Part 26 (1/2)
”I did it for your sake, my dearest Lance,” said my lady, caressingly.
”One would have thought that, loving the girl with my whole heart, for my sake you would have loved her also.”
”Love plays but a poor part in life, Lance,” said the Countess of Lanswell. ”You have too much sense to mar one of the brightest futures a man has before him for the sake of sentimental nonsense called love.”
”Mother,” said the young lord, ”I shall marry her on my twenty-first birthday. I shall not delay one hour. You understand that clearly?”
The Countess of Lanswell shrugged her graceful shoulders.
”You will certainly be able to do as you like then,” she said; ”but we need not quarrel over it in prospective; we can wait until the event happens; then it will be quite time enough to discuss what we shall do.”
”I am quite resolved,” said Lord Chandos. ”No persuasion, no argument shall induce me to change.”
”I have no arguments to use,” said my lady, with a proud laugh. ”When you are of age you shall do as you like, marry whom you will--no interference of mine will avail; but let us wait until the time comes.
My object in coming here is to seek a reconciliation with you. You are our only son, and though you think me proud and cold, I still love and do not care to be at variance with you. Let us be friends, Lance, at least until you are of age.”
She held out her hands again with a smile he could not resist.
”I tell you frankly,” continued my lady, ”that the young person has been to see me. We had quite a melodramatic interview. I do not wish to vex you, Lance, but she would make a capital fifth-rate actress for a tragedy in a barn.”
”Come, my lady, that is too bad,” said the earl.
The countess laughed.
”It was really sensational,” she said. ”The conclusion of the interview was a very solemn threat on her part that she would be revenged upon me, so that I must be prepared for war. But, Lance, let it be as it may, we must be friends. You will not refuse your mother when she asks a favor, and it is the first favor, mind.”
”I cannot refuse,” he replied. ”I will be friends, as you phrase it, mother, but you must change your opinion about Leone.”
”Another time,” said my lady, with a wave of the hand. ”Kiss me now, Lance, and be friends. Shake hands with your father. We are staying at the Hotel France. When the ball is over, join us at supper.”
And in that way the solemn reconciliation was effected.
CHAPTER XXIII.
A SHREWD SCHEME.
There had been nothing very sentimental in the reconciliation scene between parents and son. The earl and Lord Chandos walked home through the quiet streets of Berlin, while my lady drove. They smoked the cigar of peace, while Lord Chandos reported his social triumphs to his father.
No more pa.s.sed between them on the most important of all subjects--his love, his marriage, and the lawsuit; they spoke of anything and everything else. The only words which went from the heart of the father to the heart of the son, were these:
”I am glad you have made friends with my lady, Lance. She has pined after you, and she is so proud. She says nothing, but I know that she has felt the separation from you most keenly. I am glad it is all right; you must not vex her again, Lance.”
”I will not, if I can help it,” replied the young lord; and so the conversation ended.
Lord Chandos was a clever man, but he was in the hands of a far more clever woman. When a woman has the gift of strategy, she excels in it, and the countess added this to her other accomplishments. She was a magnificent strategist. Her maneuvers were of the finest; quite beyond the power of one less gifted to detect. A man in her skillful hands was a toy, to be played with as she would. The strongest, the wisest, the most honest, the best, were but wax in her hands. She did just as she would with them, and it was so cleverly done, so skillfully managed, that they never had the faintest idea my lady was twining them around her little fingers. She had two modes of strategy. One was by grand moves, one alone of which was enough to carry a nation. The other means was by a series of finest possible details of intrigue.
She said to herself that her son's marriage with this person should be set aside in some fas.h.i.+on or other, and in the end she prevailed. That was by one grand move.
She was equally resolved that her son should marry Lady Marion Erskine, the beauty, the belle, the wealthiest heiress of the season, and by a series of fine, well-directed maneuvers, she was determined to accomplish that.