<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIV" id="CHAPTER_XIV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
<p class="chapterhead">"ARE WE TO CALL HIM POPENJOY?"</p>
<p><span class="firstwords">The</span> news which he had heard did afflict Lord George very much.
A day or two after the dinner-party in Berkeley Square he found Mr.
Knox, his brother's agent, and learned from him that Miss Houghton's
story was substantially true. The Marquis had informed his man of
business that an heir had been born to him, but had not communicated
the fact to any one of the family! This omission, in such a family,
was, to Lord George's thinking, so great a crime on the part of his
brother, as to make him doubt whether he could ever again have
fraternal relations with a man who so little knew his duty. When
Mr. Knox showed him the letter his brow became very black. He
did not often forget himself,—was not often so carried away by any
feeling as to be in danger of doing so. But on this occasion even he<!-- Page 86 -->
was so moved as to be unable to control his words. "An Italian brat?
Who is to say how it was born?"</p>
<p>"The Marquis, my Lord, would not do anything like that," said
Mr. Knox, very seriously.</p>
<p>Then Lord George was ashamed of himself, and blushed up to the
roots of his hair. He had hardly himself known what he had meant.
But he mistrusted an Italian widow, because she was an Italian, and
because she was a widow, and he mistrusted the whole connexion,
because there had been in it none of that honourable openness which
should, he thought, characterise all family doings in such a family as
that of the Germains. "I don't know of what kind you mean," he
said, shuffling, and knowing that he shuffled. "I don't suppose my
brother would do anything really wrong. But it's a blot to the
family—a terrible blot."</p>
<p>"She is a lady of good family,—a Marchese," said Mr. Knox.</p>
<p>"An Italian Marchese!" said Lord George, with that infinite contempt
which an English nobleman has for foreign nobility not of the
highest order.</p>
<p>He had learnt that Miss Houghton's story was true, and was certainly
very unhappy. It was not at all that he had pictured to
himself the glory of being himself the Marquis of Brotherton after his
brother's death; nor was it only the disappointment which he felt as
to any possible son of his own, though on that side he did feel the
blow. The reflection which perplexed him most was the consciousness
that he must quarrel with his brother, and that after such a quarrel
he would become nobody in the world. And then, added to this, was
the sense of family disgrace. He would have been quite content with
his position had he been left master of the house at Manor Cross, even
without any of his brother's income wherewith to maintain the house.
But now he would only be his wife's husband, the Dean's son-in-law,
living on their money, and compelled by circumstances to adapt
himself to them. He almost thought that had he known that he
would be turned out of Manor Cross, he would not have married.
And then, in spite of his disclaimer to Mr. Knox, he was already
suspicious of some foul practice. An heir to the title and property, to
all the family honours of the Germains, had suddenly burst upon
him, twelve months,—for aught that he knew, two or three years,—after
the child's birth! Nobody had been informed when the child
was born, or in what circumstances,—except that the mother was an
Italian widow! What evidence on which an Englishman might rely
could possibly be forthcoming from such a country as Italy! Poor
Lord George, who was himself as honest as the sun, was prepared to
believe all evil things of people of whom he knew nothing! Should
his brother die,—and his brother's health was bad,—what steps should
he take? Would it be for him to accept this Italian brat as the heir
to everything, or must he ruin himself by a pernicious lawsuit?<!-- Page 87 -->
Looking forward he saw nothing but family misery and disgrace, and
he saw, also, inevitable difficulties with which he knew himself to be
incapable to cope. "It is true," he said to his wife very gloomily,
when he first met her after his interview with Mr. Knox.</p>
<p>"What Miss Houghton said? I felt sure it was true, directly she
told me."</p>
<p>"I don't know why you should have felt sure, merely on her word,
as to a thing so monstrous as this is. You don't seem to see that it
concerns yourself."</p>
<p>"No; I don't. It doesn't concern me at all, except as it makes you
unhappy." Then there was a pause for a moment, during which she
crept close up to him, in a manner that had now become usual with her.
"Why do you think I married you?" she said. He was too unhappy
to answer her pleasantly,—too much touched by her sweetness to
answer her unpleasantly; and so he said nothing. "Certainly not
with any hope that I might become Marchioness of Brotherton.
Whatever may have made me do such a thing, I can assure you that
that had nothing to do with it."</p>
<p>"Can't you look forward? Don't you suppose that you may have
a son?" Then she buried her face upon his shoulder. "And if so,
would it not be better that a child so born should be the heir, than
some Italian baby, of whom no one knows anything?"</p>
<p>"If you are unhappy, George, I shall be unhappy. But for myself
I will not affect to care anything. I don't want to be a Marchioness.
