his daughter Lady Clara was hanging.
   Jack Belsize, in a velvet coat, with a sombrero slouched over his face,
   with a beard reaching to his waist, was, no doubt, not recognised at
   first by the noble lord of Dorking, for he was greeting the other two
   gentlemen with his usual politeness and affability; when, of a sudden,
   Lady Clara looking up, gave a little shriek and fell down lifeless on the
   gravel walk. Then the old earl recognised Mr. Belsize, and Clive heard
   him say, "You villain, how dare you come here?"
   Belsize had flung himself down to lift up Clara, calling her frantically
   by her name, when old Dorking sprang to seize him.
   "Hands off, my lord," said the other, shaking the old man from his back.
   "Confound you, Jack, hold your tongue," roars out Kew. Clive runs for a
   chair, and a dozen were forthcoming. Florac skips back with a glass of
   water. Belsize runs towards the awakening girl: and the father, for an
   instant losing all patience and self-command, trembling in every limb,
   lifts his stick, and says again, "Leave her, you ruffian." "Lady Clara
   has fainted again, sir," says Captain Belsize. "I am staying at the Hotel
   de France. If you touch me, old man" (this in a very low voice), "by
   Heaven I shall kill you. I wish you good morning;" and taking a last long
   look at the lifeless girl, he lifts his hat and walks away. Lord Dorking
   mechanically takes his hat off, and stands stupidly gazing after him. He
   beckoned Clive to follow him, and a crowd of the frequenters of the place
   are by this time closed round the fainting young lady.
   Here was a pretty incident in the Congress of Baden!
   CHAPTER XXIX
   In which Barnes comes a-wooing
   Ethel had all along known that her holiday was to be a short one, and
   that, her papa and Barnes arrived, there was to be no more laughing and
   fun and sketching and walking with Clive; so she took the sunshine while
   it lasted, determined to bear with a stout heart the bad weather.
   Sir Brian Newcome and his eldest born arrived at Baden on the very night
   of Jack Belsize's performance upon the promenade; of course it was
   necessary to inform the young bridegroom of the facts. His acquaintances
   of the public, who by this time know his temper, and are acquainted with
   his language, can imagine the explosions of the one and the vehemence of
   the other; it was a perfect feu d'artifice of oaths which he sent up. Mr.
   Newcome only fired off these volleys of curses when he was in a passion,
   but then he was in a passion very frequently.
   As for Lady Clara's little accident, he was disposed to treat that very
   lightly. "Poor dear Clara, of course, of course," he said, "she's been
   accustomed to fainting fits; no wonder she was agitated on the sight of
   that villain, after his infernal treatment of her. If I had been there"
   (a volley of oaths comes here along the whole line) "I should have
   strangled the scoundrel; I should have murdered him."
   "Mercy, Barnes!" cries Lady Anne.
   "It was a mercy Barnes was not there," says Ethel, gravely; "a fight
   between him and Captain Belsize would have been awful indeed."
   "I am afraid of no man, Ethel," says Barnes fiercely, with another oath.
   "Hit one of your own size, Barnes," says Miss Ethel (who had a number of
   school-phrases from her little brothers, and used them on occasions
   skilfully). "Hit Captain Belsize, he has no friends."
   As Jack Belsize from his height and strength was fitted to be not only an
   officer but actually a private in his former gallant regiment, and
   brother Barnes was but a puny young gentleman, the idea of a personal
   conflict between them was rather ridiculous. Some notion of this sort may
   have passed through Sir Brian's mind, for the Baronet said with his usual
   solemnity, "It is the cause, Ethel, it is the cause, my dear, which gives
   strength; in such a cause as Barnes's, with a beautiful young creature to
   protect from a villain, any man would be strong, any man would be
   strong." "Since his last attack," Barnes used to say, "my poor old
   governor is exceedingly shaky, very groggy about the head;" which was the
   fact. Barnes was already master at Newcome and the bank, and awaiting
   with perfect composure the event which was to place the blood-red hand of
   the Newcome baronetcy on his own brougham.
   Casting his eyes about the room, a heap of drawings, the work of a
   well-known hand which he hated, met his eye. There were a half-dozen
   sketches of Baden; Ethel on horseback again; the children and the dogs
   just in the old way. "D--- him, is he here?" screams out Barnes. "Is that
   young pothouse villain here? and hasn't Kew knocked his head off? Is
   Clive Newcome here, sir," he cries out to his father. "The Colonel's son.
