<h2><SPAN name="#id9">CHAPTER VIII--Lord Northmuir's Young Relative</SPAN></h2>
<p>Awakened and informed of what had
happened, the housekeeper called the
doctor, who looked at the body and certified
that death had resulted from failure of the
heart, which must have been long diseased.
Joan paid for a good oak coffin and a
decent funeral. She bought a grave at Kensal
Green and ordered a neat stone to be erected.
If she had previously earned Mrs. Gone's
gratitude, she felt that she had now merited
any reward which might accrue in future,
and the curious, erasible tablet that did
duty as her conscience was wiped clear.</p>
<p>The morning after Mrs. Gone's funeral,
the girl put on her favourite frock of grey
cloth, with a hat to match, which had been
bought at one of the most fashionable shops
in Monte Carlo. This costume, with grey
gloves, grey shoes, and a grey chiffon parasol,
ivory-handled, gave Joan an air of quiet
smartness, a combination particularly
appropriate for the adventure which she had
planned. She hired a decorous brougham
and said to the coachman: "Drive to
Northmuir House, Belgrave Square."</p>
<p>It was but ten o'clock, and, as Joan had
gleaned some information concerning the
habits of the occupant, she was confident
that he would be at home. Mrs. Gone had
not been dead two hours when the girl
began searching through her own scrapbook,
compiled of cuttings taken from Society
papers. Whenever she came across the
description of any important member of the
aristocracy--his or her home life, manners,
fancies, and ways--she cut it out and pasted
it into this book, in case it should become
valuable for reference. The moment that
the dying woman uttered the name of
Northmuir, Joan's memory jumped to a paragraph
(one of the first that had gone into the
scrapbook), and as soon as she could shut
herself up in the little back room, she had
consulted her authority.</p>
<p>The Earl of Northmuir was, according to
the paper from which the cutting had been
clipped, still the handsomest man in England,
though now long past middle age. Once he had
been among the most popular also, but for
some years he had lived more or less in
retirement, owing to illness and family
bereavements, seldom leaving his fine old town
house in Belgrave Square.</p>
<p>"He'll be in London, and he won't be the
sort of man to go out before noon," Joan
said to herself.</p>
<p>Her heart was beating more quickly than
usual, but her face was calm and untroubled,
as she stood on the great porch at Northmuir
House, asking a footman in sober livery if
Lord Northmuir were at home.</p>
<p>The girl in the grey dress and grey hat,
with large, soft ostrich feathers, might have
been a young princess. Whatever she was,
she merited civility, and the servant, who
could not wholly conceal surprise, politely
invited her to enter, while he inquired if
his Lordship could receive a visitor. "What
name shall I say?" he asked.</p>
<p>"Give him this, please," said Joan,
handing the footman an envelope, addressed to
"The Earl of Northmuir." Inside this
envelope was a sheet of paper, blank,
save for the words, "A messenger from
Mrs. Gone, who is dead"; and the death
notice was enclosed.</p>
<p>With this envelope the man went away,
leaving her to wait in a large and splendid
drawing-room, where stiffness of arrangement
betrayed the absence of a woman's taste.</p>
<p>Joan looked about appreciatively, yet
critically. Then, when she had gained an
impressionist picture of the room, she glanced
at the jewelled watch on her wrist, a present
from Lady John Bevan after the sale of the
<em class="italics">Titania</em>.</p>
<p>What if Lord Northmuir had never known
the dead woman under the name of Gone?
What if--there were many things which
might go wrong, and Joan had put her
whole stake on a single chance. If she had
been mistaken--but as her mind played
among surmises, the footman returned.</p>
<p>"His Lordship will see you in his study,
if you will kindly come this way," the servant
announced.</p>
<p>Joan rose with quiet dignity and followed
the man along a pillared hall to a closed
door. "The lady, my lord," murmured the
footman, in opening it. Joan was left alone
with a singularly handsome old man, who
sat in a huge cushioned chair by the
fireplace. It was summer still, but a fire of
ship-logs sparkled with changing rainbow
lights on the stone hearth. In a thin hand,
Lord Northmuir held an exquisitely bound
book. He must have been more than sixty,
but his features were of the cameo--fine,
classic cut, of which the beauty, like that
of old marble, never dies, and it was easy
to see why he had once borne a reputation
as the handsomest man in England. It was
easy to see also, by his eyes as they catalogued
each item of Joan's beauty, that he had
been a gallant man, not blind to the charms
of women. Nevertheless, his voice was cold
as he spoke to the unexpected visitor.</p>
<p>"I haven't the pleasure of knowing your
name, or why you have honoured me by
calling," he said. "Forgive my not rising.
