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"Wait!" the banker ordered, as the boy was about to turn. "Who is it?"
Without ceremony he drew the card from Diane's hand and looked at it.
"Heu!" he cried. "It's Bienville, is it? Of course you'll see him; of course you will; of course! Here, boy, I'll go with you."
Returning to Gramercy Park after this interview, the banker pottered about his apartment until, on hearing the door-bell ring, he looked out of the window and recognized Derek Pruyn's chauffeur. On the stairs, as he went down, he heard Miss Lucilla's voice in the hall.
"Oh, come in, Derek. Marion isn't here yet, but she won't be long. I asked you to come punctually, because I gathered from her note that she wanted to see you very particularly, and without Mrs. Bayford's knowledge. She has evidently something on her mind that she wants to tell you."
"h.e.l.lo, dears!" the old man interrupted suddenly, as, leaning heavily on the bal.u.s.ter, he descended the stairs. "I've got good news for you."
"Good news, Uncle James?" Miss Lucilla said, reproachfully. With her long, grave face, and in her heavy c.r.a.pe, she looked as though she found good news decidedly out of place.
"The very best," the banker declared, reaching the hall and taking his nephew and niece each by an arm. "Come into the library and I'll tell you. There!" he went on, pus.h.i.+ng Miss Lucilla into an arm-chair. "Sit down, Derek, and make yourself comfortable. Now, listen, both of you.
Perhaps you're going to have a new aunt."
"Oh, Uncle James!" Miss Lucilla cried, in the voice of a person about to faint.
"You're going to be married!" Derek roared, with the fury of a father addressing a wayward son.
"The young woman," the banker went on to explain, "is of French extraction, but Irish on the mother's side."
Derek grasped the arms of his chair and half rose, making an inarticulate sound.
"'s.h.!.+ 's.h.!.+" the old man went on, lifting a warning hand. "She'd had reverses of fortune; but that wasn't the reason why she came to me.
Though her husband had just died, leaving nothing, she had her own _dot_, on the income of which she could have lived. But that didn't suit her. Her husband had left a mother, who had neither _dot_ nor anything else in the world. At the age of sixty the old woman was a pauper. My little lady came to see me in order to transfer all her own money secretly to her mother-in-law, and face the world herself with empty hands."
"My G.o.d!" Derek breathed, just audibly. Miss Lucilla sat upright and tense, hot tears starting to her eyes.
"Plucky, wasn't it?" the uncle went on, complacently. "I didn't approve of it at first, but I let her do it in the end, knowing that some good fellow would make it up to her."
"Don't joke, uncle," Derek cried, nervously. "It's too serious for that."
"I'm not joking. It's what I did think. And if the world wasn't full of idiots who couldn't tell diamonds from gla.s.s, a little woman like that would have been snapped up long ago."
Derek sprang up and strode across the room.
"Do you mean to tell me," he demanded, turning abruptly, "that she made over all her money to Mrs. Eveleth--a woman who has deserted her, like the rest of us?"
"That's what she did; but there's this to be said for the old lady, that she doesn't know it. She thinks it's the wreck of her own fortune, and Diane wouldn't let me tell her the truth. Since you seem to be interested in the little story," he added, with sarcasm, "you may hear all about it."
With tolerable accuracy he gave the details of his first interview with Diane, three years previous. Long before he finished, Lucilla was weeping silently, while Derek stood like a man turned to stone. Even the banker's own face took on an expression of whimsical gravity as he said in conclusion:
"And so I've decided to give her a home--that is," he added, significantly, "if no one else will."
"Do you mean that for me?" Derek asked, in a tone too low for Lucilla to hear it.
"Oh no--not particularly. I mean it for--any one."
"Because," Derek went on, "as for me--I'm not worthy to have her under my roof."
The banker made no comment, sitting in a hunched att.i.tude and humming to himself in a cracked voice while Derek stared down at him.
They were still in this position when Marion Grimston was shown in.
XXV
Greetings having been exchanged, it was Miss Lucilla's policy to draw her uncle away to some other room, leaving Marion free to have her conference with Pruyn; but the old man settled himself in his chair again, with no intention of quitting the field. Derek, too, entered on the task of dislodging him, but without success. Nursing his knee, and peering at Marion with bulgy, short-sighted eyes, the banker kept her answering questions as to Mrs. Bayford's health, blind to her obvious nervousness and distress.
The cousins exchanged baffled, impatient glances, while Lucilla managed to say in an undertone: "Take Marion to the drawing-room. We'll never get him to go."
Derek was about to comply with this suggestion, when the footman threw open the library door again. For a moment no one appeared, though a sound of smothered voices from the hall caused the four within the room to sit in strangely aroused expectancy.
"No, no; I can't go in," came a woman's whispered protest. "You can do it without me."
"You must!" was the man's response; and a second later Bienville was on the threshold, standing aside as Diane Eveleth entered.
Derek sprang to his feet, but, as if petrified by a sense of his own impotence, stood still. Miss Lucilla, with the instincts of the hostess awake, even in these strange conditions, went forward, with her hand half outstretched and the words "Monsieur de Bienville" on her lips. The old banker rose, and, taking Diane's hand, drew it within his arm in a protecting way for which she was grateful, while she suffered him to lead her some few steps apart. Marion Grimston alone, seated in a distant corner, did not move. With her arm resting on a small table, she watched the rapidly enacted scene with the detachment of a spectator looking at a play. She had thrown back her black veil over her hat, and against the dark background her face had the grave, marble whiteness of cla.s.sic features in stone.
During the minute of interrogatory silence that ensued, Bienville, with quick reversion to the habits of the drawing-room, was able to re-establish his self-control. With his hat, his gloves, and his stick, he had that air of the casual visitor which helped to give him back the sensation of having his feet on accustomed ground.
"I must beg your pardon, Miss van Tromp, for disturbing you," he said, addressing himself to Miss Lucilla, who stood in the foreground. "I shouldn't have done so if I hadn't something of great importance to say."
His voice was so calm that Miss Lucilla could not do otherwise than reply in the same vein of commonplace formality.
"I'm very glad to see you, Monsieur de Bienville. Won't you sit down? I was just going to ring for tea."
"Thank you," he said, with a wave of the hand that declined without words the proffered entertainment. "Perhaps I had better say what I have to say--and go."
"Oh, if you think so--!"
Having fulfilled her necessary duties as mistress of the house, she felt at liberty to fall back, leaving Bienville isolated in the doorway.
"Mr. Pruyn," he said, after further brief hesitation, "I come to make a confession which can scarcely be a confession to any one in this room--but you."
Derek grew white to the lips, but remained motionless, while Bienville went on.
"On the way up from South America last spring I said certain things about a certain lady which were not true. I said them first out of thoughtless folly; but I maintained them afterward with deliberate intent. When I pretended to take them back, I did so in a way which, as I knew, must convince you further."
"It did."
As he brought out the two words, Derek tried to look at Diane, but she was clinging to the arm of old James van Tromp, while her frightened eyes were riveted on Bienville.
"I'm telling you the truth to-day," Bienville continued, "partly because circ.u.mstances have forced my hand, partly because some one whom I greatly respect desires it, and partly because something within myself--I might almost call it the manhood I've been fighting against--has made it imperative. I've come to the point where my punishment is greater than I can bear. I'm not so lost to honor as not to know that life is no longer worth the living when honor is lost to me."
He spoke without a tremor, leaning easily on the cane he held against his hip.