The Forsyte Saga - Volume 3 - Page 121/204

"These foreigners are all the same. Sack the lot. This one meets

your lady twice a week. I know it of my own knowledge--and to see an

Englishman put on goes against the grain. You watch it and see if what I

say isn't true. I shouldn't meddle if it wasn't a dirty foreigner that's

in it.

"Yours obedient."

The sensation with which Soames dropped the letter was similar to

that he would have had entering his bedroom and finding it full of

black-beetles. The meanness of anonymity gave a shuddering obscenity

to the moment. And the worst of it was that this shadow had been at the

back of his mind ever since the Sunday evening when Fleur had pointed

down at Prosper Profond strolling on the lawn, and said: "Prowling cat!"

Had he not in connection therewith, this very day, perused his Will and

Marriage Settlement? And now this anonymous ruffian, with nothing to

gain, apparently, save the venting of his spite against foreigners, had

wrenched it out of the obscurity in which he had hoped and wished it

would remain. To have such knowledge forced on him, at his time of life,

about Fleur's mother I He picked the letter up from the carpet, tore it

across, and then, when it hung together by just the fold at the back,

stopped tearing, and reread it. He was taking at that moment one of the

decisive resolutions of his life. He would not be forced into another

scandal. No! However he decided to deal with this matter--and it

required the most far-sighted and careful consideration he would

do nothing that might injure Fleur. That resolution taken, his mind

answered the helm again, and he made his ablutions. His hands trembled

as he dried them. Scandal he would not have, but something must be

done to stop this sort of thing! He went into his wife's room and stood

looking around him. The idea of searching for anything which would

incriminate, and entitle him to hold a menace over her, did not even

come to him. There would be nothing--she was much too practical. The

idea of having her watched had been dismissed before it came--too well

he remembered his previous experience of that. No! He had nothing

but this torn-up letter from some anonymous ruffian, whose impudent

intrusion into his private life he so violently resented. It was

repugnant to him to make use of it, but he might have to. What a mercy

Fleur was not at home to-night! A tap on the door broke up his painful

cogitations.

"Mr. Michael Mont, sir, is in the drawing-room. Will you see him?"