I only want to see you without a frown on your brow. To tell the
truth, if you didn't mind it, I should care nothing about your brother
and his doings. I would make a joke of this Marchese, who, Miss
Houghton says, is a puckered-faced old woman. Miss Houghton seems
to care a great deal more about it than I do."</p>
<p>"It cannot be a subject for a joke." He was almost angry at the
idea of the wife of the head of the family being made a matter of
laughter. That she should be reprobated, hated,—cursed, if necessary,—was
within the limits of family dignity; but not that she should become
a joke to those with whom she had unfortunately connected herself.
When he had finished speaking to her she could not but feel that he
was displeased, and could not but feel also the injustice of such displeasure.
Of course she had her own little share in the general
disappointments. But she had striven before him to make nothing of
it, in order that he might be quite sure that she had married him—not
with any idea of rank or wealth, but for himself alone. She had
made light of the family misfortune, in order that he might be
relieved. And yet he was angry with her! This was unreasonable.
How much had she done for him! Was she not striving every hour
of her life to love him, and, at any rate, to comfort him with the
conviction that he was loved? Was she not constant in her assurance
to herself that her whole life should be devoted to him? And yet he<!-- Page 88 -->
was surly to her simply because his brother had disgraced himself!
When she was left alone she sat down and cried, and then consoled
herself by remembering that her father was coming to her.</p>
<p>It had been arranged that the last days of February should be spent
by Lord George with his mother and sisters at Cross Hall, and that the
Dean should run up to town for a week. Lord George went down to
Brotherton by a morning train, and the Dean came up on the same
afternoon. But the going and coming were so fixed that the two men
met at the deanery. Lord George had determined that he would
speak fully to the Dean respecting his brother. He was always
conscious of the Dean's low birth, remembering, with some slight
discomfort, the stable-keeper and the tallow-chandler; and he was a
little inclined to resent what he thought to be a disposition on the
part of the Dean to domineer. But still the Dean was a practical,
sagacious man, in whom he could trust; and the assistance of such a
friend was necessary to him. Circumstances had bound him to the
Dean, and he was a man not prone to bind himself to many men. He
wanted and yet feared the confidence of friendship. He lunched
with the Dean, and then told his story. "You know," he said, "that
my brother is married?"</p>
<p>"Of course, we all heard that."</p>
<p>"He was married more than twelve months before he informed us
that he was going to be married."</p>
<p>"No!"</p>
<p>"It was so."</p>
<p>"Do you mean, then, that he told you a falsehood?"</p>
<p>"His letter to me was very strange, though I did not think much of
it at the time. He said, 'I am to be married'—naming no day."</p>
<p>"That certainly was—a falsehood, as, at that time, he was
married."</p>
<p>"I do not know that harsh words will do any good."</p>
<p>"Nor I. But it is best, George, that you and I should be quite
plain in our words to each other. Placed as he was, and as you were,
he was bound to tell you of his marriage as soon as he knew it himself.
You had waited till he was between forty and fifty, and, of course, he
must feel that what you would do would depend materially upon what
he did."</p>
<p>"It didn't at all."</p>
<p>"And then, having omitted to do his duty, he screens his fault by
a——positive misstatement, when his intended return home makes
further concealment impossible."</p>
<p>"All that, however, is of little moment," said Lord George, who
could not but see that the Dean was already complaining that he had
been left without information which he ought to have possessed when
he was giving his daughter to a probable heir to the title. "There is
more than that."<!-- Page 89 --></p>
<p>"What more?"</p>
<p>"He had a son born more than twelve months since."</p>
<p>"Who says so?" exclaimed the Dean, jumping up from his chair.</p>
<p>"I heard it first,—or rather Mary did,—in common conversation,
from an old friend. I then learned the truth from Knox. Though he
had told none of us, he had told Knox."</p>
<p>"And Knox has known it all through?"</p>
<p>"No, only lately. But he knows it now. Knox supposes that they
are coming home so that the people about may be reconciled to the
idea of his having an heir. There will be less trouble, he thinks, if
the boy comes now, than if he were never heard of till he was ten or
fifteen years old,—or perhaps till after my brother's death."</p>
<p>"There may be trouble enough still," said the Dean, almost with
a gasp.</p>
<p>The Dean, it was clear, did not believe in the boy. Lord George
remembered that he himself had expressed disbelief, and that
Mr. Knox had almost rebuked him. "I have now told you all the
facts," said Lord George, "and have told them as soon as I knew
them."</p>
<p>"You are as true as the sun," said the Dean, putting his hand on
his son-in-law's shoulder. "You will be honest. But you must not
trust in the honesty of others. Poor Mary!"</p>
<p>"She does not feel it in the least;—will not even interest herself
about it."</p>
<p>"She will feel it some day. She is no more than a child now. I
feel it, George;—I feel it; and you ought to feel it."</p>
<p>"I feel his ill-treatment of myself."</p>
<p>"What—in not telling you? That is probably no more than a
small part of a wide scheme. We must find out the truth of all
this."</p>
<p>"I don't know what there is to find out," said Lord George,
hoarsely.</p>
<p>"Nor do I; but I do feel that there must be something. Think of
your brother's position and standing,—of his past life and his present
character! This is no time now for being mealy-mouthed. When
such a man as he appears suddenly with a foreign woman and a foreign
child, and announces one as his wife and the other as his heir, having
never reported the existence of one or of the other, it is time that
some enquiry should be made. I, at any rate, shall make enquiry.
