The Knight Of Gwynne Volume II Part 47
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"To say in so many words what they have done, is not so easy. It would, perhaps, give better insight into the circ.u.mstances were I to say what they have not done."
"Even as you please, my Lord. The negative charge, then," said Forester, impatiently.
"Lord Castlereagh, my Lord!" said a servant, throwing open the door; for he had already received orders to admit him when he called, though, had Forester guessed how inopportune the visit could have proved, he would never have said so.
In the very different expressions of Lord Netherby and the sick man's face, it might be seen how differently they welcomed the new arrival.
Lord Castlereagh saluted both with a courteous and cordial greeting, and although he could not avoid seeing that he had dropped in somewhat _mal-a-propos_, he resolved rather to shorten the limit of his stay than render it awkward by any expressions of apology. The conversation, therefore, took that easy, careless tone in which each could join with freedom. It was after a brief pause, when none exactly liked to be the first to speak, that Lord Netherby observed,--
"The very moment you were announced, my Lord, I was endeavoring to persuade my young friend here to a line of conduct in which, if I have your Lords.h.i.+p's co-operation, I feel I shall be successful."
"Pray let me hear it," said Lord Castlereagh, gayly, and half interrupting what he feared was but the opening of an over-lengthy exposition.
Lord Netherby was not to be defeated so easily, nor defrauded of a theme whereupon to expend many loyal sentiments; and so he opened a whole battery of arguments on the subject of the young peer's first appearance in the House, and the splendid opportunity, as he called it, of a maiden speech.
"I see but one objection," said Lord Castlereagh, with a well-affected gravity.
"I see one hundred," broke in Forester, impatiently.
"Perhaps _my_ one will do," rejoined Lord Castlereagh.
"Which is--if I may take the liberty--" lisped out Lord Netherby.
"That there will be no debate on the subject. The motion is withdrawn."
"Motion withdrawn!--since when?"
"I see you have not heard the news this morning," said Lord Castlereagh, who really enjoyed the discomfiture of one very vain of possessing the earliest intelligence.
"I have heard nothing," exclaimed he, with a sigh of despondency.
"Well, then, I may inform you, that the 'Pike' has brought us very stirring intelligence. The war in Egypt is now over. The French have surrendered under the terms of a convention, and a treaty has been ratified that permits their return to France. Hostages for the guarantee of the treaty have been already interchanged, and"--here he turned towards Forester, and added--"it will doubtless interest you to hear that your old friend the Knight of Gwynne is one of them,--an evidence that he is not only alive, but in good health also."
"This is, indeed, good news you bring me," said Forester, with a flas.h.i.+ng eye and a heightened complexion. "Has any one written? Do Colonel Darcy's friends know of this?"
"I have myself done so," said Lord Castlereagh. "Not that I may attribute the thoughtful attention to myself, for I received his Royal Highness's commands on the subject I need scarcely say that such a communication must be gratifying to any one."
"Where are they at present?" said Forester, eagerly.
"That was a question of some difficulty to me, and I accordingly called on my Lord Netherby to ascertain the point. I found he had left home, and now have the good fortune to catch him here." So saying, Lord Castlereagh took from the folds of a pocket-book a sealed but un-addressed letter, and dipping a pen in the ink before him, prepared to write.
There were, indeed, very few occurrences in life which made Lord Netherby feel ashamed. He had never been obliged to blush for any solecism in manner or any offence against high breeding, nor had the even tenor of his days subjected him to any occasion of actual shame, so that the confusion he now felt had the added poignancy of being a new as well as a painful sensation.
"It may seem very strange to you, my Lord," said he, in a broken and hesitating voice; "not but that, on a little reflection, the case will be easily accounted for; but--so it is--I--really must own--I must frankly acknowledge--that I am not at this moment aware of my dear cousin's address."
If his Lords.h.i.+p had not been too much occupied in watching Lord Castlereagh's countenance, he could not have failed to see, and be struck by, the indignant expression of Forester's features.
"How are we to reach them, then, that's the point?" said Lord Castlereagh, over whose handsome face not the slightest trace of pa.s.sion was visible. "If I mistake not, Gwynne Abbey they have left many a day since."
"I think I can lay my hand on a letter. I am almost certain I had one from a law-agent, called--called--"
"Bicknell, perhaps," interrupted Forester, blus.h.i.+ng between shame and impatience.
"Quite right,--you are quite right," replied Lord Netherby, with a significant glance at Lord Castlereagh, cunningly intended to draw off attention from himself. "Well, Mr. Bicknell wrote to me a very tiresome and complicated epistle about law affairs,--motions, rules, and so forth,--and mentioned at the end that Lady Eleanor and Helen were living in some remote village on the northern coast."
