let us return to sir lucius grafton. he is as mad as any man must be who feels that the imprudence of a moment has dashed the ground all the plans, and all the hopes, and all the great results, over which he had so often pondered. the great day from which he had expected so much had passed, nor was it possible for four-and-twenty hours more completely to have reversed all his feelings and all his prospects. miss dacre had shared the innocent but unusual and excessive gaiety which had properly become a scene of festivity at once so agreeable, so various, and so novel. sir lucius grafton had not been insensible to the excitement. on the contrary his impetuous passions seemed to recall the former and more fervent days of his career, and his voluptuous mind dangerously sympathised with the beautiful and luxurious scene. he was elated, too, with the thought that his freedom would perhaps be sealed this evening, and still more by his almost constant attendance on his fascinating companion. as the particular friend of the dacre family, and as the secret ally of mrs. dallington vere, he in some manner contrived always to be at miss dacre’s side. with the laughing but insidious pretence that he was now almost too grave and staid a personage for such scenes, he conversed with few others, and humourously maintaining that his ‘dancing days were over,’ danced with none but her. even when her attention was engaged by a third person, he lingered about, and with his consummate knowledge of the world, easy wit, and constant resources, generally succeeded in not only sliding into the conversation, but engrossing it. arundel dacre, too, although that young gentleman had not departed from his usual coldness in favour of sir lucius grafton, the baronet would most provokingly consider as his particular friend; never seemed to be conscious that his reserved companion was most punctilious in his address to him; but on the contrary, called him in return ‘dacre,’ and sometimes ‘arundel.’ in vain young dacre struggled to maintain his position. his manner was no match for that of sir lucius grafton. annoyed with himself, he felt confused, and often quitted his cousin that he might be free of his friend. thus sir lucius grafton contrived never to permit miss dacre to be alone with arundel, and to her he was so courteous, so agreeable, and so useful, that his absence seemed always a blank, or a period in which something ever went wrong.
the triumphant day rolled on, and each moment sir lucius felt more sanguine and more excited. we will not dwell upon the advancing confidence of his desperate mind. hope expanded into certainty, certainty burst into impatience. in a desperate moment he breathed his passion.
may dacre was the last girl to feel at a loss in such a situation. no one would have rung him out of a saloon with an air of more contemptuous majesty. but the shock, the solitary strangeness of the scene, the fear, for the first time, that none were near, and perhaps, also, her exhausted energy, frightened her, and she shrieked. one only had heard that shriek, yet that one was legion. sooner might the whole world know the worst than this person suspect the least. sir lucius was left silent with rage, mad with passion, desperate with hate.
he gasped for breath. now his brow burnt, now the cold dew ran off his countenance in streams. he clenched his fist, he stamped with agony, he found at length his voice, and he blasphemed to the unconscious woods.
his quick brain flew to the results like lightning. the duke had escaped from his mesh; his madness had done more to win this boy miss dacre’s heart than an age of courtship. he had lost the idol of his passion; he was fixed for ever with the creature of his hate. he loathed the idea. he tottered into the hermitage, and buried his face in his hands.
something must be done. some monstrous act of energy must repair this fatal blunder. he appealed to the mind which had never deserted him. the oracle was mute. yet vengeance might even slightly redeem the bitterness of despair. this fellow should die; and his girl, for already he hated miss dacre, should not triumph in her minion. he tore a leaf from his tablets, and wrote the lines we have already read.
the young duke reached home. you expect, of course, that he sat up all night making his will and answering letters. by no means. the first object that caught his eye was an enormous ottoman. he threw himself upon it without undressing, and without speaking a word to luigi, and in a moment was fast asleep. he was fairly exhausted. luigi stared, and called spiridion to consult. they agreed that they dare not go to bed, and must not leave their lord; so they played écarté, till at last they quarrelled and fought with the candles over the table. but even this did not wake their unreasonable master; so spiridion threw down a few chairs by accident; but all in vain. at half-past five there was a knocking at the gate, and they hurried away.
arundel dacre entered with them, woke the duke, and praised him for his punctuality. his grace thought that he had only dozed a few minutes; but time pressed; five minutes arranged his toilet, and they were first on the field.
in a moment sir lucius and mr. piggott appeared. arundel dacre, on the way, had anxiously enquired as to the probability of reconciliation, but was told at once it was impossible, so now he measured the ground and loaded the pistols with a calmness which was admirable. they fired at once; the duke in the air, and the baronet in his friend’s side. when sir lucius saw his grace fall his hate vanished. he ran up with real anxiety and unfeigned anguish.
‘have i hit you? by h-ll!’
his grace was magnanimous, but the case was urgent. a surgeon gave a favourable report, and extracted the ball on the spot. the duke was carried back to his chaise, and in an hour was in the state bed, not of the alhambra, but of his neglected mansion.
arundel dacre retired when he had seen his friend home, but gave urgent commands that he should be kept quiet. no sooner was the second out of sight than the principal ordered the room to be cleared, with the exception of spiridion, and then, rising in his bed, wrote this note, which the page was secretly to deliver.
‘—— house, — — 182-.
‘dear miss dacre,
‘a very unimportant but somewhat disagreeable incident has occurred. i have been obliged to meet sir lucius grafton, and our meeting has fortunately terminated without any serious consequences. yet i wish that you should hear of this first from me, lest you might imagine that i had not redeemed my pledge of last night, and that i had placed for a moment my own feelings in competition with yours. this is not the case, and never shall be, dear miss dacre, with one whose greatest pride is to subscribe himself
‘your most obedient and faithful servant,
‘st. james.’