I am rather an invalid. Pray sit down.
There is something I can do for you?"</p>
<p>"Several things, Lord Northmuir," returned
the girl, taking the chair his gesture had indicated.</p>
<p>"You will tell me what they are?"</p>
<p>"I am anxious to tell you. In the first
place, I wish to be a relation of yours, and
not a poor relation. I wish to have a thousand
pounds a year, either permanently or until
my marriage, should I become the wife of a
rich man through your introduction."</p>
<p>Lord Northmuir stared at the girl, and if
there were not genuine astonishment in his
eyes, he was a clever actor. "You are a
handsome young woman," he said slowly, when she
had finished, "but I begin to be afraid that
your mind is unfortunately--er--affected."</p>
<p>"There is a weight upon it," Joan replied.--"the
weight of your secret. It's so heavy
that unless you are very kind, I shall be
tempted to throw the burden off by laying
it upon others."</p>
<p>Now the blood hummed in her ears. If
she had built a house of cards, this was the
moment when it would topple, and bury
her ambition in its ignominious downfall.
But Lord Northmuir's slow speech had
quickened her hope, for she said to herself that
it was not spontaneous; and gazing keenly
into his face, she saw the blood stain his
forehead. She had staked on the right chance,
yet the risk was not past. Her game was
the game of bluff, but its success depended
upon the man with whom she had to deal.</p>
<p>"I do not understand what you are talking
about," he said.</p>
<p>"I dare say I haven't made my meaning
clear," answered Joan, half rising. "Perhaps
I'd better explain to my solicitor, and
get him to write a letter----"</p>
<p>"You are nothing more nor less than a
common blackmailer," Lord Northmuir
exclaimed, bringing down his white hand on
the arm of his chair.</p>
<p>"I may be nothing less, but I am a good
deal more than a common one," retorted
Joan, surer of her ground. "I will prove
that, if you force me to do it."</p>
<p>"Who are you?" he broke out abruptly.</p>
<p>"I am a Woman Who Knows," she replied.
"There was another Woman Who
Knew. She called herself Gone. She is dead,
and I have come. I have come to stay."</p>
<p>"Don't you understand that I can hand
you over to the police?" demanded Lord
Northmuir, with difficulty controlling his
voice so that it could not be heard by possible
listeners outside the door.</p>
<p>"Yes; and I understand that I can hand
your secret over to the police. They would
know how to use it."</p>
<p>He flushed again, and Joan saw that her
daring shot had told. For the instant he had
no answer ready, and she seized the
opportunity to speak once more. "You can do
better for yourself than hand me over to the
police. There need be no trouble, if you
will realise that I am not a common person,
and not to be treated as such."</p>
<p>"Again I ask: Who are you?" he cried.</p>
<p>Joan risked another shot in the dark.
"Can't you make a guess?" she asked,
with a malicious suggestion of hidden
meaning in her tone.</p>
<p>An expression of horror and surprise passed
over Lord Northmuir's handsome face,
devastating it as a marching tornado devastates
a landscape. It was evident that he had
"made a guess," and been thunderstruck by
its answer. Joan's curiosity was so strongly
roused that it touched physical pain. Almost,
she would have been ready to give one of
her pretty fingers to know the secret.</p>
<p>"Do you still wish to ask questions?"
she inquired.</p>
<p>"Heaven help me, no! What is it that
you want?"</p>
<p>"I have told you already. If I insisted
on all I have a right to claim, you would
not be where you are."</p>
<p>She watched him. He grew deathly and
bowed his white head. Joan felt sorry for
the man now that he was at her mercy; but
her imagination played with the secret, as a
child plays with a prism in the sunshine.
Its flashing colours allured her. "Oh! if I
only <em class="italics">knew</em> something," she thought,
"something which would hold in law, and could
go through the courts, where might I not
stand? I might reach one of the highest
places a woman can fill. But it's no use;
I must take what I can get, and be thankful;
and, anyway, I can't help pitying him
a little, though I'm sure he doesn't deserve it.
