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Title: Wyllard's Weird: A Novel
Author: Braddon, M. E. (Mary Elizabeth)
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.

*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Wyllard's Weird: A Novel" ***

WYLLARD'S WEIRD

A Novel

By

M. E. BRADDON

THE AUTHOR OF

"LADY AUDLEY'S SECRET," "VIXEN,"
"ISHMAEL,"

ETC.


IN THREE VOLUMES

VOL. I.


LONDON

JOHN AND ROBERT MAXWELL

MILTON HOUSE, SHOE LANE, FLEET STREET

AND

35 ST. BRIDE STREET, E.C.

1885


CONTENTS OF VOL. I.


     I. IN A CORNISH VALLEY
    II. AFTER THE INQUEST
   III. JOSEPH DISTIN
    IV. BOTHWELL DECLINES TO ANSWER
     V. PEOPLE WILL TALK
    VI. A CLERICAL WARNING
   VII. A RAPID CONVERSION
  VIII. A VALUABLE ALLY
    IX. FEVER DREAMS
     X. "TOUCH LIPS AND PART WITH TEARS"
    XI. A FATAL LOVE

Volume II

Volume III



WYLLARD'S WEIRD



CHAPTER I.


IN A CORNISH VALLEY.


There are some travellers who think when they cross the Tamar, over
that fairy bridge of Brunel's, hung aloft between the blue of the river
and the blue of the sky, that they have left England behind them on
the eastern shore--that they have entered a new country, almost a new
world. This land of quiet woods and lonely valleys, and bold brown
hills, barren, solitary--these wild commons and large moorlands of
Cornwall seem to stand apart, as they did in the days gone by, when
this province was verily a kingdom, complete in itself, and owning no
sovereignty but its own.

It is a beautiful region which the traveller sees, perchance for the
first time, as the train skims athwart the quaint little waterside
village of Saltash, and pierces the rich depths of the woodland,
various, enchanting. Now the line seems strung like a thread of iron
in mid-air above a deep gorge, now winds sinuous as a snake through a
labyrinth of hills. A picturesque bit of road, this between Plymouth
and Bodmin Road, at all times; but, perhaps, loveliest in the still
evening hour, when the summer sunset steeps the land in golden light,
while the summer wind scarcely stirs the woods.

In the mellow light of a July eventide the express from Paddington
swept with slackened speed round the curve which marked the approach to
a viaduct between Saltash and Bodmin Road--a heavy wooden structure,
spanning a vale of Alpine beauty. An exquisite little bit of scenery,
upon which the stranger is apt to look with some touch of fear mingled
in the cup of his delight: but to the dweller in the district, familiar
with every yard of the journey, the transit is as nothing. He is
carried through the air serenely, as he smokes his cigar and reads his
paper, and the notion of peril never occurs to him.

One man, sitting by the window of a third-class carriage near the end
of the train, looked out at the familiar scene dreamily to-night. He
was an elderly, gray-headed man, a parish doctor, hard-worked and
poorly paid; but he had a keen eye for the beautiful in Nature, dead or
living, and familiar as this spot was to his eye, it always impressed
him. He sat with his face to the engine, puffing lazily at his black
briarwood, and gazing at the landscape, in that not unpleasant
condition of bodily and mental fatigue, when the mind seems half
asleep, and the external world is little more than a dream-picture.

The train was not a long one, a good many of the London coaches having
been left behind at Plymouth. Dr. Menheniot put out his head, and
surveyed the line of carriages as they rounded the curve. There was
a figure here and there by a window; but the train seemed sparsely
occupied. They were nearing the viaduct. That narrow thread of water
trickling over its rocky bed in the depth of the gorge was in winter
a rushing torrent. The line at this point was under repair, and the
wooden palisade had been removed in the progress of the work. The
actual danger was in nowise increased by the absence of this barrier,
which would have crumbled like matchwood before the weight of the
train, had the engine run off the rails--but there was a seeming
insecurity to the eye of the traveller as he looked into the gulf
below; and Dr. Menheniot gave an involuntary shudder. Another moment
and the engine came on the viaduct. Menheniot started up with a
half-articulate exclamation, "What, in God's name--" he began.

He opened the carriage-door, seemed as if he were going to clamber out,
to try and make his way along the footboard to a distant carriage,
outside which a girl was standing, holding on to the brass hand-rail
at the side of the door. She had that instant stepped out, or been
thrust out; Menheniot knew not which. He had seen nothing till he saw
her standing there, a slender figure in a light-coloured gown, thin
draperies fluttering in the wind--standing there, hanging between life
and death, a creature to be rescued somehow, were it at the hazard of a
man's life.

Before he could put himself in peril the chance of rescue was over. A
wild shriek rang through the wood--a fluttering form went whirling down
the ravine, flashing white athwart the sunlit greenery, and lay half
buried amidst a tangle of ferns and wild flowers at the bottom of the
gorge.

Twenty or thirty heads were thrust out of the windows. The train,
which to Dr. Menheniot's eye just now had seemed almost empty, was
now alive with people. The engine slackened speed, and stopped at
about a hundred yards from the scene of the catastrophe. A dozen men
of different ages and qualities leaped out of the train and clambered
down the embankment; among others Julian Wyllard, the Lord of the Manor
of Penmorval--a man of middle age, soberly attired, a tall stately
figure, a man of mark in this part of the country--before whom all gave
way; except little Dr. Menheniot, who hurried on ahead, intent upon
affording professional help, if such help could avail.

Julian Wyllard had been an athlete in his boyhood and youth. He
walked down the steep, rugged hillside more easily than many men
walk down Regent Street. At the bottom of the embankment every one
fell back involuntarily, as it were, and allowed Mr. Wyllard to head
the procession. They went as fast as it was possible to go over that
broken ground, trampling down the ferns and flowers, the tiny scarlet
strawberries, and crimson and orange fungi, as they went, every lip
breathless, every eye strained towards that one spot in the hollow
yonder where the doctor was hastening.

"No use, I fear," said Mr. Wyllard, as if answering the common thought.
"The poor creature must be quite dead."

"What, in mercy's name, made her do it?" speculated a burly farmer;
"was she frighted, do you think, by some ruffian in the train; or did
she want to make away with herself?"

The little cluster of passengers looked at one another curiously, as
if seeking among those rustic countenances for the face of a scoundrel
capable of assailing unprotected innocence. But if guilt were present
in that assembly, there was no outward indication of the diabolical
element. Almost every one there was known to the rest: small farmers,
a squire or two, the elderly lawyer from Camelford, the curate of
Wadebridge, a magistrate of Bodmin, a cornchandler and respectable
inhabitant of the same town. Assuredly not among these would one look
for that debased and savage humanity which is viler in its instincts
than the wild beasts of the jungle.

There might be other passengers lurking in the train, among those
loquacious women up yonder, who were all putting their heads out of
windows, straining their necks to get their share in the pity and the
terror of the tragedy down below.

Mr. Wyllard and his companions found little Dr. Menheniot on his knees
beside the piteous figure lying in a heap, like a limp rag, among ferns
and ground-ivy.

He had lifted the poor bruised head upon his arm, and he was looking
down at the dead face, the open eyes gazing in the set stare of a great
horror. Horror at the wretch who flung her down, or at that awful gulf
of death self-sought? Who could tell? Those blood-bedabbled lips were
mute for evermore, unless the dead could be conjured into speech.

"Is she quite gone?" asked Julian Wyllard, his compassionate
countenance calm amidst the agitation of the little crowd.

That spectacle of sudden violent death was no new thing to his eyes.
He had lived in Paris during the siege and the Commune, had seen the
corpses laid out in long rows in the cemeteries, and piled in bloody
heaps in the streets.

"Quite dead, and a blessed thing too," answered the doctor. "I don't
believe she has a whole bone in her body. She could only have lingered
a little while to suffer agonies. Her neck is broken. Poor little
thing! She is quite a young creature and must have been pretty."

Yes, it was a pretty little face, even in the pallor of death. A
small _retroussé_ nose; large dark eyes, with long black lashes;
pouting, childish lips; a delicately moulded figure, neatly dressed in
light-gray alpaca, a linen collar cut low in the front and showing a
good deal of the slim white throat, linen cuffs, long thread gloves,
and little stuff boots.

"She looks like a furriner," said Mr. Nicholls, the burly farmer who
had speculated as to the cause of her death.

"Hadn't somebody better examine her pockets for any papers which may
identify her?" said a voice behind Wyllard.

It was the voice of a young man who had been the last to leave the
train. He had followed the rest at a few paces' distance, and had only
just arrived to look at the dead girl over Wyllard's shoulder.

"You here, Bothwell?" exclaimed Wyllard, turning quickly.

"Yes, I have been in Plymouth all day, and thought I'd get back by your
train," answered Bothwell Grahame easily. "Don't you think they ought
to examine her pockets?"

"Certainly; but it is a question as to whether it should be done now
or later," said Wyllard. "She was evidently travelling alone, poor
creature, and she must have been in a compartment by herself, since
nobody seems to know anything about her. The chief thing to be done is
to get her carried on to Bodmin Road, where there must be an inquest."

Everybody agreed that this was the voice of wisdom. Dr. Menheniot
turned out the pocket of the neat alpaca gown. There was nothing but a
handkerchief, a little bunch of keys, and a second-class railway ticket
for Plymouth; no card-case or purse; not even an old letter to offer a
clue to the dead girl's personality. This done, the doctor arranged the
poor dislocated form decently, and two sturdy men lifted it from the
greenery, and carried it gently up the embankment to the train, where
that unconscious clay was laid on the seat of an empty second-class
compartment.

"It is the very carriage she was in," said Bothwell, pointing to a torn
strip of gray alpaca hanging on the metal handle. "Her gown must have
caught on the handle as she fell, and this shred was left behind."

Bothwell gave the bit of alpaca to Dr. Menheniot.

"You can show that to the Coroner," he said; "of course, you will be a
witness."

"About the only one necessary, I should think," said the doctor. "I saw
her fall."

"Did you?" exclaimed Wyllard. "That's lucky! And what was your
impression as to the manner of her fall--whether she deliberately threw
herself out, or whether she was thrown out by a villain?"

This was asked in a lowered voice; since the murderer, if the deed were
murder, might be within hearing.

"Upon my soul, I cannot tell," protested Menheniot, with a troubled
look. "The whole thing was so rapid. It passed like a flash. I was
smoking, tired, in a dozy condition altogether, and this horrible thing
seemed like a dream. I saw no other head at the carriage window. I saw
nothing but that girl standing on the footboard as the train came on
to the bridge; and then, all in a moment, I saw her whirling down into
the gorge, like a feather blown out of a window. If it was suicide she
certainly hesitated, for when I first saw her she was standing on the
footboard, holding the hand-rail by the side of the door. She did not
leap out of the train with one desperate deliberate spring. However
determined she may have been to kill herself, she must have faltered in
the act."

"It would be only human to do so. Poor young thing--a mere child!" said
Wyllard regretfully.

He talked apart with the guard, recommending that official to keep his
eye upon the passengers who got out at Bodmin Road, and at all stations
further down the line; to mark any man of ruffianly appearance or
agitated demeanour; to give any such person in charge if he saw but the
slightest reason for suspicion.

The passengers had resumed their seats by this time, and the train
began to move slowly onward. The whole period of delay had not been
twenty minutes, and the line between Plymouth and Penzance was
tolerably clear at this hour. The train would be able to recover lost
time before the end of the journey.

"You had better come into my carriage," said Wyllard to the young man
whom he had addressed as Bothwell.

"I have only a third-class ticket," answered the other. "I've been
smoking."

"I never knew you doing anything else," said Wyllard, with a touch of
scorn. "Go back to your third-class carriage. No doubt you want another
pipe."

"I believe after that shock it will do me good," replied the young man,
producing his tobacco pouch on the instant, and beginning to fill his
little clay pipe.

Mr. Wyllard went back to the compartment where he had been sitting at
ease all day and alone. There is a mysterious power in the presence
of such a man which, save in the stress of the tourist season, can
generally secure solitude. The tourist season had not yet begun, and
Mr. Wyllard was known to be good for half-a-crown, and never to offer
less; so his particular compartment was sacred. Even bishops and
notabilities of the land were hustled away from the door, beguiled by
the promise of something better elsewhere.

He had strewed the carriage with newspapers and magazines, and now he
began to collect all this literature and to strap it neatly together
before arriving at his journey's end. He was neat and methodical in
all small matters, yet he was in nowise a prig or a pedant. His tall,
powerful frame and strongly marked features were upon a large scale. He
had a large brain and a large manner.

Look at him now as he sits in his corner of the luxurious carriage,
against a background of light-drab cloth. A man in the prime of
manhood, five-and-forty at most; a fine head well set off; light-brown
hair, thick and silky, brushed aside from a broad square forehead,
in which there are all the indications of intellectual power. Large,
full blue eyes, whose normal expression is severe, but the expression
softens when the man smiles, brightens and sparkles when the man
laughs. He has a beautiful smile, a sonorous laugh, and a voice of
power and compass rare among English voices. The features are firmly
modelled, bold, massive; the mouth, when the lips are closely set, as
they are just now, looks as if it were cut out of stone. A man likely
to love profoundly, and not likely to hate lightly. A staunch friend,
as everybody knows in this part of the country; but perchance a deadly
foe were great provocation given; a man to keep a secret as closely as
the grave. A man to give money as freely as if it were water.

The train stopped at Bodmin Road, in a picturesque valley, deep amidst
pine-clothed hills, and adjoining a park of exceptional beauty. There
was a quiet little roadside inn, about five minutes' walk from the
station, and to this strange hostelry the dead girl was conveyed, a
shrouded form lying on a shutter, and carried by two railway-porters.
She was laid in a darkened chamber at the back of the house, to await
the advent of the Coroner, a gentleman of some importance, who lived
ten miles off.

An open carriage was waiting for Julian Wyllard, and in the carriage
sat a beautiful woman, smiling welcome upon him as he came out of the
station. The dead girl had been carried out by another way. The lady in
the carriage knew nothing of the tragedy.

"How late the train is this evening!" she said. "I was beginning to
feel uneasy."

"There has been an accident."

"An accident! O, how dreadful! But you are not hurt?" she cried
anxiously, looking at him from top to toe, suspicious of some deadly
injury which he might be heroically concealing.

"No, it was not a railway accident. There is no one hurt except a poor
girl who threw herself, or was thrown, out of the train."

"How terrible!" exclaimed Mrs. Wyllard. "Is it any one we know--any one
about here?"

"No, she is quite a stranger, poor child, and from her dress and
general appearance I should take her to be a Frenchwoman. But we shall
know more after the inquest."

"How very sad! A stranger alone in a strange land, and to meet such
a death! But do you really believe that any one threw her out of the
train, Julian? That seems too horrible to be true."

"My dear, I believe nothing. The poor creature's fate is shrouded in
mystery. Whether she killed herself or whether any one killed her is
an open question. I told the guard and the station-master to be on
the alert, and to stop any suspicious character. I shall call at the
police-office as we drive through the town. Here is Bothwell," added
Wyllard, as the young man came sauntering lazily along. "Did you know
that he had gone to Plymouth?"

"Not I," replied Mrs. Wyllard. "He did not appear at luncheon, but as
he is always erratic I did not even wonder about him. What took you to
Plymouth this morning, Bothwell?" she asked, as her cousin came up to
the carriage door.

They were first cousins, and it was his cousinship with Julian
Wyllard's beautiful wife which secured Bothwell Grahame free quarters
at Penmorval. They were children of twin sisters who had loved each
other with more than common love, who had seldom been parted till death
parted them untimely. Bothwell's mother was cut off in the flower
of her youth and beauty, leaving her only child an infant, and her
husband a broken-hearted man. Captain Grahame went to India with his
regiment, less than a year after his wife's death, to fight and fall in
the Punjaub, and Bothwell, the orphan, was brought up by his mother's
sister, Mrs. Tregony Dalmaine, at a fine old manor-house near the
Land's End.

He was two years younger than Theodora Dalmaine, and he was to the
child as a younger brother. They were brought up together, played
together, and shared the same schoolroom and the same governess, till
Bothwell was drafted off to Woolwich, having set his heart upon being
a soldier, and in his father's regiment. The bright, quick-witted girl
was considerably in advance of the boy in all their mutual studies. She
was industrious where he was idle, for it must be owned that even in
the beginning of things Bothwell was somewhat scampish in his mind and
habits.

He did pretty well at Woolwich--passed his examinations respectably,
if not with _éclat_. His heart was set upon soldiering, and he did
not object to work when his heart was in the labour. He was a good
soldier, and one of the most popular men in his regiment. He saw a
good deal of service in Afghanistan, as an officer of Engineers, not
without distinction: but he came to grief, in spite of his many good
qualities. He squandered every shilling of his small patrimony, got
into debt, and finally left the army, and thus dropped out of that
one career for which nature and education had especially fitted him,
turned aside from the one path which might have led him to fame and
honour. And now he was an idler, without place or station in the world,
money, or repute, an encumbrance and a burden to his family, as he told
himself every day. He had vague ideas of chalking out a career for
himself; had visions of colonial paradises, where he might do wonders;
was always devising some new plan, inclining to some new place; but his
aspirations had not yet taken any tangible form. He was continually
falling in with some new adviser, who wrenched all his ideas out of the
soil in which they had taken root, and transplanted them to another
locality.

"Spanish America!" said Smith; "don't think of it. You would be dead
in a week. Have you never heard of the _vomito negro_, the deadliest
disease known to man? Otaheite is the place for you! A superb climate,
a new area for an enterprising young Englishman! You would make your
fortune in three years."

Then came Jones, who laughed at the notion of the South Sea Islands,
and advised Bothwell to get a tract of waste land, near the mouth of
the Gironde, and grow fir-trees, and export their resin; that was the
one certain road to fortune. You had first your resin, a large annual
revenue, and then you had your timber for railway sleepers, returning
cent per cent. Bothwell did not venture to ask how you got your resin
after you had sold your timber.

Anon came Robinson, who recommended Canada and the lumber trade; and
after him Brown, who declared that the only theatre for intelligent
youth was the interior of Africa. In the multitude of counsellors there
is wisdom, says Scripture; but Bothwell found that in the multitude of
counsellors there is bewilderment akin to madness. He had an honest
desire to get his own living; but so far uncertainty as to the manner
of getting it had barred the way to fortune.

"What took me to Plymouth?" he repeated. "Upon my word, I hardly know.
It was so deadly quiet at Penmorval this morning. I wanted to hear the
voices of my fellow-men. I went third class, you know, Dora. It wasn't
a very extravagant proceeding," he murmured confidentially. "Shall I
ride on the box?"

"You had better come inside," said Wyllard; "there is plenty of room;"
whereupon Bothwell took the back seat of the barouche, opposite his
cousin and her husband.

Bodmin town was some miles from Bodmin Road, a lovely drive in the
tranquil July eventide; but both those men were haunted by the vision
of that dead face, those dislocated limbs, hanging loosely, like a dead
stag hauled along by huntsman and whip, while the hounds cluster round
their prey. An event so terrible was not to be dismissed lightly.

"I wonder who she was, and where she was going?" said Bothwell.

"Some little nursery governess, I daresay, going to her situation."

"In that case we shall hear all about her at the inquest. She will have
been expected, and her employers will come to the fore."

"What a terrible thing for her parents, if they are living; most of all
for her poor mother!" said Mrs. Wyllard.

She pronounced the last word with peculiar softness. She had an exalted
idea of the sacredness of the relationship between mother and child.
She had passionately loved her own mother; had passionately longed for
a child in the earlier years of her wedded life. But she had been a
wife seven years, and no child had lived to bless her. A son had been
born within a year of her marriage--born only to die: and now she had
left off hoping that she would ever be called upon this earth by the
dear name of mother.

They drove past familiar woods and hills, ferny dells, and limpid
brooks. They saw the great brown tors standing afar off against the
amber sky: but that one haunting thought of a horrible death spoiled
all the beauty of the scene. They had no eyes for the landscape, but
sat in serious silence.

Mr. Wyllard alighted at the Bodmin police-station, and spent about ten
minutes in conversation with the Inspector, who was at once shocked
and elated on hearing of the strange death on the railway. He was
shocked at the horror of the thing; he was elated at the idea of an
inquiry and investigation which might result in honour and profit to
himself.

Mrs. Wyllard sat in the carriage with Bothwell, while her husband and
the official conversed gravely on the threshold of the station-house.
Bothwell talked about the girl and her mysterious death. He described
the poor little white face, the look of horror in that glassy stare of
death.

"Did she look like a lady?" asked Dora, full of painful interest.

"Hardly, I think. She had that pretty, neat appearance which one sees
in French girls of a class just a little above the grisette. Her frock,
and her boots, and her cotton gloves must all have suited herself and
her station to a nicety. There was no touch of that vulgar finery which
makes a half-bred English girl odious. I daresay Wyllard is right, and
that she was a poor little governess, going out into a strange land to
earn her bread and learn a foreign language. There are thousands who go
out every year, I have no doubt; only this one has contrived to jump
into notoriety and an early grave at the same time. By Jove! here comes
the Coroner. We shall be the first to tell him that he will be wanted
to-morrow."

Mrs. Wyllard blushed faintly as she turned to look at an approaching
horseman. She had not, even to this day, left off blushing at any
sudden mention of Edward Heathcote's name; and yet it was seven years
since she had jilted him in order to marry Julian Wyllard.

A sad story, all forgiven now, if not forgotten. A deep wrong done by
a noble-hearted woman to a noble-hearted man. It was the one act of
Theodora Wyllard's life which she could not look back upon without
remorse. In all other relations of life she had been perfect--devoted
daughter, devoted wife. But in this one thing she had sinned. This man
had loved her faithfully, fondly, from the dawn of her girlish beauty,
from the beginning of her womanly grace. She had accepted his love,
and had seemed to herself to return it, measure for measure. She had
looked forward to the years when they two would be one. And then, in a
fatal hour, another face flashed across the foreground of her life--a
new voice thrilled her ear--an influence was exercised over her which
she had never felt before, a power too potent for resistance--and, in a
moment of passionate self-abandonment, she knelt at Edward Heathcote's
feet, and confessed her love for another. Julian Wyllard had broken
down all barriers, had asked her to be his wife, knowing her to be
engaged to another man. But there are those who think that a great
irresistible love outweighs all scruples of honour or conscience.

"Why do you ask me for your freedom, as if it were so great a favour?"
Heathcote said bitterly, as he lifted her up from her knees. "Do you
think I would have you--this mere beautiful clay--now that your heart
has gone from me? Do you think I, who love you a hundred times better
than I love myself, would stand between you and happiness? You are
free, Dora. I have seen this misery coming upon me ever since this
stranger came into your mother's house."

"And you will forgive me?" she pleaded, with clasped hands, looking
at him with streaming eyes, sorry for him, deeply ashamed of her
infidelity.

"Can I be angry with you, loving you as I do? God forgive you, Dora,
for all your sins, large or small, as freely as I forgive your sin
against me."

He kissed her unresisting lips for the last time, and so left her, as
nearly broken-hearted as a man can be and yet recover.

He did recover, or was, at any rate, supposed to be cured, since,
two years after Theodora Dalmaine's wedding, he married a fair young
girl, penniless, friendless, and an orphan; a wife who loved him as
he deserved to be loved, and who, after less than two years of wedded
life, died, leaving two children, twin daughters. It was three years
since the grave had closed upon her, and Edward Heathcote was still a
widower, and was believed to have no thought of marriage.

He came riding slowly along the street in the fading light, a man
of striking appearance, mounted on a fine horse, a man of about
three-and-thirty, tall, broad-shouldered. He had a dark complexion, and
dark-brown hair, deep-set gray eyes, which looked almost black under
dark heavy brows, an aquiline nose, a heavy moustache and beard.

He had begun life as a younger son, and had practised for some years
as a solicitor in the town of Plymouth--had been town clerk and a
man of public importance in that place--when his elder brother died
a bachelor, and Edward Heathcote inherited a snug little estate near
Bodmin, with a curious old country house called The Spaniards. The
place had been so named on account of the Spanish chestnuts which
flourished there in exceeding beauty. On becoming owner of The
Spaniards, and the estate that went with it, Edward Heathcote retired
from the law, and went to live at the place of his birth, where he
looked after the well-being of his baby girls and his young sister,
and let his days glide by in the quiet monotony of a country squire's
life, hunting and shooting, sitting in judgment upon poachers and small
defaulters at petty sessions, and acting as coroner for his division of
the county. He had been leading this life of rural respectability for a
year.

He rode up to the carriage and shook hands with Mrs. Wyllard. He was
her neighbour, and had visited Penmorval during the last year. There
had never been the faintest indication in his manner or his speech that
Julian Wyllard's wife was any more to him than a friend. He was pleased
to visit her, anxious that she should be interested in his motherless
children, pleased to confide his plans and his thoughts to her. Time
had sobered his enthusiasm about all things, and had softened all
bitter memories. He took life now as a gentle legato movement. He had
lived and suffered, and done his duty, and that which was left to him
was rest. He sat down among his fields and his vineyards to take his
ease just a little earlier than other men, that was all. A great sorrow
suffered in the morning of life ages a man by at least a decade.

"Why are you waiting outside the station-house?" he asked; "have you
had an alarm of burglars at Penmorval?"

"It is something much worse than that," answered Mrs. Wyllard gravely;
and then Bothwell related the catastrophe on the railway.

Julian Wyllard came back to the carriage just as the story was finished.

"This will be a job for you, Heathcote," he said.

"A very sad one. The story has a brutal sound to me, remembering past
stories of the same kind," answered Heathcote. "It shall not be my
fault if the ruffian escapes."

"You think there is a ruffian, then? You don't take it for a case of
suicide?"

"Decidedly not," replied the other promptly. "Why should a girl choose
such a death as that?"

"Why should a girl throw herself off the Monument?" asked Wyllard. "Yet
we know girls had a rage for doing that, fifty years ago. However, you
will have a good opportunity for the display of your legal acumen in a
really mysterious case. I did all I could in my small way to put the
officials on the alert along the line; and if any scoundrel had a hand
in that poor child's death, I don't believe he will get off easily.
Where are you riding?"

"Only for an evening stroll over the downs."

"You had better come home and have supper with us. It will be too late
to call it dinner."

"You are very good, but I dined at seven. Besides, I shall have to
arrange about this inquest for to-morrow. I'll talk to Morris, and then
ride on to the Vital Spark, and settle matters with the people there."

The Vital Spark was the small roadside inn where the dead girl was
lying. The Penmorval barouche drove off, while Edward Heathcote
stopped to talk to Morris, the Inspector. The jury would have to get
notice early next morning. The inquest was to be held at five in the
afternoon. This would give time for the tradesmen to get away from
their shops. The chief business of the day in Bodmin town would be over.

"It will give time for any one in this neighbourhood, who knows
anything about the girl, to come forward," added Mr. Heathcote. "If
she was going to a situation in this part of the world, as Mr. Wyllard
suggests, some one must know all about her."

"What a man he is, Mr. Heathcote!" said the Inspector admiringly. "Such
clearness, such decision; always to the point."

"Yes, he is a very superior man," answered Heathcote heartily.

He had schooled himself long ago to generous thoughts about his rival.
It pleased him to know that Dora had been lucky in her choice, that she
had not taken a scorpion into her bosom when she preferred another man
to himself. He had wondered sometimes--in a mere idle wonder, when he
saw her in her beautiful home at Penmorval--whether it would have been
possible for him to make her life happier than Julian Wyllard had made
it; whether in his uttermost adoration he could ever have been a better
husband to her than Julian Wyllard had been. He had looked searchingly
for any flaw in the perfection of that union, and he had perceived
none. He was generous-minded enough to be glad that it was so.

The carriage drove slowly up a long hill, and across a wide expanse of
heathy ground, before it entered the gate of Penmorval, which was two
miles from the town. It was a beautiful old place, standing on high
ground, yet so richly wooded as to be shut in from the outer world.
Only the Cornish giants, Roughtor and Brown Willie, showed their
dark crests above the broad belt of timber which surrounded the good
old Tudor mansion. A double avenue of elms and yews led to the old
stone porch. The long stone façade facing northward looked out upon a
level lawn divided from the park by a haw haw. The southern front was
curtained with roses and myrtle, and looked upon one of the loveliest
gardens in Cornwall--a garden which had been the pride and delight of
many generations--a garden for which the wives and dowagers of three
centuries of Cornish squires had laboured and thought. Nowhere could
be found more glorious roses, or such a treasury of out-of-the-way
flowers, from the finest to the simplest that grows. Nowhere did April
sunlight shine upon such tulips and hyacinths, nowhere did June crown
herself with fairer lilies, or autumn flaunt in greater splendour of
dahlias, hollyhocks, and chrysanthemums. The soil teemed with flowers.
There was no room left for a weed.

For a childless wife like Dora Wyllard a garden such as this is a kind
of spurious family. She has her hopes, her fears, her raptures and
anxieties about her roses and chrysanthemums, just as mothers have
about their girls and boys. She counts the blossoms on a particular
_Gloire de Dijon_. She remembers the cruel winter when that superb
John Hopper succumbed to the frost. She has her nostrums and remedies
for green-fly, as mothers have for measles. That glorious old garden
helped to fill the cup of Mrs. Wyllard's happiness, for it gave her
inexhaustible employment. Having such a garden she could never say,
with the languid yawn of the idle and the prosperous, "What can I do
with myself to-day?" But Dora was not dependent on her garden for
occupation. Exacting as the roses and lilies were, manifold as were the
cares of the hothouses and ferneries and wildernesses, Mrs. Wyllard's
husband was more exacting still. When Julian was at home she could
give but little time to her garden. He could hardly bear his wife to
be out of his sight for half an hour. She had to be interested in all
his schemes, all his letters, even to the driest business details.
She rode and drove with him, and, as he had no taste for field sports,
neither his guns nor his hunters took him away from her. He was a
studious man, a man of artistic temperament, a lover of curious books
and fine bindings, a lover of pictures and statues, and porcelain and
enamels--a worshipper of the beautiful in every form. His tastes were
such as a woman could easily and naturally share with him. This made
their union all the more complete. Other wives wondered at beholding
such domestic sympathy. There were some whose husbands could not sit
by the domestic hearth ten minutes without dismal yawnings, men who
depended upon newspapers for all their delight, men whose minds were
always in the stable. Julian Wyllard was an ideal husband, who never
yawned in a _tête-à-tête_ with his wife, who shared every joy and every
thought with the woman of his choice.

To-night, when they two sat down to the half-past, nine o'clock meal,
with Bothwell, who was not much worse than a Newfoundland dog, for
their sole companion, the wife's first question showed her familiarity
with the business that had taken her husband to London.

"Well, Julian, did you get the Raffaelle?" she asked.

"No, dear. The picture went for just three times the value I had put
upon it."

"And you did not care to give such a price?"

"Well, no. There are limits, even for a monomaniac like me. I had
allowed myself a margin. I was prepared to give a hundred or two over
the thousand which I had put down as the price of the picture; but
when it went up to fifteen hundred I retired from the contest, and
it was finally knocked down to Lamb, the dealer, for two thousand
guineas. A single figure--a half-length figure of Christ bearing the
cross, against a background of vivid blue sky. But such divinity in the
countenance, such pathetic eyes! I saw women turn away with tears after
they had looked at that picture."

"You ought to have bought it," said Dora, who knew that her husband had
a great deal more money than he could spend, and who thought that he
had a right to indulge his own caprices.

"My dearest, as I said before, there are limits," he answered, smiling
at her enthusiasm.

"Then you had your journey, and I had to endure the loss of your
society for three dreary days, all for nothing?" said Dora.

"Not quite for nothing. There was the pleasure of seeing a very
fine collection of pictures, and some magnificent Limoges enamels.
I succeeded in buying you a little Greuze. I am told by French
art-critics that it is a low thing to admire Greuze, the sign of a
vulgar mind. He is the painter of the _bourgeois_, the _épicier_. But,
for all that, you and I have agreed to like Greuze; so I bought this
little picture for your morning-room. I got it for five hundred and
fifty, and I believe it is a genuine bit in the painter's best manner."

"How good you are to me!" exclaimed Dora, getting up and going over to
her husband.

She bent down to kiss him as he sat at the table. They had dismissed
the servants from this informal meal, so Mrs. Wyllard was not afraid
of being considered eccentric, if she showed that she was grateful.
She did not mind Bothwell. Five hundred and fifty! How freely this
rich man talked of his hundreds, as it seemed to Bothwell, pinched by
the consciousness of debts which the cost of that picture would have
covered--little seedlings of debts, scattered long ago by the wayside,
and putting forth perennial flowers in the shape of unpleasant letters
from creditors, which made him hate the sight of the postman.

Neither Wyllard nor Grahame ate a hearty meal. That picture of the
dead face was too vividly present in the minds of both. Meat and drink
and pleasant talk were out of harmony with that horror which both had
looked upon three hours ago. They took more wine than usual, and hardly
ate anything.

"Will you come for a stroll in the garden, Julian?" asked Dora, as they
rose from the table.

It was half-past ten o'clock, a lovely summer night. A great golden
moon was shining low down in the purple sky, just above the bank of
foliage: not that far-off moon which belongs to all the world, but a
big yellow lamp lighting one's own garden.

"Do come," she said, "it is such a delicious night."

"I dare not indulge myself, dear; I have my letters to open before I go
to bed. I was just going to order a fire in the library."

"A fire, on such a night as this! I'm afraid you have caught cold."

"I think it not unlikely," answered her husband, as he rang the bell.

"Don't you think your letters might keep till to-morrow morning,
Julian?" pleaded Dora. "We could have a fire in the morning-room, and
sit and talk."

"That would be delightful, but I must not allow myself to be tempted. I
should not rest to-night with the idea of a pile of unopened letters."

He gave his orders to the servant. His letters and papers were all on
the library table. A fire was to be lighted there immediately.

"You will be late, I am afraid," said Dora.

"I may be a little late. Don't wait up for me on any account, dearest.
Goodnight!"

He kissed her; and she said good-night, but reserved her liberty to
sit up for him all the same. There is no use in a husband saying to a
wife of Mrs. Wyllard's temperament, "Don't sit up for me, and don't
worry yourself!" Sleep was impossible to Dora until she knew that her
husband was at rest; just as happiness was impossible to her when
parted from him. She had made herself a part of his being, had merged
her very existence in his; she had no value, hardly any individuality,
apart from him.

"Julian looks tired and anxious," she said to her cousin, who stood
smoking a cigarette just outside the window.

"You can't be surprised at that," answered Bothwell. "That business on
the railway was enough to make any man feel queer. I shall not forget
it for a long time."

"It must have been an awful shock. And men with strong features and
powerful frames are sometimes more sensitive than your fragile beings
with nervous temperaments," said Dora. "I have often been struck with
Julian's morbid feeling about things which a strong man might be
supposed to regard with indifference."

"He is a deuced good fellow," said Bothwell, who had been more
generously treated by his cousin's husband than by any of his own
clan. "Won't you come for a turn in the garden? I won't start another
cigarette, if you object."

"You know I don't mind smoke," she answered, joining him. "Why, how
your hand shakes, Bothwell! You can hardly light your cigarette."

"Didn't I say that I was upset by that business? I don't suppose I
shall sleep a wink to-night."

They walked in the rose-garden for more than an hour. Garden and night
were both alike ideal. An Italian garden, with formal terraces, and
beds of roses, and a fountain in the centre, a bold and plenteous jet
that rose from a massive marble basin. Roses, magnolia, jasmine, and
Mary-lilies filled the air with perfume. The moon had changed from gold
to silver, and was high up in heaven.

It was everybody's moon now, silvering the humble roofs of Bodmin,
shining over the church, the gaol, the lunatic asylum, and shining on
that humble village inn five or six miles away, beneath whose rustic
roof the stranger was lying, with no one to pray beside her bed.

Bothwell sauntered silently by his cousin's side. She, too, was silent,
and felt no inclination to talk or to listen. She was glad to be out
in the garden while her husband opened his letters. She knew there was
a pile of correspondence waiting for him--such letters as devour the
leisure of a country gentleman of wealth and high standing, letters
for the most part uninteresting, and very often troublesome. It would
take Julian Wyllard a long time to wade through them all. But when the
stable clock struck twelve, Dora thought she might fairly hope to find
the task finished.

"Good-night, Bothwell," she said. "I'll go and look for Julian."

The servants had all gone to bed, and the lamps had been extinguished,
except in the hall and corridors. A half-glass door opened from the
garden into the hall, and this was always left unbolted for the
accommodation of Bothwell, who was fond of late saunterings in the
grounds. The library was at the further end of the house, a superb
room, filled with a choice collection of books, the growth of the last
seven years; for Julian Wyllard was a new man in the county, and had
only owned Penmorval during that period.

There was a good fire burning in the artistic tiled grate--a modern
improvement upon the old arrangement in wrought iron. Mr. Wyllard had
opened all his letters, and had evidently burned some of them, for an
odour of calcined paper and sealing-wax pervaded the room.

He was sitting in a low chair beside the hearth, in a stooping
attitude, deeply meditative, looking down at some object in his hands.
He was so profoundly absorbed as to be unconscious of Dora's presence
till she was standing close beside him.

The object which so engrossed his attention, which had led his thoughts
backward to the faraway past, was a long tress of chestnut hair. He had
wound it round his fingers--a smooth, silken tress, which flashed with
gleams of gold in the cheery light of the fire.

"What beautiful hair!" said Dora gently, as she looked downward from
behind his shoulder. "Whose is it, Julian?"

"It _was_ my sister's," he answered.

"The sister who died so many years ago. Poor Julian! You have been
sitting here alone, giving yourself up to sad memories."

"I came upon this auburn tress among some old papers just now, while I
was looking for Martin's lease."

He rolled the hair up quickly, and flung it into the flaming coals.

"O Julian, why did you do that?" asked his wife reproachfully.

"What is the use of keeping such things, only to perpetuate sorrowful
memories? God knows we have enough of our dead. They haunt us and
plague us at every stage of life. We cannot get rid of them."

The bitterness of his tone jarred upon his wife's ear.

"My dearest, you are wearied and out of spirits," she said. "You have
worked too long. Were your letters troublesome?"

"Not more so than usual, dear. Yes, I am very tired."

"And that dreadful event on the line has troubled you. Poor Bothwell
is quite upset by it. I am so sorry for you, Julian," said his wife
soothingly, leaning upon his shoulder, smoothing back the thick hair
from the broad, full brow.

"My dear child, there is no reason to be sorry for me. Dreadful events
are happening every day, all over the world. We hear of them, and feel
how feeble a thing life is under such conditions as those on which we
all hold our existence. This evening I happened to be brought face to
face with a terrible death. That is all the difference."



CHAPTER II.


AFTER THE INQUEST.


There was great excitement in Bodmin on the afternoon of the inquest;
a delicious summer afternoon, which seemed made for quiet arcadian
joys; an afternoon to be spent in day-dreams under forest boughs,
or drifting lazily adown a placid stream; rather than for gathering
together in a stifling tavern-parlour, listening to the droning
accents of a police-constable, or the confused statements and innocent
prevarications of a railway-porter. But it may be that the inhabitants
of Bodmin had drunk their fill of the cup of pastoral joys, that they
had had more than enough of heathery moorland and foxglove-bordered
lane, dog-rose and honeysuckle, waving boughs and winding streams, and
that this satiety made them flock to the little inn beyond Bodmin Road
station, where they elbowed and hustled one another in the endeavour
to get a good view of the Coroner and the witnesses.

An inquest was not in itself such a thrilling event. There had been
inquests held in Bodmin which inspired neither curiosity nor excitement
in the mind of the town. But this inquiry of to-day interested
everybody. Who could tell what mystery--what story of falsehood and
wrong--had gone before that sad, strange death? The report had gone
about that the victim was a foreigner, and this gave a deeper note to
the mystery. Why had she come to that spot to kill herself? or who had
lured her there to murder her? These were the questions which were
discussed in Bodmin freely that fair July morning; questions which gave
birth to various wise and abstruse theories, every one of which seemed
to the inventor thereof a most plausible explanation of this dark
problem in human history.

"If anybody can throw light upon the business, Squire Heathcote is the
man to do it," said Mr. Bate, grocer, general-dealer, and churchwarden.