I shall think myself bound to do so on behalf of Mary." Then
they parted as confidential friends do part, but each with some feeling
antagonistic to the other. The Dean, though he had from his heart
acknowledged that Lord George was as honest as the sun, still felt
himself to be aggrieved by the Germain family, and doubted whether
his son-in-law would be urgent enough and constant in hostility to
his own brother. He feared that Lord George would be weak, feeling;<!-- Page 90 -->
as regarded himself, that he would fight till he had spent his last
penny, as long as there was a chance that, by fighting, a grandson of
his own might be made Marquis of Brotherton. He, at any rate,
understood his own heart in the matter, and knew what it was
that he wanted. But Lord George, though he had found himself
compelled to tell everything to the Dean, still dreaded the Dean. It
was not in accordance with his principles that he should be leagued
against his brother with such a man as Dean Lovelace, and he could
see that the Dean was thinking of his own possible grandchildren,
whereas he himself was thinking only of the family of Germain.</p>
<p>He found his mother and sister at the small house,—the house at
which Farmer Price was living only a month or two since. No doubt it
was the recognised dower house, but nevertheless there was still about it
a flavour of Farmer Price. A considerable sum of money had been spent
upon it, which had come from a sacrifice of a small part of the capital
belonging to the three sisters, with an understanding that it should
be repaid out of the old lady's income. But no one, except the old
lady herself, anticipated such repayment. All this had created trouble
and grief, and the family, which was never gay, was now more sombre
than ever. When the further news was told to Lady Sarah it almost
crushed her. "A child!" she said in a horror-stricken whisper, turning
quite pale, and looking as though the crack of doom were coming
at once. "Do you believe it?" Then her brother explained the
grounds he had for believing it. "And that it was born in wedlock
twelve months before the fact was announced to us."</p>
<p>"It has never been announced to us," said Lord George.</p>
<p>"What are we to do? is my mother to be told? She ought to know
at once; and yet how can we tell her? What shall you do about the
Dean?"</p>
<p>"He knows."</p>
<p>"You told him?"</p>
<p>"Yes; I thought it best."</p>
<p>"Well,—perhaps. And yet it is terrible that any man so distant
from us should have our secrets in his keeping."</p>
<p>"As Mary's father, I thought it right that he should know."</p>
<p>"I have always liked the Dean personally," said Lady Sarah.
"There is a manliness about him which has recommended him, and
having a full hand he knows how to open it. But he isn't——; he
isn't quite——"</p>
<p>"No; he isn't quite——," said Lord George, also hesitating to
pronounce the word which was understood by both of them.</p>
<p>"You must tell my mother, or I must. It will be wrong to withhold
it. If you like, I will tell Susanna and Amelia."</p>
<p>"I think you had better tell my mother," said Lord George; "she
will take it more easily from you. And then, if she breaks down, you
can control her better." That Lady Sarah should have the doing of any<!-- Page 91 -->
difficult piece of work was almost a matter of course. She did tell
the tale to her mother, and her mother did break down. The Marchioness,
when she found that an Italian baby had been born twelve
months before the time which she had been made to believe was the
date of the marriage, took at once to her bed. What a mass of
horrors was coming on them! Was she to go and see a woman who
had had a baby under such circumstances? Or was her own eldest son,
the very, very Marquis of Brotherton, to be there with his wife, and
was she not to go and see them? Through it all her indignation
against her son had not been hot as had been theirs against their
brother. He was her eldest son,—the very Marquis,—and ought to be
allowed to do almost anything he pleased. Had it not been impossible
for her to rebel against Lady Sarah she would have obeyed her son in
that matter of the house. And, even now, it was not against her son
that her heart was bitter, but against the woman, who, being an
Italian, and having been married, if married, without the knowledge
of the family, presumed to say that her child was legitimate. Had
her eldest son brought over with him to the halls of his ancestors an
Italian mistress that would, of course, have been very bad, but it
would not have been so bad as this. Nothing could be so bad as this.
