Part 38 (2/2)
”Yes, that's right, Vernon; that's right. Keep her to the point,”
exclaimed Aunt Penelope.
I looked back at them both. Aunt Penelope's bright eyes were like little pin points in her head; they were fixed on Lady Helen's got-up face. She had really never before, in the whole course of her life, met such a woman. She was studying her from every point of view.
”I have come here, stepmother,” I said, ”to tell you that I--I--know all the story with regard to my--my darling father. Vernon has told me, and Vernon and I have made up our minds to marry, and father has given his consent, and we mean to be married, if all comes right, in about----”
”Best say a week, Heather,” interrupted Vernon.
”In about a fortnight from now,” I continued.
”Well, if you must put it off so long,” he remarked, leaning back in his chair.
”But the question I have come here to-day to ask is this,” I continued.
”What is to become of my father?”
”The more proper thing for you to say, Heather Dalrymple, is this: What is to become of the man who has had the good fortune to marry Lady Helen Dalrymple?”
”But I don't think it a good fortune at all,” I said. ”Oh, Lady Helen, I must speak the truth; I can't beat about the bush any longer. My dear, my darling father is not a bit happy, not a bit! He did what he did--oh!
it was so n.o.ble of him!--to--save your brother--I know the whole story.
Oh, he was a hero! But must all his life be sacrificed because he is a hero? Your brother is in his grave; give my own dad back his freedom; let him come and live with Vernon and me!”
”Upon my word, I never heard of such a request in all my life!”
”But you will do it,” I said. ”There need be no scandal; you can go abroad or anywhere you like, and I am sure father will visit you sometimes, and no one need think anything about that, and--and you know you're not really fond of father, because if you were you would not make him so terribly unhappy. Oh, do let him come and live with us!”
”You take my breath away! You are the most audacious, dreadful girl I ever came across. What do you take me for?”
”Lady Helen, I know you have a heart somewhere.”
She looked at me. The rims round her eyes were blackened, her eyebrows were artificially darkened, her face was powdered--could I get at any soul behind that much bedecked exterior? Bedecked, do I call it?
Disfigured is the word I ought to use.
”Lady Helen,” I said suddenly, ”give my father his happiness! Don't, oh, don't be cruel to him any longer, I beg of you, I beseech of you!”
”Child, don't make a fool of yourself.” Lady Helen rose.
”Listen, you good people,” she said. ”This little Heather Dalrymple, my stepdaughter, would never have thought of such an absurd and ridiculous scheme but for you; you, Miss Despard, and you, Captain Carbury, thought this thing out. You wanted to drag me before the world as a woman separated from her husband; you thought to disgrace me before the eyes of the world, and you imagined that I would obey the whim of a child. I know better. Heather, I distinctly and once for all refuse your request.”
”Then, madam, it is my turn to say something,” cried Vernon.
”You must say it pretty quickly, sir, for my motor-car will be round in a few minutes.”
”I fear your car must wait. You have an important matter to listen to.
It is this. You love your brother, and we all, even the most hardened of us, have a feeling of respect towards the dead. But I can at least a.s.sure you that there is such a thing as even greater respect for the living who have been wronged, and the entire story of Major Grayson's conduct shall be published before the world unless you agree to what this young lady proposes. He will come out very much a hero, I fancy; but your conduct in the matter will not be quite so gratifying to you and your friends.”
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