<h3><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XL" id="CHAPTER_XL"></SPAN>CHAPTER XL.</h3>
<p> </p>
<p>John Tatham had in vain attempted to persuade Elinor
to come to his house, to dine there in comfort—he
was going out himself—so that at least in this time of
excitement and trouble she might have the careful
service and admirable comfort of his well-managed
house. Elinor preferred her favourite lodgings and a
cup of tea to all the luxuries of Halkin Street. And
she was fit for no more consultations that night. She
had many, many things to think of, and some new
which as yet she barely comprehended. The rooms in
Ebury Street were small, and they were more or less
dingy, as such rooms are; but they were comfortable
enough, and had as much of home to Elinor as repeated
visits there with all her belongings could give them.
The room in which she slept was next to that in which
her boy had usually slept. That was enough to make
it no strange place. And I need not say that it became
the scene of many discussions during the few days that
followed. The papers by this time were full of the
strange trial which was coming on: the romance of
commercial life and ruin—the guilty man who had been
absent so long, enjoying his ill-gotten gains, and who
now was dragged back into the light to give an account
of himself—and of other guilt perhaps less black than
his own, yet dreadful enough to hear of. The story of
the destroyed books was a most remarkable and picturesque
incident in the narrative. The leading papers
looked up their own account of the facts given at the
time, and pointed out how evidently justified by the
new facts made known to the public was the theory
they had themselves given forth. As these theories,
however, were very different, and as all claimed to be
right, perhaps the conclusion was less certain than this
announcement gave warrant to believe. But each and
all promised "revelations" of the most surprising
kind—involving some of the highest aristocracy, the
democratic papers said—bringing to light an exciting
story of the private relations between husband and
wife, said those of society, and revealing a piquant
chapter of social history hushed up at the time. It
was a modest print indeed that contented itself with
the statement that its readers would find a romance of
real life involved in the trial which was about to take
place. Elinor did not, fortunately, see all these comments.
The <i>Times</i> and the <i>Morning Post</i> were dignified
and reticent, and she did not read, and was indeed
scarcely cognisant of the existence of most of the
others. But the faintest reference to the trial was
enough, it need hardly be said, to make the blood boil
in her veins.</p>
<p>It was a curious thing in her state of mind, and with
the feelings she had towards her husband's family, that
one of the first things she did on establishing herself in
her Ebury Street rooms, was to look for an old "Peerage"
which had lain for several years she remembered
on a certain shelf. Genteel lodgings in Ebury Street
which did not possess somewhere an old "Peerage"
would be out of the world indeed. She found it in the
same corner as of old, where she had noted it so often
and avoided it as if it had been a serpent; but now the
first thing she did, as soon as her tray was brought her,
and all necessary explanations given, and the door shut,
was to take the book furtively from its place, almost as
if she were afraid of what she should see. What a list
there was of sons of Lord St. Serf! some she had
never known, who died young: and Reginald in India,
and Hal, who was so kind—what a good laugh he had,
she remembered, not a joyless cackle like Mariamne's,
a good natural laugh, and a kind light in his eyes:
and he had been kind. She could remember ever so
many things, nothings, things that made a little difference
in the dull, dull cloudy sky of a neglected wife.
Poor Hal! and he too was gone, and St. Serf dying,
and<span class="norewrap">——</span> Pippo the heir!—Pippo was perhaps, for any
thing she knew, Lord Lomond now.</p>
<p>To say that this did not startle Elinor, did not make
her heart beat, did not open new complications and
vistas in life, would be a thing impossible. Pippo
Lord Lomond! Pippo, whom she had feared to expose
to his father's influence, whom she had kept apart, who
did not know anything about himself except that he
was her son—had she kept and guarded the boy thus
in the very obscurity of life, in the stillest and most
protected circumstances, only to plunge him suddenly
at last, without preparation, without warning, into the
fiery furnace of temptation, into a region where he
might pardonably (perhaps) put himself beyond her
influence, beyond her guidance? Poor Elinor! and
yet she was not wholly to be pitied either. For her
heart was fired by the thought of her boy's elevation
in spite of herself. It did not occur to her that such
an elevation for him meant something also for her.
That view of the case she did not take into consideration
for a moment. Nay, she did not think of it.
But that Pippo should be Lord Lomond went through
her like an arrow—like an arrow that gave a wound,
acute and sharp, yet no pain, if such a thing could be
said. That he should discover his father had been the
danger before her all his life, but if he must find out that
he had a father that was a way in which it might not be
all pain. I do not pretend that she was very clear in
all these thoughts. Indeed, she was not clear at all.