Edward Heathcote was one of the most popular men within ten miles
of Bodmin. He was a native of the soil, had been known to the
neighbourhood from his childhood. He came of a race that was held in
high honour, which had produced men famous with sword and gown in the
days that were gone. Honour, courage, and all generous feelings were
supposed to run in the blood of the Heathcotes. He had succeeded to a
small estate and a fine old Grange, in which his forefathers had lived
from generation to generation. In the deepest night of past ages there
had been Heathcotes in the land. Thus, albeit he was by no means a rich
man as compared with Julian Wyllard, he stood higher than the wealthy
financier in the esteem of those good old conservatives who held that
money is not everything. Mr. Wyllard was a new-comer, had bought
Penmorval just before his marriage--choosing this part of the world
for his residence because Theodora Dalmaine loved it, rather than for
any leaning of his own. He was known to have made the greater part of
his money himself--a low thing for a man to have done. Even commercial
fortunes become hallowed after they have filtered from father to son
for three or four generations. Thus, although he was altogether the
most important personage in the neighbourhood, and belonged to the
landed gentry by right of recent purchase, there were people who looked
upon Julian Wyllard as a _parvenu_, and who were somewhat disposed to
resent the weight which his wealth gave him in local affairs.

Squire Heathcote was said to be the best coroner who had filled that
office at Bodmin within the memory of the oldest inhabitant. His
legal experiences had been of a wider range than those of the average
provincial solicitor. He had served his articles to a well-known London
firm; he had travelled a good deal, and had seen men and cities. He had
been brought into close relations with his fellow-men under manifold
conditions; and he was said to be a marvellous reader of character,
an impartial and clear-headed judge. On more than one occasion he
had shown an acumen rarely met with at a rural inquest; and he had
disentangled more than one knotted skein. It was argued, therefore,
that if any one could unravel the mystery of the dead girl's fate,
Squire Heathcote was the man to do it.

Nothing could be quieter or less pretentious than his manner as he took
his seat at the head of the long table in the parlour of the Vital
Spark; but there were signs of anxiety or emotion in the sombre fire of
the deep-set gray eyes, and the nervous movement of the sun-burnt hand,
which played with his dark chestnut-beard. He sat for some minutes
looking down at his notes, and then slowly raised his eyes and surveyed
the room, which was quite full.

Julian Wyllard was sitting near the opposite end of the table, with
little Dr. Menheniot by his side. Bothwell Grahame was seated apart
from them and nearer the jury. He had a haggard look, Mr. Heathcote
thought, as of a man who had passed a troubled night.

There were three or four railway officials present, and these were
the principal witnesses. First came the guard on the down train from
Paddington, whose evidence was meagre, since it appeared that he had
only seen the dead girl standing on the footboard a moment before she
fell. She was standing on the footboard and clinging to the hand-rail,
with her face to the coach; she seemed to be talking to some one
inside. It had not seemed to him that she threw herself off the
footboard. It had seemed rather as if she had dropped off.

"Was it your impression that she was thrown off?" asked Heathcote.

"No, sir. I can't say that was my impression. But the whole thing
was too quick for me to have a very clear idea either way. My first
thought was how I could save her. I had only just stepped out upon the
footboard when she gave a shriek and fell. She was at the farther end
of the train. Before I could get to the carriage from which she had
fallen, the engine had slackened and the passengers were getting out."

"Did you find the carriage out of which she fell?"

"Yes, sir. There was an empty second-class next but one to the engine.
I believe that was the compartment. There was a little basket with
some refreshments, and a newspaper, which I believe belonged to the
deceased."

The basket was on the table. It had a foreign look; a poor little
basket, containing a few cherries in a cabbage-leaf, and a little bag
of biscuits. The newspaper was the French _Figaro_. The Coroner handed
the basket to the jury, who examined the contents curiously. There was
no scrap of writing, no card or old letter; nothing to identify the
dead girl, or to indicate the place from which she had come.

"Her clothes and the contents of her pocket have been examined," said
Mr. Heathcote, in reply to a question from one of the jury, "but no
mark or clue has been found. Nor has any luggage belonging to her
been discovered, which is curious, since it is not often that any one
travels from London to Cornwall without luggage. I have communicated
with the London police; and I have sent an advertisement to the
_Times_, and to a Parisian newspaper. Perhaps, by this means we shall
discover the girl's identity. In the mean time the question is, how did
she come by her death?"

The next witness was a porter from the Plymouth station, who had taken
notice of the girl there while the train waited. He had seen her on
the platform, alone. He was sure that he had not seen her speak to
anybody. She walked up and down the platform two or three times, and
he thought she looked puzzled and anxious, as if she expected to meet
somebody who had not come. He was too busy looking after people's
luggage to watch her closely, but he had noticed her because she looked
like a foreigner. He saw her get into a second-class compartment near
the engine just as the train was starting. She got in hurriedly, and it
seemed to him that some one inside the compartment had opened the door
for her and helped her in; but he could not be positive about this, as
he was a long way off at the time. He had seen the deceased, and he
recognised her as the young person he had observed at Plymouth.

Dr. Menheniot was the next witness. He gave technical evidence as
to the cause of the girl's death; but as to the circumstances that
preceded her fall, he could say no more than the guard. Yes, a little
more, for he had seen the carriage door opened and the girl stepping
out on the footboard. Yes, in answer to the Coroner's question, it had
seemed to him that some one thrust her out, yet he could not swear that
it was so. The door had opened suddenly; and he had seen her standing
on the footboard, clinging to the open door. If she had meant to commit
suicide, it appeared to him that she would have leapt at once from the
carriage over the embankment. The act of standing on the footboard and
clinging to the carriage would imply resistance.

"It might mean only hesitation," said Heathcote. "How long do you
suppose she remained standing on the footboard?"

"Hardly a minute---perhaps not more than thirty seconds. I heard the
guard signal for the stopping of the train, and then I heard her shriek
as she fell. It was almost instantaneous. The engine was just on the
bridge when I first saw her. It was in the middle of the bridge when
she fell. That will give you the best idea as to time."

"Not more than thirty seconds," said the Coroner, who knew every yard
of the line. "Is there any one else here who can tell us anything about
this poor girl's death?"

There was no one else; though there were twenty people in the room who
had been in the train yesterday evening, and who had gone down into the
gorge to see that poor crushed form lying amidst ferns and foxgloves,
to look curiously at the small white face, the childish lips for ever
mute in death. No one could tell any more, or indeed as much about the
details of the catastrophe as Dr. Menheniot and the guard, both of whom
had seen the fall: whereas no one else happened to have been looking
out of window on the near side of the train.

"We will adjourn the inquest for a fortnight," said Mr. Heathcote
presently, after a whispered consultation with the jury. "The matter
is much too mysterious to be dismissed without a very careful
investigation. A fortnight will give ample time for the friends of the
deceased to come forward. I have ordered photographs to be taken, with
a view to her identification. Burial cannot, of course, be delayed
beyond the usual time."

There were morbid minds among the spectators who envied the
photographer his ghastly office. The inquest was felt to have been
disappointing. Revelations had been expected, and none had come. But
Mr. Heathcote had pronounced the case deeply mysterious: and there was
comfort in the idea that he might know more than he cared to reveal yet
awhile.

Julian Wyllard had driven from Penmorval in his own particular
dog-cart, with one of the finest horses in the district. Bothwell
Grahame, who was a great walker and altogether independent in his
habits, had come across the hills, and over cornfields and meadows, as
straight as the crow flies. The master of Penmorval's smart trap and
high-stepping gray were out of sight before Bothwell left the pathway
in front of the Vital Spark, where he lingered to talk over the inquest
with some of his Bodmin acquaintance. The young Scotchman was steeped
to the eyes in true Caledonian pride of race; but he had none of the
petty pride which makes a man scornful of that portion of the human
family which earns its bread by humble avocations. He was as friendly
with a railway-porter or a village tradesman as with the proudest
landowner in the county; had not two sets of manners for high and
low, or two distinct modes of speech for gentle and simple, the very
intonation different for that inferior clay. Bothwell had never been
able to understand why some of the men he knew talked to a tradesman
or a servant just as they would have spoken to a dog, or, indeed,
much less civilly than Bothwell spoke to his dogs. He was a staunch
Conservative in most things; but in this one question of respect for
his fellow-man he was an unmitigated Radical.

And now he loitered in front of the inn door, talking to the railway
officials who had appeared at the inquest, and who knew Mr. Grahame as
a frequent traveller between Bodmin Road and Plymouth.

"There was one thing that didn't come out just now," said the
station-master, "and that was the girl's ticket. The ticket was for
Plymouth; and yet here was this poor young thing going on towards
Penzance. Why was she going beyond her first destination, eh, Mr.
Grahame? Why did she walk up and down the platform at Plymouth, as if
she expected some one to meet her there? Why did she get into the
train at the last moment, just as it was moving out of the station?
Don't it seem likely that the individual who was to have met her in the
station for which she had taken her ticket was the same individual that
helped her into the train, and that he made away with her? A husband,
perhaps, who wanted to get rid of a troublesome foreign wife. And he
tells her to meet him at Plymouth, and he is there to meet her, but
not on the platform as she expects. He is there in hiding in a railway
carriage, and he beckons her in just as the train is starting, when he
is least likely to be observed in the bustle and hurry of the start."

"You put your story together very well, Mr. Chafy," said Bothwell
somewhat indifferently, as if not deeply interested in the mystery
which so enthralled the Bodmin mind. "You ought to have been a
detective. But if this poor girl was murdered, and her murderer was in
the train, how is it that you who are so sharp could not contrive to
spot him when you took stock of the passengers? Mr. Wyllard gave you
the office, I remember."

"Murderers do not carry the brand of Cain, Mr. Grahame," said Edward
Heathcote, who had come out of the inn door in time to hear Bothwell's
speech. "The assassins of our civilised era are high-handed gentlemen,
very cunning of fence, and have no more mark upon them than you or I."

"I believe the girl's death was an accident," said Bothwell, with a
touch of impatience--"one of those profound mysteries which are as
simple as ABC. She may have been standing by the door, admiring the
landscape, and the door may have opened as she leant against it. She
might recover herself so far as to stand on the foot-board for a few
seconds, clinging to the hand-rail, and then she fell and was killed."

"Not a very plausible explanation, my dear Grahame. She was leaning
against the door, looking out at the landscape, you suggest, and the
door opened and let her out. How was it, then, that when Menheniot and
the guard saw her, she was standing on the foot-board with her face
to the carriage? Did she swing herself round on the footboard, as on
a pivot, do you suppose? Rather a difficult achievement, even for an
acrobat."

"You need not be so deuced clever," retorted Bothwell, who seemed
altogether out of sorts this afternoon. "It is not my business to find
out how the young woman came by her death."

"No," said the Coroner, "but it is mine; and I mean to do it."

"It won't be the first queer case you've got to the bottom of, Mr.
Heathcote," said the station-master, in a tone of respect that amounted
almost to reverence. "You remember poor old uncle Taylor, who was found
dead at the bottom of the Merrytree shaft over to Truro? You put a rope
round the neck of the scoundrel that killed him, you did. There's not
many men clever enough to keep a secret from you."

"Good-night, squire; good-night, Chafy," said Bothwell, moving off.

Heathcote followed him.

"If you are walking home, I'll go part of the way with you," he said.

"What, are you on foot?" asked Bothwell, surprised. "What has become of
Timour?"

"Timour is in a barn, with his shoes off, getting ready for the
cub-hunting."

"And the rest of your stud?"

"O, I have plenty of horses to ride, if that is what you mean; but I
rather prefer walking, in such weather as this. How is it you did not
drive home in your cousin's dog-cart?"

"I hate sitting beside another man to be driven," said Bothwell
shortly. "There are times, too, when a fellow likes to be alone."

If this were intended for a hint, Mr. Heathcote did not take it. He
produced his cigar-case, and offered Bothwell one of his Patagas. He
was a great smoker, and renowned for smoking good tobacco; so Bothwell
accepted the cigar and lighted it, but did not relax the sullen air
which he had assumed when Mr. Heathcote volunteered his company.

"You are not looking particularly well this afternoon, Grahame," said
Heathcote, when they had walked a little way, silently smoking their
cigars.

"O, there's nothing the matter with me," the young man answered
carelessly. "I was up late, and I had a bad night, that's all."

"You were troubled about yesterday's business," suggested the Coroner.

"The girl's dead face haunted me; but I had troubles of my own without
that."

"You must have seen a good many dead faces in India."

"Yes, I have seen plenty--black and white--but there are some things
against which a man cannot harden himself, and sudden death is one of
them."

He relapsed into silence, and Heathcote and he walked side by side
for some time without a word, the lawyer contemplating the soldier,
studying him as if he had been a difficult page in a book. Edward
Heathcote had spent a good deal of his life in studying living books
of this kind. His practice in Plymouth had been of a very special
character; he had been trusted in delicate matters, had held the
honour of noble families in his keeping, had come between father and
son, husband and wife; had been guide, philosopher, and friend, as
well as legal adviser. His reputation for fine feeling and high moral
character, the fact of his good birth and ample means, had made him the
chosen repository of many a family secret which would have been trusted
to very few solicitors. His name in Plymouth was a synonym for honour,
and his advice, shrewd lawyer though he was, always leaned to the side
of chivalrous feeling rather than to stern justice.

Such a man must have had ample occasion for the study of human nature
under strange aspects. It was, therefore, a highly-trained intellect
which was now brought to bear upon Bothwell Grahame, as he walked
silently beside the flowering hedgerows in that quiet Cornish lane,
puffing at his cigar, and looking straight before him into vacancy.

Mr. Heathcote had seen a good deal of Captain Grahame during the year
he had lived at Penmorval; but he never had seen such a look of care
as he saw in the soldier's face to-day. Trouble of some kind--and of
no light or trifling kind--was gnawing the man's breast. Of that fact
Edward Heathcote was assured; and there was a strange sinking at his
own heart as he speculated upon the nature of that secret trouble which
Bothwell was trying his best to hide under a show of somewhat sullen
indifference.

As coroner and as lawyer, Mr. Heathcote had made up his mind more than
an hour ago that the girl lying at the Vital Spark had been murdered.
She had been thrust out of the railway carriage, flung over the line
into that dreadful gulf, by some person who wanted to make away with
her. Her murderer was to be looked for in the train, had travelled in
one of those carriages, had been one among those seemingly innocent
travellers, all professing ignorance of the girl's identity. One among
those three-and-twenty people whom Chafy, the station-master, had
counted and taken stock of at Bodmin Road station, must needs be the
murderer. That one, whoever he was, had borne himself so well as to
baffle the station-master's scrutiny. He had shown no trace of remorse,
agitation, guilty fear. He had behaved himself in all points as an
innocent man.

But what if the criminal were one whom the station-master knew and
respected--a man of mark and standing in the neighbourhood, whose very
name disarmed suspicion?

Such a man would have passed out of the station unobserved; or if any
signs of agitation were noted in his manner, that emotion would be put
down to kindly feeling, the natural pity of a benevolent mind. Had
any hard-handed son of toil, a stranger in the land, reaper, miner,
seafaring man--had such an one as this exhibited signs of discomposure,
suspicion would at once have been on the alert. But who could suspect
Mrs. Wyllard's soldier-cousin, the idle open-handed gentleman, who had
made himself everybody's favourite?

It would have been a wild speculation to suppose, because Bothwell's
countenance and manner were so charged with secret trouble, that his
was the arm which thrust that poor girl to her untimely death. Yet the
Coroner found himself dwelling upon this wild fancy, painful as it was
to him to harbour any evil thought of Dora Wyllard's kinsman.

There were several points which forced themselves upon his
consideration. First, Bothwell's changed manner to-day--his avowal
of a troubled night--his evident wish to be alone--his incivility,
as of one whose mind was set on edge by painful thoughts. Then came
the fact of his journey to Plymouth yesterday--a journey undertaken
suddenly, without any explanation offered to his cousin--seemingly
purposeless, since he had given no reason for absenting himself, stated
no business in the town. He had gone and returned within a few hours,
and his journey had been a surprise to his cousin and her husband.
Thirdly, there was his clumsy attempt to explain the girl's death just
now, in front of the inn door; his unwillingness to admit the idea of
foul play. He who excuses himself accuses himself, says the proverb.
Bothwell had tried to account for the catastrophe on the line, and in
so doing had awakened the Coroner's suspicions.

After all, these links in a chain of evidence were of the slightest;
but Edward Heathcote had set himself to unravel the mystery of the
nameless dead, and he was determined not to overlook the slenderest
thread in that dark web.

"Wyllard seemed to have quite recovered from the shock of yesterday
evening," he said presently. "I never saw him looking better than he
looked this afternoon."

"Wyllard is a man made of iron," answered Bothwell carelessly. "I
sometimes think there is only one soft spot in his heart, and that is
his love for my cousin. In that he is distinctly human. I never saw a
more devoted husband. I never knew a happier couple."

Bothwell sighed, as if this mention of the happiness of others recalled
the thought of his own misery. At least, it was thus that Edward
Heathcote interpreted the sigh.

Completely absorbed in his own cares, Bothwell had forgotten for the
moment that he was talking to the man whom his cousin had jilted in
order to marry Julian Wyllard. The courtship and the marriage had
happened while Bothwell was in the East. It had never been more to him
than a tradition; and the tradition was not in his mind when he talked
of his cousin's wedded happiness.

"I am glad that it is so, very glad," said Heathcote earnestly.

He spoke in all good faith. He had loved with so unselfish a love
that the welfare of his idol had been ever of more account to him
than his own bliss. He had renounced her without a struggle, since
her happiness demanded the sacrifice. And she was happy. That was the
grand point. He had paid the price, and he had won the reward. He had
loved with all his heart and strength; he had never ceased so to love.
That wedded life, which to the outside world had seemed a life of
domestic happiness, had been on his part only a life of resignation.
He had married a friendless girl who loved him--who had betrayed the
secret of her love for him unawares, in very innocence of inexperienced
girlhood. He had taken a helpless girl to his heart and home, because
there seemed upon this earth no other available shelter for her; and he
had done his best to make her happy. He had succeeded so well that she
never knew that this thoughtful kindness which wrapt her round as with
a balmy atmosphere, this boundless benevolence which shone upon her
like the sun, was not love. She was one of the happiest of women, and
one of the proudest wives in the west country; and she died blessing
him who had made her life blessed.

And now the gossips were all full of pity for the widower's loss and
loneliness--a poor bereaved creature living in a lonely old Grange,
with a young sister, the twin daughters, just four years old, and an
ancient maiden lady who looked after the sister, the children, the
house, and the servants, and in her own person represented the genius
of thrift, propriety, prudence, wisdom, and all the domestic virtues.
People in the neighbourhood of Bodmin, and his old friends at Plymouth,
all thought and talked of Mr. Heathcote as borne down by the weight of
his bereavement, and all hoped that he would soon marry again.

The Spaniards lay in a valley between Bodmin Road station and
Penmorval. It lay on Bothwell's road to his cousin's house, and he
had thus no excuse for parting company with the Coroner, had he been
so inclined. The old wrought-iron gate between gray granite pillars,
each crowned with the escutcheon of the Heathcotes, stood wide open,
and the rose and myrtle curtained cottage by the gate had as sleepy
an air in the summer evening as if it had stood by the gate of the
Sleeping Beauty's enchanted domain. Even the old trees, the great
Spanish chestnuts, with their masses of foliage, had a look of having
outgrown all reason in a century of repose. No prodigal son had laid
the spendthrift's axe to the good old trees around the birthplace of
the Heathcotes. There was only the extent of a wide paddock and a
lawn between the hall-door and that grand old gateway, and the house,
though substantial and capacious, hardly pretended to the dignity of
a mansion. It was long and low and rambling--a house of many small
rooms, queer winding passages, innumerable doors and windows, and low
heavily-timbered ceilings; a house in which strange visitors and their
servants were given to seeing ghosts and hearing unearthly noises of
funereal significance--albeit the family had jogged on quietly enough
from generation to generation, without any interference from the spirit
world. People coming from brand-new houses in Earl's Court or Turnham
Green protested that The Spaniards _must_ be haunted; and shuddered
every time the mice scampered behind the panelling, or the wind sighed
amidst the branches of those leafy towers that girdled lawn and meadow.

Bothwell thought that Mr. Heathcote would leave him at the gate of The
Spaniards.

"Good-night," he said somewhat shortly.

"I'll go on to Penmorval with you, and hear what impression the inquest
made upon Wyllard," said the other. "It's not half-past seven yet--your
cousin will be able to spare me a few minutes before dinner."

Bothwell walked on without a word. Ten minutes brought them to the
gates of Penmorval, by far the lordlier domain, with a history that
was rich in aristocratic traditions. But that ancient race for which
Penmorval had been built, for whose sons and daughters it had grown
in grandeur and dignity as the centuries rolled along--of _these_
there remained no more than the echo of a vanished renown. They were
gone, verily like a tale that is told; and the _parvenu_ financier,
the man who had grown rich by his own intellect and his own
industry--naturally a very inferior personage--reigned in their stead.

Penmorval seemed not quite so dead asleep as Heathcote Grange, _alias_
The Spaniards. In the sweet stillness of the summer evening, Bothwell
and his companion heard voices--women's voices--familiar and pleasant
to the ears of both.

Mrs. Wyllard was strolling in the avenue, with a young lady by her
side, a girl in a white gown and a large leghorn hat; tall, slight,
graceful of form, and fair of face--a girl who gave a little cry of
pleased surprise at seeing Heathcote.

"I was just rushing home, Edward," she said, "for fear I should keep
you waiting for dinner."

"Indeed, Hilda! Then I can only say that your idea of rushing is my
idea of sauntering," her brother answered, smiling at the girlish face,
as he shook hands with Mrs. Wyllard.

"What did Mr. Wyllard think of the inquest?" he asked. "You have seen
him, I suppose?"

"Only for a minute as he drove by to the house, while Hilda and I were
walking in the avenue. Why, Bothwell, how fagged and ill you look!"
exclaimed Dora to her cousin.

"Only bored," answered Bothwell, which was not complimentary to the
companion of his long walk.

"But you look positively exhausted, poor fellow," pursued Dora
pityingly. "Why didn't you come back in the dog-cart? There was room
for you."

"I wanted to be alone."

"And I wanted company," said Heathcote, laughing, "so I inflicted my
society upon an unwilling companion. Very bad manners, no doubt."

"I'm afraid you got the worst of the bargain," muttered Bothwell, with
a sullen look, at which Hilda's blue eyes opened wide with wonder.

"Do you know, Mr. Heathcote, an idle life does not agree with my
cousin," said Dora. "I never know what it is to be weary of Penmorval
or the country round; but for the last three or four weeks Bothwell
has behaved as if he hated the place, and could find neither rest nor
amusement within twenty miles of us. He is perpetually running off to
Plymouth or to London."

"I wish women would take to reading their dictionaries, instead of
cramming their heads with other women's novels," exclaimed Bothwell
savagely, "for then perhaps they might have some idea of the meaning
of words. When you say I run up to London perpetually, Dora, I suppose
you mean that I have been there twice--on urgent business, by the
way--within the last five weeks."

"And to Plymouth at least a dozen times," protested Dora. "All I can
say is that you are my idea of perpetual motion."

"I know you are hardly ever at home, Mr. Grahame," said Hilda,
supporting her friend.

They strolled towards the house as they talked, and half-way along the
avenue they met the master of Penmorval, correctly attired in sober
evening-dress, with a light overcoat worn loosely above his faultless
black.

"How do you do, Heathcote? Do you know, Dora, that it is ten minutes
to eight? You'll stop and dine with us, of course," added Wyllard
cordially. "You refused last night; but now Hilda is here, and you
have no excuse for going home."

"I only came to afternoon tea," said Hilda.

"And you and my wife have been gossiping from five o'clock until now.
Deepest mystery of social life, what two women can find to talk about
for three mortal hours in the depths of a rural seclusion like this!"

"A mystery to a man, who cannot imagine that women either think or
read," retorted Dora, taking her husband's arm. "You men have a
fixed idea that your wives and sisters have only two subjects of
conversation, gowns and servants. Of course, you will stay and dine,
Mr. Heathcote. I am not going to dress for dinner, so please don't look
at your frock-coat as if that were an insuperable obstacle. You and
Hilda are going to stop, whether you like it or not."

"You know we always like to be here," said Hilda, in her low sweet
voice.

She stole a shy little look at Bothwell, as if wondering what he
thought of the matter; but Bothwell's countenance was inscrutable.

Hilda was pained but not surprised by his manner. He had changed to her
so strangely within the last few months--he who half a year ago had
been so kind, so attentive. She was not angry--she was not vain enough
to wonder that a man should begin by caring for her a little, and then
leave off caring all at once, and relapse into absolute indifference.
She supposed that such fickleness was a common attribute of the
superior sex.

They all went to the house, and through a glass door into the large low
drawing-room, where the butler immediately announced dinner. The two
ladies had only time to take off their hats before they went into the
dining-room. They were both in white, and there was a grace in Dora
Wyllard's simple gown, a cluster of roses half hidden by the folds
of an Indian muslin fichu, a swan-like throat rising from a haze of
delicate lace, which was more attractive than the costliest toilet ever
imported from Paris to be the wonder of a court ball. Yes, she was of
all women Edward Heathcote had ever known the most gracious, the most
beautiful. Those seven years of happy married life had ripened her
beauty, had given a shade of thoughtfulness to the matron's dark eyes,
the low wide brow, the perfect mouth, but had not robbed the noble
countenance of a single charm. The face of the wife was nobler than
the face of the girl. It was the face of a woman who lived for another
rather than for her own happiness; the face of a woman superior to all
feminine frivolity, and yet in all things most womanly.

Edward Heathcote sighed within himself as he took his place beside his
hostess in the subdued light of the old panelled room, a warm light
from lamps that hung low on the table, under rose-coloured shades,
umbrella-shaped, spreading a luminous glow over silver and glass and
flowers, and leaving the faces of the guests in rosy shadow. He sighed
as he thought how sweet life would have been for him had this woman
remained true to her first love. For she had loved him once. Eight
years ago they two had clasped hands, touched lips, as affianced
lovers. He could never forget what she had been to him, or what she
might have been. He sat at her husband's table in all loyalty of
soul, in staunch friendship. He would have cut his heart out rather
than debased himself or Dora by one guilty thought. Yet he could but
remember these things had been.

The two ladies left almost immediately after dinner, and Bothwell
sauntered out into the garden directly afterwards. Not to rejoin
them, as he would have done a few months ago, but to smoke the cigar
of solitude in a path beside a crumbling, old red wall, and a long,
narrow border of hollyhocks, tall, gigantic, yellow, crimson, white,
and pink. There were fruit-trees on the other side of the wall, which
was supported with tremendous buttresses at intervals of twenty feet or
so, and about wall and buttresses climbed clematis and passion-flower,
jasmine, yellow and white, and the great crimson trumpets of the
bignonia.

The banker and the lawyer sat silently for a few minutes, Julian
Wyllard occupied in the choice of a cigar from a case which he had
first offered to his guest; and then Edward Heathcote asked him what he
thought of the inquest.

"I thought it altogether unsatisfactory," answered Wyllard. "You did
your best to thrash out a few facts; but those fools of railway people
had nothing to tell worth hearing. Everybody knows that the poor
creature fell off the train--or was thrown off. What we want to find
out is whether there was foul play in the business."

"It is my belief that there was," said Heathcote, looking at him
fixedly in the dim roseate light, almost as unsatisfactory for such a
scrutiny as the changeful glow of the fire.

"And mine," answered Wyllard; "and so strong is my conviction upon this
point that I stopped at the post-office on my way home, and telegraphed
to my old friend Joe Distin, asking him to come down and help us to
solve the mystery."

"Do you mean the criminal lawyer?"

"Whom else should I mean? He and I were schoolfellows. I have asked him
to stop at Penmorval while he carries on his investigation."



CHAPTER III.


JOSEPH DISTIN.


Mrs. Wyllard was surprised and even horrified when, on the morning
after the inquest, her husband told her that he had invited Distin, the
criminal lawyer, to stay at Penmorval while he investigated the mystery
of the nameless girl's death. The presence of such a man beneath her
roof seemed to her like an outrage upon that happy home.

"My dear Dora, what a delightful embodiment of provincial simplicity
you show yourself in this business!" said her husband laughingly. "I
believe you confound the lawyer who practises in the criminal courts
with the police-agent you have read about in French novels. A man of
low birth and education, with nothing but his native wit to recommend
him; a man whose chief talent is for disguises, and who passes his life
in a false beard and eyebrows, in the company of thieves and murderers,
whom it is his business to make friends with and then betray. Joe
Distin is a solicitor of long standing, whose chief practice happens to
be in the Old Bailey. He is a most accomplished person, and the friend
of princes."

"He is your friend, Julian, so I ought not for a moment to have doubted
that he is a gentleman," answered Dora sweetly, with her hand resting
on her husband's shoulder. Such a lovely hand, with long tapering
fingers, and dimples where other people have knuckles, like a hand in
an early Italian picture. "Still, I wish with all my heart that he were
going to stay at the hotel. I don't want you to be involved in this
terrible business. Why should you concern yourself about it, Julian?
Nothing you can do can be of use to the poor dead girl. What is it all
to you? What have you to do with it?"

"My duty," answered Wyllard firmly. "As a magistrate I am bound to
see that a terrible crime--if crime it be--shall not go unpunished in
my district. I have no particular aptitude in unravelling mysteries.
I therefore send for my old schoolfellow, who has won his reputation
among the sinuous ways of crime."

"Ah, I remember. You and Mr. Distin were together at Marlborough," said
Dora musingly. "That is enough to make him an interesting person in my
mind."

"Yes, we were companions and rivals in the same form," answered
Julian. "There were some who thought us two the sharpest lads in the
school. In all our studies we were neck and neck: but in other points
the difference between us was a wide one. Distin was the son of a
rich London solicitor--an only son, who could draw upon an indulgent
father for means to gratify every whim, who had his clothes made by a
fashionable tailor, and could afford to hire a hunter whenever he got
the chance of riding one. I was one of many children--the fourth son of
a Warwickshire parson; so I had to reckon my cash by sixpences, and to
wear my clothes till they were threadbare. Yes, there was an impassable
gulf between Distin and me in those days."

"And now you must be a great deal richer than he, and you can receive
him in this lovely old place."

"There will be some pride in that. Yes, Dora, Fortune was at home to
me when I knocked at her door. I have been what is called a lucky man."

"And you are a happy one, I hope," murmured his wife, leaning her head
upon his shoulder, as he stood before the open window, looking dreamily
out at summer woods.

"Ineffably happy, sweet one, in having won you," he answered tenderly,
kissing the fair broad brow.

"You must have been wonderfully clever," said Dora enthusiastically,
"beginning without any capital, and within twenty years making a great
fortune and a great name in the world of finance."

"I was fortunate in my enterprises when I was a young man, and I lived
at a time when fortunes were made--and lost--rapidly. I may have had a
longer head than some of my compeers; at any rate, I was cooler-headed
than the majority of them, and I kept out of rotten schemes."

"Or got out of them before they collapsed," Mr. Wyllard might have
said, had he displayed an exhaustive candour.

But in talking of business matters to a woman a man always leaves a
margin.

So after a good deal more discursive talk between husband and wife
it was agreed that Mr. Distin's visit was not to be regarded as an
affliction. A telegram arrived while Mr. and Mrs. Wyllard were talking,
announcing the lawyer's arrival by the same train which had carried
the nameless waif to her grave in the valley, the train which was due
at Bodmin Road at a quarter before eight. The dog-cart was to meet
the guest, and dinner was to be deferred till nine o'clock for his
accommodation.

"You can send a line to Heathcote and ask him to dine with us
to-night," said Wyllard. "I know he is interested in this business, and
would like to meet Distin."

"And Hilda--you won't mind having Hilda?"

"Not in the least. Hilda is an ornament to any gentleman's
dining-table. But how fond you have become of Hilda lately!"

"I was always fond of her. Do you know there is something that puzzles
me very much?"

"Indeed!"

"A few months ago I thought Bothwell was in love with Hilda. He seemed
devoted to her, and was always asking me to have her over here. I was
rejoicing at the idea of the poor fellow getting such a sweet girl for
his wife, for I thought Hilda rather liked him, when all at once he
cooled, and appeared actually to go out of his way in order to avoid
her. Strange, was it not?"

"The fickleness of an idle mind, no doubt," answered Wyllard carelessly.

He had not his wife's keen interest in the joys and sorrows of other
people. He was said to be a kind-hearted man. He was good to the
poor in a large way, and never shut his purse against the appeal of
misfortune. But he could not be worried about the details of other
people's lives. He did not care a straw whether Bothwell was or was
not in love with Hilda. To his wife, on the contrary, the question was
vital, involving the happiness of two people whom she loved.

"If your cousin does not put his shoulder to the wheel before long he
will fall into a very bad way," said Wyllard decisively.

"He would be very glad to do it, if he only knew what wheel to
shoulder," said Bothwell's voice outside, as he sauntered to the
window, wafting aside the smoke of his cigarette.

It seemed to Dora as if her cousin spent his home life in smoking
cigarettes and sauntering in the gardens, where, on his energetic days,
he helped her in her war of extermination against the greenfly.

"There is always a wheel to be moved by the man who is not afraid of
work," said Wyllard.

"So I am told, but I have found no such wheel, as a civilian.
Seriously, Julian, I know that I am an idler and a reprobate, that I
am taking advantage of your kindness and letting life slip by me just
because I have the run of my teeth in this fine old place, and because
you and Dora are worlds too good to me. I have been taking my own
character between my teeth and giving it a good shaking within the last
few days, and I mean to turn over a new leaf. I shall go abroad--to the
South Seas."

"What are you to do for a living in the South Seas?"

"Something. Sub-edit a colonial paper, keep a grocery store, turn
parson and convert the nigger. I shall fall upon my feet, you may be
sure. I shall find something to do before I have been out there long.
Or if Otaheite won't give me a roof and a crust, I can cross to the
mainland and drive sheep. Something I must do for my bread. Into the
new world I must go. The atmosphere of the old world is stifling me. I
feel as if I was living in an orchid house."

"No, Bothwell, you are not going to the other end of the world," said
Dora affectionately. "You ought not to say such things, Julian, making
him feel as if he were an intruder, as if he were not welcome here; my
first cousin, the only companion of my youth that remains to me now my
dear mother is gone. Surely we who are rich need not grudge our kinsman
a home."

"My dearest, you ought to know that I spoke for Bothwell's sake, and
from no other motive than my care for his interest," answered Julian
gravely. "A young man without a profession is a young man on the
high-road to perdition."

"I believe you with all my soul," cried Bothwell, with feverish energy,
"and I shall sail for Otaheite in the first ship that will carry me.
Not because I do not love you, Dora, but because I want to be worthier
of your love."

He lighted a fresh cigarette, and sauntered away from the window, to
breathe latakia over the John Hoppers and Victor Verdiers on the wall.

Dora's eyes filled with tears. She was angrier with her husband than
she had ever been since her marriage.

"It is very unkind of you to drive Bothwell out of your house," she
said indignantly. "You make me regret that I have not a house of my
own. You forget how fond we have always been of each other--that he is
as dear to me as a brother."

"It is because I remember that fact that I am anxious to stimulate
Bothwell to action of some kind," answered her husband. "Do you think
it is good for any young man to lead the kind of life your cousin leads
here?"

"If he were to marry he would become more industrious, I have no
doubt," said Dora. "You might pension off old Mr. Gretton, and make
Bothwell your land-steward."

"Which in Bothwell's case would mean a genteel dependence, under the
disguise of a responsible position. Bothwell would be seen on every
racecourse in the west country--would play billiards at the George,
shoot my game, and let somebody else do my work."

"Do you mean that my cousin is a dishonourable man?" asked Dora
indignantly.

"No, dear. I mean that he is a man who has spoiled one career for
himself, and will have to work uncommonly hard in order to find
another."

This was cruel logic to Dora's ear. For the first time in her life she
thought that her husband was ungenerous; and for the first time in her
life she reckoned her own fortune as an element of power. Hitherto she
had allowed her rents to be paid into her husband's bank. She had her
own cheque-book, and drew whatever money she wanted; but she never
looked at her pass-book, and she did not even ask what income each year
brought her, or what surplus was left at the end of the year. She had
never offered to help Bothwell with money; she had felt that any such
offer would humiliate him. But now she considered for the first time
that her money must have accumulated to a considerable extent, and that
it was in her power to assist Bothwell with capital for any enterprise
which he might desire to undertake. If he had set his heart upon going
to the South Sea Islands, he should not start with an empty purse.

       *       *       *       *       *

The train from Paddington came into Bodmin Road station with laudable
punctuality, and without mischance of any kind; and the dog-cart
brought Mr. Distin to Penmorval before half-past eight. Dora was in
the drawing-room when he arrived. She had dressed early in order to be
ready to welcome her husband's friend; even albeit he came to her with
a perfume of the Old Bailey.

In spite of Wyllard's praise of his old schoolfellow, Dora had expected
a foxy and unpleasant individual, with craft in every feature of his
face.

She was agreeably surprised on beholding a good-looking man, with
aquiline nose, dark eyes, hair and whiskers inclining to gray, slim,
well set up, neat without being dapper or priggish--a man who might
have been taken for an artist or an author, just as readily as for a
lawyer versed in the dark ways of crime.

"My friend Wyllard looks all the better for his rural seclusion," said
Distin, after he had been introduced to Dora. "He seems to me a younger
man by ten years than he was when I met him in Paris just ten years
ago. And that means twenty years to the good, you see."

"Is it really ten years since you have met?" exclaimed Dora.

"Exactly a decade. Our last meeting was a chance encounter in the
Palais Royal in the summer of '72, when Paris was just beginning to
recover herself after the horrors of the Commune. We ran against each
other one day at dinner-time--both making for Véfour's, where we dined
together and talked over old times. I thought that evening my friend
looked aged and haggard, nervous and worried, and I put it down to the
ruling disease of our epoch, high-pressure. I knew it could not be the
effect of late hours or dissipation of any kind, for Wyllard was always
as steady as old Time. But now I find him regenerated, glorified by
rustic pleasures. Happy fellow, who can afford to enjoy his _otium cum
dignitate_ in the very prime of life."

"You hear what he says, Dora," said Wyllard laughingly. "Now, I daresay
what he thinks is: 'How can this poor devil endure his existence
out of London--two hundred and forty miles from the clubs--from the
opera-house--from the first nights of new plays--the crowd of familiar
faces?' I know my friend Distin of old, and that he could not exist out
of London any more than a fish can live out of water."

"I like my little London," admitted Distin coyly, almost as if he were
talking of a fascinating woman. "There's so much in it, and it's such
a devilish wicked place, to those who really know it. But I think the
country a most delightful institution--from Saturday to Monday."

"The cockney stands confessed in that one remark," said Wyllard,
laughing.

"That is the worst of Devonshire and Cornwall," pursued Distin, in his
airy way. "Charming scenery, eminently picturesque; but not available
between Saturday and Monday. Now, there is one ineffable charm in
those pretty places up the river, and that rural district round
Tunbridge Wells."

"Pray what is that?"

"One is always so delighted to arrive on Saturday afternoon, and so
charmed to leave on Monday morning. The rustic aroma just lasts till
Sunday night, and the keen craving for town begins with the dawn of
Monday. But I must go and get rid of two hundred and forty miles of
dust," said Mr. Distin, slipping off as lightly as a boy.

He left the drawing-room at twenty minutes to nine, and returned at
five minutes before the hour, in full evening-dress. It was like a
conjuring trick. His costume was of the quietest, yet there was a
finish and style about everything that impressed even the ignorant.
One felt that the very latest impress of Fashion's fairy fingers had
touched that shirt, had meted out the depth of the silk collar, the
curve of the sleeve. That black pearl centre-stud might have been the
last gift of a prince or a grateful beauty. One ring, and one only,
adorned the solicitor's left hand; but that ring was a table diamond,
two hundred and forty years old, said to have been given by Anne of
Austria to the Duke of Buckingham.

Bothwell, who took some pride in his clothes, looked clumsy and
unfashionable beside the London lawyer, or at any rate fancied that he
did. Edward Heathcote was at all times a careless dresser, but his tall
figure, and a certain dash which was more soldierly than civilian, made
him an important personage in every circle. He had the free grace, the
easy movements, of a man who has spent his boyhood and youth out of
doors--hunting, shooting, fishing, mountaineering.

The dinner was lively, thanks chiefly to Joseph Distin, for Bothwell
had a dispirited air, and Hilda could not help feeling unhappy at
seeing his gloom, though she tried to conceal her sympathy. Mr. Wyllard
and Mr. Distin had the conversation to themselves during the greater
part of the meal, for Mr. Heathcote was graver and more reserved than
usual, and Dora had a subdued and thoughtful air. She would have been
quite ready to admit that Joseph Distin was a very agreeable person,
and altogether worthy of her husband's friendship; but she could not
dissociate him from the horror of the event which caused his presence
in that house. She felt that of those gathered around her table that
night, in the shaded light of the low lamps, amidst the perfume of
hothouse flowers, the greater number were brooding upon a mystery which
might mean murder.

She was very glad to escape to the drawing-room with Hilda, directly
dinner was over.

