"I shan't find it dull here," said Ashe; and he was surprised to
discover, through the medium of a pleased giggle, that he was considered to
have perpetrated a compliment.
Mr. Beach appeared in due season, a little distrait, as becomes a man who
has just been engaged on important and responsible duties.
"Alfred spilled the hock!" Ashe heard him announce to Mrs. Twemlow
in a bitter undertone. "Within half an inch of his lordship's arm he
spilled it."
Mrs. Twemlow murmured condolences. Mr. Beach's set expression was of one who
is wondering how long the strain of existence can be supported.
"Mr. Beach, if you please, dinner is served."
The butler crushed down sad thoughts and crooked his elbow.
"Mrs. Twemlow?"
Ashe, miscalculating degrees of rank in spite of all his caution, was within
a step of leaving the room out of his proper turn; but the startled pressure of
Miss Willoughby's hand on his arm warned him in time. He stopped, to allow the
statuesque Miss Chester to sail out under escort of a wizened little man with a
horseshoe pin in his tie, whose name, in company with nearly all the others
that had been spoken to him since he came into the room, had escaped Ashe's
memory.
"You were nearly making a bloomer!" said Miss Willoughby brightly.
"You must be absent-minded, Mr. Marson--like his lordship."
"Is Lord Emsworth absent-minded?"
Miss Willoughby laughed.
"Why, he forgets his own name sometimes! If it wasn't for Mr. Baxter,
goodness knows what would happen to him."
"I don't think I know Mr. Baxter."
"You will if you stay here long. You can't get away from him if you're
in the same house. Don't tell anyone I said so; but he's the real master here.
His lordship's secretary he calls himself; but he's really everything rolled
into one--like the man in the play."
Ashe, searching in his dramatic memories for such a person in a play,
inquired whether Miss Willoughby meant Pooh-Bah, in "The Mikado," of
which there had been a revival in London recently. Miss Willoughby did mean
Pooh-Bah.
"But Nosy Parker is what I call him," she said. "He minds
everybody's business as well as his own."
The last of the procession trickled into the steward's room. Mr. Beach said
grace somewhat patronizingly The meal began.
"You've seen Miss Peters, of course, Mr. Marson?" said Miss
Willoughby, resuming conversation with the soup.
"Just for a few minutes at Paddington."
"Oh! You haven't been with Mr. Peters long, then?"
Ashe began to wonder whether everybody he met was going to ask him this
dangerous question.
"Only a day or so."
"Where were you before that?"
Ashe was conscious of a prickly sensation. A little more of this and he
might as well reveal his true mission at the castle and have done with it.
"Oh, I was--that is to say----"
"How are you feeling after the journey, Mr. Marson?" said a voice
from the other side of the table; and Ashe, looking up gratefully, found Joan's
eyes looking into his with a curiously amused expression
He was too grateful for the interruption to try to account for this. He
replied that he was feeling very well, which was not the case. Miss
Willoughby's interest was diverted to a discussion of the defects of the
various railroad systems of Great Britain.
At the head of the table Mr. Beach had started an intimate conversation with
Mr. Ferris, the valet of Lord Stockheath, the Honorable Freddie's "poor
old Percy"--a cousin, Ashe had gathered, of Aline Peters' husband-to-be.
The butler spoke in more measured tones even than usual, for he was speaking of
tragedy.
"We were all extremely sorry, Mr. Ferris, to read of your
misfortune."
Ashe wondered what had been happening to Mr. Ferris.
"Yes, Mr. Beach," replied the valet, "it's a fact we made a
pretty poor show." He took a sip from his glass. "There is no concealing
the fact--I have never tried to conceal it--that poor Percy is not
bright."
Miss Chester entered the conversation.
"I couldn't see where the girl--what's her name? was so very pretty.
All the papers had pieces where it said she was attractive, and what not; but
she didn't look anything special to me from her photograph in the Mirror. What
his lordship could see in her I can't understand."
"The photo didn't quite do her justice, Miss Chester. I was present in
court, and I must admit she was svelte--decidedly svelte. And you must
recollect that Percy, from childhood up, has always been a highly susceptible
young nut. I speak as one who knows him."
Mr. Beach turned to Joan.
"We are speaking of the Stockheath breach-of-promise case, Miss
Simpson, of which you doubtless read in the newspapers. Lord Stockheath is a
nephew of ours. I fancy his lordship was greatly shocked at the
occurrence."
"He was," chimed in Mr. Judson from down the table. "I
happened to overhear him speaking of it to young Freddie. It was in the library
on the morning when the judge made his final summing up and slipped it into
Lord Stockheath so proper. 'If ever anything of this sort happens to you, you
young scalawag,' he says to Freddie--"
Mr. Beach coughed. "Mr. Judson!" "Oh, it's all right, Mr.