He's old and tired, and I won't make him
suffer more than is necessary for the game."</p>
<p>Joan again named her terms, this time
with much ornamental detail. She was to
be a newly discovered orphan cousin. Her
name was to be, as it had been in
Cornwall, Mercy Milton. She was to be
invited to visit, for an indefinite length
of time, at Northmuir House. Her noble
relative was to exert himself to the extent
of giving entertainments to introduce her
to his most influential and highly placed
friends. He was also to make her an
allowance of a thousand pounds a year.</p>
<p>"Don't think, if you gamble away
as--as the other did, that I will go beyond this
bargain, for I will not!" cried Lord Northmuir,
with a testy desire to assert himself
and show that he was not wholly to be cowed.</p>
<p>"I don't gamble, except with Fate," said Joan.</p>
<p>This exclamation of his explained one
or two things which had been dark. She
guessed now why Mrs. Gone, evidently used
to luxuries, had been reduced to living on
the charity of a boarding-house keeper, and
why it had been necessary to wait until she
should be well enough to go out before she
could obtain "remittances."</p>
<p>Having concluded her arrangement with
Lord Northmuir, and settled to become his
relative and guest, Joan went back in her
brougham to Woburn Place. She told Miss
Witt that she had been called away, packed
her things, left such as she would not want
in Belgrave Square in boxes at the boarding-house,
delighted the housekeeper with many
gifts, and the following morning drove off with
a pile of luggage on a cab. Turning the corner
of Woburn Place into the next street, she
also turned a corner in her career, and for
the third time ceased to be Joan Carthew.</p>
<p>She had chosen to take up her lately laid
down part of Mercy Milton for two reasons.
One was, that in this character as she had
played it in Cornwall, with meekly parted
hair, soft, downcast eyes, simple manners
and simple frocks, she was not likely to be
recognised by any one who had known the
dashing and magnificent Miss Jenny Mordaunt;
while if she should come across Cornish
acquaintances, there was nothing in her
new position which need invalidate the story
of Lady Pendered's gentle sister.</p>
<p>If Lord Northmuir had looked forward
with dread to the intrusion of the adventuress
whom he was forced to receive, he soon
found that, beyond the galling knowledge
of his bondage, he had nothing disagreeable
to fear. The young cousin did not
attempt to interfere with his habits after
he had provided her with acquaintances,
who increased after the manner of a
"snowball" stamp competition. The two
usually lunched and dined together, and--at
first--that was all. But Miss Mercy
Milton made herself charming at table, never
referred by word or look to the loathed
secret, and was so tactful that, to his
extreme surprise, almost horror, the man found
himself looking forward to the hours of
meeting. Joan was not slow to see this;
indeed, she had been working up to it. When
the right time came, she volunteered to help
Lord Northmuir with his letters (he had
no secretary) and to read aloud. At the
end of six months she had become indispensable,
and he would have wondered how
existence had been possible without his
treasure had he dwelt upon the dangerous
subject at all. If, however, the blackmailer's
instalment in the household had turned
out an agreeable disappointment to the
blackmailed, it was a disappointment of
another kind to the author of the plot. Joan
Carthew did not find life in Belgrave Square
half as amusing as she had pictured it, and
though she was surrounded by luxury which
might be hers as long as Lord Northmuir
lived, each day she grew more restless and
discontented.</p>
<p>She had found society on the Riviera
delightful, but the butterfly crowd which
fluttered between Nice and Monte Carlo had
little resemblance to that with which she
came in contact as Lord Northmuir's cousin.
Jenny Mordaunt could do much as she
pleased--at worst she was put down as a
"mad American, my dear"; but Mercy
Milton had the family dignity to live up to.
Lord Northmuir's adopted relative could
not afford to be "cut" by the primmest
dowager; and being an ideal, conventional
English girl in the best society did not suit
Joan's roaming fancies.</p>
<p>It was supposed that she would be Lord
Northmuir's heiress; consequently mothers
of eligible young men were charming to her,
which would have been convenient if Joan
had happened to want one of their sons.
