The meeting was appointed by my Lord Rotherby for seven o'clock next morning in Lincoln's Inn Fields. It is true that Lincoln's Inn Fields at an early hour of the day was accounted a convenient spot for the transaction of such business as this; yet, considering that it was in the neighborhood of Stretton House, overlooked, indeed, by the windows of that , it is not easy to rid the mind of a suspicion that Rotherby appointed that place of purpose set, and with intent to mark his contempt and of his father, with whom he supposed Mr. Caryll to be in some league.
Accompanied by the Duke of Wharton and Major Gascoigne, Mr. Caryll entered the enclosure as seven was striking from St. Danes. They had come in a coach, which they had left in waiting at the corner of Portugal Row.
As they beyond the belt of trees they found that they were the first in the field, and his grace proceeded with the major to inspect the ground, so that time might be saved against the coming of the other party.
Mr. Caryll stood apart, breathing the freshness of the sunlit morning, but indifferent to its glory. He was gloomy and . He had slept ill that night after his interview with Sir Richard, by the choice that lay before him of either breaking with the adoptive father to whom he owed and affection, or betraying his natural father whom he had every reason to hate, yet who remained his father. He had been able to arrive at no solution. Duty seemed to point one way; instinct the other. Down in his heart he felt that when the moment came it would be the behests of instinct that he would obey, and, in obeying them, play false to Sir Richard and to the memory of his mother. It was the only course that went with honor; and yet it was a course that must lead to a break with the one friend he had in the world—the one man who stood to him for family and .
And now, as if that were not enough to plague him, there was this quarrel with Rotherby which he had upon his hands. That, too, he had been considering during the wakeful hours of that summer night. Had he reflected he must have seen that no other result could have followed his at White's last night; and yet it was a case in which reflection would not have stayed him. Hortensia Winthrop's fair name was to be of the smirch that had been cast upon it, and Justin was the only man in whose power it had lain to do it. More than that—if more were needed—it was Rotherby himself, by his aggressiveness, who had thrust Mr. Caryll into a position which almost made it necessary for him to explain himself; and that he could scarcely have done by any other than the means which he had adopted. Under ordinary circumstances the matter would have troubled him not at all; this meeting with such a man as Rotherby would not have robbed him of a moment's sleep. But there came the reflection—belatedly—that Rotherby was his brother, his father's son; and he experienced just the same degree of at the of crossing swords with him as he did at the prospect of betraying Lord Ostermore. Sir Richard would force upon him a parricide's task; Fate a fratricide's. Truly, he thought, it was an enviable position, his.
Pacing the turf, on which the dew still gleamed and sparkled diamond-like, he pondered his course, and wondered now, at the last moment, was there no way to this meeting. Could not the matter be arranged? He was stirred out of his musings by Gascoigne's voice, raised to curse the of Lord Rotherby.
“'Slife! Where does the fellow tarry? Was he so drunk last night that he's not yet slept himself sober?”
“The streets are astir,” put in Wharton, himself to snuff. And, indeed, the cries of the morning hawkers reached them now from the four sides of the square. “If his lordship does not come soon, I doubt if we may stay for him. We shall have half the town for spectators.”
“Who are these?” quoth Gascoigne, stepping aside and craning his neck to get a better view. “Ah! Here they come.” And he indicated a group of three that had that moment passed the palings.
Gascoigne and Wharton went to meet the newcomers. Lord Rotherby was attended by Mainwaring, a captain—a great, burly, scarred of a man—and a Mr. Falgate, an young of his acquaintance. An odder pair of sponsors he could not have found had he been at pains to choose them so.
“Adso!” swore Mr. Falgate, in his , voice. “I 'tis a most ungenteel hour, this, for men of quality to be abroad. I had my beauty sleep broke into to be here in time. Lard! I shall be all day for't!” He took off his hat and delicately mopped his brow with a square of lace he called a handkerchief.
“Shall we come to business, gentlemen?” quoth Mainwaring gruffly.
“With all my heart,” answered Wharton. “It is growing late.”
“Late! La, my dears!” clucked Mr. Falgate in horror. “Has your grace not been to bed yet?”
“To save time,” said Gascoigne, “we have made an of the ground, and we think that under the trees yonder is a spot not to be bettered.”
Mainwaring flashed a critical and experienced eye over the place. “The sun is—So?” he said, looking up. “Yes; it should serve well enough, I—”
“It will not serve at all,” cried Rotherby, who stood a pace or two apart. “A little to the right, there, the turf is better.”
“But there is no protection,” put in the duke. “You will be under observation from that side of the square, including Stretton House.”
“What ?” quoth Rotherby. “Do I care who overlooks us?” And he laughed unpleasantly. “Or is your grace ashamed of being seen in your friend's company?”
Wharton looked him in the face a moment, then turned to his lordship's seconds. “If Mr. Caryll is of the same mind as his lordship, we had best get to work at once,” he said; and bowing to them, withdrew with Gascoigne.
“See to the swords, Mainwaring,” said Rotherby shortly. “Here, Fanny!” This to Falgate, whose name was Francis, and who delighted in the feminine which his intimates used toward him. “Come help me with my clothes.”
“I vow to Gad,” protested Mr. Falgate, advancing to the task. “I make but an indifferent valet, my dear.”
Mr. Caryll stood thoughtful a moment when Rotherby's wishes had been made known to him. The odd of the situation—the key to which he was the only one to hold—was borne in upon him. He fetched a sigh of utter weariness.
“I have,” said he, “the greatest repugnance to meeting his lordship.”
“'Tis little wonder,” returned his grace contemptuously. “But since 'tis forced upon you, I hope you'll give him the lesson in manners that he needs.”
