He ceased speaking abruptly. It would have been difficult to have grasped from his tone whether he judged his mother harshly or not.
"I hope to get you more details," Mr. Haverford said when he spoke again. "As a matter of fact, I have brought down with me a quantity of old letters and other papers which I dare say will throw some light on your early history. You seem to have been quite a baby when your mother died, and you came to England when you were a little child between three and four."
"Then I must have gone immediately to Miss Beamish, my old schoolmistress," said Caroline.
"Yes; my mother tells me you were placed in a school. She explains this rather strange proceeding by telling me that Cuthbert was at that time such a delicate child that her whole thought and care had to be given to him, and she herself was in such a poor state of health that she was not in a condition to charge herself with too much responsibility."
Caroline laughed. It was not an unkind laugh.
"No, I am sure Mrs. Baynhurst never did care about responsibilities," she said.
She stooped forward to push some of the parcels more securely on the opposite seat, and the colour rushed to her face as she asked him another question.
"There is one thing I should like to know," she said, "and that is if I have been kept by charity all this time. Did you find out anything about that?"
They were close to the gates of Yelverton now, and Rupert Haverford answered her hurriedly.
"You touch on a rather important phase of this matter, Miss Graniger," he said, "and I have more to communicate to you; but we cannot go into this properly now. As I shall be here for a day or so I hope you will afford me an opportunity for speaking quietly with you."