"But could Lackington afford this? What is he worth?"
"They call the English property twelve thousand a year, and he has a small estate in Ireland besides. In fact, it is out of that part of the property the mischief has come. This Conway's claim was discovered in some old country-house there, and Froode is only partially instructed in it."
"And now, Paul," said Davis, slowly, "if you got a commission to square this here affair and make all comfortable, how would you go about it?"
"Acting for which party, do you mean?" asked Paul.
"I mean for the Lackingtons."
"Well, there are two ways. I 'd send for Froode, and say, 'What's the lowest figure for the whole?' or I'd despatch a trusty fellow to the Crimea to watch Conway, and see what approaches they are making to him.
Of course they'll send a man out there, and it ought n't to be hard to get hold of him, or, if not himself, of all his papers and instructions."
"That looks business-like," said Grog, encouragingly.
"After all, Kit, these things, in ninety-nine cases out of the hundred, are only snaps of the percussion-cap. There 's scarcely a peerage in England is not menaced with an attempt of the kind; but such is the intermarriage--such the close tie of affinity between them--they stand manfully to the fellow in possession. They know in their hearts, if once they let the world begin to pick out a stone here or there, the whole wall may come tumbling down, and so they say, 'Here 's one of us since Henry II.'s time going to be displaced for some upstart fellow none of us ever heard of.' What signifies legitimacy that dates seven centuries back, in favor of one probably a shoemaker or a house-painter? They won't stand that, Kit, and reasonably enough, too. I suppose you've heard all about this case from Beecher?"
"Well, I _have_ heard something about it," said Grog, in confusion, for the suddenness of the question disconcerted him; "but _he_ don't care about it."
"Very likely not. If Lackington were to have a son, it would n't concern him much."
"Not alone that, but he does n't attach any importance to the claim; he says it's all got up to extort money."
"What of that? When a highwayman stops you with the same errand, does n't the refusal occasionally provoke him to use force? I know very few things so hard to deal with as menaces to extort money. Life is, after all, very like the game the Americans call 'Poker,' where the grand secret is, never to 'brag' too far on a bad hand. What was _your_ part in this business, Kit?" asked he, after a brief silence.
"How do you mean by _my_ part?" rejoined Davis, gruffly.
"I mean, how were you interested? Do you hold any of Lackington's paper?--have you got any claims on the reversion?--in a word, does it in any way concern you which king reigns in Israel?"
"It might, or it might not," said Grog, dryly. "Now for a question to _you_. Could you manage to get employed in the affair,--to be sent out after this Conway,--or is it too late?"
"It might, or it might not," said Classon, with a significant imitation of the other's tone and manner. Davis understood the sarcasm in a moment, and in a voice of some irritation said,--
"Don't you try to come the whip-hand over me, Holy Paul. If there be anything to do in this matter, it is I, and not _you_, will be paymaster; so much for this, so much for that,--there's the terms!"
"It is such dealings I like best," said Classon, blandly "Men would have benefited largely in this world had probity been parcelled out as task-work instead of being made daily labor."
"I suspect that neither you nor I would have had much employment either way," said Davis, with a bitter laugh. "But come, you must be stirring.
You 'll have to be off out of this before the afternoon. The Rhine steamer touches at Neuwied at three, and I expect my daughter by this boat. I don't want her to see you just yet awhile, Paul. You 'll start for Hochst, put up at the inn there, and communicate with me at once, so that I may be able to reckon upon you when needed. It were as well, too, that you'd write a line to Froode, and say that on second thoughts that expedition to the Crimea might suit; explore the way, in fact, and let me know the tidings. As to terms," said Grog,--for the other's blank look expressed hesitation,--"if _I_ say, 'Go,' _you_ shall say 'For what?'"
"I do love these frank and open dealings," said Paul, warmly.
"Look here!" said Davis, as the other was about to leave the room; "old Joe Morris, of Mincing Lane, made his fortune by buying up all the forged bills of exchange he could lay hands on, well knowing that the fellows he could hang or transport any day would be trusty allies. Now, I have all my life committed every critical thing to somebody or other that no other living man would trust with a sixpence. They stood to _me_ as I stood to _them_, and they knew why. Need I tell you that why?"
"No necessity in the world to do so," said Paul, blandly.
"That 's enough," said Davis. "Come to me when you're ready, and I'll have some cash for you."
CHAPTER VIII. A FAMILY MEETING.
Along a road pleasantly shaded by linden-trees, Davis strolled leisurely that afternoon to meet his daughter. It was a mellow autumnal day,--calm, silent, and half sombre,--one of those days in which the tranquil aspect of nature has an influence of sad but soothing import, and even the least meditative minds are led to reflection. Down the deep valley, where the clear trout-stream eddied along, while the leafy chestnut-trees threw their shadows over the water; over the rich pasture-lands, where the spotted cattle roamed; high up the blue mountains, whose snowy summits mingled with the clouds,--Davis wandered with his eyes, and felt, he knew not why or how, a something of calming, subduing effect upon a brain racked with many a scheme, wearied with many a plot.
