The American Senator eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 785 pages of information about The American Senator.

The American Senator eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 785 pages of information about The American Senator.

Arabella Trefoil had adhered without flinching to the purpose she had expressed of going down to Bragton to see the sick man.  And yet at that very time she was in the midst of her contest with Lord Rufford.  She was aware that a correspondence was going on between her father and the young lord and that her father had demanded an interview.  She was aware also that the matter had been discussed at the family mansion in Piccadilly, the Duke having come to London for the purpose, and that the Duke and his brother, who hardly ever spoke to each other, had absolutely had a conference.  And this conference had had results.  The Duke had not himself consented to interfere, but he had agreed to a compromise proposed by his son.  Lord Augustus should be authorised to ask Lord Rufford to meet him in the library of the Piccadilly mansion,—­so that there should be some savour of the dukedom in what might be done and said there.  Lord Rufford would by the surroundings be made to feel that in rejecting Arabella he was rejecting the Duke and all the Mayfair belongings, and that in accepting her he would be entitled to regard himself as accepting them all.  But by allowing thus much the Duke would not compromise himself,—­nor the Duchess, nor Lord Mistletoe.  Lord Mistletoe, with that prudence which will certainly in future years make him a useful assistant to some minister of the day, had seen all this, and so it had been arranged.

But, in spite of these doings, Arabella had insisted on complying with John Morton’s wish that she go down and visit him in his bed at Bragton.  Her mother, who in these days was driven almost to desperation by her daughter’s conduct, tried her best to prevent the useless journey, but tried in vain.  “Then,” she said in wrath to Arabella, “I will tell your father, and I will tell the Duke, and I will tell Lord Rufford that they need not trouble themselves any further.”  “You know, mamma, that you will do nothing of the kind,” said Arabella.  And the poor woman did do nothing of the kind.  “What is it to them whether I see the man or not?” the girl said.  “They are not such fools as to suppose that because Lord Rufford has engaged himself to me now I was never engaged to any one before.  There isn’t one of them doesn’t know that you had made up an engagement between us and had afterwards tried to break it off.”  When she heard this the unfortunate mother raved, but she raved in vain.  She told her daughter that she would not supply her with money for the expenses of her journey, but her daughter replied that she would have no difficulty in finding her way to a pawn shop.  “What is to be got by it?” asked the unfortunate mother.  In reply to this Arabella would say, “Mamma, you have no heart;—­ absolutely none.  You ought to manoeuvre better, than you do, for your feelings never stand in your way for a moment” All this had to be borne, and the old woman was forced at last not only to yield but to promise that she would accompany her daughter to Bragton.  “I know how all this will end,” she said to Arabella.  “You will have to go your way and I must go mine.”  “Just so,” replied the daughter.  “I do not often agree with you, mamma; but I do there altogether.”

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The American Senator from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.