Lord Kilgobbin. Lever Charles James

Lord Kilgobbin - Lever Charles James


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you had asked whether persons anywhere else would like to maintain such a strange pretension, I might perhaps have answered you.’

      ‘For the few minutes of this visit to me, I liked him; he seemed frank, hearty, and genial.’

      ‘I suppose he is, and I suspect this folly of the lordship is no fancy of his own.’

      ‘Nor the daughter’s, then, I’ll be bound?’

      ‘No; the son, I take it, has all the ambition of the house.’

      ‘Do you know them well?’

      ‘No, I never saw them till yesterday. The son and I are chums: we live together, and have done so these three years.’

      ‘You like your visit here, however?’

      ‘Yes. It’s rather good fun on the whole. I was afraid of the indoor life when I was coming down, but it’s pleasanter than I looked for.’

      ‘When I asked you the question, it was not out of idle curiosity. I had a strong personal interest in your answer. In fact, it was another way of inquiring whether it would be a great sacrifice to tear yourself away from this.’

      ‘No, inasmuch as the tearing-away process must take place in a couple of days – three at farthest.’

      ‘That makes what I have to propose all the easier. It is a matter of great urgency for me to reach Dublin at once. This unlucky incident has been so represented by the newspapers as to give considerable uneasiness to the Government, and they are even threatened with a discussion on it in the House. Now, I’d start to-morrow, if I thought I could travel with safety. You have so impressed me with your skill, that, if I dared, I’d ask you to convoy me up. Of course I mean as my physician.’

      ‘But I’m not one, nor ever intend to be.’

      ‘You studied, however?’

      ‘As I have done scores of things. I know a little bit of criminal law, have done some shipbuilding, rode haute école in Cooke’s circus, and, after M. Dumas, I am considered the best amateur macaroni-maker in Europe.’

      ‘And which of these careers do you intend to abide by?’

      ‘None, not one of them. “Financing” is the only pursuit that pays largely. I intend to go in for money.’

      ‘I should like to hear your ideas on that subject.’

      ‘So you shall, as we travel up to town.’

      ‘You accept my offer, then?’

      ‘Of course I do. I am delighted to have so many hours in your company. I believe I can safely say I have that amount of skill to be of service to you. One begins his medical experience with fractures. They are the pothooks and hangers of surgery, and I have gone that far. Now, what are your plans?’

      ‘My plans are to leave this early to-morrow, so as to rest during the hot hours of the day, and reach Dublin by nightfall. Why do you smile?’

      ‘I smile at your notion of climate; but I never knew any man who had been once in Italy able to disabuse himself of the idea that there were three or four hours every summer day to be passed with closed shutters and iced drinks.’

      ‘Well, I believe I was thinking of a fiercer sun and a hotter soil than these. To return to my project: we can find means of posting, carriage and horses, in the village. I forget its name.’

      ‘I’ll take care of all that. At what hour will you start?’

      ‘I should say by six or seven. I shall not sleep; and I shall be all impatience till we are away.’

      ‘Well, is there anything else to be thought of?’

      ‘There is – that is, I have something on my mind, and I am debating with myself how far, on a half-hour’s acquaintance, I can make you a partner in it.’

      ‘I cannot help you by my advice. I can only say that if you like to trust me, I’ll know how to respect the confidence.’

      Walpole looked steadily and steadfastly at him, and the examination seemed to satisfy him, for he said, ‘I will trust you – not that the matter is a secret in any sense that involves consequences; but it is a thing that needs a little tact and discretion, a slight exercise of a light hand, which is what my friend Lockwood fails in. Now you could do it.’

      ‘If I can, I will. What is it?’

      ‘Well, the matter is this. I have written a few lines here, very illegibly and badly, as you may believe, for they were with my left hand; and besides having the letter conveyed to its address, I need a few words of explanation.’

      ‘The Titian Girl,’ muttered Joe, as though thinking aloud.

      ‘Why do you say so?’

      ‘Oh, it was easy enough to see her greater anxiety and uneasiness about you. There was an actual flash of jealousy across her features when Miss Kearney proposed coming up to see you.’

      ‘And was this remarked, think you?’

      ‘Only by me. I saw, and let her see I saw it, and we understood each other from that moment.’

      ‘I mustn’t let you mistake me. You are not to suppose that there is anything between Mademoiselle Kostalergi and myself. I knew a good deal about her father, and there were family circumstances in which I was once able to be of use; and I wished to let her know that if at any time she desired to communicate with me, I could procure an address, under which she could write with freedom.’

      ‘As for instance: “J. Atlee, 48 Old Square, Trinity College, Dublin.”’

      ‘Well, I did not think of that at the moment,’ said Walpole, smiling. ‘Now,’ continued he, ‘though I have written all this, it is so blotted and disgraceful generally – done with the left hand, and while in great pain – that I think it would be as well not to send the letter, but simply a message – ’

      Atlee nodded, and Walpole went on: ‘A message to say that I was wishing to write, but unable; and that if I had her permission, so soon as my fingers could hold a pen, to finish – yes, to finish that communication I had already begun, and if she felt there was no inconvenience in writing to me, under cover to your care, I should pledge myself to devote all my zeal and my best services to her interests.’

      ‘In fact, I am to lead her to suppose she ought to have the most implicit confidence in you, and to believe in me, because I say so.’

      ‘I do not exactly see that these are my instructions to you.’

      ‘Well, you certainly want to write to her.’

      ‘I don’t know that I do.’

      ‘At all events, you want her to write to you.’

      ‘You are nearer the mark now.’

      ‘That ought not to be very difficult to arrange. I’ll go down now and have a cup of tea, and I may, I hope, come up and see you again before bed-time.’

      ‘Wait one moment,’ cried Walpole, as the other was about to leave the room. ‘Do you see a small tray on that table yonder, with some trinkets? Yes, that is it. Well, will you do me the favour to choose something amongst them as your fee? Come, come, you know you are my doctor now, and I insist on this. There’s nothing of any value there, and you will have no misgivings.’

      ‘Am I to take it haphazard?’ asked Atlee.

      ‘Whatever you like,’ said the other indolently.

      ‘I have selected a ring,’ said Atlee, as he drew it on his finger.

      ‘Not an opal?’

      ‘Yes, it is an opal with brilliants round it.’

      ‘I’d rather you’d taken all the rest than that. Not that I ever wear it, but somehow it has a bit of memory attached to it!’

      ‘Do you know,’ said Atlee gravely, ‘you are adding immensely to the value I desired to see in it? I wanted


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