Volume Ii Part 7 (1/2)
The same dangerous sort of silence as before seemed creeping on them; but again the widow had the courage to break it, by recalling to the memory of her musing and greatly pre-occupied companion the anecdote respecting Waterloo which he had promised her.
”Waterloo!” said he, rousing himself.... ”Ay, dearest Mrs. Barnaby, I _will_ tell you that, though there are many reasons which render me very averse to speak of it lightly. In the first place, by those who know me not, it might be thought to look like boasting; and, moreover, if I alluded to it in any society capable of the baseness of repeating what I said, it might bring upon me very active, and indeed fatal, proofs of the dislike--I may say hatred--already felt against me in a certain quarter.”
”Gracious heaven, Major!... be careful then, I implore you, before whom you speak! There appear to be many strangers here, of whose characters it is impossible to know anything.... If you have enemies, they may be spies expressly sent to watch you.”
”I sometimes think so, I a.s.sure you.... I catch such singular looks occasionally, as nothing else can account for; and the enemy I allude to is one who has power, as well as will, to punish by evil reports, if he cannot positively crush and ruin, those who interfere with his ambition.”
”Is it possible? Thank heaven! at least you can have no doubt of me....
So, tell me, I beseech you to tell me, to whom is it that your alarming words refer?”
The Major drew his chair close to Mrs. Barnaby, took one of her hands between both of his, and having gazed for a moment very earnestly in her face, whispered,--
”The Duke of Wellington!”
”Good G.o.d!...” exclaimed the widow, quite in an agony: ”the Duke of Wellington! Is the Duke of Wellington your enemy, Major Allen?”
”To the teeth, my fairest! to the teeth!” replied the Major, firmly setting the instruments he mentioned, and muttering through them with an appearance of concentrated rage, the outward demonstration of which was increased by the firmness of the grasp in which he continued to hold her hand.
”But how can this be so?” faltered Mrs. Barnaby.... ”So brave a man as you!... one, too, who had distinguished himself so early! How can he be so base?”
”How can he be otherwise, my friend?” replied the Major with increasing agitation, ”when” ... and here he lowered his voice still more, whispering almost in her very ear, ”it is I--I,--Ferdinand Alexander Allen, who ought by right to be the Duke of Wellington, instead of him who now wears the t.i.tle!”
”You astonish me more than I am able to express!”
”Of course I do.... Such, however, is the fact. The battle of Waterloo would have been lost,--was lost, positively lost,--till I, disdaining in such a moment to receive orders from one whom I perceived to be incompetent, rushed forward, almost knocking the Duke off his horse as I did so ... sent back the French army like a flock of sheep before an advancing lion ... seized with my own hand on the c.o.c.ked hat of Napoleon ... drew it from his head, and actually flogged his horse with it till horse and rider together seemed well enough inclined to make the best of their way out of my reach.... G.o.d bless you, my dearest lady!
the Duke of Wellington had no more to do in gaining the battle of Waterloo than you had.... I now leave you to judge what his feelings towards me are likely to be.”
”Full of envy and hatred, beyond all doubt!” solemnly replied Mrs.
Barnaby; ”and I will not deny, Major Allen, that I think there is great danger in your situation. A person of such influence may do great injury, even to a man of your well-known n.o.ble character. But how extraordinary it is that no hint of this has ever transpired.”
”I beg your pardon, my dear madam; this is very far from being the case.
At your peaceful residence beneath the shades of Silverton Park, it is highly probable that you may have remained ignorant of the fact; but, in truth, the Duke's reputation among the people of England has suffered greatly; though no one, indeed, has yet proposed that his sword should be taken from him. The well-known circ.u.mstance of stones having been thrown at his windows ... a fact which probably has never reached you ... is quite sufficient to prove that the people must be aware that what the English army did at Waterloo, was not done under his generals.h.i.+p.... No, no, England knows too well what she owed to that victory so to treat the general who achieved it; and had they not felt doubts as to who that general was, no stones would have been levelled at Apsley House. Many of the common soldiers--fine fellows!--have been bold enough to name me, and it is this that has so enraged the Duke, that there is nothing which he has not taught his emissaries to say against me.... I have been called swindler, black-leg, radical, horse-jockey, and I know not what beside; and I should not wonder, my charming friend, if sooner or later your friends.h.i.+p were put to the proof, by having to listen to similar calumnies against me; but now, you will be able to understand them aright, and know the source from whence they come.”
”Well, I never did hear anything so abominable in my life!” said Mrs.
Barnaby warmly.... ”Not content with taking credit to himself for all that was gained by your extraordinary bravery, he has the baseness to attack your character!... It is too detestable!... and I only hope, that when I get among my own connexions in town, I shall not have the misfortune of meeting him often.... I am certain I should not be able to resist saying something to shew what I thought. Oh! if he were really the brave man that he has been fancied to be, how he must have adored you for your undaunted courage!... And you really took Napoleon's hat off his head?... How excessively brave!... I wish I could have seen it, Major!... I am sure I should have wors.h.i.+pped you.... I do so doat upon bravery!”
”Sweet creature!... That devoted love of courage is one of the loveliest propensities of the female mind. Yes, I am brave--I do not scruple to say so; and the idea that this quality is dear to you, will strengthen it in me four-fold.... But, my dear, my lovely friend! I must bid you adieu. I expect the steward of my property in Yorks.h.i.+re to-day, and I rather think he must be waiting for me now.... Soften, then, the pain of this parting, by telling me that I may come again!”
”I should be sorry indeed to think this was our last meeting, Major Allen,” said the widow gently; ”I am seldom out in the morning before the hour at which you called to-day.”
”Farewell then!” said he, kissing her hand with an air of mixed tenderness and respect, ”farewell!... and remember that all I have breathed into your friendly ear must be sacred; ... but I know it would be so without this injunction; Mrs. Barnaby's majestic beauty conceals not the paltry spirit of a gossip!”
”Indeed you are right!... indeed you are right!... To my feelings the communications of a friend are sweet, solemn pledges of regard, that it would be sacrilege to violate. Farewell, Major!--farewell!”
CHAPTER V.
A YOUNG LADY'S PLOT.--A CONSULTATION, AND THE HAPPY RESULT OF IT.--A TERRIBLE INTERRUPTION, AND A DANGEROUS EXPEDITION.--CONFIDENTIAL INTERCOURSE.