"A cottage called 'The Corvy,'" broke in Forester, "kindly lent to them by an old friend, Mr. Bagenal Daly."
"Will that address suffice," said Lord Castlereagh, "with the name of the nearest post-town?"
"If you will make me the postman, I 'll vouch for the safe delivery,"
said Forester, with an animation that made him flushed and pale within the same instant.
"My dear young friend, my dear Lord Wallincourt!" exclaimed Lord Netherby, laying his hand upon his arm. He said no more; indeed he firmly believed the enunciation of his new t.i.tle must be quite sufficient to recall him to a sense of due consideration for himself.
"You are scarcely strong enough, d.i.c.k," said Lord Castlereagh, coolly.
"It is a somewhat long journey for an invalid; and Halford, I 'm sure, wouldn't agree to it."
"I 'm quite strong enough," said Forester, rising and pacing the room with an attempted vigor that made his debility seem still more remarkable: "if not to-day, I shall be to-morrow. The travelling, besides, will serve me,--change of air and scene. More than all, I am determined on doing it."
"Not if I refuse you the despatches, I suppose?" said Lord Castlereagh, laughing.
"You can scarcely do that," said Forester, fixing his eyes steadfastly on him. "Your memory is a bad one, or you must recollect sending me down once upon a time to that family on an errand of a different nature.
Don't you think you owe an amende to them and to me?"
"Eh! what was that? I should like to know what you allude to," said Lord Netherby, whose curiosity became most painfully eager.
"A little secret between d.i.c.k and myself," said Lord Castlereagh, laughing. "To show I do not forget which, I 'll accede to his present request, always provided that he is equal to it."
"Oh, as to that--"
"It must be 'Halfordo non obstante,' or not at all," said Lord Castlereagh, rising. "Well," continued he, as he moved towards the door, "I 'll see the doctor on my way homeward, and if he incline to the safety of the exploit, you shall hear from me before four o'clock. I 'll send you some extracts, too, from the official papers, such as may interest your friends, and you may add, _bien des choses de ma part_, in the way of civil speeches and gratulation."
Lord Netherby had moved towards the window as Lord Castlereagh withdrew, and seemed more interested by the objects in the street than anxious to renew the interrupted conversation.
Forester--if one were to judge from his preoccupied expression--appeared equally indifferent on the subject, and both were silent. Lord Netherby at last looked at his watch, and, with an exclamation of astonishment at the lateness of the hour, took up his hat. Forester did not notice the gesture, for his mind had suddenly become awake to the indelicacy, to say no worse, of leaving London for a long journey without one effort to see his mother. A tingling feeling of shame burned in his cheek and made his heart beat faster, as he said, "I think you have your carriage below, my Lord?"
"Yes," replied Lord Netherby, not aware whether the question might portend something agreeable or the reverse.
"If you 'll permit me, I 'll ask you to drive me to Berkeley Square. I think the air and motion will benefit me; and perhaps Lady Netherby will see me."
"Delighted--charmed to see you--my dear young friend," said Lord Netherby, who having, in his own person, some experience of the sway and influence her Ladys.h.i.+p was habituated to exercise, calculated largely on the effect of an interview between her and her son. "I don't believe you could possibly propose anything more gratifying nor more likely to serve her. She is very weak and very nervous; but to see you will, I know, be of immense service. I 'm sure you 'll not agitate her," added he, after a pause. If the words had been "not contradict," they would have been nearer his meaning.
"You may trust me, for both our sakes," said Forester, smiling. "By the by, you mentioned a letter from a law-agent of the Darcys, Mr. Bicknell; was it expressive of any hope of a favorable termination to the suit, or did he opine that the case was a bad one?"
"If I remember aright, a very bad one,--bad, from the deficiency of evidence; worse, from the want of funds to carry it on. Of course I only speak from memory; and the epistle was so cramp, so complex, and with such a profusion of detail intermixed, that I could make little out of it, and retain even less. I must say that as it was written without my cousin's knowledge or consent, I paid no attention to it. It was, so to say, quite unauthorized."
"Indeed!" exclaimed Forester, in an accent whose scorn was mistaken by the hearer, as he resumed.
"Just so; a mere lawyer's _ruse_, to carry on a suit. He proposed, I own, a kind of security for any advance I should make, in the person of Miss Daly, whose property, amounting to some three or four thousand pounds, was to be given as security! There always is some person of this kind on these occasions--some tame elephant--to attract the rest; but I paid no attention to it. The only thing, indeed, I could learn of the lady was, that she had a fire-eating brother who paid bond debts with a pistol, and small ones with a horsewhip."
The Knight Of Gwynne Volume II Part 47
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The Knight Of Gwynne Volume II Part 47 summary
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