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He leant back suddenly in his chair with a strange little laugh.
Jack was leaning forward, listening with that respect which he always accorded to his father.
"I imagine," went on Sir John, "that the novelists and poets are not very far wrong. It seems that there is such a thing as a humdrum happiness in marriage. I have seen quite elderly people who seem still to take pleasure in each other's society. With the example of my own life before me, I wanted yours to be different. My motive was not entirely bad. But perhaps you know your own affairs best. What money have you?"
Jack moved uneasily in his chair.
"I have completed the sale of the last consignment of Simiacine," he began categorically. "The demand for it has increased. We have now sold two hundred thousand pounds worth in England and America. My share is about sixty thousand pounds. I have invested most of that sum, and my present income is a little over two thousand a year."
Sir John nodded gravely.
"I congratulate you," he said; "you have done wonderfully well. It is satisfactory in one way, in that it shows that, if a gentleman chooses to go into these commercial affairs, he can do as well as the bourgeoisie. It leads one to believe that English gentlemen are not degenerating so rapidly as I am told the evening Radical newspapers demonstrate for the trifling consideration of one halfpenny. But"--he paused with an expressive gesture of the hand--"I should have preferred that this interesting truth had been proved by the son of some one else."
"I think," replied Jack, "that our speculation hardly comes under the category of commerce. It was not money that was at risk, but our own lives."
Sir John's eyes hardened.
"Adventure," he suggested rather indistinctly, "travel and adventure.
There is a cla.s.s of men one meets frequently who do a little exploring and a great deal of talking. Faute de mieux, they do not hesitate to interest one in the special pill to which they resort when indisposed, and they are not above advertising a soap. You are not going to write a book, I trust?"
"No. It would hardly serve our purpose to write a book."
"In what way?" inquired Sir John.
"Our purpose is to conceal the whereabouts of the Simiacine Plateau."
"But you are not going back there?" exclaimed Sir John unguardedly.
"We certainly do not intend to abandon it."
Sir John leant forward again with his two hands open on his knees, thinking deeply.
"A married man," he said, "could hardly reconcile it with his conscience to undertake such a perilous expedition."
"No," replied Jack, with quiet significance.
Sir John gave a forced laugh.
"I see," he said, "that you have outwitted me. If I do not give my consent to your marriage without further delay, you will go back to Africa."
Jack bowed his head gravely.
There was a long silence, while the two men sat side by side, gazing into the fire.
"I cannot afford to do that," said the father at length; "I am getting too old to indulge in the luxury of pride. I will attend your marriage.
I will smile and say pretty things to the bridesmaids. Before the world I will consent under the condition that the ceremony does not take place before two months from this date."
"I agree to that," put in Jack.
Sir John rose and stood on the hearthrug, looking down from his great height upon his son.
"But," he continued, "between us let it be understood that I move in no degree from my original position. I object to Millicent Chyne as your wife. But I bow to the force of circ.u.mstances. I admit that you have a perfect right to marry whom you choose--in two months time."
So Jack took his leave.
"In two months' time," repeated Sir John, when he was alone, with one of his twisted, cynic smiles, "in two months time--qui vivra verra."
CHAPTER x.x.xVII. FOUL PLAY
Oh, fairest of creation, last and best Of all G.o.d's works!
For one or two days after the public announcement of her engagement, Millicent was not quite free from care. She rather dreaded the posts.
It was not that she feared one letter in particular, but the postman's disquietingly urgent rap caused her a vague uneasiness many times a day.
Sir John's reply to her appealing little letter came short and sharp.
She showed it to no one.
"MY DEAR MISS CHYNE,--I hasten to reply to your kind letter of to-day announcing your approaching marriage with my son. There are a certain number of trinkets which have always been handed on from generation to generation. I will at once have these cleaned by the jeweller, in order that they may be presented to you immediately after the ceremony.
Allow me to urge upon you the advisability of drawing up and signing a prenuptial marriage settlement.--Yours sincerely,
"JOHN MEREDITH."
Millicent bit her pretty lip when she perused this note. She made two comments, at a considerable interval of time.