"And now, I suppose, they will talk of that poor creature's death," she
said. "Come, Hilda, sing one of Schubert's ballads, and let us try to
forget all that horror."

Hilda seated herself at the piano obediently, and began "Mignon." She
had a superb mezzo-soprano, clear as a bell, ripe and round and full.
The rich notes went pealing up to the low ceiling and floating out at
the open windows. Perhaps Bothwell heard them in the dining-room, for
he came sauntering in presently, and slipped quietly into a seat in a
shadowy corner. Hilda always sang and played from memory. There was no
irksome duty to be done in the way of turning over music.

"What made you desert the gentlemen, Bothwell?" asked Dora, when the
song was over.

"They were talking of that diabolical inquest again. Nobody in Bodmin
seems able to talk of anything else. Wherever I went to-day I heard the
same ghastly talk--every imaginable suggestion, and not one grain of
common sense. What ghouls people must be to gloat over such a subject!
No wonder that men who live in great cities despise the rustic mind."

"I do not find that the inhabitants of cities are any less ghoulish,"
retorted Dora, who felt warmly about her native soil, and would have
fought for Cornish people and Cornish institutions to the death. "See
how the London papers gloat over the details of crime."

These three spent the evening very quietly in the drawing-room, while
the three men in the dining-room were discussing the event on the
railway.

Hilda sang some of Mrs. Wyllard's favourite songs, while her hostess
sat in the lamp-light by an open window working at a group of
sunflowers on a ground of olive plush. Bothwell kept in his dark corner
all the evening, so quiet that he might have been asleep, save that
he murmured a "Thank you, Miss Heathcote, very lovely," after one of
Hilda's songs. She thought that he was only grateful for having had his
slumber soothed by a vague strain of melody.

The men in the dining-room had turned away from the lighted table,
and were sitting in a little knot in the embrasure of the wide Tudor
window, smoking their cigars, half in the ruddy glow of the lamps and
half in the mellow light of the newly-risen moon. They could hardly
see each other's faces in that uncertain light. Stodden, the butler,
had wheeled a table over to the window and arranged the claret-jugs
and glasses upon it, before he left the room. The little knot of men
smoking and drinking by the window looked a picture of comfort, with
the soft sweet air blowing in from the garden, and the great full
moon shining over the roses and the fountain in the old-fashioned
parterre. Joseph Distin's keen eye noted every detail of his friend's
surroundings; and he told himself that, for the fourth son of a village
vicar, Julian Wyllard had done remarkably well.

Between them Wyllard and the Coroner had contrived to put the London
lawyer in full possession of the facts relating to the girl's death.
Those facts were unfortunately of the scantiest. Edward Heathcote
breathed no hint of that dark suspicion about Bothwell which had
flashed into his mind after the inquest, and which he had vainly
endeavoured to shake off since that time. Bothwell's manner at dinner
this evening had not been calculated to disarm suspicion. His moody
brow, his silence and abstraction, were the unmistakable signs of
secret trouble of some kind. That trouble was coincidental in time with
the event on the railway; for Heathcote and Bothwell had met in Bodmin,
and had ridden home together on the previous day, and the young man had
been cheery enough.

"The ticket found upon the girl was from London to Plymouth, I
apprehend," said Distin, when he had heard everything.

"Yes."

"Then she started from Paddington that morning. My business will be to
find out who she was, and the motive of her journey."

"And do you think there is a possibility of tracing her in London,
without a shred of evidence--except the photograph of a dead face?"
exclaimed Wyllard. "To my mind it seems like looking in a brook for a
bubble that broke there a week ago."

"As a west countryman you should remember how otter-hounds hunt the
bead on the water," answered Distin. "With a photograph, the police
ought to be able to trace that girl--even in the wilderness of London."

"But if she were a foreigner, and only passed through London?"
suggested Wyllard.

"Even then she would leave her bead, like the otter. She could not get
a night's shelter without some one knowing of her coming and going.
Unless she slept in the lowest form of lodging-house--a place through
which the herd of strange faces are always passing--the probabilities
are in favour of her face being remembered."

"Judging by the neatness of her clothes and the refinement of her
features, she must have been the last person likely to set foot in a
common lodging-house," said Heathcote. "But there was no money found
upon her; neither purse nor papers of any kind."

"That fact is to me almost conclusive," said Distin.

"Upon what point?"

"It convinces me that she was made away with."

"Indeed!" exclaimed Wyllard, much surprised. "The thing never occurred
to me in that light."

"Naturally, my dear friend. You have not devoted twenty years of your
life to the study of the criminal mind," answered the lawyer easily.
"Don't you see that the first thought of a man who made up his mind
to throw a girl out of a train--unless he did the act in a blind fury
which gave him no time for thought of any kind--his first precaution,
I say, would be to see that there was no evidence of her identity upon
her, more especially where the victim was a stranger in the land, as
this poor thing was? The identification of the victim is often half-way
towards the identification of the murderer. But if the dead can be
buried unrecognised--a nameless unknown waif, in whose fate no private
individual is interested--why, after the funeral the murderer may take
his ease and be merry, assured that he will hear no more of the matter.
Public interest in a mysterious crime of that kind soon dies out."

"And you think that this poor girl was the victim of a crime?" asked
the Coroner, surprised to find his own idea shared by the great
authority.

"In my own mind I have no doubt she was murdered."

"But why should she not have committed suicide?"

"Why should she have travelled from London to Cornwall in order to
throw herself over that particular embankment?" demanded Distin. "An
unnecessary luxury, when there were the Holborn Viaduct and a score
of bridges at her service, to say nothing of the more natural exit by
her own bedroom window. Besides, in the statistics of self-murder you
will find that nineteen out of twenty suicides--nay, I might almost say
ninety-nine out of a hundred--leave a piteous little note explaining
the motive of the deed--an appeal to posterity, as it were. 'See how
great a sufferer I have been, and what a heroic end I have made.' No,
there is only one supposition that would admit this girl being her own
destroyer. Some ruffian in the train might have so scared her that she
flung herself out, in a frantic effort to escape from him. But against
this possibility there is the fact of the absence of any purse or
papers. She could not have been travelling that distance without, at
least, a few shillings in her possession."

"Who knows!" said Julian Wyllard. "Very narrow are the straits of
genteel poverty. If, as I suppose, she was a poor little nursery
governess going to her situation, she may have had just money enough to
pay for her railway ticket, and no more. She may have relied upon her
employers meeting her at the station with a conveyance."

"If she were a nursery governess, due at some country house on that
day, surely her employers would have communicated with the Bodmin
police before now," said Distin.

"News finds its way slowly to sleepy old houses in remote districts
off the railway," replied Wyllard. "There are people still living in
Cornwall who depend upon a weekly paper for all news of the outer
world."

"If the poor girl were going to such benighted wretches, let us hope
they will wake in a day or two, and enlighten us about her," said
Distin. "And now to be distinctly practical, and to tell you what I am
going to do. Mr. Heathcote's carriage was announced nearly an hour ago,
and I saw him looking at his watch just now."

"I was only uneasy about Mrs. Wyllard and my sister. We are keeping
them up rather late," said the Coroner apologetically.

"Dora won't mind. She loves the tranquillity of midnight," replied
Wyllard. "Go on, Distin. What is your plan?"

"Your adjourned inquest does not come on for nearly a fortnight," said
Distin. "Now, you can't expect me to waste all that time in Cornwall,
delicious as it would be to dream away existence among the roses of
your delightful garden; so the best thing I can do is to run up to
London to-morrow morning"--he spoke as if he were at Maidenhead or
Marlow--"find out all I can _there_, and return here in time for
the Coroner's next sitting. By which time," added the specialist
cheerily, "I hope we shall have got up a pretty little case for the
Public Prosecutor. Mr. Heathcote will kindly keep me informed of any
new details that crop up here. I shall have the poor little girl's
photograph in my pocket-book. You'll send a messenger to your town
early to-morrow morning, Wyllard, and tell the photographer to meet me
at the station with his photographs of the dead girl? He ought to have
them ready by that time."

"I will give the order to-night," said Wyllard; and then the three men
repaired to the drawing-room.

"I have been very happy here," said Hilda to her brother; "but I
thought you were never coming for me. Mrs. Wyllard must be dreadfully
tired."

"Never tired of your company, Hilda," interjected Dora. "Nor of
Schubert."

"And as for Mr. Grahame, he has been asleep ever since dinner."

"That is a baseless calumny, Miss Heathcote. I have not lost a note of
your songs. I am told that Schubert was rather a low person--convivial,
that is to say somewhat Bohemian; fond of taverns and tavern company.
But I will maintain there must have been a pure and beautiful soul in
the man who wrote such songs as those."

"I am so glad you like them," answered Hilda, brightening at his
praise. "I daresay you often heard them in India."

"No; the people I knew in India had not such good taste as you."

"But in a country like that, where ladies have so little to do, music
must be such a resource," persisted Hilda, who was curiously interested
in Mr. Grahame's Indian experiences.

She was always wondering what his life had been like in that strange
distant world, what kind of people he had known there. She wondered all
the more perhaps on account of Bothwell's reticence. She could never
get him to talk freely of his Indian days, and this gave the whole
thing an air of mystery.

The clock in the great gray pile of stabling was striking twelve as the
Coroner's carriage drove away.

"I cannot think what has happened to Mr. Grahame," said Hilda. "He
used to be so lively, and now he is so dull."

"The change is palpable to others, then, as well as to me," thought
Heathcote. "Whatever the cause may be, there is a change. God help him
if my fear is well grounded! If I were a criminal, I would as soon have
a sleuthhound on my track as Joseph Distin."

Mr. Distin was on his way to London before noon next day, curled up
in a corner of a _coupé_, looking out eagerly at every station for
the morning papers. He had the dead girl's photographs--full-face,
profile--in his letter-case. On making his adieux at Penmorval he
declared that he had thoroughly enjoyed his little run into the
country, his night in the fresh air.

"So delicious to wake at six--my usual hour--and smell your roses, and
hear your fountain," he said. "I look forward with delight to my return
the week after next."

       *       *       *       *       *

During that interval which occurred between Mr. Distin's departure
and the adjourned inquest, Edward Heathcote gave himself up to his
usual avocations, and took no further trouble to fathom the mystery of
the stranger's untimely fate. After all, he told himself, wearied by
brooding upon a subject that troubled him greatly, it was not for him
to solve the problem. He was not the Public Prosecutor, nor was he a
detective, nor even a criminal lawyer, like Joseph Distin. His business
was to hear what other people had to say, not to hunt up evidence
against anybody. His duty began when he took his seat at an inquest,
and ended when he left it. Why, then, should he vex his mind with dark
suspicions against a man who was the near kinsman, the adopted brother,
of that woman for whose sake or for whose happiness he would have
gladly died?

This was how Edward Heathcote argued with himself; and it was in
pursuance of this conclusion that he gave himself up to a life of
idleness during the twelve days that succeeded Mr. Distin's departure.
He rode far afield in the early morning, he drove with his sister
and the twins in the afternoon. He appeared at two archery meetings
and three tennis-parties, a most unusual concession to the claims
of society, and he dawdled away the rest of his existence, reading
the last new books in English, French, and German, and discussing
them with Hilda's duenna, Theresa Meyerstein, a curious specimen of
the German Fräulein, intensely domestic, and yet deeply learned--a
woman able to turn from Schopenhauer to strawberry jam, from Plato to
plum-pudding--a woman who knew every theory that had ever been started
upon the mind and its functions, and who could tell to a hundredweight
how much coal ought to be consumed in a gentleman's household. Mr.
Heathcote had discovered this paragon of domesticity and erudition,
acting as deputy-manager at a boarding-house at Baden, during the
first year of his widowhood, and he brought her away from the white
slavery and the scanty remuneration of that institution to the luxury
of an English country house, and the certainty of a liberal recompense
for her labours. Fräulein Meyerstein rewarded her employer by a most
thorough fidelity, and adored Hilda and the twin daughters. Her soul
had languished in a chilling atmosphere, for lack of something to
love, and she lavished the garnered treasures of long years upon these
Cornish damsels who were committed to her care.

More than once during those long summer days Hilda urged the necessity
of calling at Penmorval; but her brother told her she could go alone,
or take the Fräulein, who dearly loved a drive, and a gossip over a cup
of tea, and who was always kindly received by Mrs. Wyllard, in spite of
her short petticoats, anatomical boots, and Teutonic bonnets.

"You can perform those small civilities without any assistance from
me," said Heathcote. "You women are so tremendously posted in the
details of etiquette. Now, it would never have occurred to me that
because we dined at Penmorval a few nights ago, we were strenuously
bound, to call upon Mrs. Wyllard before the end of the week. I thought
that, with friends of long standing those Draconic laws were a dead
letter."

"I don't mean to say that we need be ceremonious, Edward," answered
Hilda, "but I am sure Dora will expect to see us. She will think we are
forgetting her if we don't go."

"Then you go, dear, and let her see that you are not forgetful,
whatever I may be," said Heathcote.

He had a horror of entering that house of Penmorval just now, lest
he should see or hear something that would give him new cause for
suspecting Bothwell. He had a feeling that he could only cross that
threshold as the bringer of evil: and it would be a bitter thing for
him to carry evil into her home for whose peace he had prayed night and
morning for the last eight years.

So Hilda drove her ponies up the hill to Penmorval, and Miss Meyerstein
sat beside her in all the glory of her new bonnet, sent from Munich
by a relative, and reported as the very latest fashion in that city.
Unhappily for the success of the bonnet in Cornwall, Bodmin fashions
and Munich fashions were wide as the poles asunder. Bodmin boasted a
milliner who took in the fashion-magazines, and beguiled her clients
with the idea that everything she made for them was Parisian. The
Bodmin milliner had a heavy hand, and laid on feathers and flowers as
if with a trowel; but her bonnets and hats were light as thistledown
in comparison with the art of Bavaria.

       *       *       *       *       *

It was the afternoon of the adjourned inquest, and Joseph Distin was on
the scene, ready to watch the inquiry. He had arrived at Penmorval in
time for breakfast, after travelling all night.

"Such a good way of getting rid of the night," he said, as he discussed
a salmi of trout, caught in the stream that traversed Penmorval Park.

Alone in the library with Julian Wyllard after breakfast, the London
lawyer confessed that for once in his life he had been pretty nearly
beaten. He had shown the photographs of the dead face to two of the
cleverest detectives in London--had set one to work in the east and
the other in the west, promising a liberal reward for any valuable
information; and nothing had come of their labours. One had tried every
lodging-house within a certain radius of Paddington. The other had
explored the neighbourhood of London Bridge Station, and failing there,
had come as far west as Charing Cross. The ground had been thoroughly
beaten, and no likely place had been forgotten in which a stranger of
this girl's class could find shelter.

"She might have gone to the house of friends," suggested Wyllard.

"If she had friends in London--were they ever such slight acquaintances
even--they would have been heard of before now," argued Distin. "I take
it that she was unknown to a mortal on this side of the Channel, except
the man who murdered her, and who had no doubt some very powerful
motive for wanting to get rid of her."

"What do you suppose that motive to have been?"

"My dear Wyllard, what a question for a clever man to ask!" exclaimed
the lawyer, with a shade of contempt. "To speculate upon the motive I
must have some knowledge of the man, and of this girl's murderer I know
nothing. If I could once find the man, I should soon find the motive.
Such a murder as this generally means the breaking of some legal tie
that has become onerous--some bond which death alone can loosen."



CHAPTER IV.


BOTHWELL DECLINES TO ANSWER.


The room at the Vital Spark was filled to overflowing on the occasion
of the adjourned inquiry. At the previous examination only the
inhabitants of Bodmin and its immediate neighbourhood had been present;
but on this second afternoon people had come from long distances, and
there was not standing room for the audience, which filled the passage,
and waited with strained ears to catch a stray word now and then
through the open door.

The idea of a profound mystery--of a dastardly crime--had been fostered
in the local mind by the newspapers, which had harped upon the ghastly
theme, and gloated over the particulars of the nameless girl's fate
in paragraphs and leaderettes _ad nauseam_. Articles headed "More
details concerning the Bodmin Mystery," "Further particulars about the
strange death on the railway," had served as the salt to give savour
to cut and dried reports about the harvest, the markets, and those
small offenders whose peccadilloes furnish the material for Justice to
exercise her might upon at petty sessions.

Every one had read about that strange death of a lonely girl in the
summer sunset. Every one was interested in a fate so melancholy--an
abandonment so inexplicable.

"I thought that there was hardly ever a human being so isolated as to
be owned by no one," said the curate of Wadebridge. "Yet it would seem
that this poor girl had no one to care for her in life, or to identify
her after death. If she had one friend living in England or France,
surely that person must have made some sign before now."

"People in France are very slow to hear about anything that happens in
England," replied Dr. Menheniot, to whom the curate had been talking.

"But I heard Mr. Heathcote, at the first inquiry, say that he meant to
advertise in a Parisian newspaper."

"Then be sure the advertisement appeared," answered Menheniot.
"Heathcote is one of those few men with whom meaning and doing are the
same thing."

The inquiry dragged its slow length along, and hardly one new fact
was elicited. There was a great deal of repetition, in spite of the
Coroner's attempt to keep all his witnesses to the point. Mr. Distin
sat near the Coroner, and asked a few questions of two or three of the
witnesses; and though he elicited no actually new facts, he seemed to
put things in a clearer light by his cross-examination.

Just before the close of the inquiry, he said:

"I see Mr. Grahame, of Penmorval, is here this afternoon. I should like
to ask him a question or two, if you have no objection."

The Coroner paled ever so slightly at this suggestion, but he had no
objection to offer: so Bothwell Grahame was asked to come up to the
table, and kiss the Book, which he did with a somewhat bewildered air,
as if the thing came upon him as an unpleasant surprise.

"You were in the train that evening, I believe, Mr. Grahame," said
Distin.

"I was."

"Were you alone, in a compartment, or in company with other passengers?"

"I had a third-class compartment to myself."

"And you saw this girl fall?"

"I saw her fall--but as I saw just a little less than Dr. Menheniot and
the guard saw, I don't see the good of my being questioned," answered
Bothwell, with rather a sullen air.

"I beg your pardon," returned Mr. Distin suavely, "every witness sees
an event from a different point of view. You may have noticed something
which escaped the two witnesses we have just heard."

"I noticed nothing more than you have been told by these two, and I saw
less than they saw. I did not look out of the window till I heard the
girl's shriek, and I saw her in the act of falling."

"Good. But you may have observed this solitary girl--a foreigner, and
therefore more noticeable--on the platform at Plymouth. You were on the
platform at Plymouth, you know."

"I was. But I did not see the girl at the station."

"Strange that she should have escaped your observation, although the
porter who was busy with his duties had time to notice her," said Mr.
Distin.

"Would it surprise you to hear that during the four or five minutes I
spent in the station before the train started I was standing at the
bookstall buying papers, with my back to the platform?"

"That would account for your not having seen this noticeable young
stranger. You were in Plymouth for several hours, I believe, Mr.
Grahame?"

"I was; but upon my word I don't see what hearing that fact can have
upon this inquiry."

"Perhaps not. Still, you will not object to tell us what you were doing
in Plymouth--how you disposed of your time there."

This question evidently troubled Bothwell, simple as it was, and easy
as it ought to have been to answer.

"I played a game at billiards at the Duke of Cornwall," he said.

"I am sure you are too good a player for that to occupy more than half
an hour," said Mr. Distin, with his silky air, as if he were employed
in a very pleasant business, and were bent upon being as cheery as
possible.

"I had to wait for the table."

"Come now, Mr. Grahame, you need not be mysterious about so simple a
matter," exclaimed Mr. Distin. "You don't mean to tell us that you went
to Plymouth by the 12.15 train"--he had ascertained this fact before
the inquiry began--"and spent the whole of the day there, in order to
play a game at billiards in a public billiard-room. You must have had
other business in Plymouth."

"Certainly. I had other business there."

"Will you kindly tell us what that business was?"

"As it concerned others besides myself, and as it has not the faintest
bearing upon this case, I must decline to answer that question."

"Really, now, I should advise you to be more frank. You leave Bodmin
early in the day--without giving any notice of your departure--and you
return late in the evening. A most mysterious catastrophe occurs in the
train which brings you home--a death so strange, so horrible, that it
casts a cloud over all the passengers travelling by that train--leaves
a stigma upon all, as it were, until the guilt of that deed can be
brought home to one. Surely, under such circumstances, the utmost
frankness is desirable. Every traveller in that train should be ready
to answer any question which those who are charged with the elucidation
of this mystery may ask."

"I have answered your questions as to what occurred to me in the train,
and at the station; but I decline to be catechised about my business in
Plymouth," answered Bothwell doggedly.

"That will do," said Distin; and Bothwell went to his seat next
Julian Wyllard, whose handsome presence appeared in the front rank of
spectators, amongst those of the _élite_ who were favoured with chairs,
while the commonalty stood in a mob at the back of the room.

The audience had been breathless during this examination of Bothwell
Grahame. The young man's sunburnt face was clouded with anger, his dark
strongly-marked brows were scowling over those gray-blue eyes which
once had such a pleasant expression.

"I can't think what has come to Grahame," muttered a sporting squire to
his next neighbour. "He used to be such a pleasant fellow, but to-day
he looks like a murderer."

"You don't think he threw the girl out of the train, do you?" asked the
other.

"God forbid! But by that London lawyer's questions one would think _he_
suspected Grahame of having had a hand in the business."

The jury gave their verdict presently, "Death from misadventure."

"Tell Dora not to expect me at dinner," said Bothwell to Julian
Wyllard, before they left the inn; "I shall dine in Bodmin."

"Have you any engagement?"

"No, but I can easily make one. I am not going to break bread with your
lawyer friend. So long as he is at Penmorval I shall be missing."

"My dear Bothwell, you have no right to be angry at a simple question
which you might have so easily answered," remonstrated Wyllard gravely.

"It was a question which I did not choose to answer, and which he had
no right to ask. It was an outrage to ask such a question--to press it
as he did. Fifty years ago he might have been shot for a lesser insult.
By Jove, I never felt more sorry that the good old duelling days are
over--the days when one man could not insult another with impunity."

"How savage you are, Bothwell, and against a man who was only in the
exercise of his profession!"

"He had no right to question me as if I were a murderer," retorted
Bothwell savagely. "Did he think that I spent my time in Plymouth
plotting that girl's death? If I had made up my mind to push a woman
over an embankment, I should not have wanted to spend a day in Plymouth
in order to plan the business. A murder of that kind must be touch and
go--no sooner thought of than done."

"All trouble would have been saved, my dear fellow, if you had given a
straight answer to a simple question."

"To answer would have been to acknowledge his right to question me.
No judge would have allowed counsel to have asked such a motiveless
question. Nowhere except at a petty rustic inquiry would such a thing
be permitted."

"I can only say that you are needlessly angry, Bothwell," said Wyllard.
"Here comes Distin. You had better drive home with us."

"No, thank you; I shall be home before the house shuts up; but you'll
see no more of me to-night."

"Good-night, then."

The Penmorval barouche was waiting before the porch of the Vital
Spark--a great day for that rural hostelry when such a carriage could
be seen waiting there--a great day at the bar, where all the strength
of the establishment could not serve brandies-and-sodas and pale ales
fast enough. Joseph Distin came tripping out, and took his place in the
carriage beside Julian Wyllard. He had lingered at the inn for a few
minutes' talk with the Coroner.

"Is not Mr. Grahame going back with us?" he asked, as they drove
towards the town.

"No. You wounded his dignity by those questions of yours. He is a
curious young man, and is easily offended."

"He is a very curious young man," answered the lawyer, with a
thoughtful air.

He was looking at the landscape intently as they drove along the shady
road, between deep banks and luxuriant hedges; but he would have found
it rather difficult to say afterwards what kind of timber prevailed in
the hedgerows, or what crops grew in the fields.

He was thoughtful all that evening, though he did his utmost to make
himself agreeable to Mrs. Wyllard at dinner, talking to her of art,
music, the drama, society, all the arts and graces and pleasures of
life--doing everything in his power to distract her thoughts from that
one grim theme which was the motive of his presence in that place.

When she was gone, and Distin and his host were alone together over
their claret, the lawyer dropped his society manner as if it had been a
mask, and began to talk seriously.

"For the first time for a good many years I find myself completely at
fault," he said, leaning across the table, and cracking filberts in
sheer distraction of mind. "I thought that I should be able to get
up a case while I was in London, but not a shred of evidence have I
discovered. If this girl had dropped from the moon, it could not be
more difficult to trace her."

"Well, my dear Distin, you have done your best, and we must be
satisfied," replied Wyllard quietly. "I felt it to be my duty as a
magistrate to do all in my power to fathom the mystery of that poor
girl's death. The best thing I could do was to put the case in your
hands. If you cannot help us, no one can. We must be satisfied."

"But I am not satisfied, Julian; I never shall be satisfied until I
have solved this problem," said Distin resolutely. "I am not the sort
of man who can stand being baffled in a matter of this kind. Is all my
professional training to go for nothing, do you think? And yet in your
interest it might be best that I should let this business drop out of
my mind---forget the whole story if possible."

"How do you mean, in _my_ interest?" exclaimed Wyllard, surprised.
"What bearing can the case have upon me or my interest, beyond my
desire to do my duty as a magistrate?"

"I fear that this mystery touches you nearer than you suppose. Surely,
Wyllard, you must have been struck by the manner of your wife's kinsman
under my examination."

"Great Heaven!" cried Wyllard, "you don't mean to tell me that you
suspect Bothwell Grahame of any hand in this business?"

"In perfect frankness, between man and man, I believe that young man
to be in some way--either as principal or accessory--concerned in the
murder of that girl."

"My dear Distin, you must be mad."

"Come now, my dear Wyllard, you cannot pretend that you did not notice
the strangeness of Mr. Grahame's manner this afternoon: his refusal to
answer my question about his business in Plymouth."

"He was angry at your catechising him in that manner; and I must
confess that your question appeared to the last degree irrelevant, even
to me."

"Granted. My question was irrelevant. But it was a test question. I
should never have cross-examined Mr. Grahame, if I had not seen reason
for suspecting him before the inquiry began. I was painfully impressed
by his manner the night I dined here with him; and I believe, from
certain indications dropped unconsciously by your Coroner, that he too
saw reason for suspecting Mr. Grahame. His manner to-day confirms my
suspicion. I am deeply grieved that it should be so, on your wife's
account."

"You had need be sorry for her. Why, Bothwell is like a brother to her.
It would break her heart," said Wyllard, strongly agitated.

He had risen from the table, and was walking slowly up and down the
room, between the windows opening wide upon the gray evening sky, and
the warm lamplight within. Joseph Distin could not see his face, but he
could see that he was strongly moved.

"My dear fellow, let us hope that Mrs. Wyllard will never know anything
about this suspicion of mine," said Distin soothingly. "I have--so
far--not one scrap of evidence against Mr. Grahame; except the
evidence of looks and manner, and the one fact of his refusal to say
what he was doing in Plymouth the day of the girl's death. There is
nothing in all that to bring a man to the gallows. I may have my own
ideas about this mystery, and Mr. Heathcote may have pretty much the
same notion, but there is nothing to touch your wife's cousin so far.
I shall go back to town, and try to forget the whole matter. All you
have to do is to keep your own counsel, and take care that Mrs. Wyllard
knows nothing of what has passed in strictest confidence between you
and me."

"I would not have her know it for worlds. It would break her heart;
it might kill her. Women cannot bear such shocks. And to think that a
man can be suspected of a crime on such grounds--suspected by you, a
student of crime and criminals--because of a moody manner, a refusal to
answer a question! The whole thing seems too absurd for belief."

"Say that the thing is absurd, and that for once in his life Joe Distin
has made a fool of himself. Take your wife to Aix-les-Bains--or to
Biarritz----"

Julian Wyllard started at that last word as if he had been stung.

"What the deuce is the matter with you, or with Biarritz?" asked Distin
sharply.

"Nothing. My mind was wandering, that's all. You were saying----"

"That you had better forget all that has passed between us
to-night--forget the death of that girl--make a clean slate. Take your
wife to some foreign watering-place, the brightest and gayest you can
find. And let Bothwell Grahame dree his weird as best he may. The
catastrophe on the railway will be forgotten in a week."

"I doubt it. We have not much to think about at Bodmin, and we
exaggerate all our molehills into mountains. That girl's death will be
the talk of the town for the next six months."

"And yet people go on existing in such places, and think they are
alive!" exclaimed Distin.

He left Penmorval after breakfast next morning, without having seen
Bothwell, who was out on the hills breaking in a new horse while the
family were at breakfast. He had been out since five o'clock, the
butler told Mrs. Wyllard.

"Is he riding Glencoe?" she asked, with a look of alarm.

"Yes, ma'am."

"He is a dreadful horse, I know, Julian," she said. "Manby told me
about him only yesterday. He had narrowly escaped being thrown the day
before; and he said that Glencoe was a really dangerous horse, and that
we ought to get rid of him."

"So that he may break somebody else's bones," suggested Mr. Distin.
"That is what a good coachman always advises."

"And now Bothwell has gone out on him, alone."

"You would not have him take some one to pick him up if he were
thrown," said Wyllard. "My dear Dora, there is not the slightest
occasion for alarm. The horse is young, and a little gay; but your
cousin excels as a rough-rider, and there will be no harm done."

"But why should he want to ride that horse?" said Dora; "I'm sure
Manby would advise him not."

"The very reason why he should do it," replied her husband.

"I wonder if he is trying to kill himself while I am eating my
breakfast calmly here?" speculated Joseph Distin. "He must know that I
suspect him; and he may think that the game is up."

Whatever Bothwell's intention might have been, he came back to
Penmorval before eleven o'clock, bringing home the big bay hunter
bathed in sweat, and as tame as a sheep.

"A fine, honest horse! Only wants riding," he said, as he flung the
bridle to the groom, who had been watching for him at the stable-gates,
with an air of expecting to see broken bones.

In the hall Bothwell met Dora, cool, and calm, and beautiful, in her
white muslin breakfast gown. She was bringing in a basket of flowers
from the hothouse, to be arranged by her own hands.

"Is that London lawyer gone yet?" asked Bothwell curtly.

He could not be civil even to his cousin when he spoke of Joseph Distin.

"Yes, he has gone--I hope, never to come back again," said Dora. "He is
really a very well-bred man, and he made himself most agreeable here;
but he seemed to bring with him an atmosphere of crime. I could not
help thinking of all the horrible cases he must have been concerned
in, and that he had grown rich by the crimes of mankind. He could find
out nothing about that poor girl's death, it seems, although he is so
clever."

"Which goes rather to establish my view that the girl fell out of the
train by accident," replied Bothwell.



CHAPTER V.


PEOPLE WILL TALK.


The year was a month older since Joseph Distin went back to town,
baffled and angry with himself, yet glad for his friend's sake that his
discoveries had gone no further. The heather was purpling on the hills,
where the dwarf furze flashed here and there into patches of gold. The
tourist season had set in; but the tourist for the most part avoided
the little town of Bodmin, nestling snugly inland among the hills,
and turned his face to the sea, and the wild rocks which defend that
romantic western coast, to the Lizard and the Land's End, to rugged
Tintagel and sandy Bude.

Life at Penmorval had drifted by as calmly as an infant's sleep, in
those four weeks of soft summer weather. There had been no visitors
staying in the house, for both Julian Wyllard and his wife loved a
studious repose, and there were long intervals in which they lived
almost alone. Penmorval would be full by and by, in October, when
the pheasant-shooting began; and in the mean time it was pleasant to
Dora Wyllard to be able to ride and drive with her husband--to be the
companion of his walks, to read the books he read, and to waste long
evenings in inexhaustible talk. They always had so much to say to each
other. The sympathy between them was so complete.

Hilda Heathcote was at Penmorval nearly every day. She ranked almost as
one of the family. She came to Mrs. Wyllard for counsel and instruction
upon all manner of subjects--sometimes for a gardening lesson,
sometimes for a lesson in crewel-work, in French, German, Italian.
Dora was in advance of her young friend in all these subjects; but the
pupil was so bright and quick that it was a pleasure to teach her.
Between them Mrs. Wyllard and Miss Heathcote achieved marvels in the
way of art-needlework--piano-backs which were as beautiful as pictures,
portières worthy to rank with the highest examples of Gobelin tapestry,
counterpanes that ought to have been exhibited at South Kensington.
The calm leisure of country life lent itself to such slow and elaborate
labours.

Mrs. Wyllard had a big box of foreign books once a month from Rolandi's
library, and she meted out to Hilda such volumes as were fit for a
young English lady's perusal; and then they met to talk over the books,
sometimes alone, sometimes with Bothwell as a third. Bothwell was very
scornful of all the sentimental books, laughed at the super-refined
heroines of French novels, the dreamy heroes of German romance; but
he read all the books that Hilda read, and he seemed to enjoy talking
about them at that protracted function of afternoon tea from which he
rarely absented himself.

The weather was peerless during this month of August, and Mrs.
Wyllard's afternoon tea-table was set out in an arbour of clipped yew,
at the end of the Italian garden, a point from which there was a fine
view of the moors, and the great brown hills beyond.

Bothwell's sullen gloom had passed away soon after Mr. Distin's
departure. He seemed to Hilda to have become once again the old
Bothwell--gay, and cheery, and kind, and frank. But he did not commit
himself by any of those delicate little attentions to Hilda which had
made him such an agreeable person half a year ago. That particular
phase of his character was a thing of the past.

A month had gone since the close of the inquest at the Vital Spark, but
Bodmin people had not forgotten the strange death of the nameless girl,
and had not left off talking about it. They talked about Bothwell,
too, and of his refusal to give a plain answer to a plain question;
and towards the end of that month Bothwell Grahame woke up all at once
to the consciousness that he was under a cloud. He discovered that
he was being cut by his old acquaintances, so far as they dared cut
a man of his standing and temperament. They were not uncivil; they
gave him good-day if they met him in the street; they would even deign
to discuss the state of the weather, the results of the harvest. But
Bothwell felt nevertheless that he was living under a cloud; there
was a tacit avoidance of him, a desire to get off with as slight a
greeting as civility would permit. Hands were no longer held out to
him in friendship; salutations were no longer loud and cheery. No one
asked him to stop and play billiards at the chief inn, as people had
been wont to do, waylaying him when he wanted to get home. Now he could
pursue his walk without let or hindrance. He had even seen one of his
most familiar friends stroll dreamily round a corner to avoid meeting
him.

During the whole of those four weeks he had not received a single
invitation to play lawn-tennis, he for whose presence tennis-parties
used to compete. There were two or three engagements outstanding at
the time of the inquest. He had kept these, and had played his best,
struggling against a coldness in the atmosphere. It had seemed to him
that everybody was out of sorts. There was an all-pervading dulness.
Nobody could find anything pleasant to talk about. He had been very
slow to perceive that cloud which hung over him: but by the end of the
month the fact had become too palpable, and Bothwell Grahame understood
that he had been sent to Coventry.

"What does it all mean?" he asked himself, aghast with indignant
wonder. "What can they have to say against me? Can any one have found
out----?"

Bothwell's cheek paled as he thought of that one transaction of his
life which he would least like to see recorded against him. But he told
himself, after a few minutes' reflection, that nobody in Bodmin could
possibly know anything about that particular episode in a young man's
history.

He puzzled himself sorely about this change in the manner of his
acquaintance; and on trying back he discovered that the change dated
from the day of the adjourned inquest. He recalled too the curious
manner in which everybody had avoided the subject of the inquest; how
when any mention of the dead girl had been made in his presence the
conversation had been changed instantly, as if the subject must needs
be tabooed before him.

"Upon my soul," said Bothwell, "I begin to think they suspect me of
having thrown that girl out of the carriage. Because I refused to
answer that insolent ruffian's questions, these village wiseacres have
made up their minds that I am a murderer."

He went back to Penmorval in a white heat of indignation. A week ago he
had made up his mind to start for Peru. He had found out all about the
steamer which was to carry him. He had obtained letters of introduction
to the proprietor of a newspaper, and to some of the local aristocracy.
He was ready to set forth upon his quest of fortune in the land of
gold and jewels. But now he told himself that wild horses should not
drag him away from Penmorval. He would stand his ground until he had
humiliated those fools and rascals whom he had once called his friends.
He would make them taste of the cup of their own folly.

He was much too hot-headed to keep the secret of his wrongs from that
cousin who had been to him as a sister. He went straight to Dora, and
told her of the foul suspicion that had arisen in men's minds against
him.

She had read the report of the inquest, and although she had wondered
at his refusal to answer Mr. Distin's questions, she had been able to
understand that his pride might revolt against being so catechised, and
that he might choose to persist in that refusal as a point of personal
dignity.

"Any one who can suspect you for such a reason--any one who could
suspect you for any reason--must be an idiot, Bothwell," she exclaimed.
"There is no use in being angry with such people."

"But I am angry with them. I am rabid with anger."

"Why did you not answer that question, Bothwell?" asked his cousin
thoughtfully.

"Because I did not choose."

"Yet it would have prevented all possibility of misapprehension if you
had given a straight answer. And it would have been so easy," argued
Dora.

"It would not have been easy. It was not possible to answer that
question."

"Why not?"

"Because I could not answer it without injuring some one I--esteem,"
replied Bothwell, relapsing into that curious, sullen manner which Mr.
Heathcote had observed on the day of the inquest.

"O Bothwell, you have secrets, then--a secret from me, your adopted
sister!"

"Yes, I have my secrets."

"I am so sorry. I used to hope that I should have a share in the
planning of your life; and now I begin to fear----"

"That my life is wrecked already. You are right, Dora. My life was
wrecked three years before I left India, but I did not know then what
shipwreck meant. I thought that there was land ahead, and that I should
make it; but I know now I was drifting towards a fatal rock upon which
honour, happiness, and prosperity must needs go to pieces."

"Don't talk in riddles, Bothwell. Tell me the plain truth, however bad
it may be. You know you can trust me."

"I do, dear soul, as I trust Heaven itself. But there are some things a
man must not tell. Yes, Dora, I have my secret, and it is a hard one to
carry--the secret of a man who is bound in honour to one woman while he
fondly loves another."

"Bothwell, I am so sorry for you," said his cousin softly.

She put her arms round his neck as if they had still been boy and
girl. She put her lips to his fevered forehead. She comforted him with
her love, being able to give him no other comfort.

       *       *       *       *       *

Hilda Heathcote came up the avenue ten minutes later, escorting a
matchless donkey, which was of so pale a gray as to be almost white. It
was a donkey of surpassing size and dignity, and gave itself as many
airs as if it had been a white elephant. It carried a pair of panniers,
highly decorated in a Moorish fashion, and in the Moorish panniers sat
Edward Heathcote's twin daughters.

The twins were as like as the famous Corsican Brothers in person, but
they were utterly unlike in disposition, and the blue and pink sashes
which they wore for distinction were quite unnecessary; since no one
could have mistaken Minnie, the overbearing twin, for Jennie, the meek
twin. People only had to be in their company half an hour to know which
was which for ever after. Whereas Jennie was quite a baby, and could
hardly speak plain, Minnie was preternaturally old for her years, and
expressed her opinion freely upon every subject. Minnie always came to
the front, was always mistress of the situation, and where Jennie shed
tears Minnie always stamped her foot. Needless to say that Minnie was
everybody's favourite. Naughtiness at four years old, a termagant in
miniature, is always interesting. Mr. Heathcote was the only person in
Cornwall who could manage Minnie, and who properly appreciated Jennie's
yielding nature. Jennie felt that her father loved her, and used to
climb on to his knee and nestle in his waistcoat; while Minnie was
charming society by those little airs and graces which were spoken of
vaguely as "showing off."

To-day Minnie was in a delightful humour, for she was being escorted
in triumph to a long-promised festival. Since the very beginning of
the summer the twins had been promised that they should go to drink
tea with Mrs. Wyllard some day when they had been very good. Jennie
had done everything to deserve the favour; but Minnie had offended in
somewise every day. She had been cruel to the dogs--she had made an
archipelago of blots in her copybook, while her pothooks and hangers
were a worse company of cripples than Falstaff's regiment. She had
been rude to the kind Fräulein. She had been rebellious at dinner, had
protested with loud wailings against the severity of seven-o'clock
bed. Only towards the end of August had there come a brief interval of
calm, and Hilda had been quick to take advantage of these halcyon days,
knowing how soon they would be followed by storm.

The tea-table was laid in the yew-tree arbour, such a table as little
children love, and which has an attractive air even to full-grown
humanity. Such a delicious variety of cakes and jams and home-made
bread, such nectarines and grapes. Minnie shouted and clapped her hands
at sight of the feast, while Jennie blushed and hung her head, abashed
at the dazzling apparition of Mrs. Wyllard in an Indian silk gown with
a scarlet sash, and flashing diamond rings. Hilda had no such jewels on
her sunburnt fingers.

