“Nonsense!” interrupted Lady Johnstone. “You’re all alike, you Johnstones! I was talking to him this morning about her—I knew there was the beginning of something—and I told him what I thought. You’re all bad, and I love you all; but if you think that Clare Bowring is as practical as I am, you’re very much mistaken, Adam, dear! She’ll break her heart—”
“If she does, I’ll shoot him,” answered the old man with a grim smile. “I told him so.”
“Did you? Well, I am glad you take that view of it,” said Lady Johnstone, thoughtfully, and not at all realising what she was saying. “I’m glad I’m not a nervous woman,” she added, beginning to fan herself. “I should be in my grave, you know.”
“No—you are not nervous, my dear, and I’m very glad of it. I suppose it really is rather a trying situation. But if I didn’t know you, I wouldn’t have told you all this. You’ve spoiled me, you know—you really have been so tremendously good to me—always, dear.”
There was a rough, half unwilling tenderness in his voice, and his big bony hand rested gently on the fat lady’s shoulder, as he spoke. She bent her head to one side, till her large red cheek touched the brown knuckles. It was, in a way, almost grotesque. But there was that something in it which could make youth and beauty and passion ridiculous—the outspoken truthful old rake and the ever-forgiving wife. Who shall say wherein pathos lies? And yet it seems to be something more than a mere hack-writer’s word, after all. The strangest acts of life sometimes go off in such an oddly quiet humdrum way, and then all at once there is the little quiver in the throat, when one least expects it—and the sad-eyed, faithful, loving angel has passed by quickly, low and soft, his gentle wings just brushing the still waters of our unwept tears.
Sir Adam left his wife to go in search of Mrs. Bowring. He sent a message to her, and she came out and met him in the corridor. They went into the reading-room together, and he shut the door. In a few words he told her all that he had told his wife about Mrs. Crosby, and asked her whether she had any objection to signing the document as a witness, merely in order that he might satisfy himself by actually executing it.
“It is high handed,” said Mrs. Bowring. “It is like you—but I suppose you have a right to save your son from such trouble. But there is something else—do you know what has happened? He has been making love to Clare—he has asked her to marry him, and she has refused. She told me this morning—and I have told her the truth—that you and I were once married.”
She paused, and watched Sir Adam’s furrowed face.
“I’m glad of that,” he said. “I’m glad that it has all come out on the same day. He knows everything, and he has told me everything. I don’t know how it’s all going to end, but I want you to believe one thing. If he had guessed the truth, he would never have said a word of love to her. He’s not that kind of boy. You do believe me, don’t you?”
“Yes, I believe you. But the worst of it is that she cares for him too—in a way I can’t understand. She has some reason, or she thinks she has, for disliking him, as she calls it. She wouldn’t tell me. But she cares for him all the same. She has told him, though she won’t tell me. There is something horrible in the idea of our children falling in love with each other.”