n.o.bleman and parasite exchanged looks.
"How d"ye mean?"
Brayder hummed an air, and broke it to say, "He"s in for Don Juan at a gallop, that"s all."
"The deuce! Has Bella got him?" Mountfalcon asked with eagerness.
Brayder handed my lord a letter. It was dated from the Suss.e.x coast, signed "Richard," and was worded thus:
"My beautiful Devil!--
"Since we"re both devils together, and have found each other out, come to me at once, or I shall be going somewhere in a hurry. Come, my bright h.e.l.l-star! I ran away from you, and now I ask you to come to me! You have taught me how devils love, and I can"t do without you. Come an hour after you receive this."
Mountfalcon turned over the letter to see if there was any more.
"Complimentary love-epistle!" he remarked, and rising from his chair and striding about, muttered, "The dog! how infamously he treats his wife!"
"Very bad," said Brayder.
"How did you get hold of this?"
"Strolled into Bella"s dressing-room, waiting for her--turned over her pincushion haphazard. You know her trick."
"By Jove! I think that girl does it on purpose. Thank heaven, I haven"t written her any letters for an age. Is she going to him!"
"Not she! But it"s odd, Mount!--did you ever know her refuse money before? She tore up the cheque in style, and presented me the fragments with two or three of the delicacies of language she learnt at your Academy. I rather like to hear a woman swear. It embellishes her!"
Mountfalcon took counsel of his parasite as to the end the letter could be made to serve. Both conscientiously agreed that Richard"s behaviour to his wife was infamous, and that he at least deserved no mercy. "But," said his lordship, "it won"t do to show the letter. At first she"ll be swearing it"s false, and then she"ll stick to him closer. I know the s.l.u.ts."
"The rule of contrary," said Brayder, carelessly. "She must see the trahison with her eyes. They believe their eyes. There"s your chance, Mount. You step in: you give her revenge and consolation--two birds at one shot. That"s what they like."
"You"re an a.s.s, Brayder," the n.o.bleman exclaimed. "You"re an infernal blackguard. You talk of this little woman as if she and other women were all of a piece. I don"t see anything I gain by this confounded letter. Her husband"s a brute--that"s clear."
"Will you leave it to me, Mount?"
"Be d.a.m.ned before I do!" muttered my lord.
"Thank you. Now see how this will end. You"re too soft, Mount.
You"ll be made a fool of."
"I tell you, Brayder, there"s nothing to be done. If I carry her off--I"ve been on the point of doing it every day--what"ll come of that? She"ll look--I can"t stand her eyes--I shall be a fool--worse off with her than I am now."
Mountfalcon yawned despondently. "And what do you think?" he pursued.
"Isn"t it enough to make a fellow gnash his teeth? She"s" ... he mentioned something in an underbreath, and turned red as he said it.
"Hm!" Brayder put up his mouth and rapped the handle of his cane on his chin. "That"s disagreeable, Mount. You don"t exactly want to act in that character. You haven"t got a diploma. Bother!"
"Do you think I love her a bit less?" broke out my lord in a frenzy.
"By heaven! I"d read to her by her bedside, and talk that infernal history to her, if it pleased her, all day and all night."
"You"re evidently graduating for a midwife, Mount."
The n.o.bleman appeared silently to accept the imputation.
"What do they say in town?" he asked again.
Brayder said the sole question was, whether it was maid, wife, or widow.
"I"ll go to her this evening," Mountfalcon resumed, after--to judge by the cast of his face--reflecting deeply. "I"ll go to her this evening. She shall know what infernal torment she makes me suffer."
"Do you mean to say she don"t know it?"
"Hasn"t an idea--thinks me a friend. And so, by heaven! I"ll be to her."
"A--hm!" went the Honourable Peter. "This way to the sign of the Green Man, ladies!"
"Do you want to be pitched out of the window, Brayder?"
"Once was enough, Mount. The Salvage Man is strong. I may have forgotten the trick of alighting on my feet. There--there! I"ll be sworn she"s excessively innocent, and thinks you a disinterested friend."
"I"ll go to her this evening," Mountfalcon repeated. "She shall know what d.a.m.ned misery it is to see her in such a position. I can"t hold out any longer. Deceit"s horrible to such a girl as that. I"d rather have her cursing me than speaking and looking as she does. Dear little girl!--she"s only a child. You haven"t an idea how sensible that little woman is."
"Have you?" inquired the cunning one.
"My belief is, Brayder, that there are angels among women," said Mountfalcon, evading his parasite"s eye as he spoke.
To the world, Lord Mountfalcon was the thoroughly wicked man; his parasite simply ingeniously dissipated. Full many a man of G.o.d had thought it the easier task to reclaim the Hon. Peter.
Lucy received her n.o.ble friend by firelight that evening, and sat much in the shade. She offered to have the candles brought in. He begged her to allow the room to remain as it was. "I have something to say to you," he observed with a certain solemnity.
"Yes--to me?" said Lucy, quickly.
Lord Mountfalcon knew he had a great deal to say, but how to say it, and what it exactly was, he did not know.
"You conceal it admirably," he began, "but you must be very lonely here--I fear, unhappy."
"I should have been lonely, but for your kindness, my lord," said Lucy. "I am not unhappy." Her face was in shade and could not belie her.
"Is there any help that one who would really be your friend might give you, Mrs. Feverel?"
"None indeed that I know of," Lucy replied. "Who can help us to pay for our sins?"
"At least you may permit me to endeavour to pay my debts, since you have helped me to wash out some of _my_ sins."
"Ah, my lord!" said Lucy, not displeased. It is sweet for a woman to believe she has drawn the serpent"s teeth.
"I tell you the truth," Lord Mountfalcon went on. "What object could I have in deceiving you? I know you quite above flattery--so different from other women!"
"Oh, pray, do not say that," interposed Lucy.