It seemed a good omen, until I scanned Janet’s sombre face.
‘You will not see us out for the rest of the day, Harry,’ said she.
‘That is your arrangement?’
‘It is.’
‘Your own?’
‘Mine, if you like.’
There was something hard in her way of speaking, as though she blamed me, and the princess were under her protection against me. She vouchsafed no friendly significance of look and tone.
In spite of my readiness to criticize her (which in our language means condemn) for always assuming leadership with whomsoever she might be, I was impressed by the air of high-bred friendliness existing between her and the princess. Their interchange was pleasant to hear. Ottilia had caught the spirit of her frank manner of speech; and she, though in a less degree, the princess’s fine ease and sweetness. They conversed, apparently, like equal minds. On material points, Janet unhesitatingly led. It was she who brought the walk to a close.
‘Now, Harry, you had better go and have a little sleep. I should like to speak to you early.’
Ottilia immediately put her hand out to me.
I begged permission to see her to her door.
Janet replied for her, indicating old Schwartz: ‘We have a protector, you see, six feet and a half.’
An hour later, Schwartz was following her to the steps of her hotel. She saw me, and waited. For a wonder, she displayed reluctance in disburdening herself of what she had to say. ‘Harry, you know that he has come? He and Prince Ernest came together. Get him to leave the island at once: he can return to-morrow. Grandada writes of wishing to see him. Get him away to-day.’
‘Is the prince going to stay here?’ I asked.
‘No. I daresay I am only guessing; I hope so. He has threatened the prince.’
‘What with?’
‘Oh! Harry, can’t you understand? I’m no reader of etiquette, but even I can see that the story of a young princess travelling over to England alone to visit… and you…, and her father fetching her away! The prince is almost at his mercy, unless you make the man behave like a gentleman. This is exactly the thing Miss Goodwin feared!’
‘But who’s to hear of the story?’ said I.
Janet gave an impatient sigh.
‘Do you mean that my father has threatened to publish it, Janet?’
‘I won’t say he has. He has made the prince afraid to move: that I think is true.’
‘Did the princess herself mention it to you?’
‘She understands her situation, I am sure.’
‘Did she speak of “the man,” as you call him?’
‘Yes: not as I do. You must try by-and-by to forgive me. Whether he set a trap or not, he has decoyed her—don’t frown at words—and it remains for you to act as I don’t doubt you will; but lose no time. Determine. Oh! if I were a man!’
‘You would muzzle us?’
‘Muzzle, or anything you please; I would make any one related to me behave honourably. I would give him the alternative…’
‘You foolish girl! suppose he took it?’
‘I would make him feel my will. He should not take it. Keep to the circumstances, Harry. If you have no control over him—I should think I was not fit to live, in such a position! No control over him at a moment like this? and the princess in danger of having her reputation hurt! Surely, Harry! But why should I speak to you as if you were undecided!’
‘Where is he?’
‘At the house where you sleep. He surrendered his rooms here very kindly.’
‘Aunty has seen him?’
Janet blushed: I thought I knew why. It was for subtler reasons than I should have credited her with conceiving.
‘She sent for him, at my request, late last night. She believed her influence would be decisive. So do I. She could not even make the man perceive that he was acting—to use her poor dear old-fashioned word—reprehensibly in frightening the prince to further your interests. From what I gathered he went off in a song about them. She said he talked so well! And aunty Dorothy, too! I should nearly as soon have expected grandada to come in for his turn of the delusion. How I wish he was here! Uberly goes by the first boat to bring him down. I feel with Miss Goodwin that it will be a disgrace for all of us—the country’s disgrace. As for our family!… Harry, and your name! Good-bye. Do your best.’
I was in the mood to ask, ‘On behalf of the country?’ She had, however, a glow and a ringing articulation in her excitement that forbade trifling; a minute’s reflection set me weighing my power of will against my father’s. I nodded to her.
‘Come to us when you are at liberty,’ she called.
I have said that I weighed my power of will against my father’s. Contemplation of the state of the scales did not send me striding to meet him. Let it be remembered—I had it strongly in memory that he habitually deluded himself under the supposition that the turn of all events having an aspect of good fortune had been planned by him of old, and were offered to him as the legitimately-won fruits of a politic life. While others deemed him mad, or merely reckless, wild, a creature living for the day, he enjoyed the conceit of being a profound schemer, in which he was fortified by a really extraordinary adroitness to take advantage of occurrences: and because he was prompt in an emergency, and quick to profit of a crisis, he was deluded to imagine that he had created it. Such a man would be with difficulty brought to surrender his prize.