"What a nice tea!" cried Minnie, when the blue and the pink twin had
each been provided with a comfortable seat, each in a snug corner of
the arbour, banked in by the tea-table. "Why do we never have such
nice teas at home? Why don't we, Aunt Hilda?" she repeated, when her
question had been ignored for a couple of seconds.

"Because such nice things would not be wholesome every day," replied
Hilda.

"I don't believe that," said Minnie.

"O Minnie!" cried Jennie, with a shocked air. "You mustn't contradict
people. You mustn't contradict Aunt Hilda, because she is old."

"If cakes weren't wholesome _she_ wouldn't have them," said Minnie,
ignoring the blue twin's interruption, and pointing her chubby finger
at Mrs. Wyllard. "She can have what she likes, and she is grown up and
knows everything. She wouldn't give us unwholesome things. I know why
we don't have such nice teas at home."

"Why not, Minnie?" asked Dora, to encourage conversation.

"Because Fräulein is too stingy. I heard cook say so the other day. She
is always grumbling about the cream and butter. You don't grumble about
the cream and butter, do you?" she asked, in her point-blank way.

"I'm afraid I'm not so good a housekeeper as the Fräulein," answered
Dora.

"Then I like bad housekeepers best. I shall be a bad housekeeper when I
grow up, and there shall always be cakes for tea--ever so many cakes,
as there are here. I'll have some of that, please," pointing to an
amber-tinted pound-cake, "first."

By this Minnie signified that she meant to eat her way through the
varieties of the tea-table.

"And what will Jennie take?" asked Dora, smiling at the blue twin.

"Jennie's a bilious child," said Minnie authoritatively; "she ought to
have something plain."

Jennie, with her large blue eyes fixed pathetically on the pound-cake,
waited for whatever might be given to her.

"Do you think just one slice of rich cake would make you ill, Jennie?"
asked Dora.

"I am sure it would," said Minnie, ploughing her way through her own
slice. "She's always sick, if she eats rich things. She was sick
when we went to see grandma. Grandma isn't rich, you know, because
her husband was a clergyman, and they're always poor. But she gives
us beautiful teas when we go to see her, and lets us run about her
garden and pick the fruit, and trample on the beds, and do just as we
like; so we don't mind going to tea with grandma, though she's old and
deaf. Jennie had cherries and pound-cake the last time we went to see
grandma, and she was ill all night. You know you were, Jennie."

The blue twin admitted the fact, and meekly accepted a hunch of
sanitarian sponge-cake.

"You must not talk so much, Minnie; you are a perfect nuisance," said
Hilda; and then she looked round hesitatingly once or twice before she
asked, "What has become of Mr. Grahame? He generally honours us with
his company at afternoon tea."

"Bothwell has been a little worried this morning," faltered Dora. "He
is not very well."

Her heart sank within her at the thought that this girl--this girl whom
she had once thought of as Bothwell's future wife--would come in time
to know the dark suspicion which hung over him like a poisonous cloud.
She would be told by and by that people thought of him as a possible
murderer, a wretch who had assailed a defenceless girl, set upon her
as a tiger on his prey, hurled her to a dreadful death. She would learn
that there were people in the neighbourhood capable of suspecting this
very Bothwell Grahame, gentleman and soldier, of so dastardly a crime.

Dora had hardly been able to realise the awfulness of the situation
yet. In her desire to comfort her cousin she had made light of the
unspoken slander, the cruel taint which had been breathed upon his
name. But now as she sat at her tea-table ministering to her two
little guests, trying to appear interested in their prattle, her heart
was aching as it had not ached since she had been forgiven by Edward
Heathcote. From that hour until the strange girl's death her life
had been cloudless. And now a cloud had drifted across her horizon,
darkening the sunlight: a cloud that hung heavily over the head of one
whom she dearly loved.



CHAPTER VI.


A CLERICAL WARNING.


The children's tea-party lasted a long time, and the twins enjoyed
themselves prodigiously in the yew-tree arbour, albeit both their
hostess and their aunt were curiously absent-minded, and returned
vaguest answers to Minnie's continuous prattle, and to occasional
remarks propounded gravely by Jennie between two mouthfuls of cake.

Perhaps the twins enjoyed themselves all the more under this condition
of things, for they were allowed to range at will from one dainty to
another, and were not worried by those troublesome suggestions of
unwholesomeness, which are apt to harass juvenile gourmands.

Tea was over at last, and then they had a game at ball on the grass in
front of the fountain; after that they fed the gold fish, until Hilda
began to talk of getting them home. It was nearly seven o'clock by this
time, and Bothwell had not appeared.

The whole business seemed flat, stale, and unprofitable to Hilda, for
want of that familiar presence. He had been such a pleasant companion
of late--not attentive or flattering of speech, as young men are to
girls they admire. He had said none of those pretty things which call
up blushes in girlish cheeks; but he had been kind and brotherly, and
Hilda was satisfied to accept such kindness from him. She thought it
even more than her due. She was not what is called a high-spirited
girl. She did not expect men to bow down and worship her; she did not
expect that hearts were to be laid at her feet for her to trample upon
them. She had none of the insolence of conscious beauty. If ever she
were to love, it would be secretly, meekly, patiently, as Shakespeare's
Helena loved Bertram, with a gentle upward-looking affection, deeming
her lover remote and superior as a star.

There had been a time when she thought that Bothwell cared for her a
little, and then he had been to her as Bertram. Now he was kind and
brotherly, and she was grateful for his kindness.

She was somewhat heavy-hearted as she arranged her disordered
hair--rumpled in a final game of romps with the twins--and put on her
hat to go home. The donkey was waiting before the old stone porch, and
Fräulein Meyerstein had come to assist in escorting the twins.

"I thought Minnie might be troublesome after tea," she said, as if tea
had the effect of champagne upon Minnie's temperament.

They set out across the fields in the warm glow of evening sunlight, a
little procession--the children full of talk and laughter, Hilda more
silent than usual. It was harvest-time, and the corn stood in sheaves
in one wide field by which they went, a field on the slope of a hill
on the edge of the moorland. On the lower side of the field there
was a tall overgrown hedge; a hedge full of the glow of sunshine and
the colour of wild flowers, red and blue and yellow, an exuberance
of starry golden flowers, scattered everywhere amidst the tangle of
foliage.

There was a gap here and there in the hedge, where cattle or
farm-labourers had made a way for themselves from field to field, and
through one of these gaps a man scrambled, and jumped into the path
just in front of the donkey.

The animal gave a feeble shy, and the twins screamed, first with
surprise and then with pleasure. The man was Bothwell, whom the twins
adored.

"Why didn't you come to tea?" asked Minnie indignantly. "It was very
naughty of you."

"I was out of temper, Minnie; not fit company for nice people. How do
you do, Hilda?"

He had fallen into the way of calling her by her Christian name almost
from the beginning of their acquaintance; in those days when he had
been so much brighter and happier than he seemed to be now.

The donkey jogged on, carrying off the twins, Minnie holding forth all
the time, lecturing Bothwell for his rudeness. The Fräulein followed,
eager to protect her charges. They were only a few paces in advance,
but Hilda felt as if she were alone with Bothwell.

"So the children have had their long-promised tea-party," he said, "and
I was out of it. Hard lines."

"They missed you very much," said Hilda. "But did not you know it was
to be this afternoon?"

"I knew yesterday--Dora told me," answered Bothwell, hitting the wild
flowers savagely with his cane, as he walked by Hilda's side.

Unconsciously they had fallen into a much slower pace than the Fräulein
and the donkey, and they were quite alone.

"I knew all about the tea-party, and I meant to be with you; and then
something went wrong with me this morning, and I felt only fit company
for devils. If Satan had been giving a tea-party anywhere within reach,
I would have gone to _that_," concluded Bothwell vindictively.

"I am very glad Satan does not give tea-parties in Cornwall. Of course
you know that he would never trust himself in our county, for fear our
Cornish cooks should make him into a pie," answered Hilda, trying to
smile. "But I am very sorry to hear you have been worried."

"My life has been made up of worries for the last six months. I try
sometimes to be cheerful--reckless rather--and to forget; and then the
viper begins to bite again."

Hilda would have given much to be able to comfort him. It seemed almost
as if he looked to her for comfort, and yet what could she say to a man
whose troubles she knew not, who kept his own secret, and hardened his
heart against his friends?

They walked on in silence for a little way. Some of the reapers were
going homeward in the soft evening light; there was a great wain being
loaded a field or two off, and the voices of men and women sounded
clear and musical through the summer stillness.

"Would you be sorry for a man who had brought trouble on himself
from his own folly, from his own wrong-doing, Hilda?" Bothwell asked
presently.

"I should be all the more sorry for him on that account," she answered
gently.

"Yes, you would pity him. Such women as you and Dora are angels of
compassion. They never withhold their pity; but it is tempered with
scorn. They despise the sinner, even while they are merciful to him."

"You ought not to say that. I am not given to despising people. I am
too conscious of my own shortcomings."

"You are an angel," said Bothwell piteously. "O Hilda, how much I have
lost in life--how many golden opportunities I have wasted!"

"There are always other opportunities to be found," answered the girl,
trying to speak words of comfort, vaguely, hopelessly, in her utter
ignorance of his griefs or his perplexities. "There is always the
future, and the chance of beginning again."

"Yes, in Queensland, in the Fijis, in Peru. If you mean that I may some
day learn to make my own living, I grant the possibility. Queensland or
Peru may do something for me. But my chances of happiness, my chances
of renown--those are gone for ever. I lost all when I left the army. At
seven-and-twenty I am a broken man. Hard for a man to feel that this
life is all over and done with before he is thirty."

"I fancy there must be a time in every life when the clouds seem to
shut out the sun; but the darkness does not last for ever," said Hilda
softly. "I hope the cloud may pass from your sky."

"Ah, if it would, Hilda--if that cloud could pass and leave me my own
man again, as I was nine years ago, before I went to India!"

"You seemed to be very happy last winter--in the hunting season,"
said Hilda, trying to speak lightly, though her heart was beating as
furiously as if she had been climbing a mountain.

"Yes, I was happy then. I allowed myself to forget. I did not know just
then that the trouble I had taken upon my shoulders was a lifelong
trouble. Yes, it was a happy time, Hilda, last winter. How many a
glorious day we had together across country! You and I were always in
the first flight, and generally near each other. Our horses were always
such good friends, were they not? They loved to gallop neck-and-neck. O
my darling, I was indeed happy in those days--unspeakably happy."

He had forgotten all prudence, all self-restraint, in a moment. He had
taken Hilda's hand and lifted it to his lips.

"O my dear one, let me tell you how I love you," he said. "I may never
dare say more than that, perhaps, but it is true, and you shall hear
it, if only once. Yes, Hilda, I love you. I have loved you ever since
last winter, when you and I used to ride after the hounds together. O,
those happy winter days, those long waits at the corners of lanes, or
in dusky thickets, or on the bleak bare common! I shall never forget
them. Do you think I cared what became of the fox in those days, or
whether we were after the right or the wrong one? Not a jot, dear. The
veriest tailor that ever hung on to a horse could have cared no less
for the sport than I. It was your sweet face I loved, and your friendly
voice, and the light touch of your little hand. I was full of hope in
those days, Hilda; and then a cloud came over my horizon and I dared
hope no more. I never meant to tell you--I knew I had no right to tell
you this; but my feelings were too strong for me just now. Will you
forgive me, Hilda, that I, who dare not ask you to be my wife, have
dared to tell you of my love? Can you forgive me?"

"There is nothing to forgive," she answered gently, looking at him with
tear-dimmed eyes.

She was very pale, and her lips trembled faintly as she spoke. In her
inmost heart she was exulting at the knowledge of his love. It was
as if she had drunk a deep draught of the strong wine of life. In
the rapture of knowing herself beloved she had no room for any other
consideration. His love might be foolish, vain, unprofitable, fatal
even. For the moment she could not measure the consequences, or look
into the future. She cared only for the fact that Bothwell Grahame
loved her. That love which she had given to him in secret, in all
maiden modesty, purest, most ethereal sentiment of which woman's heart
is capable, had not been lavished upon a blind and dumb idol, upon a
god of wood and stone.

They walked on for a few minutes in silence, Bothwell still holding
Hilda's hand, but saying never a word. He had said too much already,
since he dared say no more. He had told his secret, and had entreated
to be forgiven. And now he came to a dead stop. Fate had walled him
round with difficulties, had set a barrier before his steps: Fate or
his only folly, that easy yielding to temptation which a man prefers
to think of afterwards as fatality.

The thud of a horse's hoofs upon the grass on the other side of the
hedge startled Bothwell from his reverie, and Hilda from her beatitude.
They looked up, and saw Edward Heathcote cantering towards them on
his powerful black. Mr. Heathcote was renowned for his hunters. He
never counted the cost of a good horse; and he never had been known
to buy a bad one. He was a man who could pick out a horse in a field
a quarter of a mile off, ragged and rough and unshorn, altogether out
of condition, long mane and neglected tail, and could distinguish the
quality of the animal to a shade. He had made many of the hunters he
rode, and was not afraid to tackle the most difficult subject. He
loved horses, and they loved him. This was a subject upon which he and
Bothwell sympathised; and it had been a link between them hitherto.
Nothing had been more friendly than their intercourse until the last
few weeks, during which time Mr. Heathcote had carefully avoided
Penmorval and Bothwell Grahame.

He rode through a gap in the hedge, acknowledged Bothwell's presence
with a nod that was barely courteous, and then turned to his sister.

"You had better hurry home, Hilda, if you mean to be in time for
dinner," he said.

Bothwell was not slow to take the hint.

"Good-bye, Hilda," he said, offering her his hand.

He called her by her Christian name boldly in her brother's hearing.
There was even a touch of defiance in his manner as he shook hands with
her, and lingered with her hand in his, looking at her fondly, sadly,
hopelessly, before he turned and walked slowly away across the bright
newly-cut stubble, which glittered golden in the evening light.

Mr. Heathcote dismounted and walked beside his sister, with the black's
bridle over his arm, the well-broken horse following as quietly as a
dog.

"You and Grahame were in very close confabulation as I rode up, Hilda,"
said Heathcote gravely, with scrutinising eyes upon Hilda's blushing
face. "Pray what was he saying to you?"

Hilda hung her head, and hesitated before she replied.

"Please do not ask me, Edward," she said falteringly, after that
embarrassed silence. "I cannot tell you."

"You cannot tell me, your brother, and natural guardian?" said
Heathcote. "Am I to understand that there is some secret compact
between you and Bothwell Grahame which cannot be told to your brother?"

"There is no secret compact. How unkind you are, Edward!" cried Hilda,
bursting into tears. "There is nothing between us; there is nothing to
tell."

"Then what are you crying about, and why was that man bending over you,
holding your hand just now when I rode up? A man does not talk in that
fashion about nothing. He was making love to you, Hilda."

"He told me that he loved me."

"And you call that nothing!" said Heathcote severely.

"It can never come to anything. It was a secret told unawares, on the
impulse of the moment. I have no right to tell you, only you have wrung
the secret from me. Nothing can ever come of it, Edward. Pray forget
that this thing has ever been spoken of between us."

"I begin to understand," said Heathcote. "He asked you to marry him,
and you refused him. I am very glad of that."

"You have no reason to be glad," replied Hilda, with a flash of anger.
She was ready to take her lover's part at the slightest provocation.
"You have no right to make guesses about Mr. Grahame and me. It is
surely enough for you to know that I shall never be his wife."

They had left the stubble-field, and were in a lane leading to The
Spaniards, a lane sunk between high banks and wooded hedgerows, such as
abound in that western world.

"That is enough for me to know," answered Heathcote gravely, "but
nothing less than that assurance would be enough. I hope it is given in
good faith?"

There was a severity in his manner which was new to Hilda. He had been
the most indulgent of brothers hitherto.

"Why should you speak so unkindly about Mr. Grahame?" she said. "What
objection have you to make against him, except that he is not rich?"

"His want of money would make no difference to me, Hilda. If it were
for your happiness to marry a man of small means, I could easily
reconcile myself to the idea, and would do my best to make things easy
for you. I have a much graver objection against Bothwell Grahame than
the fact that he is without a profession and without income. There is a
horrible suspicion in men's minds about him which makes him a man set
apart, like Cain; and my sister must have no dealings with such a man!"

"What do you mean, Edward?" exclaimed Hilda, turning angrily upon her
brother, with indignant eyes. "What suspicion? How dare any one suspect
him?"

"Unhappily, circumstances are his worst accusers. His own lips, his
own manner, have given rise to the conviction which has taken hold of
men's minds. When the idea that Bothwell Grahame was the murderer of
that helpless girl first arose in my own mind, I struggled against the
hideous notion. I told myself that I was a madman to imagine such a
possibility. But when I found that the same facts had made exactly the
same impression upon other minds----"

"_You_ could think such a thing, Edward!" exclaimed Hilda, pale with
horror. "You, who have known Bothwell for years, who knew him when he
was a boy, you who have called yourself his friend, seen him day after
day! You, a lawyer, a man of the world! You can harbour such a thought
as this! I could not have believed it of you."

"Perhaps it is because I am a man of the world, and have seen life on
the seamy side, and know too well to what dark gulfs men can go down
when the tempter urges them. Perhaps it is because of my experience
that I suspect Bothwell Grahame."

"O, it is too horrible!" cried Hilda passionately. "I feel as if I must
be mad myself, or in company with a madman. Bothwell Grahame--Bothwell,
whom I remember when I was a child, the frank, generous-hearted lad,
who went away to India to fight for his country, and who fought so
well, and won such praise from his commanding officer----"

"Yes, Hilda," interrupted her brother, "and who, just when he seemed
on the high road to fortune, threw up his chances, and abandoned his
profession, to become an idler at home. That same Bothwell Grahame
who, when he was asked what he did with himself during a long day at
Plymouth, could give no account of his time. That same Bothwell, whose
manner, from the hour of that catastrophe on the line, became gloomy
and sullen--altered so completely that he seemed a new man. That same
Bothwell, whom everybody in the neighbourhood of Bodmin suspects of
a foul crime. That is the man whom I do not wish my sister to marry;
albeit he is of the same flesh and blood as the woman whom I respect
above all other women upon earth."

"I am glad you have remembered that--at last," said Hilda bitterly.
"I am glad you have not quite forgotten that this murderer is Dora
Wyllard's first cousin--brought up with her, taught by the same
teachers, reared in the same way of thinking."

"God grant I may see reason to alter my opinion, Hilda," replied her
brother. "Do you suppose that this suspicion of mine is not a source of
pain and grief? But while I think as I do, can you wonder that I forbid
any suggestion of a marriage, between my sister and Bothwell Grahame?"

"I have told you that I shall never be his wife," said Hilda. "Pray do
not let us ever speak his name again."

They were at the entrance to The Spaniards by this time--not the great
iron gates by the lodge, but a little wooden gate opening into the
fine old garden, second only in beauty to the Penmorval parterres and
terraces.

"Will you mind if I don't appear at dinner, Edward?" asked Hilda
presently, as they went into the house. "I have a racking headache."

"Poor little girl!" said her brother tenderly. "You are looking the
picture of misery. I am very sorry for you, my dear. I am very sorry
for us all; for I fear there is calamity ahead for some of us. If
Bothwell is wise he will go to the other end of the world, and take
himself as far as possible out of the ken of his countrymen. If he
should ask you for counsel, Hilda, that is the best advice you can give
him."

"If he should ask me, that is just the very last counsel he would ever
hear from my lips," answered Hilda indignantly. "I would entreat him to
stand his ground--to live down this vile calumny--to wait the day when
Providence will clear his name from this dark cloud. Such a day will
come, I am sure of that."

She went to her own room, and shut herself up for the rest of the
evening. The convenient excuse of a headache answered very well with
the servants. She declined all refreshment--would not have this or that
brought up on a tray to oblige Glossop, her own maid, who was deeply
concerned at her young mistress's indisposition.

"I have a very bad headache," she said, "and all I want is to be left
alone till to-morrow morning. Don't come near me, please, till you
bring me my early cup of tea."

Glossop sighed and submitted. It was not often that Miss Heathcote was
so wilful. Glossop was the coachman's daughter, had been born and
brought up at The Spaniards, in old Squire Heathcote's time. She was a
buxom young woman of five-and-thirty, and counted herself almost one of
the family.

At last Hilda was alone. She locked her door, and began to pace her
room, up and down, up and down, with her hands clasped upon her
forehead, trying to think out her perplexities.

It was a fine spacious old bedroom, lighted by old-fashioned casement
windows, looking two ways--one to the garden, one to that timber-belted
lawn which might almost take rank as a park. There was a sitting-room
adjoining, which was Hilda's own particular apartment, containing
her books and piano, and the little table on which she painted china
cups and saucers. Hilda had spent many a happy hour in these rooms,
practising, studying, painting, dreaming over high-art needlework.
But this evening she felt as if she could never again be happy, here
or anywhere. A dense cloud of trouble had spread itself around her,
enfolding her as a mantle of darkness, shutting out all the light of
life.

The sun was sinking behind the tall chestnuts, in a sea of red and
gold. Every leaflet of rose or myrtle that framed the casements showed
distinct against that clear evening sky. Such a pretty room within,
such a lovely landscape and sky without; and yet that young soul was
full of darkness.

She had defended her lover with indignant firmness just now. She had
protested his innocence--declared that this thing could not be true;
and now in solitude she looked in the face of that cruel slander, and
her faith began to waver.

What could be stranger or more suspicious than Bothwell's conduct this
evening? With one breath he had avowed his love; with the next he had
told her that he was unworthy to be her lover--that they two could
never be man and wife.

Yes, it was true that he had changed of late--that he had become
gloomy, despondent, fitful. His manner had been that of a man bowed
down by the burden of some secret trouble. But was he for this reason
to be suspected of a horrible crime? It was abominable of people to
suspect him--most of all cruel and unworthy in her brother, who had
known him from boyhood.

And then came the hideous suggestion, as if whispered in her ear by the
fiend himself, "What if my brother should be right?" Her own experience
of the world was of the slightest. Her chief knowledge of life was
derived from the novels she had read. She had read of darkest deeds,
of strange contradictions in human nature, mysterious workings of the
human heart. Hitherto she had considered these lurid lights, these
black shadows, as the figments of the romancer's fancy. Now she began
to ask herself if they might not find their counterpart in fact.

She had read of gentlemanlike murderers--assassins of good bearing and
polished manners--Eugene Aram, Count Fosco, and many more of the same
school. What if Bothwell Grahame were such as these, hiding behind his
frank and easy manner the violent passions of the criminal?

No, she would not believe it. She laughed the foul fiend to scorn. Her
woman's instinct was truer than her brother's legal acumen, she told
herself; and as for those Bodmin busybodies, she weighed their wisdom
as lighter than thistledown.

"I would marry him to-morrow, if he asked me to be his wife," she said
to herself. "I would stand beside him at the altar, before the face of
all his slanderers. I should be proud to bear his name."

She blushed crimson at her own boldness, as she stood before her
mirror, with hands clasped, in all the fervour of a vow; but from that
moment her faith in Bothwell Grahame knew no wavering.

       *       *       *       *       *

In an age when infidelity and scorn of religious ceremonial is very
common among young men, Bothwell Grahame had always been steadfast to
the Church, and to the good old-fashioned habits in which he had been
brought up by his aunt. He was not a zealot, or an enthusiast; but he
attended the services of his church with a fair regularity, and had a
proper respect for the rector of his parish. Even in India, where men
are apt to be less orthodox than at home, Bothwell had always been
known as a good Churchman.

For the last year it had been his custom to receive the sacrament on
the first Sunday of the month. He had risen early, and had walked
across the dewy fields to the old parish church, and had knelt among
the people who knew him, and had felt himself all the better for that
mystic office, even when things were going far from well with him.
There was much that was blameworthy in his life; yet he had not felt
himself too base a creature to kneel among his fellow-sinners at the
altar of the Sinner's Friend.

It was a shock, therefore, to receive a letter from the Rector on the
last day of August, requesting him to absent himself from the communion
service on the following Sunday, lest his presence before that altar
should be a scandal to the other communicants.

       *       *       *       *       *

"God forbid that I should condemn any man unheard," wrote the Rector;
"but you can hardly be unaware of the terrible scandal attaching to
your name. You have not come to me, as I hoped you would come, to
explain the conduct which has given rise to that scandal. You have
taken no step to set yourself right before your fellow-men. Can you
wonder that your own silence has been in somewise your condemnation?
My duty to my flock compels me to warn you that, until you have taken
some steps to free your character from the shadow that now darkens it,
you must not approach the altar of your parish church.

"If you will come to me, and open your heart to me, as the sinner
should to his priest, I may be able to counsel and to help you. If
you can clear yourself to me, I will be your advocate with your
fellow-parishioners.----Always your friend,

"JOHN MONKHOUSE."

       *       *       *       *       *

"He did wisely to write," said Bothwell, crushing the letter in his
clenched fist. "If he had spoken such words as those to me, I believe I
should have knocked him down, priest though he is."

He answered the Rector's letter within an hour after receiving it.

       *       *       *       *       *

"I have nothing to confess," he wrote, "and that is why I have not
gone to your confessional. The difficulties and perplexities of my
life are such as could only be understood by a man of my own age and
surroundings. They would be darker than Sanscrit to clerical gray hairs.

"Because I did not choose to answer questions which I could not
answer without betraying the confidence of a friend, my wise
fellow-parishioners have agreed to suspect me of murdering a girl whose
face I never saw till after her death.

"I shall attend to receive the sacrament at the eight-o'clock service
next Sunday, and I dare you to refuse to administer it.----I have the
honour to be, yours, &c. BOTHWELL GRAHAME."

       *       *       *       *       *

He walked to Bodmin and delivered his letter at the Rectory door. He
would not run the risk of an hour's delay. On his way home he overtook
Hilda, near the gates of The Spaniards. She was very pale when they
met, and she grew still paler as they shook hands.

After a word or two of greeting, they walked on side by side in silence.

"I wonder that you can consent to be seen with me," said Bothwell
presently, after a farmer's wife had driven past them on her way from
market. "You must have heard by this time what people think about
me--your brother foremost among them, I believe, for he has given me
the cut direct more than once since the inquest."

"I am sorry that he should be so ready to believe a lie," said Hilda,
"for I know that this terrible slander is a lie."

"God bless you for those straight, strong words, Hilda!" exclaimed
Bothwell fervently. "Yes, it is a lie. I am not a good man. I have
taken one false step in my life, and the consequences of that mistake
have been very heavy upon me. But I am not capable of the kind
of wickedness which my Bodmin friends put down to me. I have not
risen to the sublimer heights of crime. I am not up to throwing a
fellow-creature out of a railway-carriage."

"Why did you not answer that man's questions at the inquest?" asked
Hilda urgently, forgetting that she had hardly the right to demand his
confidence. "That refusal of yours is the cause of all this misery. It
seems such a foolish, obstinate act on your part."

"I daresay it does. But I could not do more or less than I did. To have
answered that inquisitive cur's prying questions categorically would
have been to injure a lady. As a man of honour, I was bound to run all
risks rather than do that."

"I begin to understand," said Hilda, blushing crimson.

Why had she not guessed his secret long before this? she asked
herself. The mystery that surrounded him was the mystery of some
fatal love-affair. She was only a secondary person in his life. There
was another who had been more to him than she, Hilda, could ever
be--another to whom he was bound, for whom he was willing to sacrifice
his own character. She felt a jealous pang at the mere thought of that
unknown one.

"No, you can never understand," exclaimed Bothwell passionately. "You
can never imagine the misery of a man who has bound himself by a fatal
tie which chains him to one woman, long after his heart has gone out to
another. I gave away my liberty while I was in India, Hilda: pledged
myself to one who could give me but little in return for my faith and
devotion. I dare not tell you the circumstances of that bondage--the
fatality which led to that accursed engagement. I am desperate enough
to break the tie, now that it is too late, now that I dare not offer
myself to the girl I love, now that my name is blasted for ever. Yes,
for ever. I know these narrow-minded rustics, and that to the end of
my life I shall in their sight bear the brand of Cain. Here is a fine
example of liberal feeling, Hilda."

He handed her the Rector's letter, crumpled in his angry grasp.

She read it slowly, tears welling up to her eyes as she read. How
hardly the world was using this poor Bothwell! and the harder he was
used the more she loved him.

"What are you going to do?" she asked.

"I shall kneel before the altar of my God, as I have knelt before."

"There will at least be one communicant there who will not shrink from
you," said Hilda softly. "We will kneel side by side, if you like."

"God bless you, my darling. God help me to clear my name from this foul
stain which fools have cast upon it; and then a day may come when you
and I may kneel before that altar, side by side, and I may be thrice
blest in winning you for my wife."

There was a brief silence before Hilda murmured, "You have told me that
you are bound to another."

"Yes, and I have told you that I will break through that bondage."

"Can you do so with honour?"

"Yes. It will be more honourable to cancel my vow than to keep it;
and when I am a free man--when this shadow has been cleared from my
name--will you take me for your husband, Hilda--a man with his way to
make in the world, but needing only such an inducement as your love to
undertake the labours of a modern Hercules? Will you have me, Hilda,
when I am my own man again?"

"I will," answered Hilda softly, yet with a firm faith that thrilled
him. "I shall have to brave my brother's anger, perhaps; but I will
not wait till your name is cleared from this slander. Of what use is
fair-weather love? It is in storm and cloud that a woman's faith should
be firmest. When you have freed yourself from that old tie which has
grown a weariness to you, when you can come to me in all truth and
honour, my heart shall answer frankly and fully, Bothwell. And then you
can tell all our friends that we are engaged. It may be a very long
engagement, perhaps. I shall not be of age till two years hence, you
know; but that does not matter. People will know at least that _I_ do
not suspect you of a crime."

"My noble girl!" he cried, beside himself with joy.

Never had he thought to find any woman so frank, so generous, so brave.
He would have caught her in his arms, pressed her to his passionately
beating heart, but she drew herself away from him with a decisive
gesture.

"Not until you are free, Bothwell; not until you can tell me that the
old tie is broken. Till then we can be only friends."

"Be it so," he answered submissively. "Your friendship is worth more to
me than the love of other women. Will you walk to Penmorval with me?
Dora has been wondering at your desertion."

"Not to-day. Please tell Dora that I have not been very well. I will go
to see her to-morrow. Good-bye, Bothwell."

"Good-bye, my beloved."

They parted at the gate of The Spaniards.



CHAPTER VII.


A RAPID CONVERSION.


Three days after that compact between Bothwell and Hilda, an officious
friend went out of his way to inform Mr. Heathcote that his sister and
Mr. Grahame had been seen together several times of late, and that
their manner indicated a more than ordinary degree of intimacy. They
had been observed together at the early service on Sunday morning; they
had sat in the same pew; they had walked away from the church side by
side--indeed, Mr. Heathcote's friend believed they had actually walked
to The Spaniards together.

"It is a shame that such a man as Grahame should be allowed to be on
intimate terms with an innocent girl," said the worthy rustic, in
conclusion.

"My dear Badderly, I hope I am able to take care of my sister without
the help of all Bodmin," retorted Heathcote shortly. "Everybody is in
great haste to condemn Mr. Grahame; but you must not forget that my
sister and I have been intimate with him and his family for years. We
cannot be expected to turn our backs upon him all at once, because his
conduct happens to appear somewhat mysterious."

Notwithstanding which kindly word for Bothwell, Edward Heathcote went
straight home and questioned his sister as to her dealings with that
gentleman.

Hilda admitted that she had seen Mr. Grahame two or three times within
the last week, and that she had allowed him to walk home with her after
the early service.

"Do you think it wise or womanly to advertise your friendship with a
man who is suspected of a most abominable crime?" asked her brother
severely.

"I think it wise and womanly to be true to my friends in misfortune--in
unmerited misfortune," she answered firmly.

"You are very strong in your faith. And pray what do you expect will be
the end of all this?"

"I expect--I hope--that some day I shall be Bothwell's wife. I shall
not be impatient of your control, Edward. I am only nineteen. I hope
during the next two years you will find good reason to change your
opinion about Bothwell, and to give your consent to our marriage--"

"And if I do not?"

"If you do not, I must take advantage of my liberty, when I come of
age, and marry him without your consent."

"You have changed your tune, Hilda. A week ago you told me that you
and Bothwell would never be married. Now, you boldly announce your
betrothal to him."

"We are not betrothed--yet."

"O, there is a preliminary stage, is there? A kind of purgatory
which precedes the heaven of betrothal. Hilda, you are doing a most
ill-advised and unwomanly thing in giving encouragement to this man, in
spite of your brother's warning."

"Am I to be unjust because my brother condemns a friend unheard?
Believe me, Edward, my instinct is wiser than your experience. Why do
you not question Bothwell? He will answer you as frankly as he answered
me. He will tell you his reasons for refusing to satisfy that London
lawyer's curiosity. O Edward, how can you be so cruel as to doubt him,
to harden your heart against him and against me?"

"Not against you, my darling," her brother answered tenderly. "If I
thought your happiness were really at stake, that your heart were
really engaged, I would do much: but I can but think you are carried
away by a mistaken enthusiasm. You would never have cared for Grahame
if the world had not been against him; if he had not appeared to you as
a martyr."

"You are wrong there, Edward," she answered shyly, her fingers playing
nervously with the collar of his coat, the darkly-fringed eyelids
drooping over the lovely gray eyes. "I have liked him for a long time.
Last winter we used to hunt together a good deal, you know----"

"I did not know, or I should have taken care to prevent it," said
Heathcote.

"O, it was always accidental, of course," she apologised. "But in a
hunting country, the fast-goers generally get together, don't they?"

"In your case there was some very fast-going, evidently."

"I used to think then that Bothwell cared for me--just a little. And
then there came a change. But I know the reason of that change now; and
I know that he really loves me."

"O, you are monstrous wise, child, and monstrous self-willed for
nineteen years old," said her brother, in those deep grave tones of
his, a voice which gave weight and power to lightest words, "and you
would take your own road in life without counting the cost. Well,
Hilda, for your sake I will try to get at the root of this mystery. I
will try to fathom your lover's secret; and God grant I may discover
that it is a far less guilty secret than I have deemed."

He kissed Hilda's downcast brow and left her. She was crying; but
her tears were less bitter than they had been, for she felt that her
brother was now on her side; and Edward Heathcote's championship was a
tower of strength.

Once having pledged himself to anything, even against his own
convictions, Heathcote was the last man to go from his word; but if he
needed a stronger inducement than his sister's sorrowful pleading, that
inducement was offered.

He received a note from Dora Wyllard within a few hours of his
conversation with Hilda.

       *       *       *       *       *

"Dear Mr. Heathcote,--My husband and I have both been wondering at your
desertion of us. For my own part I want much to see you, and to talk to
you upon a very painful subject. Will you call at Penmorval after your
ride to-morrow afternoon, and let me have a few words with you alone?

"Always faithfully yours,

"DOROTHEA WYLLARD."

       *       *       *       *       *

He kissed the little note before he laid it carefully in a drawer
of his writing-table. It was a foolish thing to do, but the act was
quite involuntary and half unconscious. The sight of that handwriting
brought back the feeling of that old time when a letter from Dora
meant so much for him. He had trained himself to think of her as
another man's wife--to consider himself her friend, and her friend
only. He felt himself bound in honour so to think; all the more because
he was admitted to her home, because she was not afraid to call him
friend. Yet there were moments when the old feeling came over him with
irresistible force.

He did not ride that afternoon, but walked across the fields, and
presented himself at Penmorval between four and five o'clock. Mrs.
Wyllard was alone in her morning-room, a room in which everything
seemed part of herself--her favourite books, her piano, her easel--all
the signs of those pursuits which he remembered as the delight of her
girlhood.

"You paint still, I see," he said, glancing at the easel, on which
there was an unfinished picture of a beloved Blenheim spaniel; "you
have not forgotten your old taste for animals."

"I have so much leisure," she answered somewhat sadly; and then he
remembered her childless home.

She was very pale, and he thought she had a careworn look, as of one
who had spent anxious days and sleepless nights. He took the chair
to which she motioned him, and they sat opposite each other for some
moments in silence, she looking down and playing nervously with a
massive ivory paper-knife which was lying on the table at which she
had been writing when he entered. Suddenly she lifted her eyes to his
face--pathetic eyes which had looked at him once before in his life
with just that appealing look.

"It is very cruel of you to believe my cousin guilty of murder,"
she said, coming straight to the point. "You knew my mother. Surely
you must know our race well enough to know that it does not produce
murderers."

"Who told you that I believed such a thing?"

"Your own actions have told me. Bothwell has been cut by the people
about here; and you, who should have been his staunch friend and
champion, you have kept away from Penmorval as if this house were
infected, in order to avoid meeting my cousin."

"I cannot tell you a lie, Mrs. Wyllard, even to spare your feelings,"
replied Heathcote, deeply moved, "and yet I think you must know that I
would do much to save you pain. Yes, I must admit that it has seemed to
me that circumstances pointed to your cousin, as having been directly
or indirectly concerned in that girl's death. His conduct became so
strange at that date--so difficult to account for upon any other
hypothesis."

"Has your experience of life never made you acquainted with strange
coincidences?" asked Dora. "Is it impossible, or even improbable, that
Bothwell should have some trouble upon his mind--a trouble which arose
just about the time of that girl's death? Everything must have a date;
and his anxieties happen to date from that time. I know his frank open
nature, and how heavily any secret would weigh upon him."

"You believe, then, that he has a secret?"

"Yes--there is something--some entanglement which prevented his
answering Mr. Distin's very impertinent questions."

"Has he confided his trouble to you? Has he convinced you of his
innocence?"

"He had no occasion to do that. I never believed him guilty--I never
could believe him guilty of such a diabolical crime."

Tears came into her eyes as she spoke, but she dried them hastily.

"Mr. Heathcote, you are a lawyer, a man of the world, a man of talent
and leisure. You have been one of the first to do my kinsman a cruel
wrong. Cannot you do something towards righting him? I am making this
appeal on my own account--without Bothwell's knowledge. I come to you
as the oldest friend I have--the one friend outside my own home in whom
I can fully confide."

"You know that I would give my life in your service," he answered, with
suppressed fervour. He dared not trust himself to say much. "Yes, you
have but to command me. I will do all that human intelligence can do.
But this is a difficult case. The only evidence against your cousin is
of so vague a nature that it could not condemn him before a jury; and
yet that evidence is strong enough to brand him as a possible murderer
in the opinion of those who saw him under Distin's examination. He can
never be thoroughly rehabilitated until the mystery of that girl's
death has been fathomed, and I doubt if that will ever be. Where Joseph
Distin has failed, with all the detective-police of London at his
command, how can any amateur investigator hope to succeed?"

"Friendship may succeed where mere professional cleverness has been
baffled," argued Dora. "I do not think that Mr. Distin's heart was in
this case. At least that is the impression I derived from a few words
which I heard him say to my husband just before he left us."

"Indeed! Can you recall those words?"

"Very nearly. He said he had done his best in the matter, and should
not attempt to go further. And then with his cynical air he added, 'Let
sleeping dogs lie, Wyllard. That is a good old saying.'"

"Don't you think that sounds rather as if he suspected your
kinsman, and feared to bring trouble on your family by any further
investigation?"

"It never struck me in that light," exclaimed Dora, with a distressed
look. "Good heavens! is all the world so keen to suspect an innocent
man? If you only knew Bothwell as I know him, you would be the first
to laugh this cruel slander to scorn."

"For your sake I will try and believe in him as firmly as you do,"
answered Heathcote, "and as Wyllard does, no doubt."

Her countenance fell, and she was silent.

"Your husband knows of this cloud upon your cousin's name, I suppose?"
interrogated Heathcote, after a pause.

"Yes, I told him how Bothwell had been treated by his Bodmin
acquaintance."

"And he was as indignant as you were, I conclude?"

"He said very little," answered Dora, with a pained expression. "My
regard for Bothwell is the only subject upon which Julian and I have
ever differed. He has been somewhat harsh in his judgment of my cousin
ever since his return from India. He disapproved of his leaving the
army, and he has been inclined to take a gloomy view of his prospects
from the very first."

"I see. He has not a high opinion of Bothwell's moral character?"

"I would hardly say that. But he is inclined to judge my cousin's
errors harshly, and he does not understand his noble qualities as I do.
I should not have been constrained to ask for your help, if Julian had
been as heartily with me in this matter as he has been, in all other
things."

Edward Heathcote's bronzed cheek blanched ever so little at this
speech. It moved him deeply to think that in this one anxiety of her
loving heart he could be more to Dora Wyllard than her husband, that
she could turn to him in this trouble, with boundless confidence in
his friendship. What would he not do to merit such confidence, to show
himself worthy of such trust? Already he was prepared to be Bothwell's
champion; he was angry with himself for ever having suspected him.

