Michael
alk at Munich, and had recommended him to pass the winter at Berlin. It was immediately obvious that he rose in his father's estimation, for, though
himself so agreeable. On anyone of Lord Ashbridge's essential and deep-rooted snobbishness this could not fail to make a certain effect; his chilly politen
to go to Ber
able to," said Michael;
ael," said the father. "The Emperor knows what
II. His dietary was rather less rich than that of the defunct, an
had here," she said. "We ha
lance. Michael felt he would not
good, my dear," he sa
torchlight proces
ctly. And about his visit here,
also about our inte
ge gave a li
ome a sort of Cassandra, since she became a diplo
d Michael. "I don't think sh
ggled
dn't ask her down fo
r
ing to do, my dear?"
d across
ll come for a strol
k, on this fine morning. I should like to have a word w
nner changed: it was suffused with
It was tiresome being interrupted last night. But y
for all her married life she had been completely dominated by him, and had lived but in a twilight of her own; now into that twilight was beginning to steal a dread of him. His pleasure or his vexation had begun to affect her emotionally, instead of being as before
ot to vex him, wo
ously in front of the fire, and for the first time
said. "Your career, first of all. I take it that you hav
am afraid not
ishes are no less strong than they were. It is something to me to know that a man whom I re
tand," sa
other," he said. "Do you
said
describe
l hesi
," he said. "She came and talked to me last
blow to deal at Lord Ashbridge in the reminder that he was his father. He tried to disregard this-he tried to bring his mind into an impartial attitude, without seeing for a mom
her was always asking after you. You have not been writin
my mother every w
e dying out. Lord Ashbridge became more keenly aw
n so fortunate,
ther's anxious face, but
any of my letters. I thought it quite prob
if I had felt it," said his father with
el. "I am afraid I took your silence to m
bellion against the whole of h
y," he said. "My life is passed in the p
is place would have done somehow differently; he could almost hear Aunt Barbara laughing at the pomposity of the situation that had suddenly erec
Norfolk jacket, his loose knickerbockers, his stalwart calves expressed disapproval; but when his fathe
ything else about yo
Michael
said. "I daresay I
e with you; but I should
d of you," s
en him his own name, and continued to give him so satisfactory an income. There presented itself to his mind his own picture, painted and framed and glazed and hung up by himself, the beneficent nobleman, the co
presence-I am quite unable to account for it. In fact, there is no accounting for it. But I am thinking of going up to London before long, and making her see some good doctor. A little tonic, I daresay; though
up to his full m
atural she should be devoted to her
efore uncertain, and agai
ing this last year your mother has asked half a dozen girls down here, all of whom she and I consider perfectly suitable, and no doubt you have m
ad sat at the back, in the inmost place, throned and secure. And now she stepped forward. Apart from the impossibility of not acknowledging her, h
want to marry. She is Miss Falbe, Miss Sylvia Falbe, of whom you may have heard as a
Moses stepping down from Sinai, that prompted this appalling statement of the case; it was the joy in the pr
Miss-Miss Falbe, is it?" he said
that in his father's ton
" he said, "since when I proposed to
a double insult. Michael had proposed to this singer, and this singer h
d up your broken
indiscretion, for it but made his father recognise how s
My heart is not going to brea
mother's pale, anxious face, her des
at is the case. I wish-I wish
ord Ashbridge, and left the room with
poke like that. . . . And then, with a flare of illumination he perceived how intensely his father disliked him. Nothing but sheer basic antipathy could have been responsible for that miserable retort, "Am I to bind up your broken heart?" Anger, no doubt, was the immediate cause, but so utterly ungenerous a rejoinder to Michael's announcement could not have been conceived, except in a heart that thoroughly and rootedly disliked him. That he was a continual monument of di
ng continue being himself without being cheered and invigorated by that fact, and though when he set out his big white hands were positively trembling with passion, he carried his balsam always with him. But he had registered to himself, even as Michael had registered, the fact that he found his son a most intolerable person. And what vexed him most of all, what made him clang the gate at the end of the field so violently that it hit one of his retrievers shrewdly on the nose, was the sense of his own impotence. He knew perfectly well that in point of view of determination (that
e Zoological Gardens a few days ago: two seals, sitting bolt upright, quarrelling with each other, and making the most absurd grimaces and noises. They neither of them quite dared to attack the other,
bout nothing but Sylvia, and of Sylvia, not as the subject of quarrel
ming of spring, hung dejected heads in the sunk garden, where the hornbeam hedge that carried its russet leaves unfallen, shaded them from the wind. Here, too, a few bulbs had pricked their way above ground, and stood with stout, erect horns daintily capped with rime. All these things, which for years had been presented to Lady Ashbridge's notice without attracting her attention; now filled her with minute childlike pleasure; they were discoveries as entran
ess her, and so he represented the interview as having gone off in perfect amity. Later in the day, on his father's return, he had made up his mind to propose a truce between
t was lifted
ncis are coming, for though your aunt always laughs at your father, she does it kindly, does she not? And as for Francis-my dear, if God had
rhaps that his helpless predecessor slept below. Then their walk brought them to the band of trees that separated the links from the house, from which Lady Ashbridge retreated, fearful, as she vaguely phrased it, "of being seen," and by whom t
ry Christmas to you all. I hope you are all goo
t the children, and walked on with him.
