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There was a pause, during which the old man strove for composure.
Derrick began to tremble. He remembered Donna Elvira's strange tenderness to him, his strange tenderness towards her; and something vague and nebulous was growing out of the Marquess's words, a hope that, in its intensity, was more painful than joyous.
"I did not know," went on the Marquess in a lower voice, and with obvious difficulty, "that, when I left my wife, she was about to become a mother. I did not know that a child was born to me--a son. If I had known--well, the whole course of my life would have been altered from that moment. I should have gone back to her, should have claimed my child; perhaps it is because she knew that I should have done so that she concealed the fact from me. Be that as it may, I was kept in ignorance until this moment; and even now, she does not tell me, but--her son."
He raised his eyes to Derrick with something in them that made Derrick's heart leap, the tears spring to his eyes.
"Yes; you are my son," said Mr. Clendon, and he held out his hand.
Derrick, moving as if in a dream, took the thin hand and grasped it in both of his.
"Oh, is it true?" was all he could say, huskily.
"It is quite true," said Mr. Clendon. "The certificates are enclosed; there is a minute account of the way in which your mother placed you in the charge of these people; there are even periodical receipts for the sums she paid for your maintenance. As to your ident.i.ty----"
"No doubts about that," murmured Mr. Jacobs, cheerfully. "Proved up to the hilt. Marquess, I congratulate you--and you, too, Lord Heyton."
Now, indeed, Derrick started.
"Do you mean that I----?" he stammered, overwhelmed by the significance of the t.i.tle by which Mr. Jacobs had addressed him.
Mr. Jacobs nodded, as cheerfully as before. "Quite so," he said. "Your father being the Marquess of Sutcombe, you are, of course, Lord Heyton."
Derrick sank on to a chair, still holding his father's hand; and he was silent for a moment or two; then he looked up.
"This charge?" he said, almost in a whisper. "You--both of you--know that I am innocent?"
Mr. Jacobs nodded, and the father's hand closed tightly on his son's.
"Then," said Derrick hoa.r.s.ely, "who--who is guilty?"
"Ah!" said Mr. Jacobs, with a shake of the head, his eyes fixed on the carpet. "Very difficult to say. I'm afraid it will turn out to be one of those undiscovered crimes with which the newspapers are always taunting poor Scotland Yard." He rose as he spoke, and reached for his hat. "Now I'll leave you two gentlemen together. By the way, Mr.--I beg your pardon, Lord Heyton!--I'm afraid you'll have to remain here for another hour or two; there are certain formalities which must be endured. For instance"--he smiled--"I shall have to take you before a local magistrate. Of course, we shall produce no evidence, throw any quant.i.ty of ashes on our heads, and apologize for the cruel mistake we have made; and the local magistrate, if he knows his business, will read me a severe lecture on my stupidity and set you free with an apology from all concerned. Now I'll leave you. You two gentlemen must have a great deal to say to each other. And I beg you to believe"--he spoke with deep feeling--"that I should not have intruded on this interview, if I had not considered my presence necessary."
He opened the door, but closed it again, holding the handle, and said, in a casual fas.h.i.+on,
"By the way, I am sorry to say that Lord Heyton--tut, tut!--the gentleman who was Lord Heyton--has been called away on important business. I am afraid he will be away some time; in fact, I have advised him to go on a long tour, when his business is finished. He requires change of air, a _long_ change; in fact, I don't think England will ever suit him."
He spoke the last words over his shoulder and disappeared.
The father and son were engaged in a conversation that moved them both deeply; and a knock had been repeated on the door twice, before they heard it and Derrick said, "Come in!"
A policeman stood on the threshold.
"A lady and gentleman to see you, sir."
"I can see no one," said Derrick, trying to keep his voice steady; but his father made a gesture with his hand and Derrick nodded reluctantly.
There entered Lady Gridborough and Reggie Rex, who had obtained permission from Mr. Jacobs. Lady Gridborough was much agitated, and she was going with outstretched hand, straight to Derrick, but stopped at sight of the old man who had risen from his chair.
"Oh, I came at once!" she said, tremulously. "I couldn't stay away. Oh, Derrick, I am so sorry, so sorry. I might have known that you couldn't be so bad, so wicked as they all said! Will you forgive me? Oh, do say you'll forgive me for so cruelly misjudging you."