"I had another motive for appealing to you," continued Dora shyly.
"I have reason to think that Bothwell is very fond of Hilda, and the
dearest wish of my life is to see those two united."

"A wish which is in a fair way of being gratified," answered Heathcote.
"My sister announced to me only yesterday that there is some kind of
contingent engagement between her and Mr. Grahame; and that, he being
free to wed her, she means to marry him when she comes of age, with or
without my consent."

"My noble Hilda!" exclaimed Dora; "yes, it is just like her to accept
him now when all the world is against him."

"Say that it is just like a woman," said Heathcote. "There is a leaven
of Quixotism in all your sex, from the Queen to the wife-beater's
victim in Seven Dials. Well, dear Mrs. Wyllard, for your sake and for
Hilda's, I will be Quixotic. I will make it the business of my life to
discover the mystery of that unknown girl's fate. I will pledge myself
to think of nothing else, to undertake no other work or duty until I
have exhausted all possible means of discovery."

"God bless you for the promise," she answered fervently. "I knew that I
had one friend in the world."

A sob almost choked her utterance of those last words. She was deeply
wounded by her husband's coldness in this matter of Bothwell's
position. She had expected him to be as indignant as she was, to be
ready to take up arms against all the world for her cousin; and he had
been cold, silent, and gloomy when she tried to discuss the burning
question with him. His manner had implied that he, too, suspected
Bothwell, though he would not go so far as to give utterance to his
suspicion.

And now to have won over this strong advocate, this brave, true-hearted
champion, was a relief to her mind that almost overcame her feelings;
here, where she had ever sought to preserve the calm dignity of manner
which became her as Julian Wyllard's wife.

"I thank you with all my heart," she faltered, "and I am sure that my
husband will be as rejoiced as I shall, if you can clear Bothwell's
name from this stigma."

Heathcote rose to take leave. He felt that the business of his visit
was accomplished, that he had no right to linger in Dora Wyllard's
sanctum. It was the first time he had ever been admitted to her
own particular nest, the one room in which she was secure from the
possibility of interruption.

"Tell Hilda to come and see me," she said, as they shook hands. "She
has deserted me most cruelly of late."

"Perhaps it is better for her not to be here until her engagement to
your cousin is on a more definite footing."

"Ah, _there_ is the secret in Bothwell's life--some entanglement which
he half admitted to me the other day. He said that he was bound to
one woman while he loved another. I guessed that Hilda was the one he
loved. But who can the other be? I know of no one."

"Some lady whom he met in India, no doubt. The very air of the East is
charged with complications of that kind. If your cousin is a man of
honour, and if we can unriddle the railway mystery, all may yet come
right. Pray do not be too anxious. Good-bye."

And so they parted, they two, who once were to have spent their lives
together. Edward Heathcote walked away from Penmorval loving his old
love as dearly as ever he had loved her in his passionate youth. He was
young enough to love with youthful fervour even yet, although he had
schooled himself to believe that youth was past for him. He was only
thirty-six; Julian Wyllard's junior by nearly ten years.

Half an hour later Dora was presiding at afternoon tea in the yew-tree
arbour, where her husband joined her after two hours' business talk
with his land-steward. The weather was still warm enough for drinking
tea out of doors, and this yew-tree arbour was Mrs. Wyllard's favourite
retreat.

"How pale and tired you are looking, Julian!" she said, scrutinising
her husband's face as he sank somewhat wearily into the comfortable
basket-chair she had placed ready for him; "you must want some tea very
badly."

"I always enjoy my afternoon cup; and you are the queen of tea-makers,"
answered Wyllard; "yes, I have had a tiresome talk with Gretton, who
is getting old and prosy, and repeats himself infernally when he is
describing the tenants' wants and grievances. He cannot tell me of the
smallest repair required for a barn or pig-sty without repeating every
syllable of his conversation with some garrulous old farmer, and even
explaining the nature of the barn or the sty in dumb-show, 'as it might
be this,' and 'as it might be that.' He maddens me with his 'as it
might be.'"

"I am afraid you are growing nervous, Julian," said Dora tenderly.

She laid her cool white hand upon his forehead, and looked concerned at
the touch.

"You are actually feverish. You have been irritated into a fever by
that prosy old man. Why do you not superannuate poor old Gretton,
and let Bothwell be your steward? He is much cleverer and more
business-like than you think, and at the worst he would not prose."

"I never thought Bothwell a fit person to look after my estate, and I
think him less so now," answered her husband coldly. "He is the most
unpopular man in Bodmin. Do not let us talk about it any more. By the
way, you have had a visitor this afternoon," he continued, as his wife
handed him his tea. "I saw Heathcote go past the library-window while I
was at work with Gretton. What brought him to Penmorval?"

"I asked him to come," answered Dora, very pale, but with a steadfast
look in her eyes, and about the firmly-moulded lips.

She had never had a secret from her husband in her life, and although
she had made her appeal to Heathcote without his advice or knowledge,
she had no intention of leaving him uninformed now that the thing was
done.

"You asked him to come to you--Edward Heathcote!" exclaimed Wyllard,
with a surprised look. "And may I know what important business
necessitated this interview?"

"You have a right to know all about it, Julian," she answered quietly.
"I have asked Mr. Heathcote to give me his aid in a matter in which
you have seemed unwilling to help me. You were content that my cousin
should remain under a hideous stigma--shunned by those who were once
his friends. I am not so content; and I have asked the son of my
mother's oldest and staunchest friend to help me."

And then she told him, as briefly as possible, what kind of request she
had made to Edward Heathcote, and how he had promised to help her.

Julian Wyllard was livid with anger. He set down his cup with a hand
that trembled like an aspen-leaf; he rose from his chair, and paced
the grassy space in front of the arbour, backwards and forwards half
a dozen times, before he uttered a word. And then, coming back to his
wife, he looked at her with eyes dilated with jealous frenzy.

"Why call him the son of your mother's old friend?" he exclaimed. "What
need of so awkward and ambiguous a phrase? Why not call him your old
lover? It is in that character you have thrown yourself upon him; it
is as your old lover that you try to arouse his chivalry, that you
urge him to do that which your husband's common sense revolted from.
A husband is a reasoning animal, you know. He will only attempt the
practical, the possible. But throw your glove to the lions, and your
lover will leap into the arena and fight for it! And you take advantage
of an unquenchable passion, of a despairing love, to attempt the
solution of a problem to which the answer may be a rope round your
cousin's neck."

"You have no right to insult me as you have done," said Dora, pale as
marble, but calm in her just indignation. "You know that I am your
true wife, and that my friendship for Edward Heathcote and his for
me is above suspicion. As for my cousin Bothwell, I know that he has
been most unjustly suspected of a foul crime; and I will not rest till
the true history of that crime has been discovered. Nothing but the
discovery of the real murderer can ever set Bothwell right with his
fellow-men."

"Then he will have to remain in the wrong," answered Wyllard savagely.
"The mystery which Distin's training and experience failed to fathom
will never be brought to light by your knight-errant of The Spaniards."



CHAPTER VIII.


A VALUABLE ALLY.


Edward Heathcote devoted his every thought to the task which he had
taken upon himself. His first business must be to discover the name and
history of the murdered girl. The clue in his possession was of the
slightest; but he was not without a clue.

First, there was the name and address of the baker on the biscuit-bag.
This gave him an indication of the part of Paris in which the girl must
have been living before she started for England; it also indicated that
she had left Paris within a few days of her journey westward.

But he had a second clue, and a much better one. Within a week after
the adjourned inquest, a farm-labourer had brought him a large oval
silver locket, which he had picked up in the gorge where the girl fell.
The spot lay a little way off the direct path to the man's work, and
morbid curiosity had impelled him to go and examine the place in the
early morning, before his daily labour began.

Prowling about among the ferns and crags, he had struck his foot
against a glistening object, which proved to be an old silver locket, a
good deal worn and battered; a double locket, containing a waxen Agnus
Dei, and a little lace-bordered picture of the Virgin Mary, the paper
worn thin by much handling.

The man carried the locket to the Coroner, who rewarded him with half
a sovereign, and laid the relic aside in his desk, after a minute
examination. It had been attached to a black ribbon, which was worn and
old, and had snapped with the jerk of the girl's fall.

Upon the locket itself there was not the faintest sign which could lead
to the identification of the wearer; but upon the little lace-edged
engraving there were these words neatly written in a fine French
penmanship:

"Souvenir from Sister Gudule de la Miséricorde to Léonie. Dinan,
October 1879. Child of Jesus, pray for us."

To Heathcote's mind this brief legend indicated three facts.

First, that the Christian name of the wearer of the locket was Léonie.
Secondly, that she had been educated at a convent at Dinan. Thirdly,
that she left the convent in October 1879, and that the little paper
had been placed in her locket at parting. The nuns have no valuable
gifts to offer their _protégées_. An engraving of Saint or Blessed
Virgin would be the most precious token holy-poverty could bestow.
This indication of the locket was the clue which Heathcote decided to
follow in the first instance. He made his arrangements for leaving
England without an hour's delay; but before turning his back upon The
Spaniards, he exacted Hilda's promise that she would not see Bothwell
Grahame during his absence.

"Mr. Grahame's entanglement with another woman is an all-sufficient
reason for your holding yourself aloof from him," said her brother.
"When he is free to ask you to be his wife, let him come to me and
submit his pretensions to me, as your natural guardian. Perhaps, by
that time, I may have succeeded in setting him right with those who
now look askance upon him!"

Mr. Heathcote determined to call upon Joseph Distin before he crossed
the Channel. He had thought the question out thoroughly during a
sleepless night; and it seemed to him that it would be folly to enter
upon his difficult task of investigation without having first armed
himself with such advice as the criminal lawyer was able to give.
Before acting upon his own opinion it would be well to know the opinion
of a disinterested expert.

He called at Distin's offices the morning after his arrival in London.
The offices were in Furnival's Inn, a quiet and convenient spot, not
too far from the Old Bailey, and within a ten minutes' walk of the
stuffy old law-courts, still extant in Chancery Lane. Mr. Heathcote
sent in his card; and although at least half a dozen clients were
waiting for Mr. Distin, he was admitted immediately, and received with
marked cordiality.

"My dear Mr. Heathcote, charmed to see you. How good of you to look me
up!" exclaimed Distin, as he pushed forward a morocco-covered armchair.

There was nothing æsthetic, picturesque, or newfangled in Mr. Distin's
office, where the prevailing tone was a sober, substantial comfort.
Most of the furniture looked at least fifty years old; but the Turkey
carpet was the richest that the looms of Orient can produce; the
spacious armchairs invited to repose, and to that ease of body which
favours expansion of mind and friendly candour.

"Are you in town on business or pleasure?" inquired the lawyer, in his
airy manner. "Going through to the north, perhaps; grouse-moor, eh?"

"Nothing is further from my thoughts than shooting grouse," replied
Heathcote. "I am in London on my way to the Continent. I am going to
hunt up the antecedents of that poor girl who was killed on our line;
I want to find out who she was and how she came to be in the way of
meeting her death in our locality."

The lawyer's airy manner was dropped in a moment, and he became
intensely grave.

"O, you are going into that business, are you, and so late in the day?
But why?"

"I would rather not discuss my motive, if you will kindly excuse me."
Mr. Distin bowed. "I want to avail myself of your talent and experience
to the uttermost before I begin to work on my own account."

"The most my talent can do for you in this matter is very little; to
tell you the truth, I made a dismal failure of the business," returned
Distin, with agreeable frankness. He was too successful a man to be
ashamed to confess a failure. "But really now, Mr. Heathcote, by far
the wisest counsel I can give you is to forget all about this sad
story, and to let the world go on just as if that poor girl's death had
never come within your ken. You did your duty as Coroner, you know.
Nothing more could be asked or expected of you. Why, then, should you
do more? You are very friendly with the family at Penmorval. Take my
advice. 'Let sleeping dogs lie.'"

"That is what you said to Mr. Wyllard the morning you were leaving."

"I may have used that adage. It is a very good one."

"And you recommend me to drop this investigation, for the sake of my
friends at Penmorval," said Heathcote. "I infer from that advice that
you suspect Mr. Grahame of being concerned in the French girl's death."

"I confess to you that his whole manner and conduct were to my mind
suggestive of guilt. Of course, manner and conduct are not evidence.
At this present time there is not a shred of evidence to connect
Mr. Grahame with the crime, except the one fact that he was in the
train when the girl was killed; but that point would apply equally
to everybody else in the train, or rather to any one who happened to
be alone in a carriage as Mr. Grahame was. At present Mrs. Wyllard's
cousin is safe. If his was the arm that thrust that girl off the
footboard, there is nothing to bring the crime home to him. But go
a few steps further, follow up any clue which you may happen to
possess--you would not start upon such an investigation without some
kind of clue," speculated Joseph Distin shrewdly--"pursue your trail a
few yards further, and you may come upon evidence that will put a rope
round your friend's neck, and bring lasting disgrace upon the family
at Penmorval. I advised my old friend Wyllard to let this matter drop.
I advise you to do the same."

"I cannot act upon your advice. There has been too much mischief done
already. Mr. Grahame's refusal to answer your questions about his
whereabouts on the day of the murder has condemned him in the minds of
his fellow-townsmen. His name is blackened by a terrible suspicion, and
I have sworn to clear it, if it can be cleared. If he is guilty--well,
he can hardly be worse off with a rope round his neck than he is now,
with all his old friends estranged from him. For my own part, in such a
case I should infinitely prefer the rope. It would be a short way out
of a difficulty."

"My experience of criminals is that when the crisis comes they would
rather endure the ignominy than the halter," replied Distin. "Perhaps
you have never seen a man within an hour of his being hanged?"

"Thank God I have not been obliged to do that, though I have had to
look upon one an hour after."

"Ah, then you do not know to what manhood can descend--how it can
grovel before the spectre of instant, certain death. Come now, cannot
I persuade you to think better of your idea of investigating this
mysterious business?"

"No. I have promised to do it. I must keep my promise."

"So be it."

And then Joseph Distin discussed the matter freely, with perfect
frankness. He told Heathcote what means he had used to discover the
girl's identity on this side of the Channel.

"I should have gone further and crossed the water, if I had not seen
good reason to desist," he said, when he had explained his plan of
inquiry at every likely lodging-house, and how that plan had totally
failed.

"But what would you have done on the other side of the water, without
any clue?"

"I should have gone across myself and put the case into the hands of
Félix Drubarde, one of the cleverest police-officers in Paris. He
would have been instantly on the alert to hear of any application made
to the police by the relatives and friends of the missing girl. She
could hardly disappear for any length of time without some one being
concerned by her disappearance. The application to the police might
not occur perhaps until months after her death; but it would be likely
to occur sooner or later. And, again, Félix Drubarde has his allies in
every quarter of Paris. He hears of events so quickly that it might be
supposed he had a network of speaking-tubes all over the city. With his
help I should have been almost certain to arrive at the identification
of the dead girl."

"But I sent three advertisements to each of the best known Paris
newspapers," said Heathcote. "How do you account for those
advertisements not having been seen by the girl's friends?"

"Because French people of the lower classes are sometimes very
illiterate, and live in a very narrow circle. Your papers may not have
come within the range of the girl's friends. They would be likely to
apply to the police when time passed and they received no tidings of
her. But they would not be likely to see your best known papers--the
papers of the upper classes, no doubt. And then your advertisements
appeared immediately after the girl's death; at a time when the parents
or friends had no reason for feeling alarmed as to her safety."

"That may be so," replied Heathcote thoughtfully. "I think you can help
me very much in my undertaking, Mr. Distin, if you are willing to do
so."

"In what way?"

"Give me a letter of introduction to this Parisian detective, and let
me engage his aid by and by, when I go to Paris. I shall be happy to
pay him liberally for his services."

"Drubarde is no extortioner. He will not fleece you," said Distin. "In
fact the man is a gentleman, in his own particular line. He has made
an independence, and he only works now as an amateur. Yes, I will give
you a letter of introduction to him with pleasure, since you are bent
on pursuing this business to the bitter end. I suppose you will go
straight to Paris.

"No. I want first to follow up the only valuable clue I have. I shall
go first to Dinan, in Brittany, to find the convent, where I have
reason to believe this poor girl was educated."



CHAPTER IX.


FEVER DREAMS.


Edward Heathcote left Waterloo Station for Southampton within an hour
of leaving Mr. Distin's office, dined hastily at the Dolphin Hotel, and
started for St. Malo in the South-Western steamer at seven o'clock in
the evening. It was still early on the following morning when he landed
on the long stone quay at St. Malo, and the picturesque old granite
walls were still flushed with the rosy light of a newly-risen sun. The
quaint island-citadel, with its exquisite bay and golden sands, had
been familiar to Edward Heathcote in the past. He had lingered here to
rest after a long ramble in Brittany, and he had an affection for the
steep narrow streets and quaint old houses, with their all-pervading
aspect of the seventeenth century, the days of Bourbons and Condés,
kings and warriors, princely priests and priestly politicians.

Much as he loved the old-world town, Heathcote had no intention of
loitering there on this September morning, lovely as the bay and the
rocks and the smiling colony of white-walled villas yonder at Paramé
looked in the early sunlight. He only waited to get his portmanteau
through the Custom House in order to carry it to the little office
attached to the Dinan steamer, where he ascertained the hour for the
boat's departure.

Chance and tide favoured him. The steamer was to leave at eleven
o'clock. This afforded time for a leisurely breakfast at the Franklin,
and would enable him to reach Dinan early in the afternoon. He
breakfasted briefly and temperately, as became a man whose mind was
full of anxious thought, and then went for a stroll in the old streets,
and looked in at the Cathedral.

He had reflected seriously upon his interview with the criminal lawyer.
The fact that he had found his own original opinion about Bothwell
Grahame shared by this man, so deeply versed in the ways of criminals,
in the science of circumstantial evidence, was to the last degree
startling and disconcerting. He felt that he was setting out upon a
task which he could but perform in a half-hearted manner, struggle as
he might against that first conviction of his. He had undertaken this
task for Hilda's sake, for Dora's sake. What misery must result if
Joseph Distin were right after all, and in an ill-judged attempt to
gratify these two trusting women he should bring about the discovery
of Bothwell's guilt! That guilt was at present but a dark suspicion
which men hardly dared hint to each other; but if Distin's judgment was
correct, any unlucky discovery might make the suspicion a fact.

But he had promised, and the pledge must be kept. He must follow up the
clue which he held till it led him to other links in the chain of the
victim's history; and the chances were that in the victim's history he
would find a clue to the murderer's identity.

It was a lovely autumnal noontide, and the gay little town of Dinard,
with its gardens rising stage above stage on the slope of the hill,
its queer little bays and recesses of golden sand, was smiling in
sunlight as the "Isle et Rance" steamed across the broad bay of St.
Malo to the mouth of the Rance. There are few prettier rivers than this
little Rhine of Brittany, and Edward Heathcote had loved it well in
days gone by. But to-day he sat upon the bridge smoking his cigar, and
gazing at the green hills and hanging woods, the villas and villages,
and craggy cliffs and ever-varying shore, without seeing the objects
upon which his eyes seemed to rest. The nearer he came to the task of
investigation, the more irksome became his duty. His heart failed him
as he took out the silver locket, and read the name upon the paper
inside. It was the name of the woman who was to enlighten him about the
dead girl, who was perhaps to put in his hand the clue which would lead
him straight to the murderer.

And yet who could say that he would find Sister Gudule de la
Miséricorde at Dinan? He did not even know the name of the convent in
which she lived. She might be dead. And yet the date of the inscription
was but two years old. There was every chance that the Sister still
lived: and he must be dull if he failed to find her.

He stopped at the first church to which he came after leaving the
boat--an old church in the lower part of the town. Here he asked his
way to the presbytery, and called upon the priest, who told him that
there was only one educational convent in Dinan, the Convent of St.
Elizabeth of Hungary, an Ursuline convent situated in a quiet quarter
of the town.

Mr. Heathcote left his portmanteau at one of the hotels in the
market-place, and drove at once to the convent. It was a large white
building, with plastered walls, far from beautiful in itself, and
showing every sign of poverty; but the gardens were neatly kept, the
rooms were exquisitely clean, and the clumsy old Breton furniture was
polished to the highest degree.

Mr. Heathcote was received in the convent parlour by the Reverend
Mother, a homely little tub-shaped personage, in a black serge habit
and a picturesque white cap, which concealed every vestige of hair upon
her broad intelligent forehead. She had kindly black eyes, and a frank
benevolent smile, and Heathcote felt at once at his ease with her.
She looked a little disappointed when, in answer to her preliminary
question, he told her that he had not come to offer a new pupil. The
pupils were the chief source of revenue for the convent, albeit the
_pension_ was of the smallest.

"Have you ever seen that locket before, madame?" he asked, laying the
silver medallion before the Reverend Mother.

"I have seen many such," she answered. "The Holy Father allows us to
dispose of them for the benefit of the convent."

"There is a little paper inside with some writing. Will you look at it,
please?"

She opened the locket and unfolded the paper.

"Yes, this is Sister Gudule's writing. I know it very well indeed,"
said the nun, looking at her visitor with a puzzled air, as if
wondering whether the gentleman had not gone a little astray, his real
destination being the great monastic madhouse yonder on the crest of a
wooded hill.

"Sister Gudule is still living--still with you, perhaps?"

"Yes?" interrogatively.

"And you remember Léonie, to whom that little picture was given?"

The Reverend Mother smiled her modest smile.

"Léonie is not an uncommon name," she replied. "We have had many pupils
so called from time to time. Our school numbers over a hundred and
fifty pupils, you must remember."

"Do you recall any pupil of that name who left you two years ago?"
asked Heathcote.

"We have from thirty to forty pupils leaving us every year. Will you
permit me to ask the object of your inquiry?"

"It is a very serious one, or I should be desolated to give you so
much trouble," answered Heathcote courteously, in that polite language
which he spoke almost as fluently as his native English. "The poor girl
to whom that locket belonged met her death in my neighbourhood less
than two months ago. She fell from a railway-carriage as the train was
crossing a viaduct. Whether that death was accidental or the result of
a crime remains as yet unknown. But there are those in my country to
whom it is vital that the whole truth should be known. If you can help
me to discover the truth, you will be helping the cause of justice."

"Sister Gudule will remember," said the Reverend Mother, ringing a
hell. "She is one of our lay-sisters, a great favourite with all the
children. She nurses them when they are ill, and takes care of them
when they go out for a holiday, and plays with them as if she were a
child herself."

A lay-sister, the portress, answered the bell, and went in quest of
Sister Gudule.

"She has a very unprepossessing appearance," said the Reverend Mother.
"I fear you may be a little shocked at first seeing her, but she is so
amiable that we all adore her. She has been the victim of misfortune
from her cradle. Her deformity is the consequence of a nurse's
carelessness. It turned the heart of her mother against her, and she
was a neglected and unloved child. Her family was noble, but the
husband speculated in railways, and the wife was silly and extravagant.
By the time Gudule was a young woman poverty had overtaken her father,
and he was only too glad to acquiesce in the girl's resolution to enter
a convent. She came to us penniless thirty years ago, and has worked
for her bread ever since. I do not think I exaggerate when I say that
she is the most valuable member of our community."

The door was opened softly and Sister Gudule appeared. This little
preface from the Reverend Mother had not been unnecessary to lessen
the shock of her personal appearance, which was startling in its
unqualified ugliness.

Sister Gudule de la Miséricorde was the very type of the wicked fairy
in the dear old child stories. She was short and squat, with broad
shoulders and a decided hump. She had a nose like a potato, and a
lower lip like that of the lady who moistened the spinster's yarn; she
had an undeniable moustache and beard; yet in spite of all, there was
something pleasant, conciliating, reassuring in her face. The low broad
forehead suggested intellectual power; there was a humorous twinkle in
the small gray eyes, as of one who could revel in a joke; the thick
under-lip and prominent under-jaw were the indications of a boundless
benevolence.

The Reverend Mother handed the locket and its enclosure to Sister
Gudule.

"I must tell you that the Sister has a most miraculous memory," she
said confidentially to Heathcote. "I have never known her forget the
most trivial event in the history of our lives. She is our unwritten
calendar."

"It is Léonie Lemarque's locket," said Sister Gudule. "How comes it
here? Is my little Léonie in Dinan?"

"Léonie Lemarque!"

How glibly she pronounced the name; and how strange it seemed to Edward
Heathcote to hear it! Like a name out of a tomb.

"The owner of that locket is dead," he answered gently.

"Dead! Léonie Lemarque! Dead at twenty years old! Dead! Why, there was
not a healthier child in the convent, after we had once built up her
constitution. She was in a sad way when she came to us."

"Léonie Lemarque!" repeated the Reverend Mother. "I never thought of
her when Monsieur showed me the locket. Léonie Lemarque! Yes, she left
us in 1879 to go to her old grandmother in Paris. And now she has met
with a violent death in England. Monsieur will tell you."

Monsieur repeated his story, this time with further details, for Sister
Gudule questioned him closely. She would have every particular. The
tears streamed down her cheeks, hung upon her bristly moustache. She
was deeply distressed.

"You don't know how I loved that child," she said, excusing herself to
the Superior; and then to Heathcote, "Ah, Monsieur, you could never
understand how I loved her. I saved her life. From the weakest frailest
creature, I made her a sound and healthy child. Indeed, I may say that
I did much more than this. With the help of God and the intercession of
His Saints I saved her mind."

"It is quite true," said the Reverend Mother. "The child came to us
under most peculiar circumstances. Sister Gudule took entire charge of
her for the first year."

"And she rewarded me tenfold for my trouble," added Gudule; "she gave
me love for love, measure for measure."

"Will you tell me all about her--every detail? The knowledge may help
me to avenge her death," said Heathcote eagerly. "It is my belief, and
the belief of others, that she was foully murdered."

He was intensely agitated. He felt as if he had taken into his hand
the lever which worked some formidable machine--an instrument of death
and doom, and that every movement of his hand might bring destruction.
Yet the process once begun must go on. He was no longer an individual,
working of his own free will; he was only an agent in the hands of Fate.

"Willingly, we will tell you all we can," said the Reverend Mother.
"But you must allow us to offer you a little coffee. You have
travelled, and you look white and weary."

The convent was proud of its coffee, almost the only refreshment ever
offered to visitors. The portress brought a little oval tray covered
with a snow-white napkin, a little brown crockery pot, a white cup and
saucer, all of the humblest, but spotlessly clean.

"Léonie was with us eight years," said the Reverend Mother, while
Sister Gudule dried her eyes and tried to regain her composure. "She
was just ten years old when she was brought to us by her grandmother,
a person who had been at one time a dressmaker in one of the most
fashionable quarters of Paris, but who had fallen upon evil days, and
lived in a very humble way in a small lodging on the left bank of the
Seine. Léonie was an orphan, the daughter of Madame Lemarque's only
son, who had died young, broken-hearted at the death of his young wife.
The child was brought to us by a priest, who came all the way from
Paris with his little charge. She had but just recovered from a long
illness, which was said to be brain-fever, caused by a very terrible
mental shock which she had endured two months before."

"Were you told the nature of that shock?"

"No; the priest did not offer any information upon that point, and I
did not presume to question him. He assured me that the case was one
which merited the most benevolent consideration. Madame Lemarque had no
means of educating the child herself, nor could she afford the pension
demanded by a Parisian convent. The curé thought that our fine air
would do much to restore the child to health and strength, and he knew
that our system of education was calculated to develop her mind and
character in the right direction. He guaranteed the regular payment of
the child's pension, and we never had occasion to apply for it a second
time."

"Did Madame Lemarque ever come to see her granddaughter?"

"Never. Léonie remained with us from year's end to year's end till
after her eighteenth birthday, when, at Madame Lemarque's desire, we
made arrangements for her travelling to Paris with other pupils who
were returning to the great city."

"Then you never saw Madame Lemarque?"

"Never."

"Nor ever heard from her directly?"

"O yes, we had letters--very nicely-written letters--full of gratitude
for what Madame Lemarque was pleased to call our kindness to Léonie.
The child used to write to her grandmother monthly, while she was with
us, and her letters were the best evidence that she was fairly used
and happy."

"She was a sweet child," said Gudule, "and deserved every indulgence."

"Did she ever tell you anything about the shock which caused her
illness?" asked Heathcote of the lay-sister.

"In her right senses never one syllable," answered Gudule. "I would not
have questioned her upon that subject for worlds, for I believed that
she had narrowly escaped madness. But during the six months in which I
nursed her--for her health was completely broken, and it required all
that time to build up her strength and calm her nerves--she used to
sleep in a little bed close to mine, and in her troubled dreams I used
to hear very strange things. How far the dreams were inspired by the
recollections of real events, I cannot venture to say; but there were
phrases that recurred so often--a horrible vision which so continually
repeated itself, like a scene in a play--that I can but suppose it to
have been the representation of some event which had really happened
before the child's waking eyes."

"Can you recall the nature of that vision?" inquired Heathcote
breathlessly.

It seemed to him that he was on the threshold of a new mystery--as
terrible as the old one, and even darker: a tragedy hidden in the past,
reflected only in a child's fever-dream.

"You should ask me if I can forget it, Monsieur," said Sister Gudule.
"I wish with all my heart that I could. I have prayed many a prayer
for oblivion. The poor child used to be feverish every night--a low
fever, which only came on in the evening, but some nights were worse
than others--and in her most feverish nights this dream seemed almost
inevitable. I used to lie awake expecting it, dreading it."

"She used to talk in her sleep, then?"

"To talk, yes; and to scream--a terrible shriek sometimes, which would
disturb every sleeper in the great dormitory adjoining my little room.
She would start up on her pillow, and stare straight before her with
wide-open eyes, being fast asleep all the time, you understand. 'Don't
kill her, don't kill her!' she would cry; 'don't shoot her!' And then
she would rock herself backwards and forwards, and moan in a low
voice, 'The forest--the dark, dark forest; she is there, always there,
with the blood running down her dress! Take her away, take away the
dark forest--take away the blood!' Her words varied sometimes, but
those words never: 'Take away the dark forest--take away the blood!'"

"And did she never tell you what the dream meant--you, her nurse and
comforter, with whom she must have been on such confidential terms?"

"No, dear child. She loved me and trusted me with all the strength of
her innocent heart, I believe; but she never told me the cause of that
awful dream. And I never dared to question her. I was only anxious
that she should forget the past--that if her nights were fevered and
restless, her days should be peaceful and bright. I did everything I
could to amuse and interest her, in studies, needlework, and play, and
to help her to forget the past."

"And you succeeded, Sister," said the head of the convent approvingly.
"I never saw a more wonderful cure. From a nervous hysterical child
Léonie Lemarque grew into a bright merry girl."

"Yes, with God's help she was cured; but the cure was very slow. The
shock which shattered her health, and for a time impaired her mind,
must have been an awful one. Never before had I seen gray hairs upon
the head of a child, but the thickly curling hair upon Léonie's temples
when she came to us was patched with white; and it was years before
the hair resumed its natural colour. For the first year her memory
was almost a blank. It would have been useless for any one to attempt
to teach her in class with the other children. She would have been
despised as an idiot, laughed at perhaps, and her heart broken. I
obtained the Reverend Mother's permission to keep her in my room, and
to teach her in my own way, and little by little I awakened her memory
and her mind. Both had been, as it were, benumbed, frozen, paralysed,
by that awful shock of which we know so little."

"But you would guess that she had witnessed some dreadful scene,
perhaps the death of some one she loved," speculated Heathcote. "Did
she never talk to you of her childhood in Paris, her relatives?"

"Rarely of any one except her grandmother," answered Sister Gudule,
"and of her she told me very little. Whether her illness had blotted
out the memory of her childhood, or whether she shrank from any
allusion to the past, I cannot tell. One day I asked her who had given
her a blue satin neckerchief which I found in her trunk--a costly
neckerchief, and much too fine for a child to wear. She told me that
it was a New Year's gift from her aunt, but at the mention of the name
she turned deadly pale, her eyes filled with tears, and her whole body
shook like an aspen-leaf. I changed the conversation that moment, and I
never again heard her speak of her aunt."

"You would infer from her agitation that the aunt was connected with
the tragedy of the child's life?"

"Yes, Monsieur."

"Was perhaps the person whom she saw assailed when she cried out,
'Don't kill her; don't shoot her!'"

"I have thought that it must have been so. That dreadful cry of hers,
'Take away the blood! take away the dark forest!' No one who did not
hear those cries of hers, no one who did not see the awful expression
of her eyes, staring, dilated, full of horror; no one who had not seen
and heard her as I did could ever understand how dreadful, how real
that vision was to me as well as to the sleeper. I used to feel as if I
had seen murder done, and had stood by without the power to prevent it."

"In a word, you felt, by pure sympathy, almost exactly what the child
felt," said Heathcote.

Already he had begun to adore Sister Gudule, just as the children
of the convent adored her. He forgot her hump, he forgave her the
potato-shaped nose, he accepted her beard as a detail that gave
piquancy to her countenance. He was subdued, subjugated by that
intensely sympathetic nature which revealed itself in every word and
look of the lay-sister.

But he had a task to perform, and it was necessary that he should
proceed with his inquiries in a business-like manner. He had already
taken certain notes in his pocket-book.

"Léonie Lemarque left you in 1879, and she had been with you eight
years," he said, with pencil in hand. "She must have come to you in
1871."

"Yes, it was in 1871, not long after the troubles in Paris. It was
early in November she was brought to us."

"And you were told that she had been ill two months in consequence of a
mental shock?"

"Yes."

"Then one may fairly conclude that the event which caused her illness
occurred early in the September of 1871."

"I think so."

"Good. I thank you most heartily, Madame," with a courteous bow to the
Reverend Mother, "for the help you and Sister Gudule have so graciously
bestowed upon me. But I would venture to ask one more favour, namely,
that you would honour me with a line by way of introduction to the
worthy priest who brought Léonie Lemarque from Paris."

"Alas, Monsieur, that is impossible! Father Sorbier died three years
ago, just a year before Léonie left us."

"That is unfortunate. He doubtless knew the mystery of the girl's
childhood, and perhaps might have helped me to unravel the secret of
her strange death."

"Do you really believe that the two events have any bearing upon each
other, Monsieur?" demanded Sister Gudule thoughtfully.

"I know not, Madame," replied Heathcote; "but it is only by working
backwards that I can hope to arrive at any clue to the mystery which
has puzzled us all in Cornwall. That poor girl must have had some
purpose in going to England, in travelling to so remote a neighbourhood
as ours. Even if her death were an accident, or an unpremeditated
crime, her presence in that place cannot have been accidental."

Mr. Heathcote asked to see the class-rooms and the chapel before
he left the convent, a request which was graciously accepted, as a
compliment to the Reverend Mother. He was paraded along wide and airy
passages, was shown an empty refectory, where plates and mugs and huge
piles of bread and butter were arranged on long deal tables, covered
with snow-white linen, in readiness for the afternoon _goûter_. He
saw the chapel with its humble decorations, its somewhat crude copy of
a well-known Guido, its altar, rich in gilded paper, home-made lace,
and cheap china vases. All here spoke of small means; but the flowers
on the altar were freshly gathered, and the neatness and cleanliness
of all things in chapel and convent charmed the stranger's eye. He
slipped a couple of sovereigns into the box by the door, praised the
airy corridors, the spacious whitewashed rooms, and left the principal
and the lay-sister alike charmed with his good French and his friendly
manners.

The clock of the monastery on the opposite hill was striking five as he
drove away from the convent, a silvery chime that could be heard all
over Dinan.

He dined at the _table d'hôte_ at the Hôtel de la Poste, and walked on
the terrace on the town walls after dinner. There is no fairer view
in Brittany than the panorama of wooded hills from that walk above
the town walls. The cool night air, the silvery moonlight, soothed
Edward Heathcote's nerves. He was able to meditate upon his afternoon's
work, to think over the story he had heard from Sister Gudule, and to
speculate upon the chances of his being able to follow up this thread
of a life-history until it led him to some point which would throw a
light upon the mystery of Léonie Lemarque's death.

Reflecting upon Sister Gudule's story, he could but conclude that the
child Léonie had been the witness of some scene of violence in which a
woman had been the victim--a murder possibly, or it might be only an
attempted murder. Blood had been spilt. Hence that awful cry, "Take
away the blood, take away the dark forest!"--a child's appeal to some
unknown power to remove an object of terror.

One and one only clue had he obtained from Sister Gudule as to the
person of the victim, and even that indication might be a false light
leading him astray.

The girl's painful emotion at the utterance of her aunt's name
suggested that the victim had been that aunt. The mere mention of the
name would conjure up all the horror of that scene which had so nearly
wrecked the child's reason.

It therefore seemed plain to Heathcote's mind that a murder, or an
attempt at murder, had been committed in a dark wood, and that the
victim had been Léonie Lemarque's aunt. So deeply interested was he in
this mystery of ten years back, so powerfully moved by this strange
story of a child's suffering, that he almost forgot that the business
which had brought him across the Channel was to find out the true story
of the French girl's death, and not to unravel the mystery of this old
and perhaps forgotten crime in the unknown wood. So interested was he
that he resolved at any cost of trouble to himself to discover the
details of the scene reproduced so often in the child's fevered dreams.

"Who knows whether that may not be the surest way of arriving at the
truth about the girl's death?" he argued with himself. "At any rate it
is the only way that offers itself at present."

He walked late upon the walls of Dinan, enjoying the quiet of the
moonlit scene, hearing the bells chime again and again, silver-clear
across the vale, from the monastery where the madmen were dreaming
their disjointed dreams, or wandering sane and healed in the
spirit-land of the past, amid the faces of friends long dead. He walked
late, thinking of a face that had looked at him with trusting eyes in
the moment of parting, lovely eyes whose every expression he knew, but
most of all that tender pathetic look which had once tried to soothe
the agony of loss.

"To serve her and work for her, surely that is enough for a man's
bliss," he thought, with a sad, half-satirical smile. "In the good old
days of chivalry her knight would have deemed it happiness to bleed and
perish for her sake far away in Palestine--glory and honour enough to
have worn her colours in his helmet. Are we a meaner race, we men of
the present, that we cannot love without hope of reward? Well, I have
pledged myself to my crusade. I have put on my lady's colours, and I
will work for her as faithfully as if my love were not hopeless. I will
prove to her that there is some chivalry still left in this degenerate
world, under the modern guise of disinterested friendship."

He started for Paris by the first train next morning, a fourteen hours'
journey, a journey of dust and weariness, though the road lay through a
fair country, with glimpses of the blue sea, and then by the widening
river, till the tall houses and the many church-towers of the great
city glimmered whitely before him, under the September moon. He put
up at his old resting-place, the Hôtel de Bade, amidst the roar and
hustle of the Boulevard; and he set out the next morning after an early
breakfast in quest of Monsieur Drubarde's apartment, which was situated
in that older and shabbier Paris of the left bank.

Monsieur Drubarde's apartment was on the Quai des Grands Augustins, _au
cinquième_, a rather alarming indication to infirm or elderly legs, but
which did not appal Edward Heathcote. He ran up the five flights of a
dark wooden staircase, and found himself upon an airy landing, lighted
and ventilated by a skylight.

The skylight was half open, and through it Heathcote saw flowers and
greenery upon the roof. He also caught the odour of a very respectable
cigar, which the soft west wind blew towards him through the same
opening.

On a door opposite the top of the steep fifth flight appeared a brass
plate, with the name, Félix Drubarde.

Heathcote rang, and his summons was answered almost instantly from an
unexpected direction.

A large, round, rubicund face peered through the skylight, and a voice
asked if Monsieur desired an interview with Félix Drubarde.

"I have come here in that hope, Monsieur," answered Heathcote, "and
I venture to infer that I have the honour of addressing Monsieur
Drubarde."

"I am that individual, Monsieur," replied the rubicund gentleman,
opening the skylight to its widest extent. "Would it be too much to ask
you to ascend to my summer _salon_ upon the leads? It is pleasanter
even for a business interview than the confinement of four walls."

There was a steep straight ladder against the wall immediately under
the skylight. Heathcote mounted this and emerged upon the roof, face to
face with Félix Drubarde.

The retired police-officer's appearance was essentially rustic. His
attire resembled the holiday costume of the _station de bains_ rather
than the normal garb of a great busy metropolis. He was clothed from
head to foot in white linen; his garments were all of the loosest,
and he wore a pair of ancient buff slippers, which had doubtless
trodden the bitter biting foam on the beach of Dieppe or the sands of
Trouville. Altogether, Monsieur Drubarde looked the very picture of
comfort and coolness on this warm September morning. He had made for
himself a garden upon an open space of flat leaded roof, which was
belted round with ancient chimney-stacks of all shapes and sizes, just
as a lawn is girdled with good old oaks and beeches. On one side of his
garden he had rigged up a light lattice-work from chimney to chimney,
and his nasturtiums and Virginia creepers had clothed the lattice with
green and gold. This he called his _allée verte_, and he declared that
it reminded him of Fontainebleau in the days of the famous Diana.

