A DUCHESS'S SECRET.
When I was poor, and honest, and a novelist, I little thought that I
should ever be rich, and something not very unlike a Duke; and, as to
honesty, but an indifferent character. I have had greatness thrust on
me. I am, like Simpcox in the dramatis personæ of “Henry IV.,” “an
impostor;” and yet I scarcely know how I could have escaped this
deplorable (though lucrative) position. “Love is a great master,” says
the “Mort d'Arthur,” and I perhaps may claim sympathy and pity as a
victim of love. The following unaffected lines (in which only names and
dates are disguised) contain all the apology I can offer to a censorious
world.
Two or three years ago I was dependent on literature for my daily bread.
I was a regular man-of-all-work. Having the advan-
tage of knowing a clerk
in the Foreign Office who went into society (he had been my pupil at the
university), I picked up a good deal of scandalous gossip, which I
published in the
Pimlico Postboy, a journal of fashion. I was also
engaged as sporting prophet to the
Tipster, and was not less successful
than my contemporaries as a vaticinator of future events. At the same
time I was contributing a novel (anonymously) to the
Fleet Street
Magazine, a very respectable publication, though perhaps a little dull.
The editor had expressly requested me to make things rather more lively,
and I therefore gave my imagination free play in the construction of my
plot. I introduced a beautiful girl, daughter of a preacher in the
Shaker community. Her hand was sought in marriage by a sporting baronet,
who had seen her as he pursued the chase through the pathless glens of
the New Forest. This baronet she married after suffering things
intolerable from the opposition of the Shakers. Here I had a good deal
of padding about Shakers and their ways; and, near the end of the sixth
chapter my heroine became the wife of Sir William Buckley. But the
baronet proved a perfect William Rufus
for variegated and versatile
blackguardism. Lady Buckley's life was made impossible by his abominable
conduct. At this juncture my heroine chanced to be obliged to lunch at a
railway refreshment-room. My last chapter had described the poor lady
lunching lonely in the bleak and gritty waiting room of Swilby Junction,
lonely except for the company of her little boy. I showed how she fell
into a strange and morbid vein of reflection suggested by the qualities
of the local sherry. If she was to live, her lord and master, Sir W.
Buckley, must die! And I described how a fiendish temptation was
whispered to her by the glass of local sherry. “William's constitution,
strong as it is,” she murmured inwardly, “could never stand a dozen of
that sherry. Suppose he chanced to partake of it—accidentally—rather
late in the evening.” Amidst these reflections I allowed the December
instalment of “The Baronet's Wife” to come to a conclusion in the
Fleet
Street Magazine. Obviously crime was in the wind.
It is my habit to read the “Agony Column” (as it is flippantly called),
the second column in the outer sheet of the Times. Who knows but he may
there see something to his advan-
tage; and, besides, the mysterious
advertisements may suggest ideas for plots. One day I took up the “Agony
Column,” as usual, at my club, and, to my surprise, read the following
advertisement:—
“F. S. M.—SHERRY WINE. WRECK OF THE “JINGO.”—WRETCHED BOY: Stay your
unhallowed hand! Would you expose an erring MOTHER'S secret? Author
will please communicate with Messrs. Mantlepiece and Co., Solicitors,
Upton-on-the-Wold.”
As soon as I saw this advertisement, as soon as my eyes fell on “Sherry
Wine” and “Author,” I felt that here was something for me. “F. S. M.”
puzzled me at first, but I read it Fleet Street Magazine, by a flash of
inspiration. “Wretched Boy” seemed familiar and unappropriate—I was
twenty-nine—but what of that? Of course I communicated with Messrs.