   I have no doubt they met by----"
   "By what, Barnes?" says Ethel.
   "Clive is here, is he?" says the Baronet; "making caricatures, hey? You
   did not mention him in your letters, Lady Anne."
   Sir Brian was evidently very much touched by his last attack.
   Ethel blushed; it was a curious fact, but there had been no mention of
   Clive in the ladies' letters to Sir Brian.
   "My dear, we met him by the merest chance, at Bonn, travelling with a
   friend of his; and he speaks a little German, and was very useful to us,
   and took one of the boys in his britzska the whole way."
   "Boys always crowd in a carriage," says Sir Brian. "Kick your shins;
   always in the way. I remember, when we used to come in the carriage from
   Clapham, when we were boys, I used to kick my brother Tom's shins. Poor
   Tom, he was a devilish wild fellow in those days. You don't recollect
   Tom, my Lady Anne?"
   Further anecdotes from Sir Brian are interrupted by Lord Kew's arrival.
   "How dydo, Kew!" cries Barnes. "How's Clara?" and Lord Kew walking up
   with great respect to shake hands with Sir Brian, says, "I am glad to see
   you looking so well, sir," and scarcely takes any notice of Barnes. That
   Mr. Barnes Newcome was an individual not universally beloved, is a point
   of history of which there can be no doubt.
   "You have not told me how Clara is, my good fellow," continues Barnes. "I
   have heard all about her meeting with that villain, Jack Belsize."
   "Don't call names, my good fellow," says Lord Kew. "It strikes me you
   don't know Belsize well enough to call him by nicknames or by other
   names. Lady Clara Pulleyn, I believe, is very unwell indeed."
   "Confound the fellow! How dared he to come here?" cries Barnes, backing
   from this little rebuff.
   "Dare is another ugly word. I would advise you not to use it to the
   fellow himself."
   "What do you mean?" says Barnes, looking very serious in an instant.
   "Easy, my good friend. Not so very loud. It appears, Ethel, that poor
   Jack--I know him pretty well, you see, Barnes, and may call him by what
   names I like--had been dining to-day with cousin Clive; he and M. de
   Florac; and that they went with Jack to the promenade, not in the least
   aware of Mr. Jack Belsize's private affairs, or of the shindy that was
   going to happen."
   "By Jove, he shall answer for it," cries out Barnes in a loud voice.
					     					 			>   "I dare say he will, if you ask him," says the other drily; "but not
   before ladies. He'd be afraid of frightening them. Poor Jack was always
   as gentle as a lamb before women. I had some talk with the Frenchman just
   now," continued Lord Kew gaily, as if wishing to pass over this side of
   the subject. "Mi Lord Kiou," says he, "we have made your friend Jac to
   hear reason. He is a little fou, your friend Jack. He drank champagne at
   dinner like an ogre. How is the charmante Miss Clara? Florac, you see,
   calls her Miss Clara, Barnes; the world calls her Lady Clara. You call
   her Clara. You happy dog, you."
   "I don't see why that infernal young cub of a Clive is always meddling in
   our affairs," cries out Barnes, whose rage was perpetually being whipped
   into new outcries. "Why has he been about this house? Why is he here?"
   "It is very well for you that he was, Barnes," Lord Kew said. "The young
   fellow showed great temper and spirit. There has been a famous row, but
   don't be alarmed, it is all over. It is all over, everybody may go to bed
   and sleep comfortably. Barnes need not get up in the morning to punch
   Jack Belsize's head. I'm sorry for your disappointment, you Fenchurch
   Street fire-eater. Come away. It will be but proper, you know, for a
   bridegroom elect to go and ask news of la charmante Miss Clara."
   "As we went out of the house," Lord Kew told Clive, "I said to Barnes
   that every word I had uttered upstairs with regard to the reconciliation
   was a lie. That Jack Belsize was determined to have his blood, and was
   walking under the lime-trees by which we had to pass with a thundering
   big stick. You should have seen the state the fellow was in, sir. The
   sweet youth started back, and turned as yellow as a cream cheese. Then
   he made a pretext to go into his room, and said it was for his
   pocket-handkerchief, but I know it was for a pistol; for he dropped his
   hand from my arm into his pocket, every time I said 'Here's Jack,' as we
   walked down the avenue to Lord Dorking's apartment."