His garden was gorgeous with geraniums and roses, and perfumed with
mignonette and honeysuckle. He had his morning coffee on a little iron
table; he had a wicker-work easy-chair for himself, and another for
a friend; and a smart rug, of the usual gaudy pattern to be seen in
French lodging-houses, was spread under his slippered feet. He had his
cigars and his newspaper, and, above all, he had a large and ancient
black poodle of uncanny appearance, which looked as if he were the very
dog under whose semblance the arch-fiend visited Dr. Faustus.

Before seating himself in the basket-chair which Monsieur Drubarde
offered him, Heathcote took Joseph Distin's letter out of his
pocket-book, and handed it to the ex-police-officer, who became
convulsive with rapture when he saw the signature.

"Monsieur was welcome on his own account as a doubtless distinguished
Englishman; as the friend of Monsieur Distin he is more than welcome.
His visit is an honour, a privilege which an old member of the Paris
police cannot too highly value," said Drubarde, with enthusiasm. "Ah,
Monsieur, what a man is that Joseph Distin! what a commanding genius! I
have had the honour to assist him in cases where that mighty intellect
revealed itself with startling force, and where, I am proud to say,
he must inevitably have failed, but for my humble assistance. Yes,
Monsieur, old Drubarde has a _flair_, which even your great English
lawyer envies. What a man, all the same!" Monsieur Drubarde paused
for breath, and also to offer Mr. Heathcote a cigar, which was frankly
accepted. And then the police-officer continued his eulogy of the
English lawyer, with which he contrived to interweave a little gentle
egotism.

"Had he been a Frenchman and lived under the first Emperor, he would
have been greater than the Duke of Otranto, whom my father had the
privilege to serve, and whom I remember seeing when I was a child. My
father took me into the great chief's office one day, a little toddling
creature, chubby, and, I am told, beautiful, in my little uniform of
the Old Guard, a mother's fond fancy, Monsieur; the mothers of France
love to make gracious pictures of their children. The Duke laid his
hand upon my golden curls. 'What a lovely boy!' he exclaimed, deeply
moved by my infantine beauty; 'I prophesy a brilliant future for him.
This child will go far.' I hope, Monsieur, that my after-life has not
belied the great man's prophecy."

"Mr. Distin assures me that you have won distinction in your calling,"
replied Heathcote, wondering how long the old gentleman's recollections
of childhood were going to last. "Your narrative takes me back to a
period that is classical. It assures me also that you who so vividly
remember the events of sixty years ago--"

"More than sixty, Monsieur. I am past seventy years of age, I who speak
to you."

Mr. Heathcote put on an appropriate expression of wonder.

"With such a memory for the remote past, it will hardly trouble you
to recall the events of ten years ago," he continued, very eager to
come to the point. "Now, exactly ten years ago, in this very month of
September, there was a brutal murder, or attempted murder, of a woman,
in a wood near Paris--"

"Do you mean the murder of Marie Prévol the actress, in the forest of
Saint-Germain?" inquired the police-officer. "I was engaged in that
case. A very strange story."

"And the woman was really murdered?" asked Heathcote, pale with
agitation.

He was confounded by the ease with which the man fixed upon a notorious
crime, upon a given date. It would have surprised him less to find that
the child's vision of murder was a mere fever-dream--the repetition of
some morbid hallucination--than to hear of the reality off-hand, in the
broad light of day.

"Really murdered! yes, and her lover too, as dead as the Pharaohs.
There never was a more genuine crime, a more determined murder. The
actress and her lover had gone to Saint-Germain for a holiday jaunt.
They went by rail, dined at the Henri Quatre, hired a carriage in the
cool of the evening, drove on the terrace, and then into the forest.
They left the carriage at a point where there were cross-roads, and
pursued their ramble on foot."

"There was a child with them?" interrogated Heathcote breathlessly.

"Yes, a little girl, the actress's niece. She was the only witness of
the crime. It was from her lips that the _Juge d'Instruction_ took
down the history of the scene. They were walking quietly in the
twilight, it was nearly dark, the child said, and she was beginning to
feel frightened. The lovers were walking arm in arm, the child by her
aunt's side. Suddenly a man sprang out upon them from the darkness of
the wood, and confronted them with a pistol in his hand. He wore no
hat, and he looked wild and furious. He aimed first at the man, who
fell without a groan. The girl had just time to call out to him not to
shoot her aunt, when he fired a second time, and then a third and a
fourth, and again, quicker than the child could count. It was evidently
a six-chambered revolver. Marie Prévol was found with her breast
riddled with bullets. The driver heard the shots from his post at the
cross-roads."

"And was the murderer never found?"

"Never. In spite of his wild appearance and his bare head, he got clean
off, and all the police of Paris failed in tracing him."

"But was there no one suspected of the crime?"

"Yes. There was a former lover of Marie's, her first lover; and, as it
was said, the only man she had ever really cared for. They had been
a devoted couple--were supposed by some to be married--and until a
short time before the murder Marie's character had been considered
almost stainless. Then a younger admirer appeared on the scene. There
were violent quarrels. The actress seemed to have lost her head, to
be infatuated by this aristocratic lover, one of the handsomest men
in Paris. She had known him only a few months when they went for this
jaunt to Saint-Germain--a stolen adventure. They were supposed to have
been followed by the other man, and that the murder was an act of
jealous madness."

"And the crime was never brought home to him?"

"Never. Beyond the fact of his relations with Mademoiselle Prévol, and
of his disappearance immediately after the murder, there was nothing to
connect him with the crime."

"I thought it was difficult, indeed almost impossible, for any man to
leave France without the knowledge of the police."

"It is difficult; and at that time it was particularly difficult, as
the crimes of the Commune were still of recent date, and the police
were more than usually alert. But this man did it. All the great
railway-stations and sea-ports were closely watched for the appearance
of such a man among the departures; but he was never identified."

"And you have no doubt in your own mind that this man was the murderer?"

"Not the shadow of doubt. There was no one else who had any motive for
assailing Marie and her admirer. Except in her relations with these
two she had been propriety itself. Unless you can imagine a motiveless
maniac dashing through a wood and shooting the first comer, you can
hardly conceive any other cause than jealousy for such a crime as this."

"Do you remember the name of the man who was suspected?"

"Not at this moment; but I have the whole history of the case in my
workshop below, and if you would like to read it, there are details
that might interest you."

"I should like much to read it."



CHAPTER X.


"TOUCH LIPS AND PART WITH TEARS."


While Edward Heathcote was on the other side of the Channel trying
to find a solution for the problem of Léonie Lemarque's death, which
should also be a complete acquittal of Hilda's suitor, Bothwell himself
was bent upon solving his own particular problem, that great perplexity
of his social life, which had weighed upon him more or less heavily for
the last three years. He had been to Plymouth twice since his decisive
interview with Hilda; but on each occasion it had been impossible for
him to obtain so much as five minutes' _tête-à-tête_ with the lady he
went to see; and that which he had to say to her could not be said
in five minutes, or in five times five minutes. And now, while his
champion was faithfully toiling in his interest, and while Hilda was
giving him all her thoughts, and most of her prayers, Bothwell set
out on his familiar Plymouth journey for the third time within ten
days, and with a letter in his pocket which held out the hope of an
opportunity for confidential talk.

"You looked miserable the last time you were here," wrote the lady,
"and you looked as if you had something very serious to say to me. I am
bored to death by the General's hangers-on--he is much too kind to the
nobodies who besiege us here--and I hardly ever know what it is to be
alone. But if you will come to-morrow, I will take care to keep other
people out. I shall pretend a headache, and deny myself to everybody.
You must walk boldly in by the garden, contrive not to meet any of
the servants, and you will find me sitting in the colonnade. It will
all seem accidental. When the General comes to his afternoon tea, he
will find you there, and we shall tell him how you wandered in, and
forced the _consigne_. You are such a favourite that he will smile at a
liberty from you which he would be the first to resent in any one else."

Bothwell sat in his corner of the railway-carriage, meditating upon
this letter in his breast-pocket. How hard and cruel and false and
mean the whole tone of the lady's correspondence seemed to him, now
that the glamour of a fatal infatuation had passed from his brain and
his senses; now that he was able to estimate the enchantress at her
real value; now that his newly-awakened conscience had shown him the
true colour of his own conduct during the last three years!

Three years ago and a stroke of good fortune had happened to Bothwell
Grahame one day in the hill-country, when he and his brother-officers
had gone out after big game. It had been his chance to save the life of
one of the most distinguished men in the service, General Harborough,
a man who at that time occupied an important official position in the
Bengal Presidency. Bothwell's presence of mind, courage, and rapid use
of a revolver had saved the General from the jaws of a leopard, which
had crept upon the party while they were resting at luncheon, after a
long morning's bear-shooting. General Harborough was the last man to
forget such a service. He took Bothwell Grahame under his protection
from that hour, introduced him to his wife, Lord Carlavarock's
daughter, and one of the most elegant women in the Presidency.

Favoured by such friends, Bothwell Grahame's life in India became a
kind of triumph. He was good-looking, well-mannered, a first-rate
shot, and an exceptional horseman. He could sing a part in a glee or
duet, and he waltzed to perfection. He was supposed to have a genius
for waltzing, and to become master of every new step as if by a kind
of inspiration. "What is the last fashionable waltz in London?" people
asked him; and he showed them the very latest glide, or swoop, or
twist, as the case might be. His friends told him all about it in their
letters, he said. He always knew what was going on in the dancing world.

Such a man, not too young nor yet too old--neither a stripling nor a
fogey--chivalrous, amiable, full of verve and enjoyment of life, was
eminently adapted to the holiday existence at Simla; and it was at
Simla that Bothwell Grahame became in a manner the fashion, looked up
to by all the young men of his acquaintance, petted by all the women.
Nor did it appear strange in the eyes of society that Lady Valeria
Harborough should be particularly kind to him, and should have him
very often at her bungalow, which was the centre of all that was gay,
and elegant, and _spirituel_ in the district. All the Simla jokes
originated at the Harborough bungalow. All the latest English fashions,
the newest refinements in the service of a dinner-table or the
arrangement of afternoon tea, came from the same source. Lady Valeria
led the fashion, gave the note of taste throughout that particular
section of Indian society.

No, there was nothing exceptional in her kindness to Captain Grahame.
In the first place, he had saved her husband from being clawed and
mangled to death by a wild beast, a service for which a good wife
would be naturally grateful; and in the second place, Bothwell was
only one of a court of young men who surrounded Lady Valeria wherever
she happened to be living--but most of all up at the hills. She always
spoke of them as "boys," and frankly admitted that she liked their
admiration on account of its _naïveté_.

For some time she talked of Bothwell Grahame as a "nice boy," in
spite of his six-and-twenty years. She herself owned pensively to
seven-and-twenty. Tergiversation would have been vain, since the
_Peerage_ was open to all her friends, with its dryasdust record,
"Valeria Hermione, born 1854."

She was twenty-seven years of age, strikingly elegant and interesting,
if not actually handsome, and she had been two years married to a man
who had lately celebrated his sixty-eighth birthday. She had accepted
the General, and his splendid settlements, meekly enough. There had
been no undue persuasion, no domestic tyranny. Her suitor was a
thorough gentleman, wealthy, distinguished, and she was told that he
could give her all good things which a woman need care to possess.
She would spend two or three years with him in India, where he had an
important official appointment; and then she would return to England,
where he had two country seats--one a villa near Plymouth, the other
a castle in Scotland--and a house in Grosvenor Square. As one of four
sisters, it became her to accept the fortune that had fallen into her
lap. She was, or she seemed to be, of a temperament that could be
happy in an union with a man old enough to be her grandfather. She
seemed one of those women born to shine and to rule rather than to
love. No one who knew her intimately feared any evil consequences from
her marriage with the elderly soldier.

"Valeria will make General Harborough an admirable wife," said the
matrons and ancient maidens of the house of Carlavarock, "and she will
be a splendid mistress for that fine old place in Perthshire."

Valeria had never known what passionate feeling meant till she gave
her friendship to Bothwell Grahame. She had never thrilled at a man's
voice, or listened for a man's footstep, till she began to start at
_his_ voice and listen for _his_ tread. The fatal love came upon her
like a fever, struck her down in the strength of her proud womanhood,
made her oblivious of duty, blind to honour, mastered her like a
demoniac possession, and from a spotless wife she became all at once a
hypocrite and an intriguer.

O, those fatal days at Simla, the long idle afternoons! The music and
singing--the dances late in the night when cool winds were blowing over
the hills--the garden lit with lamps like glowworms--the billiards and
laughter, the light jests, the heavy sighs. There came a time when
Bothwell Grahame found himself bound by an iniquitous tie to the wife
of his most generous friend.

Their love was to be guiltless always--that is to say, not the kind of
love which would bring Lady Valeria Harborough within the jurisdiction
of the Divorce Court: not the kind of love which would make her name
a scandal and a hissing in the ears of all her English friends, a
theme for scorn and scoffing throughout the length and breadth of
Bengal. But, short of such guilt as this--short of stolen meetings
and base allies, the connivance of servants, the venal blindness of
hotel-keepers--short of actual dishonour--they were to be lovers. He
was to be at her beck and call--to devote all the leisure of his days
to her society--to give not one thought to any other woman--to wait
patiently, were it ten or twenty years, for the good old man's death:
and then, after her ceremonial year of widowhood, all deference to the
world's opinion having been paid, he was to claim Lady Valeria for his
wife. This was the scheme of existence to which Bothwell Grahame had
pledged himself. For all the best years of his manhood he was to be
a hypocrite and an ingrate--the slave of a woman whose ascendency he
dared not acknowledge, waiting for a good man's death. That was the
worst degradation of all to a man of warm heart and generous feeling.
All that was best and noblest in Bothwell Grahame's nature revolted
against the baseness of his position. To grasp General Harborough's
hand, and to remember how deliberately he and Valeria had calculated
the years which the good old man had yet to live, had speculated
upon the end drawing near, coming suddenly perhaps; to know that all
their hopes of happiness were based upon the husband's speedy death.
There were times, even in the first red dawn of passion, while he
was proudest of this woman's love, when he almost hated her for her
disloyalty as a wife. Could there be happiness or peace in a bond
so made? And then the woman's fascination, the absolute power of a
passionate, resolute character over a weak and yielding one, vanquished
all his scruples, stifled the voice of conscience and honour. Not
Samson at the feet of Delilah was a more abject slave than Bothwell
in that luxurious idleness of the Indian hills, when the only purpose
life held seemed to be the desire to get the maximum of frivolous
amusement out of every day. There was no pastime too childish for Lady
Valeria and her admirers, no sport too inane. Yet the lady contrived to
maintain her womanly dignity even in the most infantine amusements, and
was honoured as a queen by all her little court of worshippers, from
the bearded major, or the portly lawyer, to the callow subaltern.

Bothwell's conduct towards her, and the lady's manner to him, were
irreproachable. If there were any difference, she was a shade colder
and more reserved in her treatment of him than of her other slaves: but
there were moments, briefest opportunities--a _tête-à-tête_ of five
minutes in a moonlit verandah, a little walk down to the fountain, a
ride in which they two were ahead of the rest just for a few yards;
moments when Valeria's impassioned soul poured forth its treasures
of love at this man's feet, with the reckless unreserve of a woman
who risks all upon one cast of the die. She, who had been deemed the
coldest and proudest of women--Diana not more chaste, an iceberg not
more cold--she, Valeria Harborough, had chosen to fall madly in love
with a man who was her social inferior, and who had tried his uttermost
to escape from the net she had spread for him. Weak as he was, he had
not yielded willingly. He had fought the good fight, had tried his
hardest to be loyal and true. And then, in one moment, the spell had
been too strong for his manhood. One never-to-be-forgotten night, they
two standing beside the fountain, steeped in the golden light of the
southern stars, he had yielded himself up to the enchantment of the
hour, to the witchery of luminous violet eyes, brighter for a veil of
tears. He had drawn her suddenly to his heart, asked her passionately
why she had made him adore her, in spite of himself, against reason
and honour; and she, with tearful eyes looking up at him, had answered
softly, "Because it was my fate to love you;" and then she told him,
in short, disjointed sentences, broken by sobs, that she was not a
wicked woman, that he must not scorn or loathe her, even if he could
not give her love for love. Never, till she knew him, had she swerved
by one hair's breadth from the line of strictest duty; never had she
known a thought which she need wish to hide from her husband. And
then, in an evil hour, he had become almost domesticated in her house,
and his influence had gradually enfolded her, like a cloud spread by
a magician, and she had awakened to a new life. She had learnt the
meaning of that mystic word love.

From that night Bothwell was her slave. Touched, flattered, possessed
by this fatal love--too glad weakly to echo the woman's favourite
excuse, Fatality--he struggled no longer against this mutual madness,
which was half bliss and half pain. He belonged henceforth to Lady
Valeria--more completely enslaved than if she had been free to claim
him before the world as her affianced husband. Her lightest word, her
lightest look ruled him. He went where she told him, spent his days as
she ordered. He had been one of the hardest working officers in India
up to this time, and his branch of the service, the Engineers, was one
which offered splendid chances of promotion.

General Harborough had promised to do all that his very considerable
influence could do to push his young friend to the front; and it seemed
to the men who knew him best that Bothwell Grahame's fortune was made.

"There are men whose heads are turned by the first stroke of luck,
and who never do anything after," said a canny old Scotch major; "but
Grahame is thorough, and is not afraid of hard work. Take my word for
it, he'll get on just as young Robert Napier did forty years ago."

But, with the ball at his feet, Bothwell Grahame suddenly dropped out
of the game. He left off working altogether. He was the slave of a
woman who preferred her own pleasure in his society to his chances of
distinction: who said, "Why should you work? There will be enough for
both of us by and by."

By and by meant when the good old General should be lying in his
grave. He was an old man: it was not possible to ignore that fact,
though he was erect as a dart, active, full of dignity and intellect--a
man of men. He was nearing the scriptural limit of threescore and ten,
and the inevitable end that comes to us all must come to him before the
world was many years older.

Nothing was further from Bothwell's thoughts than the idea of being
maintained by a wife; but he let Lady Valeria tempt him away from his
books or his laboratory, and suffered himself to become indifferent to
his profession, to care for nothing but the life he led in her boudoir
or her drawing-room.

And then there came new difficulties. Lady Valeria was at heart a
gamester. The excitement of cards or betting had become a necessity to
her in her Indian life. Soon after her arrival at Calcutta she had won
a thousand pounds in the Umballa Sweep, and that one stroke of luck had
been her ruin. She became a professional gambler, played high whenever
there was a possibility of so doing, and had her book for every great
English race. She awaited the telegrams that brought her the tidings
of victory or defeat with feverish impatience. The natural result
followed: she was often in money difficulties. Generous as her husband
was, she feared to appeal to him on these occasions. She knew that, of
all types of womanhood, he most hated a gambling woman. She had her
pin-money, which was ample for all the ordinary requirements and even
extravagances of a woman of fashion. She dared not ask her husband for
more money. But she was not afraid to call upon her slave, Bothwell
Grahame; and Bothwell had to help her somehow, this wife of the future,
who, in the days to come, was to provide for him.

He helped her first by nominally lending--actually giving her--every
sixpence of his own patrimony, disposing, bit by bit, of that little
estate in Perthshire of which his ancestors had been so proud. When he
had beggared himself thus, he began to borrow of the Jews--always for
Lady Valeria--and finally found himself in such a mess, financially,
that he had to leave the army.

General Harborough heard of his difficulties, and supposed they were
all self-induced, but made the kindest excuses for the sinner. He
offered to pay Bothwell's debts, and implored him not to throw up his
career, with all its brilliant chances. The General was wounded to the
quick when his offers were steadfastly refused.

"A gentleman knows how to accept a service as well as how to render
one," he said. "You saved my life, and I have never felt burdened by
the obligation."

Bothwell stood before him, grave, pale, silent, humiliated by his
kindness.

"Forgive me, sir," he faltered at last. "Believe me, I am not
ungrateful. There was a time when I would rather have accepted a favour
from you than from any other man living. But I am tired of the army. I
feel that I shall never get on. I have sent a statement of my affairs
to my cousin's husband, who has a genius for finance. He will settle
with my creditors, and I shall begin the world again, my own man."

Bothwell sighed involuntarily after those last words. What freedom, or
manhood, or independence could there ever be for him, bound as he was
bound?

He left India soon after this interview with the General, who was to
return to England in the following year. Lady Valeria deeply resented
her lover's conduct in leaving the East, while she was obliged to
remain there. It was desertion, infidelity. He ought to have remained
at any cost, at any loss of his own self-respect. She could never
be brought to consider things from his standpoint. If he had loved
her, she argued, he would have stayed. Love never counts the cost of
anything. They parted in anger, and Bothwell went home with a sore
heart, yet with a sense of relief in the idea of recovered freedom.

Then came a period of comparative liberty for Bothwell. He received an
occasional letter from Lady Valeria, full of upbraidings and regrets.
He answered as best he might--kindly, affectionately even; but he
flattered himself that the fatal tie, the dishonourable engagement,
was a folly of the past. He was all the more anxious to believe this,
during that peaceful winter at Penmorval, on account of his growing
esteem for another woman. O, what a different feeling it was, that
winter love of his! Those happy half-hours amidst the rimy hedgerows,
with the shrill north-easter swirling across the dark brown of the
ploughed fields, the yellow light of a setting sun shining beneath a
leaden sky. How curiously different was the girl's light happy talk
in the English lane--talk which all the world might have heard--from
those impassioned whispers beside the fountain, under the stars of
Orient! At first it seemed to him that he was only soothed and cheered
by his acquaintance with Hilda Heathcote. He affected to consider her
a mere girl, hardly emerged from the nursery. He was surprised to find
how rightly she thought upon the gravest subjects. Then all at once he
awoke to the knowledge that he loved her: and while he was hesitating,
doubting whether he were free to indulge this new and purer, sweeter,
happier love, hardly daring to ask himself whether that old tie was or
was not cancelled, he received a letter from Valeria, with the Paris
postmark.

"We have just arrived here from Brindisi," she wrote. "We shall stay
here for a few days while I order some gowns, and we shall be in
London for a few weeks. After that we go to the General's place near
Plymouth, where you must come and see me every day, just as you used at
Simla. O Bothwell, I can hardly trust myself to write. I dare not tell
you half the joy I feel in the idea of our meeting. If you cared for me
you would come to London. It would be so easy to pretend business, and
you would be warmly welcomed in Grosvenor Square. You might bring your
portmanteau and stop with us. There is a barrack of empty rooms on the
third floor. Ours is one of those huge corner houses, and the piggeries
for the servants are over the offices at the back. I hope you will
contrive to come. Your last letter seemed to me so cold and distant--as
if you were beginning to forget, or as if you had not forgiven my
anger at your desertion. Ah, Bothwell, you should have pitied me and
sympathised with me in that cruel parting. You ought to have known that
my anger was despair. But you thought only of your own dignity, your
own self-respect--not of my sorrow. Men are so selfish."

Bothwell did not go to London. He excused himself upon various grounds,
and remained quietly at Penmorval. But from that hour his manner
to Hilda changed altogether. From an unavowed lover he became an
indifferent acquaintance. He set a watch upon his tongue that it should
say no words of pleasantness. He vowed that he would not again suffer
himself to be enmeshed in Lady Valeria's net: but until he had calmly
and deliberately broken with her he could not be the lover of any other
woman. He made up his mind that so soon as the General and his wife
were settled at Fox Hill there should be a rupture--temperate, gentle,
firm, and irrevocable.

Lady Valeria came to Fox Hill, and summoned her slave. He went, and
there was no rupture--only a renewal of the old bonds. The bird was in
the fowler's net again. Bothwell was often at Fox Hill. He spent long
afternoons there _tête-à-tête_ with Lady Valeria. She was less careful
than she had been in India.

"We are not surrounded with busybodies here," she said. "I feel that I
can do as I like in my own house."

He went to London to borrow money for her when she was in difficulties
about that horrible book of hers: and Lady Valeria's normal state now
was financial difficulty. Almost everybody knew that she was a gambler,
except her husband. He was so thoroughly respected and beloved that no
one had the heart to make him unhappy by breathing a word to his wife's
discredit. He thought her faultless.

She had hardened in that false wicked life of hers: but she was more
fascinating than ever, Bothwell thought, albeit he was far less
under her spell than he had been in the old days at Simla. The very
fever of her mind intensified her charm. She seemed such an ethereal
creature--all life, and light, and sparkle. She was, to other women, as
the electric light is to gas.

And now, half buried in his corner of the railway-carriage, Bothwell
smoked the pipe of meditation. He looked back upon that fatal past, and
cursed himself for the weak folly that had put such a chain round his
neck. He looked back, and recalled the old scenes, the old feelings,
and he almost wondered if he could be the same man who had so felt and
so acted.

He drove to Fox Hill as fast as a cab-horse would take him, alighted a
little way from the chief gates, and dismissed his conveyance, meaning
to walk back to Plymouth after his interview. Fox Hill was four miles
from the station, but Bothwell could walk four miles in an hour with
that free swinging stride of his. A four-mile walk and a pipe might
just serve to quiet his nerves after the ordeal he had to undergo.

The General's Devonshire home was an Italian villa, built on the
southern slope of an amphitheatre of hills, and commanding the town,
the dockyards, the Hamoaze, and the Hoe in all their extent. Distance
lent enchantment to the view. Plymouth, seen from this sunny hillside,
looked as picturesque as Naples.

The villa had been planned by an architect of taste and culture, and
built regardless of expense. The house was not large when measured by
the number of its rooms; but all the rooms were spacious, lightsome,
and lofty. The decorations were of the simplest. The glory of the
place was its conservatories, which were so arranged as to introduce
flowers and tropical foliage into every part of the dwelling. A long
marble colonnade, enclosed by plate-glass shutters in winter or bad
weather, surrounded the house, and here bloomed and flourished all that
is rarest and loveliest in modern horticulture. The central hall had
a glass roof, and was more a conservatory than a hall. The corridors
between drawing-room and dining-room, between boudoir and study, were
indoor gardens. Flowers pervaded the house, and harmonised admirably
with the elegant simplicity of the furniture, the draperies of delicate
chintz and soft India muslin.

The villa had been built sixty years ago, in the days of the Georges,
a period when Italian colonnades, Corinthian porticoes, and Pompeian
conservatories were the rage; but the house suited Lady Valeria just as
a well-chosen frame suits a picture.

On this summery September morning Lady Valeria was seated in the
colonnade, half reclining in one of those very low chairs which she
always affected, being one of the few women who can rise gracefully
from a seat about a foot from the ground. She was half hidden by
the foliage of oleanders and magnolia, and it was only by a glimmer
of white amongst the glossy green that Bothwell descried her in the
distance as he crossed the lawn. There was a fountain on the lawn here,
just as at Simla; but the fountain was a late improvement, insisted
upon by Lady Valeria.

"It will recall Simla, where we were so happy," she told her husband.

"And yet you were so impatient to leave India, towards the last," he
said, almost reproachfully.

"Yes, I was very tired of India at the last. There is an end of all
things."

Bothwell had obeyed Lady Valeria's instructions to the letter. He had
entered the grounds by a side gate, so as to escape challenge at the
lodge: and now he made his way boldly to the colonnade in front of her
boudoir. The boudoir was not a particularly sacred apartment, as it
formed one in the suite of rooms and conservatories which communicated
along the whole length of the house. Italian villas of the Georgian era
were not planned for seclusion.

Lady Valeria was sitting in her low chair, with a low table at her
side, scattered with books and newspapers. The books were mostly new
memoirs and French novels of the most advanced school. The papers were
chiefly sporting. She looked up languidly as Bothwell approached, and
gave him her hand, like an empress, without stirring from her graceful
repose amidst embroidered silken cushions. She was not beautiful. Her
charm lay in an extreme refinement of feature and figure, a delicacy of
tint which verged upon sickliness. It was the refinement of a vanishing
race, and recalled the delicacy of an over-trained racehorse.

Her complexion was almost colourless in repose, but the lips were of
the tint of pale-pink rose petals, and every emotion flushed the waxen
cheek with loveliest bloom. Her nose was long and thin, too long for
perfect beauty. Her chin was a thought too sharp, her brow too narrow.
But her eyes were exquisite. Herein lay her one grand charm, and Lady
Valeria well knew the power of those large violet eyes, fringed with
darkest lashes, accentuated by pencilled brows--eyes which seemed to
fill with tears at will--eyes which could plead more eloquently than
lips ever spoke since the days of Eve, first tempted and then tempter.

"I hope you are not really ill," said Bothwell, seating himself in the
chair opposite Lady Valeria.

"Only worried to death," she answered, with an irritated air. "I have
troubles enough to send me into an early grave."

"Money troubles?"

"Money troubles. Yes. I have other troubles, too, but the money
troubles are the most urgent. They gnaw the sharpest."

"You have been losing again?"

"Yes. I was so lucky with my Goodwood book that I grew bold--determined
upon a great _coup_ at York, put every farthing I could scrape together
upon Crofter, the second favourite for the Great Ebor. I had been
assured that it was the safest thing in the world. I might back him
with my wedding-ring, Sir George Varney said. And York has generally
been lucky to me, you know. It is my own county, and I love every inch
of it. The Knavesmire was the first racecourse I ever saw, the place
where I first learned to love horses, and to understand them. My
father used to tell me everything about the races. I was the only one
of us who was really interested in his talk."

"I thought the money from Davis, and the money you won at Goodwood,
cleared all your difficulties."

"Yes, for the moment. But this York business has made things worse than
they were before. However, you need not disturb yourself about it.
Varney has offered to lend me the money."

She said this slowly, with drooping eyelids, and a thoughtful air; but
she stole a little look at Bothwell from beneath the long dark lashes,
to see how he took her speech.

"You must not take a sixpence of his money--not a sixpence," said
Bothwell sternly.

"No? That is exactly my idea. It would be very bad form for a woman in
my position to borrow from Varney--who is--well, a man of the world.
But I must have the money somehow. The bookmakers won't wait. They only
give credit in my case because they know I dare not cheat them."

"Surely the bookmen do not know that you are their creditor?"

"They are not supposed to know. The bets are made in my brother's
name--Otho's--who has been in Australia for the last two years. But I
don't believe these men would trust Otho, even if he were in London."

"It is dreadful!" exclaimed Bothwell, deeply distressed. "You ought
not to have entangled yourself again. What makes you do this thing,
Valeria? It is worse than chloral, or any other form of feminine
madness."

"Yes, it is a kind of madness, I suppose. I should not do it if I were
happy. I shall have no need to do it when I am happy--by and by."

Again she stole a look at him, a tender pathetic look, which would have
melted him a year ago. But it left him unmoved now. He felt only anger
at her folly, her obstinate persistence in wrong-doing.

"You must not take Varney's money," he repeated, "not for worlds. To
think that you should have secret dealings with such a man--a hardened
scamp and _roué!_"

"I am not going to accept Sir George's offer--which was at least
good-natured, so you need not be uncivil about him," replied Valeria
coolly; "but I must get the money somehow. I don't want Otho's name to
be posted at Tattersall's. There are too many people who would guess
that Otho stands for Valeria in this case."

"It would be disgraceful, horrible."

"But it will happen, I'm afraid, unless I can get the money."

"I can find no more, Valeria. That last loan from Davis was most
difficult to manage. I had positively no security to offer. The money
was advanced on the strength of Wyllard's position, on the speculation
that he would not see me broke."

"I am not asking you to pay my debts," she replied with her grand air:
the air of a woman accustomed to be admired for every attribute of her
character, good or bad, and to do wrong with impunity. "But the money
must be found somehow, and perhaps you can tell me where I am to get
it."

"From your husband," he answered impetuously. "Yes, Valeria, from your
one true and loyal friend. The one man you can ask in all honour to
pay for your follies."

"You advise me to go to him!" exclaimed Valeria, livid with anger.
"You!"

"Yes, I--I, who have wronged him deeply by a most fatal engagement
which I have regretted ever since it was made. Not because you are
not lovely, fascinating, all that is fairest and most desirable in
womankind: but because I am hateful to myself on account of that
treachery. What! to be the affianced lover of a woman whose husband's
hand I grasped in seeming friendship: to smile in his face, to accept
his kindness, his friendship, his confidence, while all my life was one
long waiting for his death, while you and I were saying to each other
every day, by and by we will do this, by and by we will go here and
there, sail our yacht in the Mediterranean, build our cottage on the
Scotch moor, by and by, when that good man who trusted us both is in
his grave! O, it has been a hateful position, Valeria, base, miserable,
guilty, accursed, for both of us: and, by the God who made us, it must
come to an end."

There had been tears in his voice almost from the beginning of his
speech, and at the end he broke down altogether and sobbed aloud.

Valeria rose out of her low chair, and stood before him straight as
a dart. The movement was so quick, so instinct with an unholy grace,
that it recalled the image of a cobra he had once seen rise up straight
before him in the midst of his path through the jungle.

"You are in love with another woman!" she hissed, like the serpent.
"_That_ is the meaning of this sudden outbreak of virtue!"

He could not deny it.

"You want to break with me, in order that you may marry some one else,"
she said, whiter than death, her eyes dilating, her lips quivering.

"Yes," he answered quietly. "I could form a happier tie if you set me
free. But there is not one word which I said just now about the feeling
of my own baseness which was not just as true two years ago as it is
to-day. Such a bond as ours never could bring happiness, Valeria, to
man or to woman."

"It gave us hope," she said; "a fair dream of the future. Well, it is
all over. Whatever it is worth it is gone--like a tuft of thistledown
blown into the air. Go, Bothwell Grahame, you are your own man again;
go and marry your new love."

"It will not be a marriage of to-day or to-morrow," answered Bothwell
gravely. "My new love and I will have to wait for better times. First,
I am a pauper; and, secondly, there is a taint upon my name, inasmuch
as the good people of Bodmin and the neighbourhood have taken it into
their wise heads that I am a murderer, because I refused to answer some
very impertinent questions at the inquest. Valeria, will you forgive
me--will you believe----"

"That you were heartily tired of me ages ago, before you left India,"
she said, interrupting him with a feverish rapidity. She had sunk into
her low chair again, and was seated with her hands clasped upon the
basket-work, bedizened with trappings of Oriental embroidery, like an
Arab's horse--her eyes gazing over the wide panorama of land and sea,
the dockyards, the river, the lighthouse yonder, and the long line of
surf dashing against the breakwater.

"Yes, I know that you were weary of me long before that bitter
good-bye," she went on, breathless with passion, her sentences broken
into short gasps. "I think I knew even then that you were false, though
I pretended to myself that you were true. I don't believe you ever
loved me. You just let me love you, that was all. If you had really
cared for me--as other men have cared for other women--you would not
have been so obedient. You would have flung prudence to the winds--you
would have made scenes--you would have wanted to run away with me. No,
you never loved me."

It would have been vain now for Bothwell to protest the reality of
the old worn-out passion. It had never been of the strongest stuff
that love is made of, and it had long been growing threadbare. He had
received his release, and that was the boon he had come here to ask.
But he could not leave the woman he had once loved without one word of
peace.

"Valeria," he said gently, tenderly even, "I shall stay here till you
forgive me."

"Would you stay until you have forced me to tell a lie? There can be no
blacker lie than any word of mine that offered forgiveness to you. You
have deceived me cruelly. You were my strong rock, and I leant upon you
for comfort. O Bothwell, what is she like, this other woman for whom
you forsake me? Is she so much more beautiful--so much younger--fresher
than I?"

"She is good, and pure, and true, and has been brave and loyal when the
world spoke evil of me! That is all I can tell you about her."

"But she is handsome, I suppose? You are not going to marry a plain
woman, out of gratitude!"

"She is lovely in my eyes; and I believe she is generally considered a
pretty girl."

"Who is she?"

"A lady. I can tell you no more yet awhile. Hark! there is the
General's voice. I had better go. Stay, there is something you once
gave me. You told me to wear it till----"

"Till you were tired of me. Yes, I remember," she said impatiently.

"Till the tie was broken between us, in somewise," he answered, taking
out his watch.

There was about three inches of slender Trichinopoly chain on the
swivel of the watch, and on the chain hung an old-fashioned hoop-ring
of old Brazilian diamonds. The ring had belonged to Lord Carlavarock's
grandmother, and had been Valeria's favourite jewel.

She snatched it from Bothwell's hand the moment he had taken it off
the chain, and flung it with all her force into the nearest thicket of
shrubs.

"So much for the token of worn-out love!" she said. "If one of the
gardeners finds it, he will pawn it at Devonport, and spend the money
in drink. A worthy end for such a souvenir. Good-bye, Mr. Grahame."

Bothwell bowed and left her; left her to crawl up to her bedroom like
a wounded hind creeping to covert, and to fling herself face downwards
on the floor, and lie there tearless, despairing, ready to invoke hell
itself to help her in some kind of revenge, had she but believed in the
devil. But Lady Valeria was an agnostic. She had not even Satan as a
friend in the hour of trouble.



CHAPTER XI.


A FATAL LOVE.


Monsieur Drubarde and his visitor descended the ladder, and entered the
police-officer's apartment, which consisted of two small rooms, the
outer an office and _salon_ combined, the inner a bedchamber, which Mr.
Heathcote saw through the open door: a neat little bachelor's nest,
with a velvet-curtained bedstead, and walls lined with portraits of
every kind--engravings, lithographs, photographs.

The _salon_ was decorated with the same style of art, diversified by
engravings from newspapers, all representing notorious crimes. "The
Murder in the Rue de la Paix," "Germinie Latouche stabbed in the
kitchen of the Red Cross Restaurant by her lover, Gilles Perdie;"
"The Arrest of Victor Larennes for the great forgeries on the Bank
of France;" "The Escape of Jean Bizat, the parricide." Art had
represented all these scenes with due dramatic fervour. They were
hardly pleasing subjects in the abstract; but to Félix Drubarde they
were all delightful; for they recalled some of the most interesting and
most profitable hours of his life. He was gratified to see his guest
looking at those stories of crime, in artistic shorthand.

"Gilles Perdie would have got off, if it had not been for me," he
said, with excusable pride. "The police had been hunting for him ten
long days, when I put them on the right scent. We knew that he had not
gone far from the scene of the crime--for there had been no time for
escape, you see. The murder was found out an hour after the woman's
death. He was hunted for in every hole and corner within a radius of a
mile. No one had seen him leave the premises. No one had set eyes on
him since the murder, which occurred in the early morning in October,
when it is not light before six. 'How do you know that he ever did
leave that house?' I asked one day, meaning the Red Cross, a workman's
eating-house in the Rue Galande. He was cellarman there, cellarman
and _terreur_ combined. My comrades laughed at me. They had searched
the Red Cross from cellar to garret, they had not left an inch of the
building unexplored. 'Have you looked in the empty casks?' I asked.
Yes, they had looked in the empty casks. The cellar was very neatly
arranged, the empty casks in a row on one side, the full ones on the
other. My friends protested that they were not such fools as to have
overlooked an empty cask. 'Who knows?' I said; 'we will go there this
afternoon and overhaul those barrels.' Need I tell you the result? It
is history. There was one empty hogshead, artfully pushed in a corner,
last in the rank of unbroached hogsheads. The open end had been turned
towards the wall, and in that empty hogshead, in that rat-haunted
cellar, Gilles Perdie had contrived to exist for ten days, by the aid
of his victim's daughter, a child of seven years old, who lived in the
house, and whom he threatened to kill as he had killed her mother, if
she told any one about him, or failed to carry him food and drink twice
a day. There, amidst vermin and ordure, he had lived, coiled up in his
hogshead, and perhaps not much worse off than some among the poor of
Paris, whose only crime is poverty."

"You have a right to boast of your scent, Monsieur, after such a
triumph as that."

"A bagatelle, Monsieur, one of the feeblest of my cases: but it made
a great hit at the time. My portrait appeared in three different
newspapers, side by side with that of the murderer."

"A distinguished honour. And now, if you will be kind enough to give me
the further information which you promised as to names and details?"

"Monsieur Effcotte, you are Mr. Distin's friend, and for you I will do
what I would hardly do for my own brother. I will trust you with one of
my books."

"You are extremely obliging."

"I know, sir, that there are some people who think nothing of lending
a book; they can hand over a treasured volume to a friend--to an
indifferent acquaintance even--without a pang; they can see him turn
the leaves and violate the stiffness of the back. I, Monsieur, would
almost as soon lend my arm and hand as one of those books; but for you
I will make an exception. You shall have the volume which contains the
report of the Prévol case, to read and take notes from at your leisure."

