Part 51 (1/2)
My mother looked at Wilfred with a yearning look, and then turning towards them said,
”Mr. Roger left this house eleven years ago. Many of you were servants here then, and since then you have served my son and me faithfully; but your rightful master has come home, and now I resign all authority and command to him.”
”But mother----” I interrupted.
”Stop,” she went on, ”I must do my duty. It will not be much longer”--turning to the servants--”that I shall be with you, but this I must confess; I have been the means of Mr. Roger being away from you; through me you have been deprived of your rightful master.”
It must have cost her a terrible struggle to say this, for she was a proud woman, and regarded servants as inferior beings to herself, and, as with blanched face and trembling step she left the room immediately after, I realised that she had come to some resolution which as yet was unknown to me.
Meanwhile all the older servants crowded around me, each expressing gladness because of my return, and gladly acknowledging me as master.
And all the while Wilfred sat like one entranced, never moving, never uttering a word.
They left us at length and thus Wilfred and I were alone together. For a time neither spoke, then I held out my hand to him.
”Wilfred,” I said, ”let us shake hands and be brothers once more.”
”You are no brother of mine,” he said, without moving.
”We are both blessed with the same father, Wilfred,” I said.
”But not with the same mother. You know that. Has she told you?”
I nodded.
For a minute he did not speak, but looked at me with such a stony stare that his face seemed entirely changed; then he said slowly, but distinctly:
”I hate you.”
”Come, Wilfred,” I said, ”let the dark past be buried. We can make some arrangement about the property, if any remains, that will be agreeable to us both. I have no heart to quarrel about money.”
”Share with you, when I have been master and have had entire control?”
he said. ”Never!”
”Nay, Wilfred, be not so hard. Don't let us remember those things that will cause bitter feelings, but think of what is bright and pleasant.”
”Bright and pleasant,” he answered; ”what is there bright and pleasant for me now you have returned? Nay, nay, I am accursed; but, by heavens, so are you.”
”And you will not shake hands?”
”Never.”
At this moment a servant entered the room with the message that our mother wanted to see us both in her private sitting room.
Neither of us delayed in answering her summons, and in a minute more we were seated near her. I thought I detected a change in her face as I entered; something of her harshness had gone, and a look of tender longing had taken its place.
”Mother,” I said, as naturally as I could, ”I have been very forgetful and unbrotherly, but I have heard nothing of my sisters, are they well and happy, can you tell me anything about them?”
”Both are married and both are happy and well,” she replied absently; ”but we can talk of them on some other occasion. I want us to speak of something else just now.”
”Yes, mother.”