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money could make it. When we are wronged, not knowing we are wronged,
our loss is nothing. Eric should never give up his title and estates to
you, the son of an Irish peasant girl—his life should never be blighted
at the dying command of a cruel, and selfish, and sensual father. I
would not tell the truth.
“I have said that ten thousand times, Terry, and the years have gone on,
and you are both men. His majority comes in a few days; France is to be
his wife, the girl in Lincolnshire yours. I vowed I would not tell, and
I am telling. I have prayed passionate, rebellious prayers, wearied
Heaven with them, to know the right, and be given strength to do it.
That strength has been given to me at last—my duty is done. You know
the truth—how shamefully all your life long you have been wronged and
cheated. Here are the papers Lord Dynely left; I am prepared to repeat
the story in any court in England. All that seems easy, but—when I
think of Eric, it breaks my heart.”
Her voice died away in a choking sob. She knew so well Eric’s passionate
anger, his fierce rage and protest; how he would do battle to the death
with his interloper; how he would, in his stormy, selfish wrath, curse
the father and hate the mother. Hate her! Ay, his life long; your weak
and selfish men are good haters always. Why had she not held her
tongue?—how dared she speak?—what were the cowardly dying fears of ten
thousand fathers to his birthright? Was this her pretended love for him?
Let it end how it might he would never forgive her, never see her face
again. She knew what would follow as well as she knew that she sat here.
She placed a packet in Terry’s hand. He loosened his clasp of hers and
took it in dead silence. Even he, she thought in her bitter despair, was
turning against her already. And this is what it was to do one’s duty.
“There is no more to tell,” she said, in a stifled voice. “Go away,
Terry, and leave me alone.”
He arose, but lingeringly, and stood looking at her. In the deep
darkness that now filled the room he could see but the outline of her
figure and the white, rigid gleam of her face.
“I don’t know what to say yet,” he began, in a constrained voice, that
did not sound like Terry’s. “I feel stunned and stupefied. My head is in
a muddle. It is all so strange. You will give me to-night to think it
over—will you not?”
“What have I to do with it?” she answered, huskily. “All is in your own
hands now. You are master. You are Lord Dynely.”
“You are not angry with me?” he asked, wistfully, still hesitating.
It was a question he had asked her many times in his life, when her look
of half-concealed dislike had repelled and chilled him, and he had
wondered timidly what he had done to vex her. Its wistful, boyish pathos
and simplicity went to her heart now.
“Angry with you!” she said, with a sob. “Oh my Terry! you never gave me
cause for anger in all your life.”
“I am glad of that,” he said, simply; “I hope I never will. And, Lady
Dynely,” hesitating again, “my opinion cannot matter to you, of course;
but I hope you feel, I want you to feel, that I don’t blame you in all
this. I understand how you must have felt—it was too much to ask of any
mother—you would have been more than mortal to have acted as he
commanded you.”
She only looked up at him in the darkness with sad, hopeless eyes.
“You would have done it, Terry,” she said.
“No—I don’t know. I am not very heroic, and it requires heroism to do
these things. I am an awkward, blundering sort of fellow, not much like
Eric, but I think I could more easily die than deliberately wrong any
one I cared for to gratify myself. You know what I mean, Lady Dynely.
Don’t grieve too much over this; I can’t bear to see you in trouble. All
will go well yet. Eric—Eric does not know, of course?”
“Not yet! oh, not yet! That will be the hardest to bear of all.”
He knelt on one knee, and for the first time in all his life touched his
lips to her cheek.
“Mother,” he said, and love made Terry’s voice like an angel’s,
“mother, the best friend, the truest, man ever had, don’t grieve. All
will go well. To-night I will think it over—to-morrow we will make an
end of it forever.”
Then he arose softly and left her.
CHAPTER IX.
THINKING IT OUT.
That night, for the first time in the four-and-twenty years of his life,
Terry Dennison sat up until the “wee sma’ hours ayont the twal,” and
thought. Thought!—of all novel experiences, this surely was the most
novel in this supremely thoughtless young man’s life. The good or the
evil of Terry’s life, and there had been much of both, had alike been
unpremeditated; in all things he had acted naturally and involuntarily,
and without thinking of it beforehand. Now in a moment he was called
upon to settle the destinies of four lives—his own, Eric’s, Lady
Dynely’s and little Crystal’s. A sort of smile came over his face as he
thought of it—he the arbitrator of brilliant Eric’s whole future
life—he, Terry.