"You are more than good."

Monsieur Drubarde's library consisted of four rows of handsomely bound
volumes, whose gilded backs shone behind a barricade of plate glass,
in a locked bookcase. They were books which he had collected at his
leisure, and which bore for the most part on his profession: the
memoirs of Vidocq, the memoirs of Canler, of Sanson the executioner,
and other biographies of equally thrilling interest. For literature of
so lofty a stamp, Félix Drubarde had deemed no binding too luxurious;
and he had clothed his favourites in all the pomp of purple, and green,
and crimson, and sumptuous gilding. He had caused them to be enriched
with the bookbinder's whole gamut of ornament--his _fleurs-de-lis_ and
roses, his foliage and acorns, and scrolls and emblems. Even the volume
of printed reports which Drubarde handed to Mr. Heathcote was gorgeous
in red morocco and gold.

"You will find the case fully reported in that volume," he said. "When
you have read it, and made your own conclusions upon it, you can come
back to me, and we will talk the matter over together."

"I will call upon you again to-morrow at the same hour, if you will
allow me," replied Heathcote, laying a ten-pound note upon the table.
"But I must ask you in the mean time to accept this trifle as an
earnest of future remuneration. I do not on any account desire to
impose on your good-nature."

Monsieur Drubarde shrugged his shoulders, declared that as a matter
of feeling he would rather work gratuitously for any friend of Mr.
Distin's, but that from a business point of view his time was valuable.
He had a little place in the country, fifteen miles out of Paris; he
had nephews and nieces dependent upon him; in a word, he had to work
for others as well as for himself.

"Before you go, perhaps you will be so good as to tell me your motive
for hunting up the history of this old murder," he said, with a keen
look. He had been intending to ask this question from the beginning.

"I am searching out the details of an old murder in order to fathom the
mystery of a new murder, or of a strange death, which I take to be a
murder. Can you read English, Monsieur Drubarde?"

"I have a niece who can--a girl who was educated at a convent in
Jersey. I am going to my country home this afternoon, and my niece can
read anything you give me."

Mr. Heathcote took from his pocket-book the report of the inquest, cut
out of the local papers, and pasted on slips of foolscap.

"If your niece will translate that report for you, I think you will
understand the motive of my investigation," he said; and then bade
Monsieur Drubarde good-morning.

He went down-stairs with the volume of reports under his arm, hailed a
fly, and drove to the Hôtel de Bade, stopping on his way to engage a
stall for that evening at the Comédie Française, the only recreation
which he cared for in his present frame of mind. He had numerous
acquaintances in Paris, but he did not care about seeing one of them
just now, nor did he linger in the bright gay streets to mark the
changes which a year had made in the aspect of that ever-varying city,
as he would have done had his mind been free from care.

He had a sitting-room and bedroom on the second floor of the hotel, two
nice little rooms opening into each other, and both overlooking the
Boulevard; an outlook which on former occasions he had preferred to the
monastic quiet of the courtyard, where there were no sounds but the
splashing of the water with which the man-of-all-work sluiced the stone
pavement at intervals of an hour or two on sultry summer afternoons,
or the scream of a chambermaid arguing with a waiter, both talking as
loud as if they had been communicating from the gate of Saint-Martin
to the gate of Saint-Denis. To-day, with the report of the Prévol case
open before him, Edward Heathcote could have found it in his heart to
curse the Boulevard, with its roar and rattle, its incessant "ya-youp!"
of coachmen on the point of running over passengers, and everlasting
clamour of the lively Gaul. He would have preferred a hermit's cave,
with never a sound but the sighing of the wind on the mountain-side.

Yes, here was the interrogation of the waiter at the Pavilion Henri
Quatre.

"Do you remember a lady and gentleman who dined in a private room on
the 6th of September?"

The waiter remembered perfectly. The lady was very pretty, the
gentleman remarkably handsome, and with a distinguished air. They
had a little girl with them. The gentleman ordered a private room
and a little dinner, _bien soigné_. He was very particular about the
champagne, and about the dessert. The grapes and peaches were to be
of the choicest. The gentleman and lady dined early, between five and
six. The lady had a somewhat agitated air, seemed out of sorts, and ate
very little. The gentleman was very attentive to her, and petted the
little girl. At half-past six they went for a drive in the forest. The
carriage was ordered directly they sat down to dinner.

"Had you any reason to suppose that this lady and gentleman had been
followed or watched, by any one when they arrived at the Henri Quatre?"

"They arrived in a fly. No; I observed no one lurking about or watching
when they arrived. I went out to give an order to the coachman while
the carriage was standing before the door, waiting to take them for
their drive in the forest; and I observed a man on the other side of
the road. I should not have noticed him, perhaps, if the collar of
his overcoat had not been turned up in a curious manner. I thought it
strange that any one should wear an overcoat on such an evening."

"Did this man appear to be watching the hotel?"

"He was standing in front of the hotel-railings when I went out. I saw
him look across at the window in which the lady and gentleman were
dining. The window was at right angles with the road, opening into a
garden. It was open, and there were two candelabra upon the table. Any
one could see into the room from the road."

"There was no blind or curtain?"

"No. The evening was particularly mild. All the windows in the
sitting-rooms were open."

"What became of this man?"

"He walked rapidly along the road, and turned the corner on to the
terrace."

"Should you recognise him if you were to see him again?"

"Impossible. It was twilight when I saw him, and he was on the other
side of the road. His coat-collar was turned up, so as to hide the
lower half of his face."

"But you must at least have observed his general appearance. Was he
tall or short? Had he the air of a gentleman?"

"He was tall. Yes, I should say he was a gentleman."

"Young or old?"

"He walked like a young man. I thought he had an agitated air. He
walked very quickly, but stopped suddenly two or three times between
the hotel and the corner of the terrace, as if he were thinking
deeply--hesitating whether to go this way or that; and then he walked
on again, faster than before."

"You saw no more of him that evening?"

"No. At half-past eight o'clock I heard that there had been a double
murder in the forest, and that the bodies were lying at the Town Hall.
I went to see the bodies, and recognised the lady and gentleman who had
dined at our hotel. I also saw the little girl, who was in the charge
of the police. She was crying bitterly. The corpses were removed to
Paris on the following evening."

The examination of the driver came next. He had very little to tell. He
had been told to wait at the cross-roads until the lady and gentleman
returned from their stroll. It was a lovely night--a night which
might have tempted any one to alight and walk in the forest glade.
The moon was rising, but it was dark amid the old trees. The man
had been waiting about a quarter of an hour, when he heard a shot a
little way off--and then another, and another, and another, in rapid
succession--and then he heard a child screaming. He tied his horse to
a tree, and he ran into the glade, guided by the screams of the child.
He found the lady and gentleman lying on the ground, side by side,
the child kneeling by the lady; and screaming with grief and terror.
The gentleman groaned two or three times, and then expired. The lady
neither stirred nor moaned. Her light-coloured gown and mantle were
covered with blood.

The driver was questioned as to whether anybody had passed him while
he waited at the crossroads. No, he had not observed any one, except
an old woman and a boy who had been gathering sticks in the forest.
The place at which he was waiting was a well-known point. The glade in
which the murder occurred was considered one of the most picturesque
spots in the forest. He always drove there with people who wanted to
see the beauties of Saint-Germain. But at that late hour there were
very few people driving. He had met no carriage after leaving the
terrace.

Then followed the examination of the child, and of Marie Prévol's
mother. They were both lengthy, for the _Juge d'Instruction_ had
applied himself with peculiar earnestness to the task of unravelling
this mystery, and it was only in the details of the dead woman's
surroundings that the clue to the secret could be found.

The child had evidently answered the magisterial questions with
extreme intelligence. However she might have broken down afterwards,
she had been perfectly rational at the time of the interrogatory. It
seemed to Heathcote, influenced, perhaps, by his knowledge of after
events, that the child's replies indicated a hyper-sensitiveness, and
an intellect intensified by feverish excitement.

"You remember going to Saint-Germain with your aunt?"

"Yes."

"Tell me all you can recall about that day. Tell me exactly when and
how you started, and what happened to you on the way. I want to hear
everything."

"It was three o'clock when we left my aunt's house. Monsieur de
Maucroix came a little before that, and asked my aunt to go to dinner
with him somewhere in the country. The weather was too lovely for
Paris, he said. She did not want to go. She said Georges would be
angry."

"Who is Georges?"

"Some one I never saw."

"Was he a friend of your aunt's?"

"Yes, I think so. She often talked of him. Monsieur de Maucroix used to
talk of him, and to be angry about him."

"Why angry?"

"I don't know. He used to say Georges will not let you do this; Georges
will not let you do that. What right has Georges that he should order
you here or there? And then my aunt used to cry."

"Were you often at your aunt's apartment?"

"Very often."

"You lived there sometimes, did you not?"

"Yes, I used to stay there for a week sometimes. It was very nice to
be with my aunt, much nicer than being with grandmother. She used to
take me out in a carriage sometimes. Her rooms were prettier than
grandmother's rooms, for there were flowers all about, and pretty
things, and she was prettier, and wore prettier clothes."

"But if you were there for a week at a time, how was it that you never
saw this Monsieur Georges, who was such a close friend of your aunt's?"

"He never came till late at night. He used to come to supper often.
I heard the servant say so. She said he was a dissipated man, a bad
subject. Grandmother said so too. 'Has that night-bird been here
again?' she asked my aunt once; and my aunt was angry, and began to
cry; and then grandmother got angry too, and said, 'Who is he, and what
is he? I want to know that.' And then my aunt said, 'He is a gentleman;
that is enough for you to know;' and then she showed my grandmother a
pretty necklace that Georges had given her the night before--a necklace
of shining white beads, like the water-drops from the fountain at the
Tuileries."

"They were diamonds, I suppose?"

"Yes, that is what grandmother called them. She wetted them with her
tongue to find out if they were real diamonds, and then she and my aunt
kissed each other, and made friends."

"You are sure you never saw this Monsieur Georges?"

"Never. My aunt used to send me to bed very early, before she went to
the theatre."

"Did she not take you with her to the theatre sometimes?"

"Never. She said that theatres were not good for little girls."

"Now tell me about your journey to Saint-Germain. How did you go?"

"First in a carriage, and then in a train."

"Had you to wait at the station?"

"A long time. I was tired of waiting so long. I thought it would have
been nicer to be at home, where I had story-books to read."

"What did your aunt and Monsieur de Maucroix do while they were
waiting?"

"They sat in a corner of a big room, with great windows through which
we could see the trains. I watched the trains through the window."

"Were there many other people in the room?"

"Very few."

"Did you take notice of any one?"

"I noticed a little girl. She was bigger than I am, but not much. I
thought I should like to play with her. She had a blue balloon, and she
let it fly out of the window and broke it."

"Did you notice nobody else?"

"Only one other person--a gentleman who wore dark spectacles."

"What made you observe him in particular?"

"His spectacles were so curious, and he looked at my aunt."

"What do you mean when you say that he looked at your aunt? Did he look
as if he knew her?"

"I don't know. He stood just inside the doorway, as if he was hiding
behind the door, looking at my aunt and Monsieur de Maucroix."

"How long did he stand there?"

"I don't know."

"For five minutes, do you think? As long as you could count a hundred?"

"Longer than that."

"Was he young or old, tall or short?"

"He was tall. I think he must have been old, because he wore dark
spectacles."

"Did your aunt and Monsieur de Maucroix observe him?"

"No. I asked my aunt when we were in the train if she had seen the
gentleman with the funny spectacles, and she said no."

"Did you see him again after he left the waiting-room?"

"No."

"Now tell me all you can about your journey to Saint-Germain."

"We went in the train, in a beautiful carriage with soft cushions. I
looked out of the window all the time. My aunt and Monsieur de Maucroix
sat by the other window talking."

"Did you hear what they said?"

"Not much. I was not listening. It was so nice to see the country, and
the trees rushing by. I heard Monsieur de Maucroix ask my aunt to go
away with him--he begged her to go--to Italy, I think he said. Is there
a place called Italy?"

"Yes. And how did your aunt answer?"

"She said she could not go. She was bound to Georges. Georges would
kill her if she left him. Monsieur de Maucroix laughed, and said that
people do not do such things nowadays. He laughed--and soon afterwards
my aunt and he were both dead. I saw the blood--streams of blood."

At this point, said the report, the girl Lemarque became hysterical,
and the rest of her evidence had to be postponed for another day. In
the mean time the grandmother, and Barbe Girot, Marie Prévol's servant,
were interrogated.

Madame Lemarque stated that her daughter was an actress at the
Porte-Saint-Martin. She was very beautiful, and was more renowned for
her grace and beauty than for her acting. She danced and sang and acted
in fairy scenes. She was only three-and-twenty years of age at the time
of her death.

Upon being asked by the judge whether her daughter led a strictly moral
life, Madame Lemarque replied that her conduct was purity itself as
compared with that of many ladies who acted in fairy pieces.

"But there was some one, perhaps," insinuated the judge, "there is
always some one. So beautiful a woman must have had many admirers. I
have her photograph here. It is an exquisite face, a beauty quite out
of the common, refined, spiritual. Surely among her many admirers there
must have been one whom she favoured above all the rest?"

"Yes, there was one, and it was that one who murdered my daughter and
Monsieur de Maucroix. No one can doubt it."

"But you have no actual knowledge of the fact? You speak upon
conjecture?"

"Who else should murder her? Whom did she ever injure, poor child? She
was amiability itself--the kindest of comrades, charitable, good to
everybody."

"What do you know of this person whom you suspect?"

"Nothing except that which I heard from my daughter."

"Did you never see him?"

"Never. If he had been the Emperor he could not have been more
mysterious in his goings to and fro. I was never allowed to see him."

"Was he often at your daughter's apartment?"

"Very often. He used to go there after the theatre. He was devoted to
her. There were some who believed that he was her husband, that he
loved her too passionately to deny her anything she might ask. When she
was not acting he took her abroad, to Italy--to Spain. If it were only
for a holiday for a fortnight, he would carry her off to some remote
village in the Italian Alps or the Pyrenees. I used to tell her that
he was ashamed of his love for her, or he would not have hidden her in
those distant places. He would have taken her to Dieppe or Arcachon,
where she would have been seen and admired."

"Did you ever find out who this person is?"

"Never."

"But you must know something about him and his circumstances. Was he a
nobleman, or did he belong to the mercantile class?"

"I know nothing except that he was rich. He showered gifts upon my
daughter. He would have taken her off the stage if she would have
allowed him. He would have given her a house and gardens at Bougival
instead of her little apartment on a third floor in the Rue Lafitte;
but she loved the theatre, and she had a proud spirit, poor child--she
had not the temper of _la femme entretenue_."

"What was the name of this person?"

"Monsieur Georges. I never heard of him by any other name."

"Did your daughter reciprocate his passion?"

"For a long time she seemed to do so. They were like lovers in a
story. That lasted for years--from the time of her first appearance
at the Porte-Saint-Martin, which was four years before her death. And
then there came a change. Monsieur de Maucroix fell in love with her,
followed her about everywhere, worshipped her. And he was young and
handsome and fascinating, with the style, and manners of a prince. He
had spent all his life in palaces; had been attached to the Emperor's
household from his boyhood; had fought bravely through the war."

"Had you reason to know that Monsieur Georges was jealous of Monsieur
de Maucroix?"

"Yes, my daughter told me that there had been scenes."

"Had the two men met?"

"I think not."

"How long had Monsieur de Maucroix been an avowed admirer of your
daughter?"

"Only a few months--since Easter, I think. My granddaughter used to see
him when she was staying with her aunt."

"Could you reconcile it to your conscience to allow your grandchild
to live in the house of an aunt who was leading--well, we will say a
doubtful life?"

"There was no harm in my daughter's life that I knew of. Monsieur
Georges may have been my daughter's husband. There is no reason that he
should not have been. At her lodgings she was known as Madame Georges.
It was under that name she travelled when she went abroad."

"But you had never heard of any marriage--at the Mairie or elsewhere?
And, again, your daughter could not be married without your consent."

"I do not say that she had been married in France. She may have been
married abroad--in England, perhaps. He took her to England soon after
they became acquainted. It was the first time she left Paris with him;
and until then I know she had been as distant to him as if she had been
the Empress. In England there are no obstacles to marriage; there is no
one's consent to be asked."

"We will admit that a marriage in a foreign country would have been
possible. But this Maxime de Maucroix, this second admirer----"

"Was only an admirer. My daughter's life was not a disreputable life. I
have nothing to reproach myself with upon that score."

"Can you help us to find this man Georges, whom you suspect as the
murderer? Do you know where he is to be found?"

"If I did, the police would have known before now. I tell you I know
nothing about him--absolutely nothing. I have seen and heard nothing of
him since the murder. He has not been to my daughter's apartment since
her death--he was not at her funeral. He who pretended to adore her
did not follow her to her grave. All Paris was there; but he who was
supposed to be her husband was not there."

"How can you tell that he was not there, since you do not know his
appearance?"

"Barbe Girot knows him. It is on her authority that I say he was not
there."

"I will trouble you with no further questions to-day, madame. I will
take Barbe Girot's evidence next."

Barbe Girot's evidence was to the effect that for nearly four years
this Monsieur Georges had been a constant visitor at her mistress's
apartment. He had come there after the theatre, and it had been
Barbe's duty to leave the supper-table laid, and the candles ready on
the chimney-piece and table, before she went to bed. Madame Georges
let herself in with a latch-key, and Barbe rarely sat up for her.
Madame did not always return to the Rue Lafitte for supper. There
were occasions when she supped on the Boulevard, or in the Bois, and
returned to her apartment at a very late hour. Barbe saw Monsieur
Georges occasionally, but not frequently. He was a handsome man, but
not in his first youth. He might have been five or six and thirty. He
was generous, and appeared to be rich. Whatever his fortune may have
been, he would have given Madame the whole of it if she had asked him.
There was never a man more passionately in love with a woman. After the
Baron de Maucroix's appearance on the scene there were storms. Barbe
had seen Monsieur Georges cry like a child. She had also seen him give
way to violent passion. There had been one night when she thought that
he would kill Madame. He had his hands upon her throat; he seemed as
if he were going to strangle her. And then he fell on his knees, and
grovelled at her feet. He implored her to forgive him. It was dreadful.

Did Barbe Girot think that Monsieur Georges was Madame's husband?

She had never presumed to form an opinion upon that subject. Her
mistress wore a wedding-ring, and was always known as Madame Georges
in the house where she lived. Madame's conduct was altogether
irreproachable. Until the Baron de Maucroix began to visit her, no
other man than Monsieur Georges had crossed her threshold. And the
visits of Monsieur de Maucroix were such visits as any gentleman in
Paris might pay to any lady, were she the highest in the land.

"Did your mistress ever go out with Monsieur de Maucroix before that
fatal visit to Saint-Germain?"

"Never. And on that occasion Madame took the little girl with her. She
refused to go alone with the Baron."

"Is it your opinion that your mistress was inclined to favour Monsieur
de Maucroix' suit?"

"Alas, yes! He was so young, so fascinating, so handsome, and he
adored her. If she had not been in love with him she would hardly have
permitted his visits, for they were the cause of such agony of mind to
Monsieur Georges."

"It is your belief, then, that she had transferred her affection from
the older to the younger lover?"

"I fear so."

"You have not seen Monsieur Georges since the murder?"

"No."

"Are you sure that he was not at the funeral?"

"Quite sure."

"But there was a great crowd at the cemetery. How can you be sure that
he was not in the crowd?"

"I cannot be sure of that; but I am sure that he paid my mistress no
honour. He was not among those who stood around her grave, or who threw
flowers upon her coffin. I stayed by the grave after all was over and
the crowd had dispersed; but Monsieur Georges never came near to cast
a look upon the spot where my poor mistress was lying. He has not been
at her apartment since her death; he never came to look upon her corpse
when it was lying there."

"And he has not written--he has given no orders as to the disposal of
your mistress's property?"

"No. Madame Lemarque has taken possession of everything. She is living
in my mistress's apartment until the furniture can be sold."

"Do you know of any photograph or portrait of Monsieur Georges among
your late mistress's possessions?"

"I never saw any such portrait."

"You would know Monsieur Georges wherever you might happen to see him?"

"Yes. I do not think I could fail to recognise him."

"Even if he had disguised himself?"

"Even then. I think I should know his voice anywhere, even if I could
not see his face."

"Will you describe him?"

"He is a tall man, broad-shouldered, powerful-looking. He has fine
features, blue eyes, light-auburn hair, thick and flowing, and worn
much longer than most people wear their hair. He is not so handsome or
so elegant as Monsieur de Maucroix, but he has a more commanding look."

"That description would apply to hundreds of men. Can you mention any
peculiarity of feature, expression, gait, manner?"

"No, I can recall nothing peculiar."

"And in moments of confidence did your mistress never tell you anything
about this Monsieur Georges, his profession, his belongings, his place
of residence?"

"Nothing."

"He did not live at your mistress's apartments, I conclude?"

"No, he did not live there."

"Did you never hear how he was occupied during the day, since you say
he was never at your mistress's apartment in the daytime?"

"Never. I was told nothing about him except that he was rich and a
gentleman. I asked no questions. My place was comfortable, my wages
were paid regularly, and Madame was kind to me."

"Where did Léonie Lemarque sleep when she stayed in the Rue Lafitte?"

"She occupied a little bed in my room, which is inside the kitchen."

"Were you long in Madame's service?"

"Nearly four years. From the beginning of her engagement at the
Porte-Saint-Martin, when she took the apartment in the Rue Lafitte. Her
salary at the theatre justified her in taking such an apartment. Before
that time she had been living with her mother on the other side of the
Seine."

"Is it your opinion that Monsieur Georges was the murderer?"

"That is my fixed opinion."

This concluded the examination of Barbe Girot. The little girl's
examination was not resumed until ten days later. She had been very ill
in the mean time, and seemed altogether weak and broken down when she
was brought before the _Juge d'Instruction_. She burst out crying in
the midst of her evidence, and the grandmother had great difficulty in
calming her.

"We had a nice dinner, and Monsieur de Maucroix was very kind, and
gave me grapes and a big peach, and he promised to buy me a doll next
day in the Passage Jouffroy. My aunt was sad, and Monsieur de Maucroix
begged her to be gay, and he talked about taking her to Italy with
him, just as he had talked in the train. And then we went out in a
carriage and drove along a terrace, where there was a beautiful view
over a river and a great green valley. My aunt seemed much gayer, and
she and Monsieur de Maucroix were talking and laughing all the time;
and afterwards, when we all got out of the carriage and walked in the
forest, they both seemed very happy, and my aunt rested her head on
Monsieur de Maucroix's shoulder as they walked along, and said it was
like being in heaven to be in that moonlit forest with him; and then,
just at that moment, a man rushed out from the darkness under the
trees, like a wild beast out of a cave, and shot, and shot, and shot,
again and again and again. And first Monsieur de Maucroix fell, and
then my aunt, and she was all over blood. I could see it streaming over
her light-blue gown, first one stream and then another. I can see it
now. I am seeing it always. It wakes me out of my sleep. O, take it
away; take away the dark forest; take away the blood!"

At this point, said the report, the child again became hysterical, and
had to be carried away. After this she had an attack of brain-fever,
and could not again be interrogated formally.


END OF VOL. I.



WYLLARD'S WEIRD

A Novel


BY THE AUTHOR OF

"LADY AUDLEY'S SECRET," "VIXEN,"
"ISHMAEL," ETC.


IN THREE VOLUMES

VOL. II.


LONDON

JOHN AND ROBERT MAXWELL

MILTON HOUSE, SHOE LANE, FLEET STREET
AND
35 ST. BRIDE STREET, E.C.

1885



CONTENTS OF VOL. II.

      I. LÉONIE'S MISSION
     II. A STUDENT OF MEN AND WOMEN
    III. BOTHWELL BEGINS TO SEE HIS WAY
     IV. THE HOME OF THE PAST
      V. A FACE FROM THE GRAVE
     VI. STRUCK DOWN
    VII. THE GENERAL RECEIVES A SUMMONS
   VIII. WIDOWED AND FREE
     IX. TWO WOMEN
      X. ROSES ON A GRAVE



WYLLARD'S WEIRD



CHAPTER I.

LÉONIE'S MISSION.


The report of the interrogatory before the _Juge d'Instruction_ was
followed by a page of notes written by the police-officer Drubarde.

The child Léonie Lemarque was not again in a condition to give her
evidence. A violent attack of brain-fever succeeded her second
appearance before the _Juge d'Instruction_, and on her recovery from
the fever it was found that her mind had suffered seriously from the
shock she had undergone. Memory was a blank. The _Juge d'Instruction_
visited her in her own home when she was convalescent, and tried to
recall the impressions made upon her at the time of the murder, in
the hope of identifying the murderer; but she had forgotten the whole
circumstances of her aunt's death, and yet she suffered agonies from
a vague terror associated in her enfeebled mind with the very name of
that aunt.

As soon as she was well enough to travel she was taken to the Ursuline
convent at Dinan by a good priest who had befriended her grandmother
for many years. After this transference to the convent the police lost
sight of the child Lemarque.

Throughout the evening, even amidst the distractions of a finely acted
comedy by Augier, and in the wakeful intervals of a somewhat disturbed
night, Edward Heathcote brooded over the details of the evidence which
he had read, not once, but several times, before he closed the volume
of reports.

The detective instinct, which is a characteristic of every well-trained
lawyer's mind, had been suddenly developed into almost a passion. He
no longer limited his desire to the unravelling of the web of Léonie
Lemarque's fate; he ardently longed to discover the mystery of Marie
Prévol's murder--to succeed where one of the most accomplished Parisian
detectives had ignominiously failed. His eagerness to hear more about
Drubarde's efforts and failures in this particular case led him to the
Quai des Grands Augustins at an early hour, in time to surprise the
worthy Félix in the act of breakfasting temperately upon _café au lait_
and boiled eggs.

Monsieur Drubarde gave his new friend a cheery welcome. It was a lovely
morning, balmy as midsummer, and the little garden on the leads was
bright with gaily-coloured asters, nasturtiums, and geraniums, and
agreeably perfumed with mignonette.

"Do you perceive the exquisite odours?" asked Drubarde.

"Your mignonette is delicious."

"My mignonette!" cried the police-officer scornfully. "Why, when the
wind blows straight from the flower-market, as it does to-day, I can
sit in my garden and enjoy all the perfumes of the Riviera. I can
revel in orange-blossoms, drink my fill of tube-roses and stephanotis,
Maréchal Niel and Jacqueline roses. And look what a view! Not a touch
of the sculptor's chisel that I cannot see yonder on the old kings of
Notre Dame; not a cornice or a column in the new hospital that does not
stand clear in the morning light! And yet Paris is peopled with fools
who do not make gardens on their housetops!"

"Perhaps every landlord would not be so complaisant as yours, Monsieur
Drubarde, nor every housetop so adapted to horticulture."

"True, your Parisian landlord is a churl and a niggard, and a good
many of our housetops are no doubt impracticable. But the inventive
mind, the love of the beautiful, is more often wanting. I see you have
been good enough to bring back my volume. You have read the report, I
suppose?"

"Every line, every syllable, three times over."

"And you are interested?"

"Deeply. I was never more intensely interested in any case that has
come within my knowledge: yet as a lawyer I have become acquainted with
many strange stories. Yes, I am more interested than I can say in the
fate of that unhappy actress, in the character of her mysterious lover:
and yet I doubt if this former crime has any bearing upon the murder of
Léonie Lemarque."

"It would certainly be going somewhat far to suppose a link between the
death of a girl travelling alone in Cornwall--a death which may after
all have been accidental--and the murder of her aunt ten years before
in the forest of Saint-Germain. However, it is only by the minutest
scrutiny of Léonie's past life that you can arrive at the motive
which took her to England, and discover whether she had an enemy in
that country--that is to say, if she was lured across the Channel in
order to be made away with by that enemy. A very wild and far-fetched
supposition I think you will admit, Monsieur, and one which our
talented friend Mr. Distin would not entertain for five minutes."

"Professional acumen like Mr. Distin's is apt to run in grooves--to be
too intent upon following the practical and the possible, to shut out
the romantic element, to strangle the imagination, and to forget that
it is very often by following the apparently impossible that we arrive
at the truth."

"I see you are an enthusiast, Monsieur."

"I have never tried to subjugate my imagination. As a lawyer I found
ideality the most useful faculty of my brain. Now, I have been thinking
about Léonie Lemarque's fate from every possible point of view, from
the standpoint of imagination as well as from the standpoint of common
sense; and it has occurred to me that if the murderer of Marie Prévol
were living, he would be Léonie's natural enemy."

"Why so?"

"Because she was the only witness of his crime. She alone would have
the power to identify him as the murderer."

"You forget that it is just that power which the poor girl lost during
her illness. The fever deprived her of memory."

"That effect of the fever may not have been permanent. The agitation
which she showed at the mention of her aunt's name--when Sister Gudule
questioned her about the silk handkerchief given to her by Marie
Prévol--would indicate that memory was not a blank. And again, if she
had forgotten the person of the murderer, or even the fact of the
murder, he would not know that, and would regard her existence as a
source of danger to himself."

Félix Drubarde smiled the superior smile of experience reproving folly.

"And you think that after having allowed this one witness of his crime
to exist unmolested for ten years, the assassin all at once took it
into his head to murder her; that with this view he carried her to
your barbarous province of Cornuailles, and there flung her over an
embankment. I am tempted to paraphrase the Scripture, Monsieur, and to
exclaim, 'Are there not viaducts and embankments in this vast France of
ours, that a man should go to the remote west of your little England in
order to commit murder in that particular fashion!'"

Heathcote felt that the police-officer had the best of the argument.

"I grant that it would have been a clumsy method of getting rid of the
girl," he said, "but murder has been clumsily done before to-day, and
imagination can conceive no crime so improbable as not to be paralleled
by fact. However, it is perhaps too soon to speculate that the murderer
of Marie Prévol was also the murderer of Léonie Lemarque. What we have
to do is to find out the reason of the girl's journey to England. But
before we set about that task, I should like you to tell me what steps
you took in your endeavour to trace the murderer after the examination
before the _Juge d'Instruction_."

"I looked over the case in my note-book last night, as I was prepared
for you to ask for those details," replied Drubarde. "It was a case
that interested me profoundly, all the more so, perhaps, because I
made so little headway in my investigations. My first endeavour was to
trace the murderer's proceedings immediately after the crime. He must
have made his escape from Saint-Germain somehow, unless he had killed
himself in some obscure corner of the wood. Even then the finding of
the body would have been a question of so many days, weeks, or months.
Alive, it would have been impossible for him to remain in hiding in
the forest for a week, as the wood was searched thoroughly during the
three days immediately succeeding the murder. On the third day a hat
was found in a boggy bit of ground, ever so far from the scene of the
crime. The hat was a gentleman's hat, but it had been lying three days
and nights in a bog. It had been rained upon for two days out of the
three--there was no maker's name--no indication by which the owner of
the hat could be traced. That it had been found so far off seemed to
me to prove that the murderer had been roaming the wood in a wild and
disordered frame of mind, and walking at a tremendous pace, or he could
never have got over the distance between the time when he was seen by
the waiter at the Henri Quatre, to turn the corner of the terrace, and
the period of the murder."

"You believe, then, that the man seen by the waiter was actually the
murderer?"

"I have no doubt of it. That spasmodic walk, that hesitancy, the
looking back, and then hurrying on--all these indicated a mind engaged
upon some agitating theme. The man was seen watching the window inside
which Marie Prévol and her admirer were seated. He moved away when he
saw himself observed. He had disguised himself as much as he could by
turning up the collar of his coat; and who can doubt that this was the
same man who had been seen by Léonie in the railway-station, watching
Marie Prévol and her lover from behind the door of the waiting-room?
The dark spectacles were part of a disguise. These are all details
that point to one conclusion. The finding of the hat induced me to
visit every shop in Saint-Germain where a hat could be bought. It
was clear that the murderer could not have gone far from the forest
bare-headed, without attracting attention. He must have procured a hat
somehow; and it was not long before I ascertained that a hat had been
bought late on that very evening. At a shop in an out-of-the-way corner
of the town I was told that a boy, a _gamin_, had come in on the night
of the murder, and had asked for a cloth travelling-cap. He had chosen
one with flaps to protect the ears, a form of cap intended to give the
utmost protection from cold. He paid for his purchase with a napoleon,
and seemed in a great hurry to be gone, not even stopping to count his
change. The shopkeeper had wondered at such a little ragamuffin being
intrusted with a purchase of the kind. The man had been on the point
of closing his shop, and therefore was quite positive as to the hour.
It was his invariable habit to put up his shutters at nine o'clock,
and the clock was striking as the boy came to the door of the shop,
breathless and heated, as if he had been running for some distance."

"And you conclude that this travelling-cap was bought for the murderer?"

"Hear the sequel, and judge for yourself. I went from the hatter's
to the railway-station, and there, after having been bandied about
from pillar to post, I succeeded in finding a tolerably intelligent
official who remembered the night of the murder--now ten days past--and
who could recall most of the passengers who had left for Paris by the
half-past nine o'clock train upon that particular night. The news of
the murder had not been brought to the station before the starting of
the train: a most criminal neglect on the part of the local police. No
suspicious-looking person had been observed to enter the train; but
upon my questioning him closely, the man remembered having noticed a
traveller who wore a cloth cap with flaps over the ears--a seemingly
needless protection upon a mild September evening. 'There is one who
takes care of himself,' the railway official had thought. For the rest,
this passenger had looked like a gentleman, tall, erect, well-built,
a bigger man than the majority of Frenchmen--what the railway
official permitted himself to call _un bel homme_. Had he appeared
agitated, breathless, in a hurry? No, the official had noticed nothing
extraordinary in his manner. He wore smoke-coloured spectacles, which
concealed the expression of his eyes. He had a return-ticket for Paris.
The train was scarcely out of the station when the police came to make
inquiries. The murder had been known of at the police-station at a
quarter past eight, and it was not until after half-past nine that the
police thought of setting a watch upon the railway-station. That is how
your rustic police favour the escape of a criminal."

"Did you trace your gentleman in the cloth cap any further?"

"Not an inch. No one had observed him at Saint-Lazare, nor at any
intermediate station where the train stopped. I wearied myself during
the next six weeks in the endeavour to trace the man called Georges,
who must have had some local habitation in Paris besides Marie Prévol's
apartment. In vain. In no quarter of Paris could I hear of any
apartment occupied by a man answering to the description of this man
who called himself Georges--rich, independent, handsome, in the prime
of life. I could trace no such man among the prosperous classes of
Paris, and my machinery for tracking any individual in the wilderness
of this great city had hitherto proved almost infallible. This man
baffled me. I 'touched on him' now and again, as you English say of
your hunted fox, but I could never get upon a scent strong enough to
follow; and in the end I gave up all hope of finding him. He must have
sneaked out of France under the very noses of the police; for I had set
a watch upon every probable exit from this country."

"No doubt he was clever enough to choose the most improbable point of
departure. Did you see much of Madame Lemarque after the murder?"

"No. My interest in her ceased when I gave up the case as hopeless. I
had fresh cases--new interests; and the murder of Marie Prévol remained
in my mind only as a tradition, until you recalled the story of the
crime."

"I telegraphed yesterday to the principal of the Ursuline convent at
Dinan," said Mr. Heathcote, "and I have obtained from her the address
at which Madame Lemarque was living two years ago, when her niece was
sent back to Paris in company with other pupils. After leaving you I
shall go to that address, and try to find Madame Lemarque. I may have
the painful duty of informing her of her granddaughter's death; and yet
I can but think that were the grandmother still living she must have
heard of the girl's death, and would have communicated with the Cornish
police."

"That is to suppose her more intelligent than the average Frenchwoman,"
said Drubarde, as if he belonged to another nation. "Suppose I
accompany you in your search for Madame Lemarque? That ought to be
interesting."

"I shall be delighted to secure your aid."

Monsieur Drubarde and his guest descended the ladder. The detective put
on a gray overcoat, which concealed and subjugated the airiness of his
summer attire. He put on the hat of sober commonplace existence, and
contrived to give himself an almost patriarchal aspect before he left
his lodging.

The street in which Madame Lemarque had been living when the nuns of
Dinan last heard of her was a narrow and shabby little street between
Saint-Sulpice and the Luxembourg. The house was decently kept, and had
a respectable air, and was evidently not one of those caravanserais
where lodgers come and go with every term. It had a settled sober
appearance, and the brass plates upon the door told of permanent
residents with reputable avocations. One of these plates informed
society that Mesdames Lemarque and Beauville, _Robes et Modes_,
occupied the third floor. The staircase was clean and quiet, and the
first sound that saluted Mr. Heathcote's ears as he went up-stairs
was the screech of a parrot, which became momentarily louder as the
visitors approached the third floor.

On the door on the left of the landing appeared another brass
plate--Mesdames Lemarque et Beauville, Robes, Modes, Chapeaux.

Heathcote rang the bell. He felt curiously agitated at the thought
that in the next minute he might be face to face with the dead girl's
grandmother.

The door was opened by an elderly woman in black, very sallow, very
thin, with prominent cheekbones and hungry black eyes. She was neatly
clad, her rusty silk gown fitting her fleshless form to perfection, her
linen collar and cuffs spotlessly clean, her iron-gray hair carefully
arranged; but poverty was stamped upon every fold of her gown, and
written in every line upon her forehead.

"Madame Lemarque?" inquired Heathcote, while the _ci-devant_
police-officer looked over his shoulder.

"No, I am not Madame Lemarque, but I am her business representative.
Any orders intended for Madame Lemarque can be executed by me. I am
Mademoiselle Beauville."

"Alas, Mademoiselle, it is not a question of orders," replied
Heathcote, in his most courteous tones. "I have come on a painful
errand. I have to impart very sad news to Madame Lemarque."

Madame Beauville sighed and shrugged her thin shoulders.

"Madame Lemarque is taking her rest in a place where all the events
of this earth are alike indifferent," she said. "Take the trouble to
enter my humble apartment, gentlemen. Madame Lemarque was my partner
and my friend."

Heathcote and his companion followed the dressmaker into her little
_salon_, where a dilapidated old gray cockatoo was clambering upon a
perch, seemingly in danger of doing himself to death head downwards at
every other minute. The _salon_ was like the appearance of Mademoiselle
Beauville, scrupulously neat, painfully pinched and spare. A poor
little old-fashioned walnut table, polished to desperation, a cheap
little china vase of common flowers, a carpet which covered only a
small island in an ocean of red tiles, an old mahogany secrétaire with
materials for writing, and by way of decoration the fashion-plates of
_Le Follet_ neatly pinned against the dingy wall-paper. There was a
work-basket on the table, and Mademoiselle Beauville had apparently
been busily remaking a very old gown of her own, in order to keep her
hand in during the dead season.

Heathcote discovered later that Mademoiselle Beauville cherished one
bitter and unappeasable hatred, and that was against Messrs. Spricht,
Van Klopen, and the whole confraternity of men-milliners.

"Then Madame Lemarque is dead, I apprehend, Mademoiselle?"

"Madame Lemarque died last June."

"Suddenly?"

"No, she had been ailing for some time. But the end came more quickly
than she expected. My poor friend had but a short time in which to
arrange her affairs."

"Was her granddaughter Léonie living with her at the time of her death?"

"She was. But what do you know about Léonie?"

The ex-detective laid his hand hastily upon Heathcote's wrist before he
could answer.

"Answer nothing until we have heard what she can tell us," he whispered.

"I know very little about her, but I am anxious to know more; and
if you should be a loser by the waste of your time in answering my
inquiries, I shall be most happy to recompense you for that loss," said
Heathcote.

The spinster's hungry eyes sparkled. Decent poverty has depths unknown
to the professed pauper. Mademoiselle's larder would have exhibited
a touching spectacle to the eye of the philosopher or physiologist.
The philosopher would have wondered that woman can endure privation
with such patience: the physiologist would have been surprised that
humanity can sustain life upon so little. For weeks past Mademoiselle
Beauville's most luxurious idea of dinner had been an egg. For the last
week her daily ration had been two halfpenny rolls.

"Tell me all you can about your friend and her grandchild," asked
Heathcote eagerly. "I am particularly interested in knowing everything;
but as it is dry work talking, and as neither my friend nor I have
lunched, it might be a good idea to get a bottle of Bordeaux and a few
biscuits, if Mademoiselle will permit us to refresh ourselves in her
apartment."

His keen glance had noted the hollow cheeks and glittering eyes of
the dressmaker, and he wanted an excuse for giving life and warmth to
that impoverished form. Drubarde caught at the idea, thinking that
his client's design was to loosen the lady's tongue by the agency of
Bacchus. It was altogether an amateur's notion, crude, wanting in
subtlety; but the genial Drubarde was willing to indulge a beginner who
was feeling his way in the elements of a great art.