Derrick took the fat hand and looked, with a grave smile of more than forgiveness, at the good-natured, agitated face.
"Don't say any more, Lady Gridborough," he said. "It was my fault. I ought to have spoken--I see now what a fool I have been! My mistaken sense of honour has caused all this trouble; and grieved you very much, I see, dear Lady Gridborough. But how did you learn the truth--I mean discover that I had not wronged poor Susie?"
"It was Mr. Rex here," said Lady Gridborough, her face all smiles now.
"He's an extraordinary young man, and has succeeded in doing that at which we had all failed--opening Susie's lips. How he managed it, I do not know! Perhaps he can tell you."
Derrick had got hold of Reggie's hand by this time, and was regarding him with a half-smiling interrogation; and Reggie was also smiling with that air of omniscience and supreme acuteness which sat so curiously on his boyish face.
"A future wife should have no secrets from her future husband, as you will be the first to admit, dear Lady Gridborough."
"'Future husband!'" echoed Derrick, with a surprise that was only momentary.
"Yes," said Reggie, quietly. "I have won my angel. I don't deny that it was difficult; but this last business of yours settled it. You see, Susie felt that, if she told the truth, and showed up the right man--or, rather, the wrong one; for, if there was ever a 'wrong un,' it is----; but we won't mention names--Susie knew that she would be doing Celia a service; besides, Susie felt that she could face the world much more easily, if she had a great, hulking man beside her. And," he added modestly, "there were--ahem--other reasons."
"I am sure there were," said Derrick, warmly; and he wrung Reggie's hand. "I congratulate you--both."
"But how about this dreadful business of the robbery at the Hall?" said Lady Gridborough, suddenly growing pale.
"So far as my son is concerned, madam," said Mr. Clendon, in his grave voice which had grown very gentle, "you will be glad to hear that it has ended satisfactorily; he has been proved innocent of the crime laid to his charge."
"Oh, I'm so glad!" cried Lady Gridborough, delightedly.
"But"--suddenly--"your son? You are his father? I didn't know--I thought his father was dead."
"So I was, madam; to the world; but I have returned from the grave to find my son," said Mr. Clendon.
"Well, I am glad!" cried Lady Gridborough. "You must both come and stay with me. Now, you won't refuse, Mr. Dene, will you?" She looked at Mr.
Clendon pleadingly, and then with confusion and embarra.s.sment, as they both remained silent.
"My father's name is not 'Dene,'" said Derrick, who felt that the explanation would have to come sooner or later. "He is Lord Sutcombe."
Reggie did not start; but, for the first time in his life, the young man looked nonplussed and discomfited; he regarded the father and son with a puzzled stare, then, with an exclamation, he cried,
"Of course, the _elder_ brother! Then--then _you_, Green, are Lord Heyton?" He smiled as if he himself had conferred the t.i.tle of n.o.bility on Derrick. "Well, this knocks me out. No more detective novels for me!
Realism is my line for the future. And yet, what a novel it would make!"
"You shall write it some day, Reggie," said Derrick, with a smile.
"Some day?" retorted Reggie. "I'm going to write it at once! Come away, Lady Gridborough! This is no place for us," he added tactfully, and, taking her hand, he led the bewildered old lady out of the room, nodding, with a smile of intense gratification, over his shoulder at Derrick.
CHAPTER x.x.xI
The following afternoon, as the London evening papers were publis.h.i.+ng what they were pleased to call "A Romance in High Life," Derrick and his father made their way through an excited crowd, which had gathered about the Court House. Affairs there had proceeded as Mr. Jacobs had prophesied; the magistrates had listened with amazement, not only to Mr.
Jacobs' statement, but to the announcement which Mr. Clendon had made of his ident.i.ty and his relations.h.i.+p to Derrick; and the worthy chairman, Sir Courtenay Comber, using almost the identical words Mr. Jacobs had attributed to him, had congratulated Derrick and informed him that he left the Court "without a stain on his character." Notwithstanding its satisfactory conclusion, the ordeal had been a trying one for father and son, and Derrick looked pale and somewhat worn as he grasped the hand of Reggie, who had been in Court, and had hurried after him to congratulate him.