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CHAPTER XIV. LADY OSTERMORE
 Lord Ostermore and Mr. Caryll looked across the lawn towards the house, but failed to see any sign of her ladyship's approach.  
Mr. Caryll raised questioning eyes to his servant's face, and in that moment caught the faintest of a gown behind the . He half-turned to my lord, and nodded slightly in the direction of the sound, a smile twisting his lips. With a gesture he dismissed Leduc, who returned to the neighborhood of the pond.
 
His lordship frowned, angered by the interruption. Then: “If your ladyship will come inside,” said he, “you will hear better and with greater comfort.”
 
“Not to speak of dignity,” said Mr. Caryll.
 
The stiff gown again, this time without stealth. The countess appeared, no . Mr. Caryll rose politely.
 
“You sit with spies to guard your approaches,” said she.
 
“As a precaution against spies,” was his lordship's answer.
 
She measured him with a cool eye. “What is't ye hide?” she asked him.
 
“My shame,” he answered readily. Then after a moment's pause, he rose and offered her his seat. “Since you have thrust yourself in where you were not bidden, you may hear and welcome, ma'am,” said he. “It may help you to understand what you term my to my son.”
 
“Are these matters wherewith to a stranger—a guest?”
 
“I am proposing to say in your presence what I was about to say in your absence,” said he, without answering her question. “Be seated, ma'am.”
 
She , closed her fan with a , and sat down. Mr. Caryll resumed his long chair, and his lordship took the stool.
 
“I am told,” the latter resumed presently, in part for her ladyship's better understanding, “that his Grace of Wharton is intending to reopen the South Sea scandal, as soon as he can find evidence that I was one of those who profited by the company's charter.”
 
“Profited?” she echoed, between scorn and bitter amusement. “Profited, did ye say? I think your is surely upon you—you that have sunk nigh all your fortune and all that you had with me in this thieving venture—d'ye talk of profits?”
 
“At the commencement I did profit, as did many others. Had I been content with my gains, had I been less of a trusting fool, it had been well. I was dazzled, maybe, by the glare of so much gold. I needed more; and so I lost all. That is evil enough. But there is worse. I may be called upon to make of what I had from the company without paying for it—I may give all that's left me and barely cover the amount, and I may starve and be damned thereafter.”
 
Her ladyship's face was ghastly. Horror stared from her pale eyes. She had known, from the beginning, of that twenty thousand pounds' worth of stock, and she had had—with his lordship—her anxious moments when the disclosures were being made six months ago that had brought the Craggses, Aislabie and a half-dozen others to shame and ruin.
 
His lordship looked at her a moment. “And if this comes, as it now threatens,” he continued, “it is my son I shall have to thank for't.”
 
She found voice to ask: “How so?” courage to put the question scornfully. “Is it not rather Rotherby you have to thank that the disclosures did not come six months ago? What was it saved you but the friendship his Grace of Wharton had for Charles?”
 
“Why, then,” stormed his lordship, “did he not see to't that he preserved that friendship? It but needed a behavior of as much and honor as Wharton exacts in his associates—and the Lord knows how much that is!” he . “As it is, he has gone even lower than that abandoned ; so low that even this rakehell duke must become his enemy for his own credit's sake. He attempts mock-marriages with ladies of quality; and he attempts murder by stabbing through the back a gentleman who has spared his worthless life. Not even the president of the Hell Fire Club can these things, strong stomach though he have for villainy. It is something to have to come so low that even his Grace of Wharton must turn upon him, and swear his ruin. And so that he may ruin him, his grace is to ruin me. Now you understand, madam—and you, Mr. Caryll.”
 
Mr. Caryll understood. He understood even more than his lordship meant him to understand; more than his lordship understood, himself. So, too, did her ladyship, if we may judge from the reply she made him.
 
“You fool,” she railed. “You vain, blind, selfish fool! To blame Rotherby for this. Rather should Rotherby, blame you that by your damned dishonesty have set a weapon against him in his enemy's hands.”
 
“Madam!” he roared, empurpling, and coming heavily to his feet. “Do you know who I am?”
 
“Ay—and what you are, which is something you will never know. God! Was there ever so self-centered a fool? me, Heaven!” She rose, too, and turned to Mr. Caryll. “You, sir,” she said to him, “you have been dragged into this, I know not why.”
 
She broke off suddenly, looking at him, her eyes a pair of gimlets now for . “Why have you been dragged into it?” she demanded. “What is here? I demand to know. What help does my lord expect from you that he tells you this? Does he—” She paused an instant, a cunning smile breaking over her wrinkled, painted face. “Does he propose to sell himself to the king over the water, and are you a secret agent come to do the buying? Is that the answer to this ?”
 
Mr. Caryll, outwardly, but very ill at ease within, smiled and waved the delicate hand that appeared through the heavy at his wrist. “Madam, indeed—ah—your ladyship goes very fast. You leap so at conclusions for which no grounds can exist. His lordship is so overwrought—as well he may be, !—that he cares not before whom he speaks. Is it not plainly so?”
 
She smiled very sourly. “You are a very master of , sir. But your evasion gives me the answer that I lack—that and his lordship's face. I drew my bow at a venture; yet look, sir, and tell me, has my quarrel missed its mark?”
 
And, indeed, the sudden fear and written on my lord's face was so plain that all might read it. He was—as Mr. Caryll had remarked on the first occasion that they met—the worst dissembler that ever set hand to a . He betrayed himself at every step, if not , by incautious words, why then by the utter lack of control he had upon his countenance.
 
He made now a wild attempt to . “Lies! Lies!” he protested. “Your ladyship's a-dreaming. Should I be making bad worse by plotting at my time of life? Should I? What can King James avail me, indeed?”
 
“'Tis what I will ask Rotherby to help me to discover,” she informed him.
 
“Rotherby?” he cried. “Would you tell that what you suspect? Would you arm him with another weapon for my ?”
 
“Ha!” said she. “You admit so much, then?” And she laughed disdainfully. Then with a sudden sternness, a sudden nobility almost in the motherhood which she put forward—“Rotherby is my son,” she said, “and I'll not have my son the victim of your as well as of your injustice. We may the one and the other yet, my lord.”
 
And she swept out, fan going briskly in one hand, her long ebony swinging as briskly in the other.
 
“O God!” Ostermore, and sat down heavily.
 
Mr. Caryll helped himself to snuff. “I think,” said he, his voice so cool that it had an almost influence, “I think your lordship has now another reason why you should go no further in this matter.”
 
“But if I do not—what other hopes have I? Damn me! I'm a ruined man either way.”
 
“Nay, nay,” Mr. Caryll reminded him. “Assuming even that you are correctly informed, and that his Grace of Wharton is determined to move against you, it is not to be depended that he will succeed in collecting such evidence as he must need. At this date much of the evidence that may once have been available will have been dissipated. You are rash to despair so soon.”
 
“There is that,” his lordship admitted thoughtfully, a little hopefully, even; “there is that.” And with the resilience of his nature—of men who form opinions on slight grounds, and, therefore, are ready to change them upon grounds as slig............
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