   A great deal of animated business had been transacted during the two
   hours subsequent to poor Lady Clara's mishap. Clive and Belsize had
   returned to the former's quarters, while gentle J. J. was utilising the
   last rays of the sun to tint a sketch which he had made during the
   morning. He fled to his own apartment on the arrival of the
   fierce-looking stranger, whose glaring eyes, pallid looks, shaggy beard,
   clutched hands, and incessant gasps and mutterings as he strode up and
   down, might well scare a peaceable person. Very terrible must Jack have
   looked as he trampled those boards in the growing twilight, anon stopping
   to drink another tumbler of champagne, then groaning expressions of
   inarticulate wrath, and again sinking down on Clive's bed with a dropping
   head and breaking voice, crying, "Poor little thing, poor little devil."
   "If the old man sends me a message, you will stand by me, won't you,
   Newcome? He was a fierce old fellow in his time, and I have seen him
   shoot straight enough at Chanticlere. I suppose you know what the affair
   is about?"
   "I never heard of it before, but I think I understand," says Clive,
   gravely.
   "I can't ask Kew, he is one of the family; he is going to marry Miss
   Newcome. It is no use asking him."
   All Clive's blood tingled at the idea that any man was going to marry
   Miss Newcome. He knew it before--a fortnight since, and it was nothing to
   him to hear it. He was glad that the growing darkness prevented his face
   from being seen. "I am of the family, too," said Clive, "and Barnes
   Newcome and I had the same grandfather."
   "Oh, yes, old boy--old banker, the weaver, what was he? I forgot," says
   poor Jack, kicking on Clive's bed, "in that family the Newcomes don't
   count. I beg your pardon," groans poor Jack.
   They lapse into silence, during which Jack's cigar glimmers from the
   twilight corner where Clive's bed is; whilst Clive wafts his fragrance
   out of the window where he sits, and whence he has a view of Lady Anne
   Newcome's windows to the right, over the bridge across the little rushing
   river, at the Hotel de Hollande hard by. The lights twinkle in the booths
   under the pretty lime avenues. The hum of distant voices is heard; the
   gambling-palace is all in a blaze; it is an assembly night, and from the
   doors of the conversation rooms, as they open and close, escape gusts of
   harmony. Behind on the little hill the darkling woods lie calm, the edges
   of the fir-trees cut sharp against the sky, which is clear with a
   crescent moon and the lambent lights of the starry hosts of heaven. Clive
   does not see pine-robed hills and shining stars, nor think of pleasure in
   its palace yonder, nor of pain writhing on his own bed within a few feet
   of him, where poor Belsize was groaning. His eyes are fixed upon a window
   whence comes the red light of a lamp, across which shadows float now and
   again. So every light in every booth yonder has a scheme of its own:
   every star above shines by itself; and each individual heart of ours goes
   on brightening with its own hopes, burning with its own desires, and
   quivering with its own pain.
   The reverie is interrupted by the waiter, who announces M. le Vicomte de
   Florac, and a third cigar is added to the other two smoky lights. Belsize
   is glad to see Florac, whom he has known in a thousand haunts. "He will
   do my business for me. He has been out half a dozen times," thinks Jack.
   It would relieve the poor fellow's boiling blood that some one would let
   a little out. He lays his affair before Florac; he expects a message from
   Lord Dorking.
   "Comment donc?" cries Florac; "il y avait donc quelque chose! Cette
   pauvre petite Miss! Vous voulez tuer le pere, apres avoir delaisse la
   fille? Cherchez d'autres temoins, Monsieur. Le Vicomte de Florac ne se
   fait pas complice de telles lachetes."
   "By Heaven," says Jack, sitting up on the bed, with his eyes glaring, "I
   have a great mind, Florac, to wring your infernal little neck, and to
   fling you out of the window. Is all the world going to turn against me? I
   am half mad as it is. If any man dares to think anything wrong regarding
   that little angel, or to fancy that she is not as pure, and as good, and
   as gentle, and as innocent, by Heaven, as any angel there,--if any man
   thinks I'd be the villain to hurt her, I should just like to see him,"
   says Jack. "By the Lord, sir, just bring him to me. Just tell the waiter
   to send him upstairs. Hurt her! I hurt her! Oh! I'm a fool! a fool! a
   d----d fool! Who's that?"