Mantlepiece, saying that I had reason for supposing that I was the
“author” alluded to in the advertisement. As to the words, “Wreck of the
Jingo” they entirely beat me, but I hoped that some light would be thrown
on their meaning by the respectable firm of solicitors. It did occur to
me that if any one had reasons for communi-
cating with me, it would have
been better and safer to address a letter to me, under cover, to the
editor of the
Fleet Street Magazine. But the public have curious ideas
on these matters. Two days after I wrote to Messrs. Mantlepiece I
received a very guarded reply, in which I was informed that their client
wished to make my acquaintance, and that a carriage would await me, if I
presented myself at Upton-on-the-Wold Station, by the train arriving at
5.45 on Friday. Well, I thought to myself, I may as well do a
“week-ending,” as some people call it, with my anonymous friend as
anywhere else. At the same time I knew that the “carriage” might be
hired by enemies to convey me to the Pauper Lunatic Asylum or to West
Ham, the place where people disappear mysteriously. I might be the
victim of a rival's jealousy (and many men, novelists of most horrible
imaginings, envied my talents and success), or a Nihilist plot might have
drawn me into its machinery. But I was young, and I thought I would see
the thing out. My journey was unadventurous, if you except a row with a
German, who refused to let me open the window. But this has nothing to
do with my narrative, and is
not a false scent to make a guileless reader
keep his eye on the Teuton. Some novelists permit themselves these
artifices, which I think untradesmanlike and unworthy. When I arrived at
Upton, the station-master made a charge at my carriage, and asked me if I
was “The gentleman for the Towers?” The whole affair was so mysterious
that I thought it better to answer in the affirmative. My luggage (a
Gladstone bag) was borne by four stately and liveried menials to a roomy
and magnificent carriage, in which everything, from the ducal crown on
the silver foot-warmers to the four splendid bays, breathed of opulence,
directed and animated by culture. I dismissed all thoughts of the Pauper
Lunatic Asylum and the Nihilists, and was whirled through miles of park
and up an avenue lighted by electricity. We reached the baronial gateway
of the Towers, a vast Gothic pile in the later manner of Inigo Jones, and
a seneschal stood at the foot of a magnificent staircase to receive me. I
had never seen a seneschal before, but I recognized him by the peeled
white wand he carried, by his great silver chain, and his black velvet
coat and knee-breeches.
“Your lordship's room,” says the seneschal (obviously an old and
confidential family servant), “is your old one—the Tapestried Chamber.
Her Grace is waiting anxiously for you.”
Then two menials marched, with my Gladstone bag, to the apartment thus
indicated. For me, I felt in a dream, or like a man caught up into the
fairyland of the “Arabian Nights.” “Her Grace” was all very well—the
aristocracy always admired my fictitious creations; but “Your Lordship!”
Why your Lordship? Then the chilling idea occurred to me that I had
not been “the gentleman for the Towers;” that I was in the position of
the hero of “Happy Thoughts” when he went to the Duke's by mistake for
the humble home of the Plyte Frazers. But I was young. “Her Grace"
could not eat me, and I determined, as I said before, to see it out.
I dressed very deliberately, and that process over, was led by the worthy
seneschal into a singular octagonal boudoir, hung with soft dark blue
arras. The only person in the room was a gaunt, middle-aged lady, in
deep mourning. Though I knew no more of the British aristocracy than Mr.
W. D. Howells,
of New York, I recognized her for the Duchess by her nose,
which resembled those worn by the duchesses of Mr. Du Maurier. As soon
as we were alone, she rose, drew me to her bosom, much to my horror,
looked at me long and earnestly, and at last exclaimed, “How changed you
are, Percy!” (My name is Thomas—Thomas Cobson.) Before I could reply,
she was pouring out reproaches on me for having concealed my existence,
and revealed in my novel what she spoke of as “the secret.”
When she grew, not calm, but fatigued, I ventured to ask why she had
conferred on me the honour of her invitation, and how I had been
unfortunate enough to allude to affairs of which I had certainly no
knowledge. Her reply was given with stately dignity. “You need not
pretend,” she said, “to have forgotten what I told you in this very room,
before you left England for an African tour in the Jingo. I then
revealed to you the secret of my life, the secret of the Duke's death.
Your horror when you heard how that most unhappy man compelled me to free
myself from his tyranny, by a method which his habits rendered only too
easy—in short,
by a dose of cheap sherry, was deep and natural. Oh,
Percy, you did not kiss your mother before starting on your ill-omened
voyage. As soon as I heard of the wreck of the Jingo, and that you were
the only passenger drowned, I recognized an artifice,
un vieux truc, by
which you hoped to escape from a mother of whom you were ashamed. You
had only pretended to be the victim of Ocean's rage! People who are
drowned in novels always
do reappear: and, Percy, your mother is an old
novel-reader! My agents have ever since been on your track, but it was
reserved for
me to discover the last of the Birkenheads in the
anonymous author of the ‘Baronet's Wife.’ That romance, in which you
have had the baseness to use your knowledge of a mother's guilt as a
motif in your twopenny plot, unveiled to me the secret of your hidden
existence. You must stop the story, or alter the following numbers; you
must give up your discreditable mode of life. Heavens, that a Birkenhead
should be a literary character! And you must resume your place in my
house and in society.”