"Stupid old thing!" was the first; and then, after a pause, "I HOPE they are all diamonds."
Close upon the heels of this letter followed a host of others. There was the gus.h.i.+ng, fervent letter of the friend whose joy was not marred by the knowledge that a wedding present must necessarily follow. Those among one's friends who are not called upon to offer a more substantial token of joy than a letter are always the most keenly pleased to hear the news of an engagement. There was the sober sheet (crossed) from the elderly relative living in the country, who, never having been married herself, takes the opportunity of giving four pages of advice to one about to enter that parlous state. There was the fatherly letter from the country rector who christened Millicent, and thinks that he may be asked to marry her in a fas.h.i.+onable London church--and so to a bishopric. On heavily-crested stationery follow the missives of the ladies whose daughters would make sweet bridesmaids. Also the hearty congratulations of the slight acquaintance, who is going to Egypt for the winter, and being desirous of letting her house without having to pay one of those horrid agents, "sees no harm in mentioning it." The house being most singularly suitable for a young married couple. Besides these, the thousand and one who wished to be invited to the wedding in order to taste cake and champagne at the time, and thereafter the sweeter glory of seeing their names in the fas.h.i.+onable news.
All these Millicent read with little interest, and answered in that conveniently large calligraphy which made three lines look like a note, and magnified a note into a four-page letter. The dressmakers'
circulars--the tradesmen's ill.u.s.trated catalogues of things she could not possibly want, and the jewellers' delicate photographs interested her a thousand times more. But even these did not satisfy her. All these people were glad--most of them were delighted. Millicent wanted to hear from those who were not delighted, not even pleased, but in despair. She wanted to hear more of the broken hearts. But somehow the broken hearts were silent. Could it be that they did not care? Could it be that THEY were only flirting? She dismissed these silly questions with the promptness which they deserved. It was useless to think of it in that way--more useless, perhaps, than she suspected; for she was not deep enough, nor observant enough, to know that the broken hearts in question had been much more influenced by the suspicion that she cared for them than by the thought that they cared for her. She did not know the lamentable, vulgar fact that any woman can be a flirt if she only degrade her womanhood to flattery. Men do not want to love so much as to be loved. Such is, moreover, their sublime vanity that they are ready to believe any one who tells them, however subtly--mesdames, you cannot be too subtle for a man's vanity to find your meaning--that they are not as other men.
To the commonplace observer it would, therefore, appear (erroneously, no doubt) that the broken hearts having been practically a.s.sured that Millicent Chyne did not care for them, promptly made the discovery that the lack of feeling was reciprocal. But Millicent did not, of course, adopt this theory. She knew better. She only wondered why several young men did not communicate, and she was slightly uneasy lest in their anger they should do or say something indiscreet.
There was no reason why the young people should wait. And when there is no reason why the young people should wait, there is every reason why they should not do so. Thus it came about that in a week or so Millicent was engaged in the happiest pursuit of her life. She was buying clothes without a thought of money. The full joy of the trousseau was hers. The wives of her guardians having been morally bought, dirt cheap, at the price of an antic.i.p.atory invitation to the wedding, those elderly gentlemen were with little difficulty won over to a pretty little femininely vague scheme of withdrawing just a little of the capital--said capital to be spent in the purchase of a really GOOD trousseau, you know. The word "good" emanating from such a source must, of course, be read as "novel," which in some circles means the same thing.
Millicent entered into the thing in the right spirit. Whatever the future might hold for her--and she trusted that it might be full of millinery--she was determined to enjoy the living present to its utmost.
Her life at this time was a whirl of excitement--excitement of the keenest order--namely, trying on.
"You do not know what it is," she said, with a happy little sigh, to those among her friends who probably never would, "to stand the whole day long being pinned into linings by Madame Videpoche."
And despite the sigh, she did it with an angelic sweetness of temper which quite touched the heart of Madame Videpoche, while making no difference in the bill.
Lady Cantourne would not have been human had she a.s.sumed the neutral in this important matter. She frankly enjoyed it all immensely.
"You know, Sir John," she said in confidence to him one day at Hurlingham, "I have always dressed Millicent."