Beach; we're all in the family here, in a manner of speaking. It wasn't as
though I was telling it to a lot of outsiders. I'm sure none of these ladies or
gentlemen will let it go beyond this room?"
The company murmured virtuous acquiescence.
"He says to Freddie: 'You young scalawag, if ever anything of this sort
happens to you, you can pack up and go one to Canada, for I'll have nothing
more to do with you!'--or words to that effect. And Freddie says: 'Oh, dash it
all, gov'nor, you know--what?'"
However short Mr. Judson's imitation of his master's voice may have fallen
of histrionic perfection, it pleased the company. The room shook with mirth.
"Mr. Judson is clever, isn't he, Mr. Marson?" whispered Miss Willoughby,
gazing with adoring eyes at the speaker.
Mr. Beach thought it expedient to deflect the conversation. By the unwritten
law of the room every individual had the right to speak as freely as he wished
about his own personal employer; but Judson, in his opinion, sometimes went a
trifle too far.
"Tell me, Mr. Ferris," he said, "does his lordship seem to
bear it well?"
"Oh, Percy is bearing it well enough."
Ashe noted as a curious fact that, though the actual valet of any person
under discussion spoke of him almost affectionately by his Christian name, the
rest of the company used the greatest ceremony and gave him his title with all
respect. Lord Stockheath was Percy to Mr. Ferris, and the Honorable Frederick
Threepwood was Freddie to Mr. Judson; but to Ferris, Mr. Judson's Freddie was
the Honorable Frederick, and to Judson Mr. Ferris' Percy was Lord Stockheath.
It was rather a pleasant form of etiquette, and struck Ashe as somehow vaguely
feudal.
"Percy," went on Mr. Ferris, "is bearing it like a little
Briton--the damages not having come out of his pocket! It's his old father--who
had to pay them--that's taking it to heart. You might say he's doing himself
proud. He says it's brought on his gout again, and that's why he's gone to
Droitwich instead of coming here. I dare say Percy isn't sorry."
"It has been," said Mr. Beach, summing up, "a most
unfortunate occurrence. The modern tendency of the lower classes to get above
themselves is becoming more marked every day. The young female in this case was,
I understand, a barmaid. It is deplorable that our young men should allow
themselves to get into such entanglements."
"The wonder to me," said the irrepressible Mr. Judson, "is
that more of these young chaps don't get put through it. His lordship wasn't so
wide of the mark when he spoke like that to Freddie in the library that time. I
give you my word, it's a mercy young Freddie hasn't been up against it! When we
were in London, Freddie and I," he went on, cutting through Mr. Beach's
disapproving cough, "before what you might call the crash, when his
lordship cut off supplies and had him come back and live here, Freddie was
asking for it--believe me! Fell in love with a girl in the chorus of one of the
theaters. Used to send me to the stage door with notes and flowers every night
for weeks, as regular as clockwork.
"What was her name? It's on the tip of my tongue. Funny how you forget
these things! Freddie was pretty far gone. I recollect once, happening to be
looking round his room in his absence, coming on a poem he had written to her.
It was hot stuff--very hot! If that girl has kept those letters it's my belief
we shall see Freddie following in Lord Stockheath's footsteps."
There was a hush of delighted horror round the table.
"Goo'," said Miss Chester's escort with unction. "You don't
say so, Mr. Judson! It wouldn't half make them look silly if the Honorable
Frederick was sued for breach just now, with the wedding coming on!"
"There is no danger of that."
It was Joan's voice. and she had spoken with such decision that she had the
ear of the table immediately. All eyes looked in her direction. Ashe was struck
with her expression. Her eyes were shining as though she were angry; and there
was a flush on her face. A phrase he had used in the train came back to him.
She looked like a princess in disguise.
"What makes you say that, Miss Simpson?" inquired Judson, annoyed.
He had been at pains to make the company's flesh creep, and it appeared to be
Joan's aim to undo his work.
It seemed to Ashe that Joan made an effort of some sort as though she were
pulling herself together and remembering where she was.
"Well," she said, almost lamely, "I don't think it at all
likely that he proposed marriage to this girl."
"You never can tell," said Judson. "My impression is that
Freddie did. It's my belief that there's something on his mind these days.
Before he went to London with his lordship the other day he was behaving very
strange. And since he came back it's my belief that he has been brooding. And I
happen to know he followed the affair of Lord Stockheath pretty closely, for he
clipped the clippings out of the paper. I found them myself one day when I
happened to be going through his things."
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