Here the Duchess of Stalybridge paused;
she had quite recovered that
repose of manner and icy
hauteur which, I understand, is the heritage of
the house of Birkenhead. For my part, I had almost lost the modest
confidence which is, I believe, hereditary in the family of Cobson. It
was a scene to make the boldest stand aghast. Here was an unknown lady
of the highest rank confessing a dreadful crime to a total stranger, and
recognizing in that stranger her son, and the heir to an enormous
property and a title as old—as old as British dukedoms, however old they
may be. Ouida would have said “heir to a title older than a thousand
centuries,” but I doubt if the English duke is so ancient as that, or a
direct descendant of the Dukes of Edom mentioned in Holy Writ. I began
pouring out an incoherent flood of evidence to show that I was only
Thomas Cobson, and had never been any one else, but at that moment a gong
sounded, and a young lady entered the room. She also was dressed in
mourning, and the Duchess introduced her to me as my cousin, Miss
Birkenhead. “Gwyneth was a child, Percy,” said my august hostess, “when
you went to Africa.” I shook hands with my cousin with as much
composure
as I could assume, for, to tell the truth, I was not only moved by my
recent adventures, but I had on the spot fallen hopelessly in love with
my new relative. It was
le coup de foudre of a French writer on the
affections—M. Stendhal. Miss Birkenhead had won my heart from the first
moment of our meeting. Why should I attempt to describe a psychological
experience as rare as instantaneous conversion, or more so? Miss
Birkenhead was tall and dark, with a proud pale face, and eyes which
unmistakably indicated the possession of a fine sense of humour. Proud
pale people seldom look when they first meet a total stranger—still more
a long-lost cousin—as if they had some difficulty in refraining from
mirth. Miss Birkenhead's face was as fixed and almost as pure as marble,
but I read sympathy and amusement and kindness in her eyes.
Presently the door opened again, and an elderly man in the dress of a
priest came in. To him I was presented—
“Your old governor, Percy.”
For a moment my unhappy middle-class association made me suppose that the
elderly ecclesiastic was my “old Guv'nor,”—my
father, the late Duke. But
an instant's reflection proved to me that her Grace meant “tutor” by
governor. I am ashamed to say that I now entered into the spirit of the
scene, shook the holy man warmly by the hand, and quoted a convenient
passage from Horace.
He appeared to fall into the trap, and began to speak of old
recollections of my boyhood.
Stately liveried menials now, greatly to my surprise, brought in tea. I
was just declining tea (for I expected dinner in a few minutes), when a
voice (a sweet low voice) whispered—
“Take some!“
I took some, providentially, as it turned out. Again, I was declining
tea-cake, when I could have sworn I heard the same voice (so low that it
seemed like the admonition of a passing spirit) say—
“Take some!“
I took some, for I was exceedingly hungry; and then the conversation
lapsed, began again vaguely, and lapsed again.
We all know that wretched quarter of an hour, or half hour, which
unpunctual guests make us pass in famine and fatigue while
they keep dinner waiting. Upon my word, we waited till half-past eleven before
dinner was announced. But for the tea, I must have perished; for, like
the butler in Sir George Dasent's novel, “I likes my meals regular.”
The Duchess had obviously forgotten all about dinner. There was a
spinning-wheel in the room, and she sat and span like an elderly Fate.
When dinner was announced at last, I began to fear it would never end.
The menu covered both sides of the card. The Duchess ate little, and
“hardly anything was drunk.” At last the ladies left us, about one in
the morning. I saw my chance, and began judiciously to “draw” the
chaplain. It appeared that the Duchess did not always dine at half-past
eleven. The feast was a movable one, from eight o'clock onwards. The
Duchess and the establishment had got into these habits during the old
Duke's time. A very strange man the old Duke; rarely got up till eight
in the evening, often prolonged breakfast till next day.
“But I need not tell you all this, Percy, my old pupil,” said the
chaplain; and he winked as a clergyman ought not to wink.