As he gazed down upon that fair scene where form and color and odor were blended into one beauteous whole, a struggling effort of fancy sent through his mind the question, "Is this, after all, the real prize of life? Is this peaceful existence worth all the triumphs that we strive and fight for?" And then came the thought, "Could this be lasting, what would a nature like mine become, thus left in rust and disuse? Could I live? or should I enjoy life without that eternal hand-to-hand conflict with my fellow-men, on which skill and ready wit are exercised?" He pondered long over this notion, nor could he satisfy himself with any conclusion.
He thought he could remember a time when he would thoroughly have liked all this,--when he could have taken leave of the busy world without one regret, and made the great race of life a mere "walk over;" but now that he had tasted the poisonous fascination of that combat, where man is pitted against man, and where even the lust of gain is less stimulating than a deadly sense of jealous rivalry, it was too late--too late! How strange, too, did it seem to him, as he looked back upon his wild and stormy life, with all its perils and all its vicissitudes, to think that an existence so calm, so uneventful, and so safe, could yet be had,--that a region existed where craft could find no exercise, where subtlety might be in disuse! It was to him like a haven that he was rejoiced to know,--a harbor whose refuge, some one day or other, he would search out; but there was yet one voyage to make,--one grand venture,--which, if successful, would be the crowning fortune of his life!
The sharp crack, crack of a postilion's whip started him from his musings, and, looking up, he saw a post-carriage approaching at full speed. He waved his hat as the carriage came near for the men to draw up, and the next moment Lizzy Davis was in her father's arms. He kissed her twice, and then, holding her back, gazed with proud delight at her beautiful features, never more striking than in that moment of joyful meeting.
"How well you are looking, Lizzy!" said he, with a thick utterance.
"And you too, dear papa," said she, caressingly. "This quiet rural life seems to have agreed wonderfully with you. I declare you look five years younger for it, does he not, Mr. Beecher?"
"Ah, Beecher, how are you?" cried Davis, warmly shaking the other's hand. "This _is_ jolly, to be all together again," said he, as, drawing his daughter's arm within his own, and taking Beecher on the other side, he told the postilions to move forward, while they would find their way on foot.
"How did you ever hit upon this spot?" asked Beecher; "we could n't find it on the map."
"I came through here some four-and-twenty years ago, and I never forget a place nor a countenance. I thought at the time it might suit me, some one day or other, to remember, and you see I was right. You are grown fatter, Lizzy; at least I fancy so. But come, tell me about your life at Aix,--was it pleasant? was the place gay?"
"It was charming, papa!" cried she, in ecstasy; "had you only been with us, I could not have come away. Such delightful rides and drives, beautiful environs, and then the Cursaal of an evening, with all its odd people,--not that my guardian, here, fancied so much my laughing at them."
"Well, you did n't place much restraint upon yourself, I must say."
"I was reserved even to prudery; I was the caricature of Anglo-Saxon propriety," said she, with affected austerity.
"And what did they think of you, eh?" asked Davis trying to subdue the pride that would, in spite of him, twinkle in his eye.
"I was the belle of the season. I assure you it is perfectly true!"
"Come, come, Lizzy--"
"Well, ask Mr. Beecher. Be honest now, and confess frankly, were you not sulky at driving out with me the way the people stared? Didn't you complain that you never expected to come home from the play without a duel or something of the kind on your hands? Did you not induce me to ruin my toilette just to escape what you so delicately called 'our notoriety'? Oh, wretched man! what triumphs did I not relinquish out of compliance to your taste for obscurity!"
"By Jove! we divided public attention with Ferouk Khan and his wives. I don't see that my taste for obscurity obtained any brilliant success."
"I never heard of such black ingratitude!" cried she, in mock indignation. "I assure you, pa, I was a martyr to his English notions, which, to me, seem to have had their origin in Constantinople."
"Poor Beecher!" said Davis, laughingly.
"Poor Beecher, no, but happy Beecher, envied by thousands. Not indeed,"
added she, with a smile, "that his appearance at this moment suggests any triumphant satisfaction. Oh, papa, you should have seen him when the Russian Prince Ezerboffsky asked me to dance, or when the Archduke Albrecht offered me his horses; or, better still, the evening the Margrave lighted up his conservatory just to let me see it."
"Your guardianship had its anxieties, I perceive," said Davis, dryly.
"I think it had," said Beecher, sighing. "There were times I 'd have given five thousand, if I had it, that she had been safe under your own charge."
"My dear fellow, I'd have given fifty," said Davis, "if I did n't know she was just in as good hands as my own." There was a racy heartiness in this speech that thrilled through Beecher's heart, and he could scarcely credit his ears that it was Grog spoke it. "Ay, Beecher," added he, as he drew the other's arm closer to his side, "there was just one man--one single man in Europe--I 'd have trusted with the charge."