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"Not I," said Vane; "I don't care, and I should like to be at home when Mr Deering comes."
"Why?"
"He may be able to get me engaged somewhere in town."
"Humph!" e.j.a.c.u.l.a.t.ed the doctor. "Want to run away from us then, now we are poor."
"Uncle!" shouted Vane, fiercely indignant; but he saw the grim smile on the old man's countenance, and went close up and took his arm. "You didn't mean that," he continued. "It's because I want to get to work so as to help you and aunt now, instead of being a burden to you."
"Don't want to go, then?"
Vane shook his head sadly. "No, uncle, I've been so happy at home, but of course should have to go some day."
"Ah, well, there is no immediate hurry. We'll wait. I don't think that Mr Deering is quite the man I should like to see you with in your first start in life. I'm afraid, Vane, boy, that he is reckless. Yesterday, I thought him unprincipled too, but he is behaving like a man of honour in coming down to see me, and show me how he went wrong. It's a sad business, but I daresay we shall get used to it after a time."
The journey back was made so that they reached home after dark, Vane laughingly saying that it would screen him a little longer, and almost the first person they encountered was Mr Deering himself.
"Hah, Doctor," he said quietly, "I'm glad you're come back. I only reached here by the last train."
The doctor hesitated a moment, and then shook hands.
"Well, youngster," said the visitor, "I suppose you have not set the Thames on fire yet."
"No," said Vane, indignantly, for their visitor's manner nettled him, "and when I try to, I shall set to work without help."
Deering's eyes flashed angrily.
"Vane!" said Aunt Hannah, reproachfully.
"You forget that Mr Deering is our guest, Vane," said the doctor.
"Yes, uncle, I forgot that."
"Don't reprove him," said Deering. "I deserve it, and I invited the taunt by my manner toward your nephew."
"Dinner's ready," said Aunt Hannah, hastily.
"Or supper," said the doctor, and ten minutes later they were all seated at the meal, talking quietly about Scarboro', its great cliffs and the sea, Mr Deering showing a considerable knowledge of the place. No allusion whatever was made to the cause of their guest's visit till they had adjourned to the drawing-room, Mr Deering having stopped in the hall to take up a square tin box, and another which looked like a case made to contain rolled up plans.
The doctor frowned, and seeing that some business matters were imminent, Aunt Hannah rose to leave the room, and Vane followed her example.
"No, no, my dear Mrs Lee," said Deering, "don't leave us, and there is nothing to be said that the lad ought not to hear. It will be a lesson to him, as he is of a sanguine inventive temperament like myself, not to be too eager to place faith in his inventions."
"Look here, Deering," said the doctor, after clearing his voice, "this has been a terrible misfortune for us, and, I believe, for you too."
"Indeed it has," said Deering, bitterly. "I feel ten years older, and in addition to my great hopes being blasted, I know that in your eyes, and those of your wife, I must seem to have been a thoughtless, designing scoundrel, dishonest to a degree."
"No, no, Mr Deering," said Aunt Hannah, warmly, "n.o.body ever thought that of you."
"Right," said the doctor, smiling.
"I have wept bitterly over it, and grieved that you should ever have come down here to disturb my poor husband in his peaceful life, where he was resting after a long laborious career. It seemed so cruel--such a terrible stroke of fate."
"Yes, madam, terrible and cruel," said Deering, sadly and humbly.
"There now, say no more about it," said the doctor. "It is of no use to cry over spilt milk."
"No," replied Deering, "but I do reserve to myself the right to make some explanations to you both, whom I have injured so in your worldly prospects."
"Better let it go, Deering. There, man, we forgive you, and the worst we think of you is that you were too sanguine and rash."
"Don't say that," cried Deering, "not till you have heard me out and seen what I want to show you; but G.o.d bless you for what you have said.
Lee, you and I were boys at school together; we fought for and helped each other, and you know that I have never willingly done a dishonest act."
"Never," said the doctor, reaching out his hand, to which the other clung. "You had proof of my faith in you when I became your bondman."
"Exactly."
"Then, now, let's talk about something else."
"No," said Deering, firmly. "I must show you first that I was not so rash and foolish as you think. Mrs Lee, may I clear this table?"
"Oh, certainly," said Aunt Hannah, rather stiffly. "Vane, my dear, will you move the lamp to the chimney."
Vane lifted it and placed it on the mantelpiece, while Mr Deering moved a book or two and the cloth from the round low table, and then opening a padlock at the end of the long round tin case, he drew out a great roll of plans and spread them on the table, placing books at each corner, to keep them open.
"Here," he said, growing excited, "is my invention. I want you all to look--you, in particular, Vane, for it will interest you from its similarity to a plan you had for heating your conservatory."
Vane's attention was centred at once on the carefully drawn and coloured plans, before which, with growing eagerness, their visitor began to explain, in his usual lucid manner, so that even Aunt Hannah became interested.
The idea was for warming purposes, and certainly, at first sight, complicated, but they soon grasped all the details, and understood how, by the use of a small furnace, water was to be heated, and to circulate by the law of convection, so as to supply warmth all through public buildings, or even in houses where people were ready to dispense with the ruddy glow of fire.
"Yes," said the doctor, after an hour's examination of the drawings; "that all seems to be quite right."
"But the idea is not new," said Vane.
"Exactly. You are quite right," said Deering; "it is only a new adaptation in which I saw fortune, for it could be used in hundreds of ways where hot-water is not applicable now. I saw large works springing up, and an engineering business in which I hoped you, Vane, would share; for with your brains, my boy, I foresaw that you would be invaluable to me, and would be making a great future for yourself. There, now, you see my plans, Lee. Do I seem so mad and reckless to you both? Have I not gone on step by step, and was I not justified in trying to get monetary help to carry out my preparations for what promised so clearly to be a grand success?"
"Well, really, Deering, I can't help saying yes," said the doctor. "It does look right, doesn't it, my dear?"
"Yes," said Aunt Hannah, with a sigh; "it does certainly look right."
"I would not go far till, as I thought, I had tested my plans in every way."
"That was right," said the doctor. "Well, what's the matter--why hasn't it succeeded?"
"Ah, why, indeed?" replied Deering. "Some law of nature, which, in spite of incessant study, I cannot grasp, has been against me."