that abduction I might never have gone in my life--on a discovery, which by my client"s direction I am here to communicate."
"Do you mean, sir," the Earl said with sudden ac.u.men, a note of keen surprise in his voice, "that you are here--to abandon your claim?"
"My client"s claim," the attorney answered with a sorrowful look. "Yes, my lord, I am."
For an instant there was profound silence in the room; the astonishment was as deep as it was general. At last, "are the papers which were submitted to Mr. Dagge--are they forgeries then?" the Earl asked.
"No, my lord; the papers are genuine," the attorney answered. "But my client, although the identification seemed to be complete, is not the person indicated in them." And succinctly, but with sufficient clearness, the attorney narrated his chance visit to the church, the discovery of the entry in the register, and the story told by the good woman at the "Golden Bee." "Your lordship will perceive," he concluded, "that, apart from the exchange of the children, the claim was good. The identification of the infant whom the porter presented to his wife with the child handed to him by his late master three weeks earlier seemed to be placed beyond doubt by every argument from probability. But the child was not the child," he added with a sigh. And, forgetting for the moment the presence in which he stood, Mr. Fishwick allowed the despondency he felt to appear in his face and figure.
There was a prolonged silence. "Sir!" Lord Chatham said at last--Sir George Soane, with his eyes on the floor and a deep flush on his face, seemed to be thunderstruck by this sudden change of front--"it appears to me that you are a very honest man! Yet let me ask you. Did it never occur to you to conceal the fact?"
"Frankly, my lord, it did," the attorney answered gloomily, "for a day.
Then I remembered a thing my father used to say to us, "Don"t put mola.s.ses in the punch!" And I was afraid."
"Don"t put mola.s.ses in the punch!" his lordship e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed, with a lively expression of astonishment. "Are you mad, sir?"
"No, my lord and gentlemen," Mr. Fishwick answered hurriedly." But it means--don"t help Providence, which can very well help itself. The thing was too big for me, my lord, and my client too honest. I thought, if it came out afterwards, the last state might be worse than the first.
And--I could not see my way to keep it from her; and that is the truth,"
he added candidly.
The statesman nodded. Then,
"_Dissimulare etiam sperasti, perfide tantum Posse nefas, tacitusque meam subducere terram_?"