“Have you any influence with him?”

“Not much, my lord. Only now and then—a little.”

“You are not in the Army?”

The question was quite unnecessary. Ripton confessed to the law, and my lord did not look surprised.

“I will not detain you,” he said, distantly bowing.

Ripton gave him a commoner’s obeisance; but getting to the door, the sense of the matter enlightened him.

“It’s a duel, my lord?”

“No help for it, if his friends don’t shut him up in Bedlam between this and to-morrow morning.”

Of all horrible things a duel was the worst in Ripton’s imagination. He stood holding the handle of the door, revolving this last chapter of calamity suddenly opened where happiness had promised.

“A duel! but he won’t, my lord,—he mustn’t fight, my lord.”