   "It's Kew," says a voice out of the darkness from behind cigar No. 4, and
   Clive now, having a party assembled, scrapes a match and lights his
   candles.
   "I heard your last words, Jack," Lord Kew says bluntly, "and you never
   spoke more truth in your life. Why did you come here? What right had you
   to stab that poor little heart over again, and frighten Lady Clara with
   your confounded hairy face? You promised me you would never see her. You
   gave your word of honour you wouldn't, when I gave you the money to go
   abroad. Hang the money, I 
					     					 			 don't mind that; it was on your promise that
   you would prowl about her no more. The Dorkings left London before you
   came there; they gave you your innings. They have behaved kindly and
   fairly enough to that poor girl. How was she to marry such a bankrupt
   beggar as you are? What you have done is a shame, Charley Belsize. I tell
   you it is unmanly and cowardly."
   "Pst," says Florac, "numero deux, voila le mot lache."
   "Don't bite your thumb at me," Kew went on. "I know you could thrash me,
   if that's what you mean by shaking your fists; so could most men. I tell
   you again--you have done a bad deed; you have broken your word of honour,
   and you knocked down Clara Pulleyn to-day as cruelly as if you had done
   it with your hand."
   With this rush upon him, and fiery assault of Kew, Belsize was quite
   bewildered. The huge man flung up his great arms, and let them drop at
   his side as a gladiator that surrenders, and asks for pity. He sank down
   once more on the iron bed.
   "I don't know," says he, rolling and rolling round, in one of his great
   hands, one of the brass knobs of the bed by which he was seated. "I don't
   know, Frank," says he, "what the world is coming to, or me either; here
   is twice in one night I have been called a coward by you, and by that
   little what-d'-you-call-'m. I beg your pardon, Florac. I don't know
   whether it is very brave in you to hit a chap when he is down: hit again,
   I have no friends. I have acted like a blackguard, I own that; I did
   break my promise; you had that safe enough, Frank, my boy; but I did not
   think it would hurt her to see me," says he, with a dreadful sob in his
   voice. "By--I would have given ten years of my life to look at her. I was
   going mad without her. I tried every place, everything; went to Ems, to
   Wiesbaden, to Hombourg, and played like hell. It used to excite me once,
   and now I don't care for it. I won no end of money,--no end for a poor
   beggar like me, that is; but I couldn't keep away. I couldn't, and if she
   had been at the North Pole, by Heavens I would have followed her."
   "And so just to look at her, just to give your confounded stupid eyes two
   minutes' pleasure, you must bring about all this pain, you great baby,"
   cries Kew, who was very soft-hearted, and in truth quite torn himself by
   the sight of poor Jack's agony.
   "Get me to see her for five minutes, Kew," cries the other, griping his
   comrade's hand in his; "but for five minutes."
   "For shame," cries Lord Kew, shaking away his hand, "be a man, Jack, and
   have no more of this puling. It's not a baby, that must have its toy, and
   cries because it can't get it. Spare the poor girl this pain, for her own
   sake, and balk yourself of the pleasure of bullying and making her
   unhappy."
   Belsize started up with looks that were by no means pleasant. "There's
   enough of this chaff I have been called names, and blackguarded quite
   sufficiently for one sitting. I shall act as I please. I choose to take
   my own way, and if any gentleman stops me he has full warning." And he
   fell to tugging his mustachios, which were of a dark tawny hue, and
   looked as warlike as he had ever done on any field-day.
   "I take the warning!" said Lord Kew. "And if I know the way you are
   going, as I think I do, I will do my best to stop you, madman as you are!
   You can hardly propose to follow her to her own doorway and pose yourself
   before your mistress as the murderer of her father, like Rodrigue in the
   French play. If Rooster were here it would be his business to defend his
   sister; In his absence I will take the duty on myself, and I say to you,
   Charles Belsize, in the presence of these gentlemen, that any man who
   iusults this young lady, who persecutes her with his presence, knowing it