"Are we to call him Popenjoy?" she asked with a gurgling voice from
amidst the bed clothes. Now the eldest son of the Marquis of Brotherton
would, as a matter of course, be Lord Popenjoy, if legitimate.
"Certainly we must," said Lady Sarah, authoritatively, "unless the
marriage should be disproved."</p>
<p>"Poor dear little thing," said the Marchioness, beginning to feel
some pity for the odious stranger as soon as she was told that he
really was to be called Popenjoy. Then the Ladies Susanna and
Amelia were informed, and the feeling became general throughout the
household that the world must be near its end. What were they all
to do when he should come? That was the great question. He had
begun by declaring that he did not want to see any of them. He had
endeavoured to drive them away from the neighbourhood, and had
declared that neither his mother nor his sisters would "get on" with
his wife. All the ladies at Cross Hall had a very strong opinion that
this would turn out to be true, but still they could not bear to think
that they should be living as it were next door to the head of the
family, and never see him. A feeling began to creep over all of
them, except Lady Sarah, that it would have been better for them
to have obeyed the head of the family and gone elsewhere. But
it was too late now. The decision had been made, and they must
remain.</p>
<p>Lady Sarah, however, never gave way for a minute. "George,"
she said very solemnly, "I have thought a great deal about this, and
I do not mean to let him trample upon us."</p>
<p>"It is all very sad," said Lord George.<!-- Page 92 --></p>
<p>"Yes, indeed. If I know myself, I think I should be the last person
to attribute evil motives to my elder brother, or to stand in his way
in aught that he might wish to do in regard to the family. I know all
that is due to him. But there is a point beyond which even that
feeling cannot carry me. He has disgraced himself." Lord George
shook his head. "And he is doing all he can to bring disgrace upon
us. It has always been my wish that he should marry."</p>
<p>"Of course, of course."</p>
<p>"It is always desirable that the eldest son should marry. The heir to
the property then knows that he is the heir, and is brought up to understand
his duties. Though he had married a foreigner, much as I
should regret it, I should be prepared to receive her as a sister; it is
for him to please himself; but in marrying a foreigner he is more
specially bound to let it be known to all the world, and to have everything
substantiated, than if he had married an English girl in her own
parish church. As it is, we must call on her, because he says that she
is his wife. But I shall tell him that he is acting very wrongly by us
all, especially by you, and most especially by his own child, if he does
not take care that such evidence of his marriage is forthcoming as shall
satisfy all the world."</p>
<p>"He won't listen to you."</p>
<p>"I think I can make him, as far as that goes; at any rate I do not
mean to be afraid of him. Nor must you."</p>
<p>"I hardly know whether I will even see him."</p>
<p>"Yes; you must see him. If we are to be expelled from the family
house, let it be his doing, and not ours. We have to take care, George,
that we do not make a single false step. We must be courteous to
him, but above all we must not be afraid of him."</p>
<p>In the meantime the Dean went up to London, meaning to spend a
week with his daughter in her new house. They had both intended
that this should be a period of great joy to them. Plans had been
made as to the theatres and one or two parties, which were almost as
exciting to the Dean as to his daughter. It was quite understood by
both of them that the Dean up in London was to be a man of pleasure,
rather than a clergyman. He had no purpose of preaching either at
St. Paul's or the Abbey. He was going to attend no Curates' Aid
Society or Sons of the Clergy. He intended to forget Mr. Groschut,
to ignore Dr. Pountney, and have a good time. That had been his
intention, at least till he saw Lord George at the deanery. But now
there were serious thoughts in his mind. When he arrived Mary had
for the time got nearly rid of the incubus of the Italian Marchioness
with her baby. She was all smiles as she kissed him. But he could
not keep himself from the great subject.</p>
<p>"This is terrible news, my darling," he said at once.</p>
<p>"Do you think so, papa?"</p>
<p>"Certainly I do."<!-- Page 93 --></p>
<p>"I don't see why Lord Brotherton should not have a son and heir
as well as anybody else."</p>
<p>"He is quite entitled to have a son and heir,—one may almost say
more entitled than anyone else, seeing that he has got so much to
leave to him,—but on that very account he is more bound than anyone
else to let all the world feel sure that his declared son and heir is absolutely
his son and heir."</p>
<p>"He couldn't be so vile as that, papa!"</p>
<p>"God forbid that I should say that he could. It may be that he
considers himself married, though the marriage would not be valid
here. Maybe he is married, and that yet the child is not legitimate."
Mary could not but blush as her father spoke to her thus plainly.
"All we do know is that he wrote to his own brother declaring that
he was about to be married twelve months after the birth of the child
whom he now expects us to recognise as the heir to the title. I for
one am not prepared to accept his word without evidence, and I shall
have no scruple in letting him know that such evidence will be
wanted."</p>
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