But not one of the men who sent her flowers
and begged for "extras" at dances would
she have married if he had been the last
existing specimen of his sex. This was
annoying, for in planning her campaign, Joan
had resolved to marry well and settle
satisfactorily for life. Now, however, she found
that it was simpler to decide upon a mercenary
marriage in the abstract than when it became
a personal question.</p>
<p>At the close of a year with Lord Northmuir
she had saved seven hundred pounds,
and at last, after a sleepless night, she made
up her mind to take a step which was, in a
way, a confession of failure.</p>
<p>She went to Lord Northmuir's study as
usual in the morning, but this time it was
not to act as reader or amanuensis.</p>
<p>"It's a year to-day since I came," she
said abruptly, with a purposeful look on
her face which the man felt was ominous.</p>
<p>"Yes," he answered. "A strange year,
but not an unhappy one. What I regarded
as a curse has turned out a blessing. I
should miss the albatross now if it were to
be taken off my neck."</p>
<p>"I'm sorry for that," said Joan, "for
the albatross has revived and intends to fly
away."</p>
<p>"What! You will marry?"</p>
<p>"No. I'm tired of being conventional.
I've decided to relieve you of my presence
here; and you can forget me, except when,
each quarter, you sign a cheque for two
hundred and fifty pounds."</p>
<p>Lord Northmuir's handsome face grew
almost as white as when she had first
announced her claim upon him. "I don't
want to forget you. I can't forget you!"
he stammered. "If I could, I would publish
the whole truth; but that is impossible, for
the honour of the name. You have made
me fond of you--made me depend upon
you. Why did you do that, if you meant
to leave me alone?"</p>
<p>"I didn't mean it at first," replied Joan
frankly. "I thought I should be 'in clover'
here, and so I have been; but too much
clover upsets the digestion. I must go, Lord
Northmuir. I can't stand it any longer. I'm
pining for adventures."</p>
<p>"Have you fallen in love?"</p>
<p>"No. I wish I had. I've been trying in vain."</p>
<p>"A year ago I would not have believed
it possible that I should make you such an
offer, but you have wrought a miracle. You
came to blackmail, you remained to bless.
Stay with me, my girl, till I die, and not
only shall you be remembered in my will, but
I will increase your allowance from one
thousand to two thousand a year. I can
afford to do this, since you have become
the one luxury I can't live without."</p>
<p>"I was just beginning to say that, if you
would let me go without a fuss, I would
take five hundred instead of a thousand a
year."</p>
<p>"But now I have shown you my heart,
you see that offer does not appeal to me."</p>
<p>Joan broke out laughing; this upsetting
of the whole situation was so humorous. A
sudden reckless impulse seized her. She
could not resist it.</p>
<p>"Lord Northmuir, you will change your
mind when I have told you something," she
said. "I have played a trick on you. I
have no connection with your family, and
know no more about your secret than I
know what will be in to-morrow's papers.
Mrs. Gone, in dying, mentioned a secret
and your name. I put two and two together,
and they matched so well that I've lived on
you for a year, bought lots of dresses, made
crowds of friends, had heaps of proposals,
and kept seven hundred pounds in hand.
Now I think you will be willing to let me
go; and you can lie easy and live happy
for ever after."</p>
<p>Having launched the thunderbolt, she
would have left the room, but Lord Northmuir,
old and invalided as he was, sprang
from his chair like an ardent youth and
caught her arm.</p>
<p>"By Jove! you shan't leave me like
that!" he cried. "You have made your
first mistake, my dear. Instead of being
in your power, you have put yourself in
mine. I need fear you no longer. But as a
trickster I love you no less than I did as a
blackmailer. Indeed, I love you the more
for your diabolical cleverness, you beautiful
wretch! Stay with me, not as the little
adopted cousin, living on charity, but as
my wife, and mistress of this house. Or,
if you will not, I shall denounce you to the
police."</p>
<p>For once, Joan was dumfounded. The
tables had been turned upon her with a
vengeance. She gasped, and could not answer.</p>
<p>"You see, it is my turn to dictate terms
now," said Lord Northmuir.</p>
<p>Joan's breath had come back. "You are
right," she returned, in a meek voice. "I
have given you the reins. But--well, it
would be something to be Countess of
Northmuir."</p>
<p>"Don't hope to be a widowed Countess,"
chuckled the old man. "I am only sixty-nine,
and for the last ten years I have taken
good care of myself."</p>
<p>"I count on nothing after this," said Joan.</p>
<p>"You consent, then?"</p>
<p>"How can I do otherwise?"</p>
<p>Lord Northmuir laughed out in his triumph
over her. "The notice of the engagement
will go to the <em class="italics">Morning Post</em> immediately,"
he said. "To-morrow, some of our friends
will be surprised."</p>
<p>But it was he who was surprised; for,
when to-morrow came, Joan had run away.</p>
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