ere he could be pointedly ignored, and the resplendent dinner, with its six footmen and its silver service, was not really more joyless than usual. But his father's majestic displeasure was more apparent when the three men sat alone afterwards, and it was in dead silence that port was pushed round and cigarettes handed. Francis, it is true, made a couple of efforts to enliven things, but his r
told my mother that our interview this morning was quite amicable. I
face soften
ree to tha
ristmas, and let a specialist see her. For the present the pious fraud practised on her that Michael and his father had had "a good talk" together, and were excellent friends, sufficed to render her happy and cheerful. She had long, dim talks, full of repetition, with Michael, whose presence appeared to make her completely content, and when he was out or away from her she would sit eagerly waiting for his return. Petsy, to the great benefit of his health, got somewhat neglected by her; her whole nature and instincts were alight with the mother-love that had burnt so late into flame, with this tragic accompaniment of derangement. She seemed to be groping her way back to the days when Michael was a little boy, and she was a yo
of distressing Lady Ashbridge. It was dreary work for all concerned, but, luckily, not difficult of accomplishment. A little chatter about the weather, the merest small change of conversation, especially if that conversation was held between Michael and his father, was sufficient to wreathe her in smiles
humanity he had, by appearing to be friends with Michael, to secure her serenity, and this could only be done by the continued profanation of his own highly proper and necessary attitude towards his son. He had to address friendly words to Michael that really almost choked him; he had to practise cordiality with this wretch who wanted to marry the sister of a music-master. Michael had pulled up all the old traditions, that carefully-tended and pompous flower-garden, as if they had been weeds, and thrown them in his father's face. It was indeed no wonder that, in his wife's absence, he a
d stopped three nights, instead of finding urgent private business in town after one. He realised also, somewhat with surprise, that Francis was "no good" when there was trouble about; there was no one so delightful when there was, so to speak, a contest of who should enjoy himself the most, and Francis invariably won. But if the subject of the contest was changed, and the prize given for the individual who, under depressing circumstances, should
unt Marion is there. And there's nothing going on, is there? I practically asked if I might go duck-shooting to-day, and
n't," sai
e shot. But there it is, then. Certainly Uncle Robert doesn't want me
oat gently grated on the pebbly mud at the side of the landing-place. Francis's quest
we shall all go back to town in a couple
od with his hands in his pockets while Michael pus
sn't she? I daresay it's nothing; but she's been alone, hasn't she, w
ng maturity, he saw how hopeless it was to feel Francis's deficiencies, his entire lack of deep feeling. He was made like that;
d a little w
the present, anyhow, she had refused you. There was nothing to tell him about. If I was fond of a gir
el la
ords, fond of her 'like that.' You couldn't help it. At leas
sto
id-"or, rather, I can't talk ab
sed you," said th
y father's anger, and my mother's illness, whatever it proves to be-I think about them really with all my might,
road through the woods, which, following the estuary, turned the point, they presently found themselves, as they mounted, quite clear of the mist that lay below them on the river. Their steps were noiseless on the mossy path, and almost immediately after they had turned the corner, as Francis paused to light a cigarette, they heard from just below them the creaking of oars in their rowlocks. It caught the ears of them both, and without conscious curiosity they listened. On the moment the sound of rowing ceased, and from the dense mist just below them there came a sound which was quite unmistakable, namely, the "plop" of something heavy dropped into the water. That
ence, then, invisible below, someone said, "Fifteen fath
rds his cousin, so that
"I want to row round and see who
then were still again. Once more there came the
ndings in the channel
were round the point, then quicke
enough right across for a ship of moderate draught to come up, but there is a channel up which any man-of-
ked Francis, striding easily a
wards. Now the tide's going out we can drop down with it, and we shan't be heard. I'll row
it. From the lisp of little wavelets lapping on the shore below the woods, he knew he was quite close in to the bank, and close also to the place where the invisible boat had been ten minutes before. Then, in the bewildering, unlocalised manner in which sound without the corrective guidance of sight comes to the ears, he heard as before the creaking of in
other boat shot by them, making down the estuary. Next moment it had quite vani
retreating and faint-growing sound of the other, it was clear that he could
ve run away," he said. "They'd hav
e was it?" a
opped his
" he said. "She would tell yo
is la
o niggers,"
e an odd thing, t
nquillity of the sky was growing dim as with the mist that lay that afternoon on the waters of the deep reach, and covered mysterious mo