daughter. Whenever this aspect of affairs presented itself to him, he would endeavour to console himself by remembering the past success of a similar transaction. He thought of his own first interview with his wife. “You have heard,” he had said, “what our friends wish.” She had pouted her lips, and when gently pressed had at last muttered, with her shoulder turned to him, that she supposed it was to be so. Very much more coercion had been used to her then than either himself or Lady Cantrip had dared to apply to his daughter. He did not think that his girl in her present condition of mind would signify to Lord Popplecourt that “she supposed it was to be so.” Now that the time for the transaction was present he felt almost sure it would never be transacted. But still he must go on with it. Were he now to abandon his scheme, would it not be tantamount to abandoning everything? So he wreathed his face in smiles⁠—or made some attempt at it⁠—as he greeted the young man.

“I hope you and Lady Mary had a pleasant journey abroad,” said Lord Popplecourt. Lord Popplecourt, being aware that he had been chosen as a son-in-law, felt himself called upon to be familiar as well as pleasant. “I often thought of you and Lady Mary, and wondered what you were about.”

“We were visiting lakes and mountains, churches and picture galleries, cities and salt-mines,” said the Duke.

“Does Lady Mary like that sort of thing?”

“I think she was pleased with what she saw.”

“She has been abroad a great deal before, I believe. It depends so much on whom you meet when abroad.”

This was unfortunate, because it recalled Tregear to the Duke’s mind. “We saw very few people whom we knew,” he said.

“I’ve been shooting in Scotland with Silverbridge, and Gerald, and Reginald Dobbes, and Nidderdale⁠—and that fellow Tregear, who is so thick with Silverbridge.”

“Indeed!”

“I’m told that Lord Gerald is going to be the great shot of his day,” said Lady Cantrip.

“It is a distinction,” said the Duke bitterly.

“He did not beat me by so much,” continued Popplecourt. “I think Tregear did the best with his rifle. One morning he potted three. Dobbes was disgusted. He hated Tregear.”

“Isn’t it stupid⁠—half-a-dozen men getting together in that way?” asked Lady Cantrip.

“Nidderdale is always jolly.”

“I am glad to hear that,” said the mother-in-law.

“And Gerald is a regular brick.” The Duke bowed. “Silverbridge used always to be going off to Killancodlem, where there were a lot of ladies. He is very sweet, you know, on this American girl whom you have here.” Again the Duke winced. “Dobbes is awfully good as to making out the shooting, but then he is a tyrant. Nevertheless I agree with him, if you mean to do a thing you should do it.”

“Certainly,” said the Duke. “But you should make up your mind first whether the thing is worth doing.”

“Just so,” said Popplecourt. “And as grouse and deer together are about the best things out, most of us made up our minds that it was worth doing. But that fellow Tregear would argue it out. He said a gentleman oughtn’t to play billiards as well as a marker.”

“I think he was right,” said the Duke.

“Do you know Mr. Tregear, Duke?”

“I have met him⁠—with my son.”

“Do you like him?”

“I have seen very little of him.”

“I cannot say I do. He thinks so much of himself. Of course he is very intimate with Silverbridge, and that is all that anyone knows of him.” The Duke bowed almost haughtily, though why he bowed he could hardly have explained to himself. Lady Cantrip bit her lips in disgust. “He’s just the fellow,” continued Popplecourt, “to think that some princess has fallen in love with him.” Then the Duke left the room.

“You had better not talk to him about Mr. Tregear,” said Lady Cantrip.

“Why not?”

“I don’t know whether he approves of the intimacy between him and Lord Silverbridge.”

“I should think not;⁠—a man without any position or a shilling in the world.”

“The Duke is peculiar. If a subject is distasteful to him he does not like it to be mentioned. You had better not mention Mr. Tregear.” Lady Cantrip, as she said this, blushed inwardly at her own hypocrisy.

It was of course contrived at dinner that Lord Popplecourt should take out Lady Mary. It is impossible to discover how such things get wind, but there was already an idea prevalent at Custins that Lord Popplecourt had matrimonial views, and that these views were looked upon favourably. “You may be quite sure of it, Mr. Lupton,” Lady Adelaide FitzHoward had said. “I’ll make a bet they’re married before this time next year.”

“It will be a terrible case of Beauty and the Beast,” said Lupton.

Lady Chiltern had whispered a suspicion of the same kind, and had expressed a hope that the lover would be worthy of the girl. And Dolly Longstaff had chaffed his friend Popplecourt on the subject, Popplecourt having laid himself open by indiscreet allusions to Dolly’s love for Miss Boncassen. “Everybody can’t have it as easily arranged for him as you⁠—a Duke’s daughter and a pot of money without so much as the trouble of asking for it!”

“What do you know about the Duke’s children?”

“That’s what it is to be a lord and not to have a father.” Popplecourt tried to show that he was disgusted; but he felt himself all the more strongly bound to go on with his project.

It was therefore a matter of course that these should-be lovers would be sent out of the room together. “You’ll give your arm to Mary,” Lady Cantrip said, dropping the ceremonial prefix. Lady Mary of course went out as she was bidden. Though everybody else knew it, no idea of what was intended had yet come across her mind.

The should-be lover immediately reverted to the Austrian tour, expressing a hope that his neighbour had enjoyed herself. “There’s nothing I like so much myself,” said he, remembering some of the

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