But the smile quickly faded as he entered the room and laid the little
packet her ladyship had given him down upon the table, and looked at the
yellow paper, the faded writing. The father who had wronged him so
greatly, who had so irreparably wronged his mother, and written
this—had striven to do him justice when that justice could no longer
annoy himself. He had served Satan all his life, and would make his
peace with Heaven at the last, at any sacrifice to those left behind. He
had lived a life of sin and sensualism, and would offer the dregs of
that bad life to his Creator. There was more a feeling of disgust in
Terry’s breast than any other as he looked at the faded writing and
thought of him who had written it, dust and ashes years ago.
“And his works do follow him!”
He sat down and looked blankly before him. He was Lord Dynely’s elder
son; no longer plain, impecunious Terry Dennison, a dependant on a
great lady’s bounty, but Viscount Dynely, with estates and mansions in
half a dozen counties, a villa at Ryde, a rent-roll as long as his
lineage. And he could make Crystal, Lady Dynely. His face flushed for a
moment at that. All that might be spread before him, a glittering vista.
He was one of the least mercenary of men, but he had lived too long in
the world not to know the great and utter change it would make in his
life. One of the oldest titles in the United Kingdom, one of the noblest
incomes—that is what he was called upon to claim or resign to-night.
For a moment, as he thought of it, his heart beat quick. He was very
human after all, and this was no child’s toy he must lay down or take
up. Men called Terry Dennison a good fellow—rather a simple soul,
perhaps, but a good fellow all the same. He had few enemies and many
friends, but in their liking for him there was more or less blended a
slight shade of contempt. He was one of them, but not of them. His
manners and habits were primitive to a degree. He wasn’t a “plunger,” as
they were to a man; didn’t drink, to speak of; didn’t gamble at all;
hunted down no woman, married or single, to her own destruction. He was
behind his age in all these things, in a most remarkable degree. Still
men liked him, and laughed with Terry, and at Terry, and never carried
their laughter too far. He was the soul of good-nature, but there was
that in his six feet of stature, his trained muscles, and scientific
British way of “hitting out straight from the shoulder,” on occasions,
that commanded respect. In the annual battles between “Town and Gown,”
at Oxford, Dennison had ever been a host in himself. In all athletic and
field sports he stood his own with the best of them. He was a “mighty
hunter before the lord,” down in the shires; but in the ball-room and
the boudoir, at court and at courting, Terry was decidedly a failure. He
never lost his heart for barronne or ballerina, duchess or actress; he
ran away with no man’s wife, wasn’t a fascinating sinner of any sort. He
had his failings, they were many—he had his virtues, they were many
too, and generosity stood chief among them. To give pain to a woman, to
any woman—to a woman he loved and venerated, as he did Lady Dynely,
would have been impossible to him; and in asserting this claim before
the world he would simply break Lady Dynely’s heart.
Wrong had been done. Yes; but, to Terry’s mind, hardly by her. She loved
her handsome son, as few sons ever deserve to be loved, and Eric
Hamilton certainly did not. How, then, loving him, could she
deliberately, and at the command of a selfish and cowardly husband, hand
over his birthright to a stranger, and blight his whole life? Lord
Dynely had asked too much; it was not in frail human nature to do it. He
had been wronged, but not by her. Why, she might have left him all his
life in that Irish cabin by the wild Galway coast, to drag out the
wretched, unlettered life of a peasant. Who then would have been the
wiser? But she had come for him, and in all things done by him as her
own son. And now, at last, she had told him all, and, at all cost to
herself, was ready to prove the truth of her words. Then his thoughts
drifted to Eric. He saw Eric’s rage and fury as plainly as he saw the
paper on the table, the blue eyes lurid with rage, the fair, womanish
face crimson with anger and rebellion. Eric would do battle to the
death, would contest every inch of the ground. The sympathy would be
with Eric; possession, the “nine points of the law,” would be with Eric;
the glory and the power were Eric’s;—what chance would he stand? There
would be an endless chancery suit, the kingdom would ring with the
scandal, the informal Irish marriage would be contested; perhaps in the
eye of the law, proven no marriage at all. And, meantime, Lady Dynely
would have broken her heart at the shame and publicity, and ended her
part of the tragedy. No, had he been ever so inclined, as selfishly bent
on his own interests as Eric himself, the thing was impossible on the
face of it. But he was not. It was really very little of a sacrifice to
him. He had no ambition whatever—he was, I have said, a most
commonplace young man. Life as he held it contented him. With his
commission, his five hundred a year, and Crystal for his wife, the world
might wag; he asked no more of fate.
With a long-drawn breath he broke from his reverie; with a motion of his
hand he seemed to dismiss the whole thing at once and forever.
He lit a cigar, opened the little packet
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