John Tatham, knowing but one side, had begun to
think vaguely of Elinor what Elinor thought of her
mother, that her mind was not quite as of old, not so
bright nor so vivid, not so clear in coming to a conclusion;
had he known everything he might not have been
so sure even on that point. But then had he known
everything that Elinor knew, and been aware of what
it was which Elinor had been summoned by all the
force of old fidelity and the honour of her name to do,
John would have been too much horrified to have been
able to form an opinion. No, poor Elinor was not at
all clear in her thoughts—less clear than ever after these
revelations—the way before her seemed dark in whatever
way she looked at it, complications were round her
on every side. She had instinctively, without a word
said, given up that idea of flight. Who was it that
said the heir to a peerage could not be hid? John
had said it, she remembered, and John was always
right. If she was to take him away to the uttermost
end of the earth, they would seek him out and find
him. And then there was—his father, who had known
all the time, had known and never disturbed her<span class="norewrap">——</span>No
wonder that poor Elinor's thoughts were mixed
and complicated. She walked up and down the room,
not thinking, but letting crowds and flights of thoughts
like birds fly through her mind; no longer clear indeed
as she had been wont to be, no longer coming to
sudden, sharp conclusions, admitting possibilities of
which Elinor once upon a time would never have
thought.</p>
<p>And day by day as he saw her, John Tatham understood
her less and less. He did not know what she
meant, what she was going to do, what were her sentiments
towards her husband, what were her intentions
towards her son. He had found out a great deal about
the case, merely as a case, and it began to be clear to
him where Elinor's part came in. Elinor Compton
could not have appeared on her husband's behalf, and
whether there might not arise a question whether,
being now his wife, her evidence could be taken on
what had happened before she was his wife, was by no
means sure—"Why didn't they call your mother?"
John said, as Mrs. Dennistoun also had said—but he
did not at all understand, how could he? the dismay
that came over Elinor, and the "Not for the world,"
which came from her lips. He had come in to see her
in the morning as he went down to his chambers, on
the very morning when Pippo, quite unexpected and
also not at all desired, was arriving at Euston Square.</p>
<p>"It would have been much better," he said, "in
every way if they had called your mother—who of
course must know exactly what you know, Elinor, in
respect to this matter<span class="norewrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>"No," said Elinor with dry lips. "She knows nothing.
She—calculates back by little incidents—she
does not remember: I—do<span class="norewrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>"That's natural, I suppose," said John, with an impatient
sigh and a half-angry look. "Still—my
aunt<span class="norewrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>"Would do no good at all: you may believe me,
John. Don't let us speak of this any more. I know
what has to be done: my mother would twist herself
up among her calculations—about Alick Hudson's examination
and I know not what. Whereas I—there
is nothing, nothing more to be said. I thought I
could escape, and it is your doing if I now see that I
cannot escape. I can but hope that Providence will
protect my boy. He is at school, where they have little
time for reading the papers. He may never even
see—or at least if he does he may think it is another
Compton—some one whom he never heard of<span class="norewrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>"And how if he becomes Lord Lomond, as I said,
before the secret is out?"</p>
<p>"Oh, John," cried Elinor, wringing her hands—"don't,
don't torment me with that idea now—let only this
be past and then: Oh, I see, I see—I am not a fool—I
perceive that I cannot hide him as you say if that happens.
But oh, John, for pity's sake let this be over
first! Let us not hurry everything on at the same
time. He is at school. What do schoolboys care for
the newspapers, especially for trials in the law courts?
Oh, let this be over first! A boy at school—and he
need never know<span class="norewrap">——</span>"</p>
<p>It was at this moment that a hansom drew up, and a
rattling peal came at the door. Hansoms are not rare
in Ebury Street, and how can one tell in these small
houses if the peal is at one's door or the next? Elinor
was not disturbed. She paid no attention. She expected
no one, she was afraid of nothing new for the
present. Surely, surely, as she said, there was enough
for the present. It did not seem possible that any new
incident should come now.</p>
<p>"I do not want to torment you, Elinor—you may
imagine I would be the last—I would only save you if
I could from what must be<span class="norewrap">——</span> What! what? who's
this?—<span class="smallcaps">Philip!</span> the boy!"</p>
<p>The door had burst open with an eager, impatient
hand upon it, and there stood upon the threshold, in
all the mingled excitement and fatigue of his night
journey, pale, sleep in his eyes, yet happy expectation,
exultation, the certainty of open arms to receive him,
and cries of delight—the boy. He stood for a second
looking into the strange yet familiar room. John
Tatham had sprung to his feet and stood startled, hesitating,
while young Philip's eyes, noting him with a
glance, flashed past him to the other more important,
more beloved, the mother whom he had expected to
rush towards him with an outcry of joy.</p>
<p>And Elinor sat still in her chair, struck dumb, grown
pale like a ghost, her eyes wide open, her lips apart.