Again, there was his love for me. ‘Pater est, Pamphile;—difficile est.’ How was this vast conceit of a not unreal paternal love to be encountered? The sense of honour and of decency might appeal to him personally; would either of them get a hearing if he fancied them to be standing in opposition to my dearest interests? I, unhappily, as the case would be sure to present itself to him, appeared the living example of his eminently politic career. After establishing me the heir of one of the wealthiest of English commoners, would he be likely to forego any desperate chance of ennobling me by the brilliant marriage? His dreadful devotion to me extinguished the hope that he would, unless I should happen to be particularly masterful in dealing with him. I heard his nimble and overwhelming volubility like a flood advancing. That could be withstood, and his arguments and persuasions. But by what steps could I restrain the man himself? I said ‘the man,’ as Janet did. He figured in my apprehensive imagination as an engine more than as an individual. Lassitude oppressed me. I felt that I required every access of strength possible, physical besides moral, in anticipation of our encounter, and took a swim in sea-water, which displaced my drowsy fit, and some alarming intimations of cowardice menacing a paralysis of the will: I had not altogether recovered from my gipsy drubbing. And now I wanted to have the contest over instantly. It seemed presumable that my father had slept at my lodgings. There, however, the report of him was, that he had inspected the rooms, highly complimented the owner of them, and vanished.
Returning to the pier, I learnt that he had set sail in his hired yacht for the sister town on the Solent, at an early hour:—for what purpose? I knew of it too late to intercept it. One of the squire’s horses trotted me over; I came upon Colonel Hibbert Segrave near the Club-house, and heard that my father was off again:
‘But your German prince and papa-in-law shall be free of the Club for the next fortnight,’ said he, and cordially asked to have the date of the marriage. My face astonished him. He excused himself for speaking of this happy event so abruptly. A sting of downright anger drove me back at a rapid canter. It flashed on me that this Prince Ernest, whose suave fashion of depressing me, and philosophical skill in managing his daughter, had induced me to regard him as a pattern of astuteness, was really both credulous and feeble, or else supremely unsuspecting: and I was confirmed in the latter idea on hearing that he had sailed to visit the opposite harbour and docks on board my father’s yacht. Janet shared my secret opinion.
‘The prince is a gentleman,’ she said.
Her wrath and disgust were unspeakable. My aunt Dorothy blamed her for overdue severity. ‘The prince, I suppose, goes of his own free will where he pleases.’
Janet burst out, ‘Oh! can’t you see through it, aunty? The prince goes about without at all knowing that the person who takes him—Harry sees it—is making him compromise himself: and by-and-by the prince will discover that he has no will of his own, whatever he may wish to resolve upon doing.’
‘Is he quite against Harry?’ asked my aunt Dorothy.
‘Dear aunty, he ‘s a prince, and a proud man. He will never in his lifetime consent to… to what you mean, without being hounded into it. I haven’t the slightest idea whether anything will force him. I know that the princess would have too much pride to submit, even to save her name. But it ‘s her name that ‘s in danger. Think of the scandal to a sovereign princess! I know the signification of that now; I used to laugh at Harry’s “sovereign princess.” She is one, and thorough! there is no one like her. Don’t you understand, aunty, that the intrigue, plot—I don’t choose to be nice upon terms—may be perfectly successful, and do good to nobody. The prince may be tricked; the princess, I am sure, will not.’
Janet’s affectation of an intimate and peculiar knowledge of the princess was a show of her character that I was accustomed to: still, it was evident they had conversed much, and perhaps intimately. I led her to tell me that the princess had expressed no views upon my father. ‘He does not come within her scope, Harry.’ ‘Scope’ was one of Janet’s new words, wherewith she would now and then fall to seasoning a serviceable but savourless outworn vocabulary of the common table. In spite of that and other offences, rendered prominent to me by the lifting of her lip and her frown when she had to speak of my father, I was on her side, not on his. Her estimation of the princess was soundly based. She discerned exactly the nature of Ottilia’s entanglement, and her peril.
She and my aunt Dorothy passed the afternoon with Ottilia, while I crossed the head of the street, looking down at the one house, where the princess was virtually imprisoned, either by her father’s express injunction or her own discretion. And it was as well that she should not be out. The yachting season had brought many London men to the island. I met several who had not forgotten the newspaper-paragraph assertions and contradictions. Lord Alton, Admiral Loftus, and others were on the pier and in the outfitters’ shops, eager for gossip, as the languid stretch of indolence inclines men to be. The Admiral asked me for the whereabout of Prince Ernest’s territory. He too said that the prince would be free of the Club during his residence, adding:
‘Where is he?’—not a question demanding an answer. The men might have let the princess go by, but there would have been questions urgently demanding answers had she been seen by their women.
Late in the evening my father’s yacht was sighted from the pier. Just as he reached his moorings, and his boat was hauled round, the last steamer came in. Sharp-eyed Janet saw the squire on board among a crowd, and Temple next to him, supporting his arm.
‘Has grandada been ill?’ she exclaimed.