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"Had he known for long?" was her next question.
It met with no immediate answer. Duplay rose abruptly and walked to the mantelpiece; he leant his arm on it and turned half away from the group at the table.
"Had he known for long?" Cecily repeated.
"Ever so long," answered Mina Zabriska in a low voice, but very confidently.
"Ah, he was waiting till Lady Tristram died?"
Iver nodded; he thought what she suggested a very good explanation to accept. It was plausible and sensible; it equipped Harry Tristram with a decent excuse for his past silence, and a sound reason for the moment of his disclosure. He looked at Neeld and found ready acquiescence in the old gentleman's approving nod. But Mina broke out impatiently--
"No, no, that had nothing to do with it. He never meant to speak. Blent was all the world to him. He never meant to speak." A quick remembrance flashed across her. "Were you with him in the Long Gallery last night?"
she cried. "With him there for hours?"
"Yes, we were there."
"Yes, I saw you from the terrace here. Did he tell you there?"
"He told me there." There was embarra.s.sment as well as wonder in her manner now.
"Well then, you must know why he told you. We don't know." Mina was very peevish.
"Is it any use asking----?" Iver began. An unceremoniously impatient and peremptory wave of Mina's arm reduced him to silence. Her curiosity left no room for his prudent counsels of reticence.
"What were you doing in the Gallery?" demanded Mina.
"I was looking at all the things there and--and admiring them. He came up presently and--I don't remember that he said very much. He watched me; then he asked me if I loved the things. And--well, then he told me.
He told me and went straight out of the room. I waited a long while, but he didn't come back, and I haven't spoken to him since." She looked at each of them in turn as though someone might be able to help her with the puzzle.
"Somehow you made him do it--you," said Mina Zabriska.
Slowly Cecily's eyes settled on Mina's face; thus she stood silent for a full minute.
"Yes, I think so. I think I must have somehow." Her voice rose as she asked with a sudden access of agitation, "But what are we to do now?"
Mina had no thought for that; it was the thing itself that engrossed her, not the consequences.
"There will, of course, be a good many formalities," said Iver. "Subject to those, I imagine that the--er--question settles itself."
His phrase seemed to give Cecily no enlightenment.
"Settles itself?" she repeated.
"Subject to formal proof, I mean, and in the absence of opposition from"
(he hesitated a second) "--from Mr Tristram, which can't be antic.i.p.ated now, you will be put into possession of the estates and the t.i.tle." He pointed to Harry's letter which was still in her hands. "You see what he himself calls you there, Miss Gainsborough."
She made no answer. With another glance at Neeld, Iver pushed back his chair and rose. Neeld followed his example. They felt that the interview had better end. Duplay did not move, and Cecily stood where she was. She seemed to ask what was to be done with her; her desolation was sad, but it had something of the comic in it. She was so obviously lost.
"You might walk down to Blent with Miss Gainsborough, Mina," Iver suggested.
"No," cried the Imp in a pa.s.sion, leaping up from her chair. "I don't want to have anything to do with her."
Cecily started and her cheeks flushed red as though she had been struck.
Iver looked vexed and ashamed.
"It's all her fault that Harry Tristram's--that Harry Tristram's----"
The Imp's voice was choked; she could get no further.
Old Mr Neeld came forward. He took Harry's letter from Cecily and gave it to Mina.
"My dear, my dear!" he said gently, as he patted her hand. "Read that again."
Mina read, and then scrutinized Cecily keenly.
"Well, I'll walk down with you," she said grudgingly. She came nearer to Cecily. "I wonder what you did!" she exclaimed, scanning her face. "I must find out what you did!"
Iver came forward. "I must introduce myself to you, Miss Gainsborough. I live at Blentmouth, and my name is Iver."
"Iver!" She looked at him curiously. At once he felt that she had knowledge of the relation between his daughter and Harry Tristram.
"Yes, and since we shall probably be neighbors----" He held out his hand. She put hers into it, still with a bewildered air. Neeld contented himself with a bow as he pa.s.sed her, and Duplay escaped from the room with a rapidity and stillness suggestive of a desire not to be observed.
When the men were gone Cecily sank into a chair and covered her face with her hands for a minute. She looked up to find Mina regarding her, still with mingled inquisitiveness and hostility.
"What were you all doing here when I came?" asked Cecily.
"They were trying to make me tell what I knew about Harry Tristram. But I wouldn't tell."
"Wouldn't you?" Cecily's eyes sparkled in sudden approval, and she broke into a smile. "I like you for that," she cried. "I wouldn't have told either."
"But now!" The Imp pouted disconsolately. "Well, it's not your fault, I suppose, and----" She walked up to Cecily and gave her a brief but friendly kiss. "And you needn't be so upset as all that about it. We'll just talk over what we'd better do."
There was not much prospect of their talk affecting either the laws of England or the determination of Harry Tristram to any appreciable extent. But the proposal seemed to comfort Cecily; and the Imp rang the bell for tea. Coming back from this task, she gave Cecily a critical glance.
"You'll look it anyhow," she concluded with a reluctant smile.
Meanwhile Iver and Neeld drove back to Blentmouth. Iver said nothing about his friend's bygone treachery; oddly enough it was not in the culprit's mind either.
"Now, Neeld, to break this news to Janie!" said Iver.
Neeld nodded once again.
But of course a situation quite other than they expected awaited them at Fairholme.
XVI