At any rate, he was one of the most powerful men of his day—the owner, through The New Rambler, of an influence which now for some fifteen years had ranked among the forces to be reckoned with. A man in whom politics assumed a tinge of sombre poetry; a man of hatreds, ideals, indignations, yet of habitually sober speech. As to passions, Sir Wilfrid could have sworn that, wife or no wife, the man who could show that significance of mouth and eye had not gone through life without knowing the stress and shock of them.
Was he, too, beguiled by this woman?—he, too? For a little behind him, beside the Duchess, sat Jacob Delafield; and, during his painful interview that day with Lady Henry, Sir Wilfrid had been informed of several things with regard to Jacob Delafield he had not known before. So she had refused him—this lady who was now the heart of this whirlwind? Permanently? Lady Henry had poured scorn on the notion. She was merely sure of him; could keep him in a string to play with as she chose. Meanwhile the handsome soldier was metal more attractive. Sir Wilfrid reflected, with an inward shrug, that, once let a woman give herself to such a fury as possessed Lady Henry, and there did not seem to be much to choose between her imaginings and those of the most vulgar of her sex.
So Jacob could be played with—whistled on and whistled off as Miss Le Breton chose? Yet his was not a face that suggested it, any more than the face of Dr. Meredith. The young man’s countenance was gradually changing its aspect for Sir Wilfrid, in a somewhat singular way, as old impressions of his character died away and new ones emerged. The face, now, often recalled to Bury a portrait by some Holbeinesque master, which he had seen once in the Basle Museum and never forgotten. A large, thin-lipped mouth that, without weakness, suggested patience; the long chin of a man of will; nose, bluntly cut at the tip, yet in the nostril and bridge most delicate; grayish eyes, with a veil of reverie drawn, as it were, momentarily across them, and showing behind the veil a kind of stern sweetness; fair hair low on the brow, which was heavy, and made a massive shelter for the eyes. So looked the young German who had perhaps heard Melanchthon; so, in this middle nineteenth century, looked Jacob Delafield. No, anger makes obtuse; that, no doubt, was Lady Henry’s case. At any rate, in Delafield’s presence her theory did not commend itself.
But if Delafield had not echoed them, the little Duchess had received Meredith’s remarks with enthusiasm.
“Regret! No, indeed! Why should we regret anything, except that Julie has been miserable so long? She has had a bad time. Every day and all day. Ah, you don’t know—none of you. You haven’t seen all the little things as I have.”
“The errands, and the dogs,” said Sir Wilfrid, slyly.
The Duchess threw him a glance half conscious, half resentful, and went on:
“It has been one small torture after another. Even when a person’s old you can’t bear more than a certain amount, can you? You oughtn’t to. No, let’s be thankful it’s all over, and Julie—our dear, delightful Julie—who has done everybody in this room all sorts of kindnesses, hasn’t she?”
An assenting murmur ran round the circle.
“Julie’s free! Only she’s very lonely. We must see to that, mustn’t we? Lady Henry can buy another companion tomorrow—she will. She has heaps of money and heaps of friends, and she’ll tell her own story to them all. But Julie has only us. If we desert her—”
“Desert her!” said a voice in the distance, half amused, half electrical. Bury thought it was Jacob’s.
“Of course we shan’t desert her!” cried the Duchess. “We shall rally round her and carry her through. If Lady Henry makes herself disagreeable, then we’ll fight. If not, we’ll let her cool down. Oh, Julie, darling—here you are!”
The Duchess sprang up and caught her entering friend by the hand.
“And here are we,” with a wave round the circle. “This is your court—your St. Germain.”
“So you mean me to die in exile,” said Julie, with a quavering smile, as she drew off her gloves. Then she looked at her friends. “Oh, how good of you all to come! Lord Lackington!” She went up to him impetuously, and he, taken by surprise, yielded his hands, which she took in both hers. “It was foolish, I know, but you don’t think it was so bad, do you?”
She gazed up at him wistfully. Her lithe form seemed almost to cling to the old man. Instinctively, Jacob, Meredith, Sir Wilfrid Bury withdrew their eyes. The room held its breath. As for Lord Lackington, he colored like a girl.
“No, no; a mistake, perhaps, for all of us; but more ours than yours, mademoiselle—much more! Don’t fret. Indeed, you look as if you hadn’t slept, and that mustn’t be. You must think that, sooner or later, it was bound to come. Lady Henry will soften in time, and you will know so well how to meet her. But now we have your future to think of. Only sit down. You mustn’t look so tired. Where have you been wandering?”
And with a stately courtesy, her hand still in his, he took her to a chair and helped her to remove her heavy cloak.
“My future!” She shivered as she dropped into her seat.
How weary and beaten-down she looked—the heroine of such a turmoil! Her eyes travelled from face to face, shrinking—unconsciously appealing. In the
