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"Yes, I rather understood that--from what you let fall."
"That idea was entirely erroneous, I suppose? Or, at all events, if ever entertained, is abandoned now?"
We had already got on to delicate ground. "The situation seems to speak for itself, Lord Fillingford. And I'm sure that the arrangement now proposed has always been desired by Miss Driver."
"Miss Driver has a very great influence over my son, I think," he remarked.
"I don't think she would wish to deny that she has favored this arrangement so far as she properly and legitimately could. She was naturally desirous of promoting Miss Octon's happiness. If in other respects the marriage was a very desirable one--well, she was ent.i.tled to think of that also."
"You consider that Miss Octon's feelings are deeply engaged in this matter?"
"If you ask me, I think the two young people are as much in love as any young couple could be."
"I know my son's feelings; he has made me aware of them. And Miss Driver thinks this marriage desirable?"
"She charged me to express the great pleasure she would take in it, if it met with your approval."
He sat silent for a moment, his hand up to his mouth as he bit his finger nail. For reasons I have given, to follow the trend of his thoughts was quite beyond my powers of discernment.
"I suppose I seem to her--and perhaps to you--a very ineffectual person?" he went on in his even voice, with his dull eyes (like a gas jet turned low to save the light!)--"I have the bad luck to stand half-way between two schools--two generations--of ideas. When I was born, men of my order still had fortunes; nowadays many of them have to set out to make fortunes--or at least careers--like other people. I've been stranded half-way. The fortunes of my house are gone; I've neither the power nor the taste to try to retrieve them; and I'm too old. Public life used to be the thing, but I've not the manners for that." His chilly smile came again. "So I sit on, watching the ruins falling into more utter ruin still."
It was not for me to say anything to that. But I had a new sympathy for him. His room, again, seemed to add a silent confirmation of all he said.
"Once I did try to retrieve the situation. You know how--and how the attempt ended. It served me right--and I've learned the lesson. Now the same woman asks me for my son."
"Not for herself!"
"No, thank G.o.d!"
He said that very deliberately--not carried away, meaning to let me have it for all it was worth. Well, my diplomacy failed--or I fear so. I did not like to hear him thank G.o.d for being quit of Jenny.
"She might have," I declared impulsively.
"I think you're right. She's a very clever woman. Young men are wax in hands like that."
"Shall we get back from what isn't in question to what is, Lord Fillingford?"
"I don't think that the digression was due to me--not wholly anyhow. If it were, I must seek excuse in the fact that I have lived a month under that nightmare." I must have given some sign of protest or indignation.
"Well, I beg your pardon--under that impression."
"From that, at least, you're relieved--by the present arrangement."
"The proposed arrangement"--I noticed that he corrected my epithet--"has not my approval, Mr. Austin. The other day I called it ridiculous. That was perhaps too strong. But it is profoundly distasteful to me, and not at all to my son's interest. I wish to say plainly that I am doing and shall do my best to dissuade him from it."
"If he won't be dissuaded?"
"I venture to hope that we needn't discuss that eventuality. Time enough, if it should occur."
"Miss Octon's feelings----"
"What Miss Driver has--properly and legitimately as you maintain--used her efforts to promote, she will probably be able, with a little more trouble, to undo. That seems to me not my affair."
His defense was very quiet, very stubborn. He told me no more than suited him. But I was ent.i.tled to lay hold of the two grounds of objection which he had advanced; the arrangement was distasteful to him--and not at all to his son's interest.
"I thank you for your candor in putting me in possession of your views.
Miss Driver would wish me to be equally frank with you. She has antic.i.p.ated your objections."
"She could hardly do otherwise," he remarked, smiling faintly.
"As regards the first, her position is that this girl can't be held responsible for anything in the past. She, at least, is blameless."
"I occupy the position of my parents--and bear their burdens, Mr.
Austin. So do you of yours. It's the way of the world, I'm afraid, and Miss Driver can't alter it."
"She regards this sentimental objection----"
"You would apply that term to my objection to allying my family with the late Mr. Octon's?"
I was not quite sure of my epithet myself. "I didn't say your objection wasn't natural."
"Perhaps you might go so far as to admit that it is inevitable? I on my part will admit that the girl herself appears to be unexceptionable.
Indeed, I liked her very much, when I met her at our friend Alison's.
That, however, doesn't in my view alter the case."
"I understand. Will you permit me to pa.s.s to the other point you mentioned--that of your son's interest?"
"If you please," he said, with a slight inclination of his head, as he leaned back in his chair. I could see that I had made no way with him.
The best that we had hoped for was not coming to pa.s.s. There was to be no triumph of pure romance; even relief from the "nightmare" would not, by itself, serve the turn.
"Having placed Miss Octon in the position which she now occupies, Miss Driver naturally charges herself with Miss Octon's future."
"Miss Driver is well known to be generous. I had antic.i.p.ated, in my turn, that she would propose to make some provision for Miss Octon who, as I understand, has only a very small income of her own."
"Miss Driver has recently concluded negotiations for the purchase of Oxley Lodge, together with the whole of Mr. Bertram Ware's estate. It is estimated that, freed from enc.u.mbrances, that estate will produce a net rental of three thousand pounds a year. Miss Driver will present the house and estate to Miss Octon on her marriage."
He raised his brows slightly, but made no other comment than, "I had heard that she was in treaty for Ware's place. Aspenick told me."
"She will settle on Miss Octon a sum of money sufficient to make up this income to the sum of ten thousand pounds a year. This income she will increase to twenty thousand on Lord Lacey's succession to the t.i.tle. She will also present Miss Octon, on her marriage, with a lump sum of fifty thousand pounds. She will execute a settlement of funds sufficient to raise the income to thirty thousand on her death--this income to be settled on Miss Octon for life, with remainder among her children as she and her husband shall jointly appoint. I am also to inform you that, without undertaking any further legal obligation, it is Miss Driver's present intention to leave to Miss Octon, or (if Miss Octon predeceases her) to any son of hers who is heir to your t.i.tle, the estate of Breysgate and the greater part of her Catsford property. I need not tell you that that property is of great and growing value. In short, subject to public claims and certain comparatively small private ones, Miss Octon is to be regarded as her natural heir no less absolutely and completely than if she were her own and her only child."
He heard me all through with an impa.s.sive face--even his brows had returned to their natural level. "Miss Driver is a young woman herself.
She will probably marry."
"It is possible, and therefore she limits her legal obligation to the amount I have mentioned--approximately one half of her present income. I am, however, to inform you in confidence that it is her fixed intention not to marry, and that it is practically certain that she will not depart from that resolution--in which case the ultimate arrangement which I have indicated will come into effect."
The bribe was out--and fewest possible words spent over it! Now--how would he take it?
His manner showed nothing. He sat silent for a minute or two. Then he said, "It's certainly princely." He smiled slightly again. "I think I must apologize for my word 'provision.' This is a very large fortune, Mr. Austin--or seems like it to poor folks like the Laceys."