“Is it—is it unavoidable?” quoth Mr. Caryll.
“Unavoidable?” Wharton looked at him in stern wonder.
Gascoigne, too, swung round to stare. “Unavoidable? What can you mean, Caryll?”
“I mean is the matter not to be arranged in any way? Must the take place?”
His Grace of Wharton stroked his chin contemplatively, his eye , his lip curling never so slightly. “Why,” said he, at length, “you may beg my Lord Rotherby's pardon for having given him the lie. You may , and brand yourself a and your version of the Maidstone affair a silly invention which ye have not the courage to maintain. You may do that, Mr. Caryll. For my own sake, let me add, I hope you will not do it.”
“I am not thinking of your grace at all,” said Mr. Caryll, slightly by the tone the other took with him. “But to relieve your mind of such doubts as I see you entertain, I can assure you that it is out of no of weakness that I boggle at this combat. Though I confess that I am no ferrailleur, and that I the duel as a means of settling a difference just as I abhor all things that are stupid and insensate, yet I am not the man to shirk an encounter where an encounter is forced upon me. But in this affair—” he paused, then ended—“there is more than meets your grace's eye, or, indeed, anyone's.”
He was so calm, so master of himself, that Wharton perceived how groundless must have been his first notion. Whatever might be Mr. Caryll's motives, it was plain from his most perfect composure that they were not motives of fear. His grace's half-contemptuous smile was dissipated.
“This is , Mr. Caryll,” he reminded his principal, “and time is speeding. Your now would not only be damaging to yourself; it would be damaging to the lady of whose fair name you have made yourself the champion. You must see that it is too late for doubts on the score of this meeting.”
“Ay—by God!” swore Gascoigne hotly. “What a pox you, Caryll?”
Mr. Caryll took off his hat and flung it on the ground behind him. “We must go on, then,” said he. “Gascoigne, see to the swords with his lordship's friend there.”
With a relieved look, the major went forward to make the final preparations, whilst Mr. Caryll, attended by Wharton, rapidly himself of coat and waistcoat, then kicked off his light shoes, and stood ready, a slight, , figure in white Holland shirt and pearl-colored small clothes.
A moment later the were face to face—Rotherby, divested of his and with a kerchief bound about his close-cropped head, all a trembling eagerness; Mr. Caryll with a lightly masked by a dangerous composure.
There was a perfunctory salute—a mere presenting of arms—and the blades swept round in a half-circle to their first meeting. But Rotherby, without so much as allowing his steel to touch his opponent's, as the laws of courtesy demanded, it away again into the higher lines and lunged. It was almost like a attempt to take his unawares and unprepared, and for a second it looked as if it must succeed. It must have succeeded but for the quickness of Mr. Caryll. Swinging round on the ball of his right foot, lightly and as a dancing master, and with no sign of haste or fear in his amazing speed, he let the other's hard-driven blade glance past him, to meet nothing but the empty air.
As a result, by the very force of the stroke, Rotherby found himself over-reached and carried beyond his point of aim; while Mr. Caryll's sideward movement brought him not only nearer his opponent, but within his guard.
It was seen by them all, and by none with such panic as Rotherby himself, that, as a consequence of his quasi-foul stroke, the viscount was thrown entirely at the mercy of his opponent thus at the very outset of the encounter, before their blades had so much as touched each other. A straightening of the arm on the part of Mr. Caryll, and the engagement would have been at an end.
Mr. Caryll, however, did not straighten his arm. He was observed to smile as he broke ground and waited for his lordship to recover.
Falgate turned pale. Mainwaring swore softly under his breath, in fear for his principal; Gascoigne did the same in vexation at the opportunity Mr. Caryll had so wantonly wasted. Wharton looked on with tight-pressed lips, and wondered.
Rotherby recovered, and for a moment the two men stood apart, seeming to feel each other with their eyes before resuming. Then his lordship renewed the attack with .
Mr. Caryll parried lightly and closely, a beautiful weapon in the best manner of the French school, and opposing to the force of his a delicate science. Rotherby, a fine swordsman in his way, soon saw that here was need for all his skill, and he exerted it. But the rapidity of his blade broke as upon a cuirass against the other's light, impenetrable guard.
His lordship broke ground, breathed heavily, and sweated under the glare of the morning sun, cursing this swordsman who, so cool and deliberate, husbanded his strength and scarcely seemed to move, yet by sheer skill and address more than his lordship's advantages of greater strength and length of reach.
“You cursed French dog!” swore the viscount presently, between his teeth, and as he he made a ringing parade, feinted, beat the ground with his foot to draw off the other's attention, and went in again with a full-length lunge. “Parry that, you damned maitre-d'armes” he roared.
Mr. Caryll answered nothing; he parried; parried again; delivered a riposte whenever the opportunity offered, or whenever his lordship grew too pressing, and it became to drive him back; but never once did he stretch out to lunge in his turn. The seconds were so lost in wonder at the beauty of this close play of his that they paid no to what was taking place in the square about them. They never observed the opening windows and the spectators at them—as Wharton had feared. Amongst these, had either of the combatants looked up, he would have seen his own father on the balcony of Stretton House. A moment the earl stood there, Lady Ostermore at his side; then he vanished into the house again, to reappear almost at once in the street, with a couple of footmen hurrying after him.
Meanwhile the combat went on. Once Lord Rotherby had attempted to fall back for a , realizing that he was winded. But Mr. Caryll denied him this, attacking now for the first time, and the rapidity of his play was such that Rotherby opined—the end to be at hand, appreciated to the full his . In a last desperate effort, gathering up what of strength remained him, he Mr. Caryll by a vigorous co............