flung over his shoulder: 'What should I do?'

'You may meet him, if you choose, and acknowledge the justice of his action by deloping.'

'Folly!'

'So I think.'

'I'll not beg his pardon! No, by God, that's too much! How could I guess—?'

'I believe him to be sensible of the misapprehension under which you acted. He is not the man to demand an apology from you. If you wish it, I can settle it for you, so that it will be unnecessary for any mention of the matter to be made between you. If you charge me with this office, I shall tell him that I have disclosed to you the secret of his betrothal, upon which you have naturally withdrawn your challenge.'

After a moment's inward struggle, Martin said in a choked voice:. 'Very well!' He cast one of his smouldering looks at Gervase, and said: 'Obliging of you! You think I should be grateful, no doubt! I'm not grateful! If it had not been for you, that fellow would never have come here!'

'Why, no! But if she had returned your affection, Martin, his coming would not have injured you,' the Earl said gently.

Martin seemed to brush aside these words. 'All was right until you came here! You put the wish to become a Countess into Marianne's head, trifling with her, flattering her with your balls and your distinguishing attentions—to cast my pretensions into the shade! Then you brought in Ulverston, encouraged him to remain here! You set everyone against me! Marianne, Theo, Louisa—even my mother! Yes, even my mother, bemoaning the fact that you are going away to London! She will miss you amazingly! Ay, that is what she says! But there is one person you haven't cozened with your soft words, one person who will not miss you! I hate you, St. Erth! From the bottom of my heart, I hate you!'

'If that is what you think, I cannot wonder at it,' the Earl said, a little sadly.

'Tell my mother I have gone to dine with Warboys!' Martin said fiercely, and flung out of the room

.

CHAPTER 15

 «     ^     »

Martin was too much in the habit of dining from home for his absence to be greatly felt by his mother. Beyond saying several times that she had had no notion he meant to go to the Warboys' that day, and supposing that he would drink tea at Whissenhurst, she made no comment. Her mind was engrossed by one of the complicated relationships in which she delighted, for she had chanced to read in the Gazette that a son had been born to the wife of a Mr. Henry Lamberhurst, which instantly reminded her that a third cousin of her own had married a Lamberhurst, who, in his turn, was linked by two other marriages with a branch of the Austell family. With the Viscount's good-natured, if not very valuable, assistance, she beguiled the dinner-hour by pursuing through all their ramifications every offshoot of both families until she reached, with the dessert, the apparently satisfactory conclusion that the unknown Henry Lamberhurst could not be connected with the Lamberhursts she knew.

The Viscount was spared her subsequent recollections of some people she had once met at Ramsgate, and whom she rather fancied to have been in some way related to the family, these being imparted only to Miss Morville, when the two ladies withdrew to one of the saloons. Miss Morville, who had contrived to evade giving an account of her discoveries at Whissenhurst, and who had no wish to be more closely interrogated on the subject, encouraged these tedious reminiscences, and by interpolating a question now and then managed to keep her ladyship's mind occupied until the appearance of the gentlemen turned her thoughts towards whist.

It was not until the party had broken up that Theo was able to exchange any private conversation with the Earl. He detained him then, as he was about to leave the library in the Viscount's wake, and said in his blunt way: 'One moment, St. Erth! What happened at Whissenhurst today between Martin and Ulverston?'

'A misunderstanding only.'

'Gervase, Martin must not be allowed to call Ulverston out!'

'He will not do so.'

Theo looked shrewdly at him. 'He seems to have had that intention. Did you scotch it?'

'Not that precisely. He was not fully informed of the circumstances.'

'I see. In short, Ulverston has offered for Miss Bolderwood, and has been accepted?'

'The engagement is not to be made generally known yet,' the Earl warned him.

'You need not be afraid that I shall spread the news. Well! I guessed as much. I am sorry for Martin. He has not had time to grow accustomed to the knowledge that he is not of sufficient consequence to aspire to the hand of an heiress.'

'Really, Theo, I think you wrong Miss Bolderwood!'

'Never. This is her parents' doing. I always knew they had set their ambition high. Oh, don't think I blame them! it was inevitable.' He forced a smile. 'I fancy you raised expectations, trifler that you are!'

'Nonsense!'

'My dear Gervase, you cannot be such an innocent as to suppose that Sir Thomas would not have jumped at the chance of seeing his daughter Countess of St. Erth!'

'You sound very like my stepmother,' remarked the Earl. 'He gave me no encouragement, nor do I think that his wishing not to announce this engagement immediately shows him to be jumping at the chance of seeing Miss Bolderwood the future Countess of Wrexham.'

'I daresay not. He had hoped for better. The Frants were Earls of St. Erth before ever the Austells rose to the dignity of a barony!'

'Very like my stepmother!' murmured Gervase.

Theo was obliged to laugh, but he said: 'However you may disregard the difference you may be sure the Bolderwoods do not! Offer for Marianne before her betrothal to Ulverston is announced, and see what Sir Thomas will say to you!'

'My dear Theo, where have your wits gone begging? It was a case of love at first sight with them both! You must have seen that!'

'Did Martin?'

'Oh, Martin—! Does he ever see beyond his nose?'

'No, and for that reason I am more than ever sorry for him. I believe he had no suspicion, and the news must have come to him as a severe shock.'

'I am afraid you are right, but he will very soon recover from it. He is at present forswearing women—an excellent sign!'

'Where is he?'

'Unless he did indeed visit his friend Warboys, I don't know.'

'I hope he has done nothing foolish!' Theo said, a crease appearing between his brows. 'He almost knocked me over when he brushed past me on his way out of the house, and looked as though he would have willingly murdered me, had I dared to address him.'

'Poor Theo!' said the Earl lightly. 'I'm afraid you were acting as my scapegoat—or possibly Lucy's!'

'Did you quarrel?' Theo asked, the crease deepening.

'It takes two to make a quarrel.'

'Evasion, Gervase! Was he—' He broke off, for a quick footstep was heard approaching the library across the Great Hall beyond it, and in another instant Martin had entered the room.

He was looking tired, and pale, his face rather set, and his expressive eyes sombre. He checked on the threshold when he saw his cousin, and ejaculated: 'Oh—! You here!'

'Do you wish to speak to Gervase? I am just off to bed.'

'It doesn't signify. I have no doubt you know the whole!' He glanced at St. Erth, and then lowered his eyes. 'I only wished to say—I was in a rage!'

'Yes, I know,' the Earl replied quietly.

Another fleeting glance was cast up at him. 'I think I said—I don't know: I do say things, in a rage, which— which I don't mean!'

'I did not regard it, and you need not either.'

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