The sight of the boy, her beloved child, her pride and
delight, was as a horrible spectacle to Elinor. She
stared at him like one horrified, and neither moved nor
spoke.</p>
<p>"Elinor!" cried John, terrified, "there's nothing
wrong. Don't you see it's Philip? Boy, what do you
mean by giving her such a fright? She's fainting, I
believe."</p>
<p>"I—give her a fright!" cried, half in anguish, half
in indignation, the astonished boy.</p>
<p>"No, I'm not fainting. Pippo! there's nothing
wrong—at home?" Elinor cried, holding out her hand
to him—coming to herself, which meant only awakening
to the horror of a danger far more present than she
had ever dreamt, and to the sudden sight not of her
boy, but of that Nemesis which she had so carefully
prepared for herself, and which had been awaiting her
for years. She was not afraid of anything wrong at
home. It was the first shield she could find in the
shock which had almost paralysed her, to conceal her
terror and distress at the sight of him from the astonished,
disappointed, mortified, and angry boy.</p>
<p>"I thought," he said, "you would have been glad to
see me, mother! No, there's nothing wrong at home."</p>
<p>"Thank heaven for that!" cried Elinor, feeling herself
more and more a hypocrite as she recovered from
the shock. "Pippo, I was saying this moment that
you were at school. The words were scarcely off my
lips—and then to see you in a moment, standing
there."</p>
<p>"I thought," he repeated again, trembling with the
disappointment and mortification, wounded in his
cheerful, confident affection, and in his young pride,
the monarch of all he surveyed—"I thought you would
have been pleased to see me, mother!"</p>
<p>"Of course," said John, cheerfully, "your mother is
glad to see you: and so am I, you impetuous boy,
though you don't take the trouble of shaking hands
with me. He wants to be kissed and coddled, Elinor,
and I must be off to my chambers. But I should like
to know first what's up, boy? You've got something
to say."</p>
<p>"Pippo, what is it, my dearest? You did give me a
great fright, and I am still nervous a little. Tell me,
Pippo; something has brought you—your uncle John
is right. I can see it in your eyes. You've got something
to tell me!"</p>
<p>The tired and excited boy looked from one to another,
two faces both full of a veiled but intense anxiety,
looking at him as if what they expected was no
good news. He burst out into a big, hoarse laugh, the
only way to keep himself from crying. "You don't
even seem to remember anything about it," he cried,
flinging himself down in the nearest chair; "and for
my part I don't care any longer whether any one knows
or not."</p>
<p>And Elinor, whose thoughts were on such different
things—whose whole mind was absorbed in the question
of what he could have heard about the trial, about
his father, about the new and strange future before
him—gazed at him with eyes that seemed hollowed out
all round with devouring anxiety. "What is it?" she
said, "what is it? For God's sake tell me! What
have you heard?"</p>
<p>It goes against all prejudices to imagine that John
Tatham, a man who never had had a child, an old
bachelor not too tolerant of youth, should have divined
the boy better than his mother. But he did, perhaps
because he was a lawyer, and accustomed to investigate
the human countenance and eye. He saw that Philip
was full of something of his own, immediately interesting
to himself; and he cast about quickly in his mind
what it could be. Not that the boy was heir to a peerage:
he would never have come like <i>this</i> to announce
<i>that</i>: but something that Philip was cruelly disappointed
his mother did not remember. This passed
through John's mind like a flash, though it takes a
long time to describe. "Ah," he said, "I begin to
divine. Was not there something about a—scholarship?"</p>
<p>"Pippo!" cried Elinor, lighting up great lamps of
relief, of sudden ease and quick coming joy, in her
brightened eyes and face. "My boy! you've won
your battle! You've got it, you've got it, Pippo!
And your foolish, stupid mother that thought for a moment
you could rush to her like this with anything but
good news!"</p>
<p>It took a few moments to soothe Pippo down, and
mend his wounded feelings. "I began to think nobody
cared," he said, "and that made me that I didn't
care myself. I'd rather Musgrave had got it, if it had
not been to please you all. And you never seemed so
much as to remember—only Uncle John!" he added
after a moment, with a half scorn which made John
laugh at the never-failing candour of youth.</p>
<p>"Only the least important of all," he said. "It was
atrocious of the ladies, Philip. Shake hands, my boy,
I owe you five pounds for the scholarship. And now
I'll take myself off, which will please you most of all."</p>
<p>He went down-stairs laughing to himself all the way,
but got suddenly quite grave as he stepped outside—whether
because he remembered that it does not become
a Q.C. and M.P. to laugh in the street, or for
other causes, it does not become us to attempt to say.</p>
<p>And Elinor meanwhile made it up to her boy amply,
and while her heart ached with the question what to do
with him, how to dispose of him during those dreadful
following days, behaved herself as if her head too was
half turned with joy and exultation, only tempered by
the regret that Musgrave, who had worked so hard,
could not have got the scholarship too.</p>
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