Bob was mounting now; the hour was late for him to be abroad and work waited him in the morning.
"Good-night, Tristram," he said, as he settled in his saddle.
"Good-night. And, Bob, if by any chance it doesn't come off with me, you have that turn-up with the Major!"
"Well, I don't like the idea of a foreign chap coming down and---- But, mind you, Duplay's a very superior fellow. He knows the deuce of a lot."
"Thinks he does, anyhow," said Harry, smiling again. "Good-night, old fellow," he called after Bob in a very friendly voice as horse and rider disappeared up the road.
"I must go to bed, I suppose," he muttered as he returned to the bridge and stood leaning on the parapet. He yawned, not in weariness but in a reaction from the excitement of the last few days. His emotional mood had pa.s.sed for the time at all events; it was succeeded by an apathy that was dull without being restful. And in its general effect his interview with Bob was vaguely vexatious in spite of its cordial character. It left with him a notion which he rejected but could not quite get rid of--the notion that he was taking, or (if all were known) would be thought to be taking, an unfair advantage. Bob had said he was born to it and that he could not help it. If that had indeed been so in the fullest possible sense, would he have had the notion that irritated him now? Yes, he told himself; but the answer did not quite convince.
Still the annoyance was no more than a restless suggestion of something not quite satisfactory in his position, and worth mentioning only as the first such feeling he had ever had. It did not trouble him seriously. He smoked another cigar on the bridge and then went into the house and to bed. As he undressed it occurred to him (and the idea gave him both pleasure and amus.e.m.e.nt) that he had made a sort of alliance with Bob against Duplay, although it could come into operation only under circ.u.mstances which were very unlikely to happen.
The blinds drawn at Blent next morning told Mina what had happened, and the hour of eleven found her at a Committee Meeting at Miss Swinkerton's, which she certainly would not have attended otherwise. As it was, she wanted to talk and to hear, and the gathering afforded a chance. Mrs Iver was there, and Mrs Trumbler the vicar's wife, a meek woman, rather ousted from her proper position by the energy of Miss Swinkerton; she was to manage the Bible-reading department, which was not nearly so responsible a task as conducting the savings-bank, and did not involve anything like the same amount of supervision of other people's affairs. Mrs Trumbler felt, however, that on matters of morals she had a claim to speak _jure mariti_.
"It is so sad!" she murmured. "And Mr Trumbler found he could do so little! He came home quite distressed."
"I'm told she wasn't the least sensible of her position," observed Miss S., with what looked rather like satisfaction.
"Didn't she know she was dying?" asked Mina, who had established her footing by a hypocritical show of interest in the cottage-gardens.
"Oh, yes, she knew she was dying, my dear," said Miss S. What poor Lady Tristram might have known, but apparently had not, was left to an obvious inference.
"She was very kind," remarked Mrs Iver. "Not exactly actively, you know, but if you happened to come across her." She rose as she spoke and bade Miss S. farewell. That lady did not try to detain her, and the moment the door had closed behind her remarked:
"Of course Mrs Iver feels in a delicate position and can't say anything about Lady Tristram; but from what I hear she never realized the peculiarity of her position. No (this to Mrs Trumbler), I mean in the neighborhood, Mrs Trumbler. And the young man is just the same. But I should have liked to hear that Mr Trumbler thought it came home to her at the last."
Mr Trumbler's wife shook her head gently.
"Well, now we shall see, I suppose," Miss S. pursued. "The engagement is to be made public directly after the funeral."
Mina almost started at this authoritative announcement.
"And I suppose they'll be married as soon as they decently can. I'm glad for Janie Iver's sake--not that I like him, the little I've seen of him."
"We never see him," said Mrs Trumbler.
"Not at church, anyhow," added Miss S. incisively. "Perhaps he'll remember what's due to his position now."
"Are you sure they're engaged?" asked Mina.
Miss S. looked at her with a smile. "Certain, my dear."
"How?" asked Mina. Mrs Trumbler stared at her in surprised rebuke.
"When I make a mistake, it will be time to ask questions," observed Miss S. with dignity. "For the present you may take what I say. I can wait to be proved right, Madame Zabriska."
"I've no doubt you're right; only I thought Janie would have told me,"
said Mina; she had no wish to quarrel with Miss S.
"Janie Iver's very secretive, my dear. She always was. I used to talk to Mrs Iver about it when she was a little girl. And in your case----" Miss S.'s smile could only refer to the circ.u.mstance that Mina was Major Duplay's niece; the Major's manuvres had not escaped Miss S.'s eye. "Of course the funeral will be very quiet," Miss S. continued. "That avoids so many difficulties. The people who would come and the people who wouldn't--and all that, you know."
"There are always so many questions about funerals," sighed Mrs Trumbler.
"I hate funerals," said Mina. "I'm going to be cremated."
"That may be very well abroad, my dear," said Miss S. tolerantly, "but you couldn't here. The question is, will Janie Iver go--and if she does, where will she walk?"
"Oh, I should hardly think she'd go, if it's not announced, you know,"
said Mrs Trumbler.
"It's sometimes done, and I'm told she would walk just behind the family."
Mina left the two ladies debating this point of etiquette, Miss S.
showing some deference to Mrs Trumbler's experience in this particular department, but professing to be fortified in her own view by the opinion of an undertaker with a wide connection. She reflected, as she got into her pony carriage, that it is impossible even to die without affording a good deal of pleasure to other people--surely a fortunate feature of the world!
On her way home she stopped to leave cards at Blent, and was not surprised when Harry Tristram came out of his study, having seen her through the window, and greeted her.
"Send your trap home and walk up the hill with me," he suggested, and she fell in with his wish very readily. They crossed the foot-bridge together.
"I've just been writing to ask my relations to the funeral," he said.
"At my mother's wish, not mine. Only two of them--and I never saw them in my life."
"I shouldn't think you'd cultivate your relations much."
"No. But Cecily Gainsborough ought to come, I suppose. She's my heir."
Mina turned to him with a gesture of interest or surprise.
"Your heir?" she said. "You mean----?"
"I mean that if I died without having any children, she'd succeed me.
She'd be Lady Tristram in her own right, as my mother was." He faced round and looked at Blent. "She's never been to the place or seen it yet," he added.
"How intensely interested she'll be!"
"I don't see why she should," said Harry rather crossly. "It's a great bore having her here at all, and if I'm barely civil to her that's all I shall manage. They won't stay more than a few days, I suppose." After a second he went on: "Her mother wouldn't know my mother, though after her death the father wanted to be reconciled."
"Is that why you dislike them so?"
"How do you know I dislike them?" he asked, seeming surprised.
"It's pretty evident, isn't it? And it would be a good reason for disliking the mother anyhow."
"But not the daughter?"
"No, and you seem to dislike the daughter too--which isn't fair."
"Oh, I take the family in the lump. And I don't know that what we've been talking of has anything to do with it."