“My dear sir,” cried I, encouraged by this performance, “for Heaven's
sake tell me what all this means? In this so-called nineteenth century,
in our boasted age of progress, what does the Duchess mean by her
invitation to me, and by her conduct at large? Indeed, why is she at
large?”
The chaplain drew closer to me. “Did ye ever hear of a duchess in a
madhouse?” said he; and I owned that I never had met with such an
incident in my reading (unless there is one in Webster's plays,
somewhere).
“Well, then, who is to make a beginning?” asked the priest. “The Duchess
has not a relation in the world but Miss Birkenhead, the only daughter of
a son of the last Duke but one. The late Duke was a dreadful man, and he
turned the poor Duchess's head with the life he led her. The drowning of
her only son in the Jingo finished the business. She has got that story
about”—(here he touched the decanter of sherry: I nodded)—“she has got
that story into her head, and she believes her son is alive; otherwise
she is as sane and unimaginative as—as—as Mr. Chaplin,” said he, with a
flash of inspiration. “Happily you are an honest man, or you
seem like
one, and won't take advantage of her delusion.”
This was all I could get out of the chaplain; indeed, there was no more
to be got. I went to bed, but not to sleep. Next day, and many other
days, I spent wrestling in argument with the Duchess. I brought her my
certificate of baptism, my testamurs in Smalls and Greats, an old
passport, a bill of Poole's, anything I could think of to prove my
identity. She was obdurate, and only said—“If you are not Percy, how do
you know my secret?” I had in the meantime to alter the intended course
of my novel—“The Baronet's Wife.” The Baronet was made to become a
reformed character. But in all those days at the lonely Towers, and in
the intervals of arguing with the poor Duchess, I could not but meet
Gwyneth Birkenhead. We met, not as cousins, for Miss Birkenhead had only
too clearly appreciated the situation from the moment she first met me.
The old seneschal, too, was in the secret; I don't know what the rest of
the menials thought. They were accustomed to the Duchess. But if
Gwyneth and I did not meet as cousins, we met as light-hearted young
people, in a
queer situation, and in a strange, dismal old house.
We could not in the selfsame mansion dwell
Without some stir of heart, some malady;
We could not sit at meals but feel how well
It soothed each to be the other by.
Indeed
I could not sit at meals without being gratefully reminded of
Gwyneth's advice about “taking some” on the night of my first arrival at
the Towers.
These queer happy times ended.
One day a party of archaeologists came to visit the Towers. They were
members of a “Society for Badgering the Proprietors of Old Houses,” and
they had been lunching at Upton-on-the-Wold. After luncheon they invaded
the Towers, personally conducted by Mr. Bulkin, a very learned historian.
Bulkin had nearly plucked me in Modern History, and when I heard his
voice afar off I arose and fled swiftly. Unluckily the Duchess chanced,
by an unprecedented accident, to be in the library, a room which the
family never used, and which was, therefore, exhibited to curious
strangers. Into this library Bulkin precipitated himself, followed by
his admirers, and began to lecture on the family portraits.
Beginning
with the Crusaders (painted by Lorenzo Credi) he soon got down to modern
times. He took no notice of the Duchess, whom he believed to be a
housekeeper; but, posting himself between the unfortunate lady and the
door, gave a full account of the career of the late Duke. This was more
than the Duchess (who knew all about the subject of the lecture) could
stand; but Mr. Bulkin, referring her to his own Appendices, finished his
address, and offered the Duchess half-a-crown as he led his troop to
other victories. From this accident the Duchess never recovered. Her
spirits, at no time high, sank to zero, and she soon passed peacefully
away. She left a will in which her personal property (about ₤40,000
pounds a year) was bequeathed to Gwyneth, “as my beloved son, Percy, has
enough for his needs,” the revenues of the dukedom of Stalybridge being
about ₤300,000 pounds per annum before the agricultural depression. She
might well have thought I needed no more. Of course I put in no claim
for these estates, messuages, farms, mines, and so forth, nor for my
hereditary ducal pension of ₤15,000 pounds. But Gwyneth and I are not
uncomfortably provided for, and I no longer contribute para-
graphs of
gossip to the
Pimlico Postboy, nor yet do I vaticinate in the columns of
the
Tipster. Perhaps I ought to have fled from the Towers the morning
after my arrival. And I declare that I would have fled but for Gwyneth
and “Love, that is a great Master.”