quarter. Old Lord Edbury put him down in his
will for some thousands, and he risked it to save
a lady, who hated him for his pains. Lady Edbury
was of the Bolton blood, none of the tamest; they
breed good cavalry men. She ran away from her
husband once. The old lord took her back.
“It ’s at your peril, mind!” says
she. Well, Roy hears by-and-by of afresh affair.
He mounted horse; he was in the saddle, I’ve
been assured, a night and a day, and posted himself
between my lady’s park-gates, and the house,
at dusk. The rumour ran that he knew of the marquis
playing spy on his wife. However, such was the
fact; she was going off again, and the marquis did
play the mean part. She walked down the parkroad,
and, seeing the cloaked figure of a man, she imagined
him to be her Lothario, and very naturally, you will
own, fell into his arms. The gentleman in question
was an acquaintance of mine; and the less you follow
our example the better for you. It was a damnable
period in morals! He told me that he saw the scene
from the gates, where he had his carriage-and-four
ready. The old lord burst out of an ambush on
his wife and her supposed paramour; the lady was imprisoned
in her rescuer’s arms, and my friend retired
on tiptoe, which was, I incline to think, the best
thing he could do. Our morals were abominable.
Lady Edbury would never see Roy-Richmond after that,
nor the old lord neither. He doubled the sum
he had intended to leave him, though. I heard
that he married a second young wife. Roy, I believe,
ended by marrying a great heiress, and reforming.
He was an eloquent fellow, and stood like a general
in full uniform, cocked hat and feathers; most amusing
fellow at table; beat a Frenchman for anecdote.’
I spared Colonel Heddon the revelation of my relationship
to his hero, thanking his garrulity for interrupting
me.
How I pitied him when I drove past the gates of the
main route to Innsbruck! For I was bound homeward:
I should soon see England, green cloudy England, the
white cliffs, the meadows, the heaths! And I thanked
the colonel again in my heart for having done something
to reconcile me to the idea of that strange father
of mine.
A banner-like stream of morning-coloured smoke rolled
North-eastward as I entered London, and I drove to
Temple’s chambers. He was in Court, engaged
in a case as junior to his father. Temple had
become that radiant human creature, a working man,
then? I walked slowly to the Court, and saw him
there, hardly recognising him in his wig. All
that he had to do was to prompt his father in a case
of collision at sea; the barque Priscilla had run
foul of a merchant brig, near the mouth of the Thames,
and though I did not expect it on hearing the vessel’s
name, it proved to be no other than the barque Priscilla
of Captain Jasper Welsh. Soon after I had shaken
Temple’s hand, I was going through the same ceremony
with the captain himself, not at all changed in appearance,
who blessed his heart for seeing me, cried out that
a beard and mustachios made a foreign face of a young
Englishman, and was full of the ‘providential’
circumstance of his having confided his case to Temple
and his father.