He glanced again at the address on the letter, and asked a servant to bring him a railway guide. Then he ascertained that if he would reach Scarsdale that day he must leave London not later than noon. There was a journey of nearly seven hours by rail; no chance of returning the same night.
He went to the library and rang up Sharpe & Smith on the telephone.
A clerk a.s.sured him that Mr. Sharpe, who attended to Sir Philip Morland"s affairs, had been summoned to Devonshire the previous day.
"To Devonshire!" cried Philip. "I have just received letters from Sir Philip and Lady Morland from Yorkshire."
"Mr. Sharpe himself is puzzled about the matter, sir. Lady Morland wrote from Yorkshire, but told him to proceed to Devonshire without delay."
"Has there been some unexpected development affecting the estate?"
"I am sorry, sir, but you will see I can hardly answer any further questions."
Of course the clerk was right. Philip had hardly quitted the telephone when a note reached him by hand from Evelyn: "Please come at once. Must see you."
He was at Mount Street in three minutes.
Evelyn looked serious and began by holding out a letter to him. He recognized Lady Morland"s writing.
"Philip--those people--who behaved so badly to your mother----"
"Have they dared to trouble you?"
"Oh, it is so sad. Your uncle is dying. They are wretchedly poor; an unforeseen collapse. See." And she read:
"Of your pity, Miss Atherley, ask your affianced husband to come to us, and to help us. I want nothing for myself, but the mere sight of a few checks to pay tradespeople, doctor and the rest will soothe Sir Philip"s last hours. He is a proud man, and I know he is heartbroken to think he is dying a pauper among strangers."
So it ended as might be expected. Philip wired to Grange House, Scarsdale, to announce his coming. Accompanied by his valet, he left King"s Cross at twelve o"clock, but his parting words to Evelyn were:
"See Mr. Abingdon after luncheon, dear, and tell him what I am doing. I will return to-morrow; meanwhile, I will keep you informed by telegraph of my movements."
After leaving the main line at York there was a tiresome crawl to the coast, broken by changes at junctions--wearying intervals spent in pacing monotonous platforms.
At last the train reached Scarsdale at twenty minutes to seven. A few pa.s.sengers alighted. The place was evidently a small village not given over to the incursions of summer visitors.
A tall man, with "doctor" writ large on his silk hat and frock coat, approached Philip.
"Mr. Anson?"
"Yes."
"I am Dr. Williams. I have brought you a letter from Lady Morland.
Perhaps you will read it now. I expect it explains my errand."
"Sir Philip is still living?"
"Yes, but sinking fast."
Anson tore open the note. It was brief.
"Thank you for your prompt kindness. Dr. Williams will drive you to the house. If you have brought a servant he might take your luggage to the Fox and Hounds Inn, where Dr. Williams has secured rooms for you. I regret exceedingly we have no accommodation here, but, in any event, you will be more comfortable at the inn."
He looked at the doctor. In a vague way, his voice recalled accents he seemed to recognize.
"Is there a telegraph office here?"
"Yes. We pa.s.s it. It closes at eight."
"I will not be back from the Grange House before then?"
"Hardly. It is a half-hour"s drive."
"Thank you. You will stop a moment at the telegraph office?"
The doctor hesitated.
"There is so little time. Is it of great importance? Of course----"
"Oh, I know what to do. Green--take my traps to the Fox and Hounds Inn.
Then go to the telegraph office and send a message in my name to Miss Atherley, saying: "Arrived. Sir Philip worse." That is all."
Anson"s valet saluted and left them. Dr. Williams said cheerfully:
"That disposes of a difficulty. Are you ready, Mr. Anson?"
They entered a ramshackle dogcart, for which the doctor apologized.
"These hills knock one"s conveyances to pieces. I am having a new cart built, but it will be done for in a couple of years. Out in all weathers, you see. To carry you I had to leave my man at home."
The doctor himself seemed to be young and smart-looking. Evidently Scarsdale agreed with him, if not with his vehicles. The horse, too, was a good one, and they moved through a scattered village at a quick trot.
They met a number of people, but Dr. Williams was talking so eagerly to his companion that he did not nod to any of them.
As the road began to climb toward a bleak moorland he became less voluble, more desirous to get Anson to speak. Philip thought that the doctor listened to him with a curious eagerness. Probably Sir Philip and Lady Morland impressed him as an odd couple; he would be anxious to learn what sort of relative this was who had traveled from London to see them.
Philip was in small humor for conversation. He looked forward to an exceedingly unpleasant interview, when his lips would utter consoling words to which he must strive to impart a genuine and heartfelt ring; that would need an effort, to say the least.
The road wound its way through pines and heather, but ever upward, until the trees yielded to an unbroken range of open mountain, and the farms that nestled in nooks of the hillside disappeared wholly.
Glimpses of the sea were caught where a precipitous valley tore a cleft in the land. On a lofty brow in front Philip saw a solitary and half-dismantled building.
"Is that the Grange House?" he inquired.
"Yes."
"Why on earth did two old people, one of them an invalid, select such a lonely residence?"
"That has been puzzling me for days."