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Mrs. Dund.y.k.e was sitting by, between the other side of the table and the fire. She was talking about the Arkells--the kindly generosity of William, the selfishness and persistent ill-will of Charlotte.
"And the children?" asked Mrs. Carr, as she stood, opening paper after paper. "Do they follow their father or mother in their treatment of you?"
"Of the daughters I know little; I may say nothing. They have never noticed me, even by a message. But the son--ah! you should know Travice Arkell! I cannot tell you how I love him. Will you believe that Charlotte----What is the matter?"
Emma Carr had come upon a sealed letter in an old blotting-book. The superscription was in the handwriting of her father-in-law, and ran as follows:--"To my son Robert. Not to be opened until after the death of my father, Marmaduke Carr."
She uttered the exclamation which had attracted the attention of Mrs.
Dund.y.k.e, and sat down on her chair. With a prevision that this letter had something to do with the question of the marriage, she tore the letter open and sat gazing on it spellbound.
"Have you found the receipt, my dear?"
Not the receipt. With her cheeks flus.h.i.+ng, her pulses quickening, her hands trembling, she laid the letter open before Mrs. Dund.y.k.e. "Robert was right; Robert was right! Oh! if he had but lived to read this! How could he have overlooked this, when he examined the desk after his father's death? It must have slipped between the leaves of the blotting-book, and been hidden there."
"MY DEAR SON ROBERT,--There may arise a question of your legitimacy when the time shall arrive for you to take possession of your grandfather's property. On the day I left Westerbury for ever, I married your mother, Martha Ann Hughes--she would not else have come with me. We were married in her parish church at Westerbury, St. James the Less, and you will find it duly entered in the register. This will be sufficient to prove your rights, so that there may be no litigation.
"Your affectionate father, "RT. CARR."
And, scarcely knowing whether she was awake or dreaming, while Mrs.
Dund.y.k.e, in vain attempted to recover her astonishment, Mrs. Carr wrote a line of explanation inside an envelope, and despatched the all-important doc.u.ment to Westerbury to Mr. Fauntleroy.
CHAPTER XII.
MR. RICHARDS' MORNING CALL.
Mr. Fauntleroy was seated at breakfast, when this missive reached him.
His two strapping daughters were with him: buxom, vulgar damsels, attired this morning in Magenta skirts and straw-coloured jackets. Mrs.
Fauntleroy had been some years dead, and they ruled the house, and nearly ruled the lawyer. Strong-willed man though he was, carrying things out of doors with an iron hand, and sometimes a coa.r.s.e one, he would yield to domestic tyranny; as many another has to do, if it were but known. It was fond tyranny, however, here; for whatever may have been the faults of the Miss Fauntleroys, they loved their father with a tender love. They were the only children of the lawyer--his co-heiresses--and to him they were as the apple of his eye.
The room they sat in faced the garden--a large fine garden at the back of the house. The leaves were red with the glowing tints of autumn, and as Mr. Fauntleroy looked up from his well-covered breakfast-table at the October sky, he made some remark upon the famous run the hounds would make; and a half sigh escaped his lips that his own hunting days were gone for ever.
"Would you be afraid to ride now, pa?"
"Look at my weight, Lizzy."
"I think some who ride are as heavy as you," was Miss Elizabeth's answer.
"Ah! but they are used to it; they have kept the practice up. Never a better follower than I in my younger days--always in at the death--but that's a long while ago now. I gave up hunting when I settled down. What d'ye call that, Bab?"
He was pointing with his fork to a dish apart. Miss Barbara looked at it critically, and did not recognise it. "I dare say it's some dish the new cook has sent up. It looks nice, pa."
"Hand some of it over, then," said Mr. Fauntleroy.
She helped him plentifully. The lawyer and his daughters were all fond of nice dishes, and liked good servings of them; as perhaps their large frames and their high colours testified. Miss Lizzy pushed up her plate.
"I'll take some, too, Bab."
"About that pic-nic, pa? Are we----"
"Oh! I don't know," interrupted the lawyer, with his mouth full. "You girls are always bothering for something of the sort. Get it up if you like, only don't expect me to go."
"The Arkells will join us, pa; Bab has asked them."
"Of course," said the lawyer with a loud laugh. "She'd not fail to ask _them_. How was Mr. Travice, Bab?"
"I shan't tell you, pa," answered Miss Bab, tossing her head in demonstrative indignation, though her whole face beamed with a gratified smile. "The idea! How should I know anything about Mr. Travice Arkell!"
"A good-looking young fellow," said the lawyer, significantly. "Perhaps others may be finding him so as well as you, Bab."
"Pa, then, you are a stupid! And I want to know who it is that's coming to dinner to-day?"
"Coming to dinner to-day, Bab? n.o.body that I know of."
"You said last night you had invited somebody, but you went to sleep when I asked who."
"Oh! I remember. I met him yesterday, and he said he was going to call to-day. I told him to come in and dine, if he liked. It's Ben Carr."
"Oh!" said Miss Bab, with a depreciating sniff. "Only Ben Carr!"
"He's over here for a few days, stopping with Mrs. Lewis. He wants to be off to Australia or some place, but the squire turns crusty about advancing the funds. Ben and he came to an explosion over it, and Ben has made himself scarce at home in consequence. What's the time, Bab?"
Barbara Fauntleroy glanced over her father's head at the French clock behind him. "It's twenty-five minutes after nine, pa."
"Eh!" cried the lawyer, starting up. "Why, what a time I have been at breakfast! You girls should not keep me with your chatter."
He gathered up his letters, which lay in a stack beside him, and hastened into his office. The head clerk, Kenneth, was in the outer room, with one of the other clerks, a young man named Omer. Mr.
Fauntleroy went in to ask a question.
"Have those deeds come in yet from the engrosser's, Kenneth?"
"No, sir."
"Not come! Why they promised them for nine o'clock this morning, and now it's half-past. Go for them yourself, Kenneth, at once, and give them a word of a sort. It's not the first time by many that they've been behindhand."
Mr. Kenneth took his hat and went out; and his master shut himself in his private room and began to open his letters. Sometimes he opened his letters at breakfast time, at others he carried them, as now, into the office.
Amidst these letters was the envelope despatched by Mrs. Carr, containing the important letter found in the desk. To describe Mr.
Fauntleroy's astonishment when he read it, would be beyond mortal pen.
To think that they should have been looking half over the world for this marriage record, when it was lying quietly under their very nose!
"By George!" exclaimed Mr. Fauntleroy. "A clever trick, though, of Robert Carr's--if he _did_ so marry her. The secret was well kept. He would be sure we should suspect any place rather than Westerbury."
"Omer!" he called out aloud.
The clerk came in, in answer, and stood before the table of Mr.