“That was like your mother, she always had a high spirit. He must be a cur, and he does not speak the truth. Your mother comes of a better stock than the Kershaws. The Carduses are one of the oldest families in the Eastern counties. Why, boy, our family lived down in the Fens by Lynn there for centuries, until your grandfather, poor weak man, got involved in his great lawsuit and ruined us all. There, there, it has gone into the law, but it is coming back, it is coming back fast. This Sir Hugh has only one son, by the way. Do you know that if anything happened to him you would be next in the entail?—at any rate you would get the baronetcy.”
“I don’t want his baronetcy,” said Ernest, sulkily; “I will have nothing of his.”
“A title, boy, is an incorporeal hereditament, for which the holder is indebted to nobody. It does not descend to him, it vests in him. But tell me, how long was this before your mother died—that he sent the five pounds, I mean?”
“About three months.”
Mr. Cardus hesitated a little before he spoke again, tapping his white fingers nervously on the table.
“I hope my sister was not in want, Ernest?” he said, jerkily.
“For a fortnight before she died we had scarcely enough to eat,” was the blunt reply.
Mr. Cardus turned himself to the window, and for a minute the light of the dull December day shone and glistened upon his brow and head, which was perfectly bald. Then before he spoke he drew himself back into the shadow, perhaps to hide something like a tear that shone in his soft black eyes.
“And why did she not appeal to me? I could have helped her.”
“She said that when you quarrelled with her about her marrying my father, you told her never to write or speak to you again, and that she never would.”