When the Duke arrived in London his sons were not there. Gerald had gone back to Oxford, and Silverbridge had merely left an address. Then his sister wrote him a very short letter. 'Papa will be so glad if you will come to Matching. Do come.' Of course he came, and presented himself some few days after the Duke's arrival.
But he dreaded this meeting with his father which, however, let it be postponed for ever so long, must come at last. In reference to this he made a great resolution,--that he would go instantly as soon as he might be sent for. When the summons came he started; but, though he was by courtesy an Earl, and by fact was not only a man but a Member of Parliament, though he was half engaged to marry one young lady and ought to have been engaged to marry another, though he had come to an age at which Pitt was a great minister and Pope a great poet, still his heart was in his boots, as a schoolboy's might be, when he was driven up to the house at Matching.
In two minutes before he had washed the dust from his face, and hands, he was with his father. 'I am glad to see you, Silverbridge's aid the Duke, putting out his hand.
'I hope to see you well, sir.'
'Fairly well. Thank you. Travelling I think agrees with me. I miss, not my comforts, but a certain knowledge of how things are going on, which comes to us I think through our skins when we are at home. A feeling of absence pervades me. Otherwise I like it.
And you,--what have you been doing?'
'Shooting a little,' said Silverbridge, in a mooncalf tone.
'Shooting a great deal, if what I see in the newspapers be true about Mr Reginald Dobbes and his party. I presume it is a religion to offer up hecatombs to the autumnal gods,--who must surely take a keener delight in blood and slaughter than those bloodthirsty gods of old.'
'You should talk to Gerald about that, sir.'
'Has Gerald been so great at his sacrifices? How will that suit with Plato? What does Mr Simcox say?'
'Of course they were all to have a holiday just at that time. But Gerald is reading. I fancy that Gerald is clever.'
'And he is a great Nimrod?'
'As to hunting.'
'Nimrod I fancy got his game in any way that he could compass it.
I do not doubt but that he trapped foxes.'
'With a rifle at deer, say for four hundred yards, I would back Gerald against any man of his age in England or Scotland.'
'As to backing, Silverbridge, do not you think we had better have done with that?' This was hardly in a tone of reproach, with something even of banter in it; and as the question was asked the Duke was smiling. But in a moment all that sense of joyousness which the young man had felt in singing his brother's praises was expelled. His face fell, and he stood before his father almost like a culprit. 'We might as well have it out about his racing,' said the Duke. 'Something has to be said about it. You have lost an enormous sum of money.' The Duke's tone in saying this became terribly severe. Such at least was its sound in his son's ears. He did not mean to be severe.
But when he did speak of that which displeased him his voice naturally assumed that tone of indignation with which in days of yore he had been wont to denounce the public extravagance of his opponents in the House of Commons. The father paused, but the son could not speak at the moment. 'And worse than that,' continued the Duke; 'you have lost it in as bad company as you could have found had you picked all England through.'
'Mr Lupton, and Sir Henry Playfair, and Lord Stirling were in the room when the bets were made.'
'Were the gentlemen you name concerned with Major Tifto?'
'No, sir.'
'Who can tell with whom he may be in a room? Though rooms of that kind are, I think, best avoided.' Then the Duke paused again, but Silverbridge was now sobbing so that he could hardly speak. 'I am sorry that you should be so grieved,' continued the father, 'but such delights cannot, I think, lead to much real joy.'
'It is for you, sir,' said the son, rubbing his eyes with the hand which supported his head.
'My grief in the matter might soon be cured.'
'How shall I cure it? I will do anything to cure it.'
'Let Major Tifto and the horses go.'
'They are gone,' said Silverbridge energetically, jumping from his chair as he spoke. 'I will never own a horse again, or a part of a horse. I will have nothing more to do with races. You will believe me?'
'I will believe anything that you tell me.'
'I won't say I will not go to another race, because--'
'No; no. I would not have you hamper yourself. Nor shall you bind yourself by any further promises. You have done with racing.'
'Indeed, indeed I have, sir.'
Then the father came up to the son and put his arm round the young man's shoulders and embraced him. 'Of course it made me unhappy.'
'I knew it would.'
'But if you are cured of this evil, the money is nothing. What is all for but for you and your brother and sister? It was a large sum, but that shall not grieve me. The thing itself is so dangerous that if with that much of a loss we can escape, I will think that we have made not a bad market. Who owns the horse now?'
'The horse shall be sold.'
'For anything they may fetch so that we may get clear of this dirt. And the Major?'
'I know nothing of him. I have not seen him since that day.'
'Has he claims on you?'
'Not a shilling. It is all the other way.'