"I'll fetch a bottle of wine myself," he said cheerily; "I know where I
can get one close by, and of the best."

"Bring two," said Heathcote. "Mademoiselle will accept the second
bottle by way of souvenir."

"Monsieur, do you wish to make me a drunkard? I have not tasted wine
since my poor friend's death," protested Mademoiselle Beauville, but
there was a look in her face which told Heathcote that his gift would
not be unwelcome.

Drubarde ran down-stairs like a boy, and was back in five minutes,
carrying a couple of sealed bottles, labelled St. Estèphe, and a large
bag of biscuits.

Mademoiselle had set out a tray in the mean time, with her poor little
stock of glasses, three in all, and one of those cracked, and an old
china plate for the biscuits. Again her eyes glistened when she saw the
ample biscuit-bag.

"Let me look at the name on the bag," said Heathcote.

Strange, it was the very name upon that biscuit-bag which he carried at
this moment, neatly folded in his pocket-book, the bag which had been
found in the second-class compartment from which the girl fell!

"And now, Mademoiselle, tell me all you can about your deceased friend
and her granddaughter. You had known Madame Lemarque for some time, I
conclude?"

"I had lived with her for nearly ten years."

"For nearly ten years? Then you must have joined your fortunes with
hers very soon after the murder of her daughter, Marie Prévol?"

"You have heard of that terrible event, then, Monsieur?" asked the
dressmaker. "It is so long since it happened that I thought it had been
forgotten by all the world except me."

"No, Mademoiselle; a tragedy so terrible as that can never be forgotten
by those who study the physiology of crime. I am keenly interested in
tracing the murderer of Marie Prévol."

"After ten years!" exclaimed Mademoiselle Beauville, with an
incredulous smile. "Only a dreamer could think of such a thing,
Monsieur."

"Then I am such a dreamer, Mademoiselle, and I hope you will help me to
realise my dream."

"Does Monsieur know that Monsieur Mardoche, one of the most
distinguished of our _Juges d'Instruction_, took up this case with
enthusiasm; that the police were never more earnest than in their
endeavour to find poor Marie Prévol's murderer? Does Monsieur know that
it was a double murder, and that the Baron de Maucroix, a young man of
high family and large fortune, was also a victim? Does Monsieur suppose
that the Baron's friends were idle--that no inducement was offered to
the police?"

"I am aware of all this, Mademoiselle, and I know that the cleverest
police in the world----"

"Except Russia. We must always bow to the superior genius of the
north," interjected Drubarde.

"I am aware that the police failed. But you must consider,
Mademoiselle, that when the police of Paris were keenest in their
pursuit of the assassin, the assassin was most upon his guard. The
consciousness of his crime, the horror of his position, intensified
his intelligence. He had but one thought--to escape detection. Every
act, every movement, every word was planned with that purpose. But now
ten years have gone by--ten years of security. The murderer may be less
guarded, more open to detection. He will have grown careless--foolhardy
even--believing that after such an interval detection must be
impossible. If Mademoiselle will do me the honour to touch glasses, we
will discuss this question at our leisure."

He had filled the three glasses, but he had perceived that the
dressmaker had a delicacy in drinking the wine he had provided, so he
took up his glass and offered the edge of it to hers; and, emboldened
by this friendly movement, the spinster clinked her glass against the
rim of his, then against that of the patriarchal Drubarde, while the
cockatoo, wondering at this unwonted revelry, screeched his loudest.

"To your good health, gentlemen," faltered the dressmaker, before she
sipped her wine.

"To the speedy discovery of Marie Prévol's murderer," said Heathcote.

"Did you know our poor Marie, Monsieur, that you are thus interested in
her dark fate?"

"No, Mademoiselle."

"O, if you had but known her, I should understand your desire to avenge
her death. She was so lovely. To know her was to adore her. Even a
soured old maid such as I could but yield to her charm. She was as
loving as she was lovable; a clinging disposition, a poetical nature.
Her life was not blameless, perhaps--who knows? We will not scrutinise
too closely. She was as different from those harpies whom one hears of
in Paris as a wild rose in the hedge is different from a jewel that
has gone the round of every Mont-de-Piété in the city. Her heart was
pure as the heart of a child. She had no ambition but to love and to
be loved. The man who absorbed her life for a long time, whose hand
perhaps slew her, was rich, lavish. He would have loaded her with gifts
if she had let him, he would have taken her off the stage and allowed
her to play the fine lady; but to the last she preserved the same
modest ideas--generous to others, careless of herself."

"Did you ever see the man who called himself Georges?"

"Never. He was a man of curious habits. He loved the night better than
the day. Nothing delighted him more than a moonlight drive in the Bois
after midnight, a supper at the Cascade. He patronised the restaurants
that keep open half the night. Marie and he used to sup together at
the Café de Paris, sometimes with one or two chosen friends, but much
more often alone. I was not Madame Lemarque's partner at that time;
but I occupied a room in the roof of this house, and I used to work by
the day for Madame and for Marie. I have spent many days working for
her in the Rue de Lafitte. I made all her gowns, and I was proud that
she should challenge comparison with actresses who squandered their
thousands upon such impostors as Spricht and Van Klopen. Imagine,
Monsieur, a man--a stern rugged nature which can have no true feeling
for the beauty of woman's dress--a being of angles and hard lines--a
creature without grace or _flou_. No wonder that square shoulders and
pointed elbows have come into fashion since men have dictated the dress
of women!"

Mademoiselle had mounted her hobby, and was riding furiously.

"Doubtless it is a mistake in art, and one that must be discovered
before long," said Heathcote soothingly. "But tell me, Mademoiselle, in
all your visits to the Rue de Lafitte, did you never encounter Georges?"

"Never."

"Strange! And did your friend Mademoiselle Prévol talk much of this
Monsieur Georges?"

"Yes, she used to talk to me a great deal about him at one time,
poor child: I think she talked even more freely to me than to her
mother. Madame Lemarque was just a little too fond of money, too
eager for gifts from her child, and that wounded Marie's generous
nature. 'You value people only for what they can give you,' she said
once to her mother. 'If Georges were Satan, you would like him just
as well--provided you got enough of his money.' And then there was
a quarrel, as you may suppose, Monsieur. There were excuses to be
made for Madame Lemarque, poor soul. She had been rich once--an
atelier in the Rue de la Paix--a country house at Asnières--but these
man-milliners had spoiled her trade, and at this time she was very
poor, living in these rooms which you see, and working for half a dozen
shabby customers who ground her to the dust by their meanness. And then
when Marie gave her money she spent it recklessly--she ate and drank
like a princess--she took a _voiture de place_, whenever she went out:
she thought that Marie could never do too much for her or her son's
orphan child Léonie."

"Léonie lived with her grandmother, did she not?"

"Yes, Madame Lemarque had kept her since she was three years old. It
was a dull life for a child. She used to sit on a little stool in that
corner, and thread needles for her grandmother. When she was eight
years old she could work very neatly; she ran errands too. She earned
her daily bread, poor child. But her happiest days were those she spent
with her aunt in the Rue Lafitte."

"Mademoiselle Prévol was good to her?"

"Good to her? Yes, and to every one who came in her way. I tell you she
was a creature made up of sweetness and love."

"And was she devoted to this Monsieur Georges?"

"At one time, yes. It was an adoration on both sides. Marie used to
tell me of their journeys in foreign countries, under a southern sky.
Of their happy life, far away from the crowd; of his boundless love for
her, his generosity, his devotion. She had a fever in Venice, and he
nursed her, and watched beside her bed day and night--thirteen days and
thirteen nights--till she was out of danger. It was a love such as one
reads of in poetry."

"Have you any reason to think that she was his lawful wife?"

"I cannot tell. His constancy and devotion were those of the best of
husbands. She wore a wedding-ring, and she was always called by his
name when they travelled, as well as in her lodgings. It was almost at
the beginning of their attachment that he took her to England. I have
sometimes thought that they were married in England."

"Did he introduce her to his friends in Paris?"

"Only a few artists and writers whom she used to meet at supper. They
were some of the wildest young men in Paris."

"But he introduced her to no ladies--to no families of good standing?"

"I doubt if he could have had any such friends. He lived too eccentric
a life to cultivate what you call respectable acquaintance."

"Was he himself an artist?"

"I think not. He was too rich for a painter or an author."

"And you have never heard of him since Marie Prévol's death?"

"Never."

"What became of the jewels and other property which had belonged to
Mademoiselle Prévol?"

"They were sold by her mother, who lived upon the proceeds of the
sale for some years. She paid for Léonie's schooling out of the same
fund. It was only in the last years of her life that she again became
poor. But to the very last she had means of her own--a small income,
the source of which was unknown to me. She might have lived very
comfortably if she had not been extravagant; but she had no prudence,
and there were times when she was almost penniless. She took me into
partnership very soon after her daughter's death. She had sent the
little girl to a convent, and she felt lonely and nervous in these
rooms. Her spirits never recovered from the shock of that terrible
murder--the horror of the night in which Léonie was brought home to
her by the police from Saint-Germain, who told her the history of
the murder. She invited me to share her apartment, and to work for
her, taking half the profits of the business. The profits were of the
smallest, but she gave me my board and lodging, and I was too fond of
Madame Lemarque, and of Jacko," added the spinster, looking fondly at
the cockatoo.

"That is Madame Lemarque's parrot, I conclude?"

"Yes. He belonged to poor Marie. Ah, he could tell us a great deal, if
he would but talk sense instead of repeating foolish songs. She bought
him from a sailor at Marseilles, and brought him home with her after
one of her autumn holidays. She used to teach him lines from the songs
she sang at the theatre."

_"Moi, je suis le radis noir!_" shrieked the parrot.

"You were living with Madame Lemarque when her granddaughter returned
from Dinan, I suppose?" said Heathcote.

"Ah, you seem to know all about it. Yes, I was with Madame when she
went to Saint-Lazare to meet the child. Such a bright, pretty girl she
had grown--so amiable, and clever, and industrious. I never thought she
would act towards me as she has done."

"In what way has she acted badly?"

"She went to England directly after her grandmother's death--that is
more than two months ago--and she has not written to me once since
then. No doubt she has found powerful friends--rich friends--and has no
need of a poor old woman like me."

"There may be some other reason for her silence," said Heathcote
gravely.

"What other reason?"

"Some misfortune; an accident, perhaps. She had to travel by steamer
and by railway. Might not something have happened?"

"I have thought of that sometimes," said the dressmaker, with a
distressed look, "and if I had had a friend in England--one single
friend--I should have written to ask that friend to make inquiries. But
I have so few friends--hardly any one in Paris, no one outside Paris,"
she concluded dejectedly.

"But surely you knew Léonie's errand? You knew to whom she was going?
You might have written to that person."

"I know nothing. The girl's errand was a secret from me. On her
death-bed Madame Lemarque gave her granddaughter some commission. There
were letters or papers of some kind, I think, which she was to take to
somebody in England, and that person was expected to befriend her. The
grandmother was very secret about it. She would not speak to Léonie on
the subject while I was in the room, but on reëntering rather suddenly
I saw some papers on the bed. I overheard a few words---something
about a friend of Monsieur Georges, rich, powerful."

"And it was to this friend of Georges, the murderer, that Léonie was to
appeal for protection and help?"

"Remember we are not certain that Georges was the murderer. It is only
a supposition."

"But a supposition so well grounded as to be almost certainty. An
adoring lover, who disappears immediately after the murder of his
mistress--a lover who had good ground for jealousy, and is known to
have been madly jealous, mark you; a murder that could only have been
inspired by madness or by jealousy. If these facts are not strong
enough to condemn Monsieur Georges, what does circumstantial evidence
mean?"

"Don't talk to me about it," muttered Drubarde impatiently. "Georges
was the murderer. The police were at fault in their search for him, but
they were never in doubt as to his guilt."

"And it was to a friend of her daughter's murderer that Madame Lemarque
sent her granddaughter?"

"What other resources had she, do you think?" exclaimed the dressmaker.
"She was dying, penniless, friendless, leaving her grandchild to the
mercy of strangers. She knew that Monsieur Georges was a rich man,
and that any friend of Monsieur Georges was likely to be well off. I
daresay she knew no more than the name of this friend."

"Did you hear the name?"

"Never. I heard her tell Léonie that the gentleman was in London. He
was living at some hotel, the name of which I forget."

"Would you recognise it if you heard it?" asked Heathcote.

"Perhaps. I am not sure."

He went over the names of the principal hotels, without success.
Mademoiselle Beauville could not remember to have heard any one of them.

"You are sure that Mademoiselle Lemarque was to go to London," inquired
Heathcote, "and no further than London? You heard no mention of
Cornwall or Plymouth?"

He repeated the names of county and town--giving each the true Gallic
intonation--but they suggested nothing to Mademoiselle Beauville.

"She was to go to London--nowhere else. But why do you ask?"

"I will tell you that presently. Did Léonie Lemarque leave Paris
immediately after her grandmother's death?"

"She left the evening after the funeral. She did not even wait to get
a mourning-gown made. She had worn a black gown belonging to me at the
funeral, and she changed it for her gray alpaca gown before she left."

"Did she take no luggage?"

"Only a change of linen in a handbag."

"How did she travel?"

"She went from the Station du Nord at eight o'clock. I walked to the
station with her, poor child. We were both very sad, and very tired.
She was to cross from Calais to Dover in the night, and she would
arrive in London early next morning. She promised me to write on the
day of her arrival. I told her that I thought it was a dangerous thing
for a young girl to go alone to meet a stranger, a man whose face she
had never seen. She said her grandmother had told her that he was a
good and honourable man, who had befriended her in her poverty, and she
(Léonie) was to trust him. She begged me not to ask her any questions.
Her grandmother had warned her to say nothing until after she had
arrived in England, when she was to write to me and tell me of her new
home. When I pressed her to give me her confidence, she began to cry;
but I managed to find out that she was going to London with the idea of
being placed in some rich and aristocratic family, where she would be a
companion to the children and teach them her own language. She was not
accomplished enough to be a governess of a superior kind."

"How did she get the money for her journey?"

"Her grandmother gave it her on her death-bed; but as there had been
hardly any money in the house for the last week of Madame Lemarque's
illness, I concluded that this money had been sent from the person in
England in reply to an application from Madame Lemarque."

"Did you post any letter addressed to England during your friend's
illness?"

"I did not; but Léonie may have done so. She went out every day upon
some errand or other. And now, Monsieur, pray tell me how you came to
know all about Léonie, and if you have any bad news for me."

"Alas, Mademoiselle, I have the worst possible news. Your young friend
is dead."

"Dead! And there was no one to tell me. The gentleman who was to
befriend her, to whom she went as to a protector and benefactor, he did
not even take the trouble to tell me her fate."

"She may never have found him, poor child. She may have been lured
away from her destination and from London by a villain. She met
her death more than two hundred miles from London. She fell from a
railway-bridge, and was killed instantly; but whether that death was an
accident or a murder, no one yet knows, except the Great Judge of all
human actions."

"You believe it was----"

"Murder. I am here to discover the motive of that crime."



CHAPTER II.


A STUDENT OF MEN AND WOMEN.


There was a silence of some minutes, during which Mademoiselle
Beauville wept quietly. And then Heathcote and the ex-police-officer
rose to take leave.

"I thank you sincerely, Mademoiselle, for having given me all the
information in your power to give, and I must beg you to accept some
small compensation for the time I have wasted," said Mr. Heathcote,
slipping a couple of twenty-franc pieces into the dressmaker's hand.

The lonely spinster's eyes shone with a feverish light as her skinny
fingers closed upon the gold. It was like manna dropped from heaven.
Long and weary weeks had passed since her _robes et modes_ had brought
her so much money. Her chief customers of late had been the grisettes
of the quarter, who had dribbled out their payments by two or three
francs at a time, and who had exacted the maximum of labour for the
minimum of pay. Mademoiselle's hollow cheeks were flushed with the
warm red wine, her heart glowed with the thought that she could now pay
her last term to the Harpagon landlord--not much worse, perhaps, than
the rest of his species, but all landlords seem Harpagons when they
claim their due from the needy.

"Monsieur is too good, too generous," murmured the seamstress; "I
should refuse all remuneration, only work has been so slack of late----"

"Not one word, Mademoiselle. Stay, I have one more question, and that
an important one, to ask before I take my leave. Can you give me the
exact date upon which Léonie Lemarque left Paris for Dover?"

"Assuredly, Monsieur. It was on the 4th of July."

"The 4th! And it was on the evening of the 5th she met with her death.
You say she carried a small handbag containing linen."

"Yes. Her clothes were of the fewest, dear child; but everything she
had was neat and nice of its kind. She had a change of linen with her."

"Had she nothing else in the bag?"

"Nothing. I went into the room while she was packing, and I saw her
take a small sealed packet from under her pillow, and put it in her
bosom. I had seen the same packet under her grandmother's pillow before
she died. It looked like a parcel of letters or papers of some kind."

"Do you know what station Léonie was to arrive at?"

"Yes. It was the terminus of Charing."

"Charing Cross?"

"Precisely. It was a double name like that."

"Good. Adieu, Mademoiselle. My friend and I may come to you again
perhaps to make further inquiries."

"You shall be very welcome, Monsieur. And if you discover the secret of
my poor young friend's fate, you will tell me----"

"Assuredly."

"One word, Monsieur. Where is our little Léonie buried? Has she a
decent grave in your English land?"

"She lies in a rustic churchyard under a great yew-tree. There is a
stone upon her grave, with a brief record of when and how she met her
death. Her name and age shall now be added to the inscription."

"Indeed, Monsieur! But what kind friend was it who placed a stone over
the grave of a nameless stranger?"

"That was my care. It was a very small thing to do."

"Ah, Monsieur, it is in doing these small things that a great heart
shows itself."

Mr. Heathcote and his companion made their adieux, accompanied to the
landing by the spinster, who felt as if she had entertained angels
unawares; but when the sound of their footsteps had died away upon the
stairs she went back to her room, and wept over the fate of her young
friend.

"I have nothing left in this world to love but you," she said,
piteously addressing the cockatoo.

"J'ai bien des chos's au Mont-d'-Piété," replied the bird.

It was one o'clock by the time Mr. Heathcote and Monsieur Drubarde
left the dressmaker's apartment, so the Englishman suggested a light
luncheon at the Restaurant Lapérouse, within a stone's throw of
Drubarde's apartment; and the suggestion being received favourably by
the ex-policeman, they were soon afterwards seated at a little table,
in a private room with a window overlooking the river, ready to do
justice to the _plat du jour_, a _fricandeau aux épinards_, and to a
bottle of _Mouton-Rothschild_. The wine-bibbing at the dressmaker's
apartment had been merely a benevolent excuse for providing the
spinster with a little good Bordeaux.

"Now, Monsieur Drubarde, we are alone and at our ease. You have now all
the facts of Léonie Lemarque's death well within your knowledge; and it
is for you to give me your opinion."

"A very difficult case in which to come to a decided opinion," answered
Drubarde. "At present my conclusions and yours are antagonistic. My
niece wrote out a careful translation of your newspaper report. I have
her translation in my pocket-book. You can look it over if you like,
to see that it is faithfully done. I have read it three or four times,
with keenest attention, and I can so far see nothing out of the common
in Léonie Lemarque's fate. A pretty girl travelling alone, a common
ruffian, a common murder."

"And you see no link between this crime and that former murder?"

"Not a thread--not a hair. A deed done ten years ago--unpunished, the
murderer undiscovered."

"Do you forget that Léonie went to London with credentials to a friend
of this very murderer? Perhaps a friend so devoted, so bound to the
guilty man, that he might not stop at murder to get rid of the one
witness of his friend's crime."

"To imagine that is to imagine an impossible friendship. Men do not
risk their necks nowadays, whatever they may have done in the time of
Damon and Pythias."

"Then you see nothing extraordinary or mysterious in the violent death
of this girl, within twenty-four hours of her leaving Paris, carrying
with her documents which may, in some manner, have betrayed the secret
of the double murder. Perhaps a letter from the lover to his mistress,
a letter written by a man maddened by jealousy, threatening to do
the deed which was afterwards done. You see no sufficient ground for
connecting one crime with the other, for seeking the secret of the
second crime in the history of the first."

"Honestly, I do not," replied Drubarde, who had fastened his napkin
under his chin, had nibbled a radish or two, and destroyed the symmetry
of a dish of prawns, by way of preparation for the _fricandeau_. "I
only wish I could see my way to such an opinion. It would make as
pretty a complication as ever I was concerned in. However, there is
no knowing what new discoveries we may hit upon, if we go to work
patiently. My present view of the case is that Léonie Lemarque, being
young, silly, and inexperienced, and not knowing a word of English,
altogether a wrong person to attempt such a journey alone, got into bad
hands at the very beginning. I believe that, instead of meeting this
person who was to have befriended her, and who must have been a man of
standing and respectability, or the old grandmother would not have sent
her to him, she fell into the hands of a scoundrel, and was lured into
your train for Cornwall."

"You must remember that Paddington Station is some miles from Charing
Cross," said Heathcote. "The girl could not be smuggled from one train
to the other unawares. She must have traversed half London on foot, or
in a conveyance of some kind."

"Possibly. But, as likely as not, she was in the companionship of the
wrong man. Consider her ignorance, her helplessness. What an easy prey
for a villain!"

Heathcote was unconvinced.

"I cannot imagine a crime so motiveless as that which you suggest," he
said thoughtfully.

He began to lose faith in the old sleuthhound. He began to think that
Félix Drubarde was worn-out; that scent, and pace, and tongue were
things of the past. He began to think that the work of finding the link
between the two crimes must be done by himself rather than by Drubarde.

"What became of the girl's bag?" asked Drubarde, after he had eaten a
liberal portion of veal and spinach. "There is no mention of a bag in
your newspaper."

"There was no bag found. If there had been, the victim might have been
identified earlier."

"And the sealed packet?"

"There was no packet. There was nothing but a little basket containing
a few cherries and a biscuit-bag. There was no clue to identity. The
murderer had done his work well."

"The best thing you can do is to put Mr. Distin in possession of the
details you heard from Mademoiselle Beauville. He can make inquiries at
the Charing Cross Station, where it is just possible the girl may be
remembered by some of the porters. A girl travelling alone, and meeting
a gentleman on the platform. The meeting may have been observed even
there, where hundreds meet and part every hour. Railway officials are
observant and keen-witted. It is within the limits of the possible that
this poor girl may not have passed altogether unremarked."

"I will write to Distin this afternoon," said Heathcote. "And there
is another thing I can do. If your theory is correct, Léonie Lemarque
missed the person who was to have met her at the station, and fell
into bad hands. If that is so, the fact ought to be arrived at easily
by an appeal to the person whom she should have met."

He took out his pencil and pocket-book, and wrote the rough draft of an
advertisement:

"The person who was to have met Léonie Lemarque at Charing Cross
Station on the morning of July 5th last is earnestly requested to
communicate immediately with Messrs. Distin & Son, Solicitors,
Furnival's Inn."

He translated this advertisement to Monsieur Drubarde.

"Yes, that is a wise test," said the police-officer. "I see you
have the true _flair_. If the man is innocent, he will answer that
advertisement--always supposing that it come to his knowledge."

"I will repeat it so often in the _Times_ that it will not be easy for
the appeal to escape him," answered Heathcote.

"Then if there is no sign, we shall say guilty," said Drubarde.

"And in that case we have to find the villain."

"You may add a postscript to your letter to Monsieur Distin, advising
him to inquire at the cloak-room of Charing Cross Station for an
unclaimed handbag left there on July 5th. Something must have been done
with that handbag, and, in our civilised condition, it is not easy to
get rid of even a handbag."

After having made this suggestion, Monsieur Drubarde devoted himself
entirely to the pleasures of the table. Heathcote ate very little, and
was too troubled in mind to know what he ate. He saw himself no nearer
a solution of the problem which he had pledged himself to solve. Yet
this he felt, that the sky was growing clearer round Bothwell Grahame.
The secret of the girl's death seemed to lie between the man whom
she was to have met at Charing Cross and the phenomenal villain of
Drubarde's imagination, who had lured her into the Cornish train with
darkest intent.

He left Félix Drubarde directly after luncheon, and walked back to the
Hôtel de Bade, where he devoted the afternoon to his correspondence. He
wrote at fullest length to Joseph Distin, enclosing the advertisement
for the _Times_, with a cheque, and an order for its daily appearance
until further notice. He wrote a cheery letter to Hilda, telling her to
be hopeful; and he wrote to Mrs. Wyllard, telling her that the result
of his investigations up to the present hour had gone far to dispel his
suspicion of her cousin's guilt.

"I am still groping in the dark," he concluded, "and am very far from
having achieved any tangible result; but I am working with all my mind
and all my strength, and I hope that Providence will not compel me to
abandon my task until I have fathomed the mystery of Léonie Lemarque's
death."

He wrote thus, unconsciously forgetting that Dora Wyllard did not know
even the name of the victim. The discovery of the girl's identity, made
three days ago, at Dinan, seemed, to him an old history, so exclusively
had his mind dwelt upon this one subject since his interview with the
nuns. The fact that the name must be a new thing to Dora never struck
him.

He dined alone in his private sitting-room, he who at any other time
would have enjoyed the glitter and life of the Boulevard in all
its evening brilliancy. He wanted to be free from all sound and
movement, from the sight of strange faces, so that his mind should work
undisturbed upon the problem he had set himself to solve.

And now over his solitary cutlet, with his pocket-book open before him,
he marshalled his facts, and reflected upon each detail of the story.

The murderer of Marie Prévol and Maxime de Maucroix had escaped, and
in all probability was still living. He appeared to have been rich,
independent of all ties, a Bohemian in his habits, a man who could live
in any country. Hardly possible that such a man would remain within a
narrow radius of the scene of his crime. He was not to be looked for
assuredly in Paris, or even in France. It was far more likely that he
had crossed the Atlantic, and sunk his identity in that wider, freer
society of the United States, where money and cleverness outweigh a
man's antecedents, where no one asks what a man has been, only what
he is, or is worth in the present. Or it might be that such a man as
this Georges--a night-bird, a man of fervid temperament, a lover of
pleasure rather than work, unambitious, a voluptuary--would turn
his face to Southern America, and dream away the after stages of an
exhausted life in some romantic city upon the Seaboard of the Pacific.
Not in Europe--or not in the accessible quarters of Europe--should he
be sought for.

But in the mean time, here in this city of Paris, there was something
to be done. Vain to look for the man himself, perhaps; but those who
had known the man--his chosen friends, the companions of his midnight
orgies--might still be found. From them the man's antecedents might be
learned; and possibly some glimmer of light could be obtained as to his
adventures and whereabouts after the murder.

Edward Heathcote reviewed his Parisian acquaintance in search of such
men as might be likely to have known this Monsieur Georges. It was
almost impossible for a man, spending his money lavishly, the favoured
admirer of a beautiful actress, not to be in some measure a man of
mark, and widely known in the faster section of Parisian society.

Mr. Heathcote knew his Paris well, and loved it well. After that
bitter loss which had changed the current of his life, he had found
hard work in his office his best cure, and next best to hard mental
labour he had found relief of mind in the society of the artistic and
keen-witted idlers of the Boulevard and the Bohemian clubs. He had
found a week in Paris--a week of Boulevard idleness and Boulevard
society--the best remedy for the dulness and the depression that
come from an unsatisfied heart and an overworked brain: and in
these occasional plunges into Parisian society he had made a wider
acquaintance with the artistic classes than it is often granted to a
provincial Englishman to make.

He ran over the names of the men he knew best in Paris, trying to hit
upon the likeliest person to suit his purpose. It must be a man who had
been well to the fore ten years ago, when Marie Prévol was a famous
beauty, and her lover was spending his nights and his fortune on the
Boulevard. It should not be difficult, he thought, to hit upon such a
man.

"Volney Dugarge, Bize, Pontruche, Trottier. Yes, Trottier. That is
the man; a thorough-going Bohemian, a haunter of supper-tables and
gambling-dens, a hanger-on of lorettes, steeped to the tips of his
nails in the atmosphere of the _demi-monde_, a man who had known
Gautier and Nerval and Gustave Planche, an _habitué_ of the Boulevard
theatres; poor, keen-witted, a member of the band of paragraphists,
the men who invent scandals, political, social, literary, theatrical,
according to the prevailing demand, who write smart paragraphs for the
most audacious of the newspapers, and puffs for enterprising tradesmen."

Trottier, thus humble in his pursuits, a man utterly without pride,
or, as his enemies said, without self-respect, was one of the most
agreeable men in Paris. He had been a Boulevardier for the last thirty
years, had seen the Boulevard extend its glittering length into regions
which he had known as a wilderness of gloom and poverty. He remembered
the time when the Palais Royal was the focus of Parisian gaiety, the
temple of fashion and taste.

"If this man Georges had any status in Bohemian society, Sigismond
Trottier must have known him," thought Heathcote.

The next thing was to find Trottier. He was a man who only began to
live after dinner. He might be looked for on the Boulevard between
nine o'clock and midnight. He might be found at a club much favoured
by actors and journalists, a club which had taken for itself a name
from the history of the mediæval drama, and rejoiced in the title of
_Les Enfants Sans Souci_, more briefly known as the _Sans Souci_. The
_Sans Souci_ had its nest on an _entresol_ in the Rue Vivienne, six
low-ceiled rooms opening one out of another, three of them furnished
with divans in true Oriental style. These were the smoking-rooms. Then
came a fourth and much more spacious apartment, provided with numerous
small tables, writing materials, and the newspapers. Tapestried
_portières_ on the right and left of the fireplace in this reading-room
opened into the sanctuary of the club, two medium-sized rooms,
furnished with green cloth tables for baccarat, thickly curtained,
thickly carpeted, lighted only from the courtyard of the house, which
was like a dry well.

Edward Heathcote strolled along the Boulevard, looking for his friend
as he went. It was nearly ten o'clock, a delicious night, balmy,
starlit, summer-like; a night upon which Sigismond Trottier might
naturally have been found seated amidst the idlers clustered on the
asphalte in front of a popular café. But in the groups which Heathcote
passed between the Hôtel de Bade and the corner of the Place de la
Bourse there was no sign of Trottier's ferret-face and long gray hair.
So the Englishman continued his walk to the Rue Vivienne, and entered
the lamp-lit vestibule which led to the mysteries of the _Sans Souci_.

He had been taken there more than once by Trottier, and had been amused
and interested by the people he met.

"Can you tell me if Monsieur Trottier is here this evening?" he asked
of the porter.

"Yes, Monsieur. He came half an hour ago. Monsieur Trottier generally
comes here at the same hour every evening to write his article for the
_Taon_."

The rooms were almost empty. Neither journalists nor actors mustered
strong before midnight. In a comfortable corner of the writing-room,
at a little table brilliantly lighted by a green-shaded lamp, Edward
Heathcote found the man he came to seek.

Sigismond Trottier was at least sixty years of age, tall, spare to
attenuation, with a long narrow face of almost livid pallor, and long
gray hair, falling over a greasy olive-green velvet collar, choice
ornament of a threadbare and faded olive-green frock-coat. His jaw
was narrow and projecting, his lips were thin and pinched, his nose
was long and sharp, his eyebrows were gray and shaggy. The only
features that gave life or colour to the face were the restless and
brilliant black eyes, small, keen, observant, the eyes of a creature
always on the watch. Ah, how many of the darkest mysteries of Paris
had that keen glance discovered, how many a loathsome depth had that
ruthless gaze explored, how many a social ulcer, how many a domestic
disease, how many a wound of heart and honour, how many an atrophy of
purse and reputation had those eyes pierced and scrutinised, while
all the rest of the world was still blind to the coming ruin, the
inevitable disgrace! Sigismond Trottier was a student of society. It
was his boast that he knew this Paris of the Third Republic as well
as Saint-Simon knew the Paris of the great Louis; knew it in all its
strength; and in all its weakness; knew it to the core of its rotten
heart.

Needless to say that such a man was invaluable as a paragraphist. He
had the same keen scent for a scandal that the well-trained detective
has for a crime. A whisper, a shrug was enough to put him on the right
track. He was a genius at that modern style of hint and innuendo which
just stops short of libel. He had killed more reputations than any
man in Paris: and he had never been to prison. His safety lay in the
keenness of his perception, which never allowed him to fall into such
mistakes as have ruined other society gossips. Whatever Sigismond
Trottier wrote was true. He had an extraordinary power of winnowing
the chaff from the corn in the floating scandals of the Boulevard. He
knew what to accept and what to reject. His judgment was infallible.
When Parisian society saw the hint of an elopement, the suggestion
of a marital wrong signed by Sigismond's hieroglyphic--an Egyptian
beetle--the thing was received as a fact. The pen of the unerring
recorder had proclaimed a truth. Happily he was not a physical coward,
though a professional assailant of man's honour and woman's reputation.
He had given good proof of his courage on several occasions, had
stood up before famous swordsmen, had faced marksmen of repute. That
deep dint in his lean and livid cheek was the mark of a bullet from
the Duke of Midlothian's pistol--that famous _viveur_ who expired
suddenly amidst the fading flowers and flaring tapers of a Boulevard
supper-room--the very spirit of profligate pleasure extinguished in a
breath. That long slanting scar upon the left jaw, a shade more livid
than the normal lividity of the complexion, was the result of five
minutes' sword-play between the Boulevard chronicler and the Marquis du
Bois-Chaufonds, the reminiscence of a duel which set all Paris talking
twenty years ago, when the Walewska was in the zenith of her charms.
From scalp to sole the paragraphist could have shown the scars of past
battles. He had never been known to refuse a challenge.

Trottier was so absorbed in his task when Heathcote approached his
table as to be quite unconscious of any one's presence. Heathcote
seated himself upon the other side of the table, and took up a
newspaper, to wait till the journalist came to the end of a sheet.

He had not long to wait. Before he had read more than half a dozen
paragraphs in the _Taon_, each signed with the familiar beetle,
Sigismond paused to blot a page, looked up, and recognised his English
acquaintance.

"Good-evening," he said. Then, with a mighty effort, he burst into
English, and exclaimed, "'Owderyoudo?" all as one word, having achieved
which feat he laughed long and loud, surprised at his own talent for
foreign tongues. "We begin to talk your language of horses, we others,"
he said triumphantly. "We have taken all your words for the sport, and
now we begin to take your greetings and salutations, your shake-hand,
your 'owderyoudo. And what brings you to Paris, Monsieur Effcott, at
the dead season?"

"I should rather ask what you, chosen chronicler of fashionable
society, can find to record in the dead season?"

"My dear friend, the most stupendous scandals are those that happen
in the dead season, when Paris is a desert, and a man thinks he can
murder his neighbour or run away with his neighbour's wife with equal
impunity. Ah, my friend, for the development of intrigue, for the
ripening of social mysteries, the working out of domestic tragedies,
there can be no better time than this dull blank interval of the year,
when there is no one in Paris. What stolen meetings, what little
suppers in closely-sealed cabinets, when Madame is at the seaside and
Monsieur is shooting wild boar in Auvergne! Heaven only forbid that
Monsieur and Madame should happen to take their supper in adjacent
cabinets, and that Monsieur should recognise the voice of Madame
on the other side of the lath and plaster! Yes, there is no richer
harvest-time for the chronicler than the season when there is not a
mortal in Paris."

"Cynic!" exclaimed Heathcote. "And so you still live by exposing the
faults and follies of your fellow-creatures."

"I try to reform them by proving to them that sooner or later all
social secrets are known. I am about the only preacher whose sermons
scare them nowadays."

"Then you consider your trade a strictly honourable one, no doubt."

"In French no doubt means perhaps," replied Trottier, "_vide_ Michelet.
No, I will say nothing for my calling, except that a man must live. You
may not see the necessity of my living, but the existence of the lowest
of us has its value to the man himself. The world might get on very
well without me, but I can't get on without the world."

"A man of your talent might have done well in any other line--"

"Pardon; mine is not a talent. It is a specialty. I should have
succeeded in no other line. If I had been rich and high-placed, like
Saint-Simon, I should have kept my impressions to myself while I lived,
and should have left a big book behind me when I died. But I am poor
and a nobody, so I have had to live upon my impressions."

"You put the case neatly," said Heathcote, "and you are right. We are
most of us the thing which circumstances make us. The man who will not
allow himself to be moulded by circumstance, who will strike out into
the empyrean of ideal good, is one man in a thousand."

"And the odds are that your one in a thousand, your honest man, is an
eminently disagreeable personage--like Diogenes or Thomas Carlyle,"
said Trottier.

"You have not finished your evening's work, I suppose?"

"No; I am in for another hour."

"Good," said Heathcote; "then at midnight you will be free. Will you
sup with me at the Café de Paris when your work is done? I believe it
is in your power to do me a material service merely by calling upon
your recollection of the past. Will you meet me at the Café de Paris at
twelve?"

"With pleasure; and if my poor memories of men and events can help you,
the record is at your service."

"A thousand thanks. I will go and order supper, and stroll on the
Boulevard till it is ready. _Au revoir!_"

"Until midnight!"

       *       *       *       *       *

Sigismond Trottier was a man who kept his appointments. He was not neat
in his person, or punctual in his payments. He never went to church,
and he did not always wash. But if he promised a page of copy to a
newspaper, the page was delivered in due time. If he offered to frank a
friend to the theatre, in his quality as critic, he was waiting in the
vestibule at the appointed hour, ready to keep his word. If he accepted
an invitation to supper, he never kept his host waiting. Invitations to
dinner he invariably declined.

"A dinner-party is an anti-climax," he protested. "A man gets drunk too
early, and spoils his evening."

At midnight Monsieur Trottier's evening began, and he was ready for the
feast.

Mr. Heathcote received him in one of the cosiest little rooms in the
café. The Englishman's first act on entering had been to light all the
wax candles on the mantelpiece, which the waiters had left unlighted.
This established him at once as a man who knew his Paris, and his
judicious choice of wines having strengthened his position, everything
was ready when Trottier's shabby olive-green coat came meekly into the
radiance of the wax candles. Trottier was known at the Café de Paris,
and his shabby coat commanded the reverence of the waiters. Was he not
a man who, as it were, carried reputations in his pocket, who could
make a head-waiter famous by a stroke of his pen?

The supper was delicate, _recherché_, Parisian; the wine was
Johannisberger of princely quality, and a magnum of Mumms decanted in a
cut-crystal pitcher appeared with the last course. The two men talked
of general topics during supper. It was only when the waiters had
withdrawn, and when Sigismond Trottier had thrown himself back in his
chair and lighted his cigarette, that Heathcote approached the business
of the evening. It was half-past one o'clock, and the roll of wheels
upon the asphalte below the open window had been gradually diminishing.
There was no longer the roar of the Boulevard to disturb the speakers.

"If I can be of the slightest use to you, as an embodied chronicle of
Paris, command me," said Trottier. "Here I am at your service--an open
book. You have only to turn my leaves."

"Do you remember a double murder--the murder of an actress and her
lover--which happened ten years ago, in the forest of Saint-Germain?"

"Do I remember? Yes, as if the thing had happened last week; and for a
good reason. The man who was suspected--the lover, or, as some thought,
the husband, of the actress--was my familiar friend."

"Great Heaven!" exclaimed Heathcote, almost starting from his chair.
"Then my instinct was right. It told me that I should get on the track
of that man--it told me that you must have known him."

"The man was well known to me and to a chosen few, but only a few,"
replied Trottier. "He was a man of eccentric habits--a man of
considerable talent and large intellect, who could afford to live his
own life, and lived it. What he did with himself in the daytime none
of us knew: whether he slept away half his daylight life, or shut
himself in his den and smoked and dreamed and read. The latter idea
seemed likely enough, for he was a man who had read widely. He was
a delightful companion, brilliant, genial, lavish to his friends, a
splendid host. I have supped with him and Marie Prévol many a night in
this house--sometimes making the third in a cosy trio, sometimes one of
that small choice circle with which he occasionally surrounded himself."

"Then I take it that he was known in general society, either the
uppermost or the middle circles."

"Not the least in the world. He was a man who scorned society, hated
ceremonies and conventionalities. I never saw him in a dress-suit. I
doubt if he possessed one. When he went to a theatre, it was to sit
in a dark corner, where he could see without being seen. He detested
crowds. He had nothing to gain from the great world, and could afford
to outrage all its rules and regulations."

"Was he a thoroughbred Parisian?"

"Far from it. He was an American, but he had lived so long in Paris as
to be almost as Parisian as a citizen born and bred."

"Had he made his money, or inherited it?"

"Inherited it, without doubt. His habits were those of the spender,
not the worker. He was one of the lilies of the field, who toil not,
neither do they spin. I take it that his father had been one of those
daring speculators who in America begin with nothing and become
millionaires in a year or two. As for the man himself, he had no more
idea of business or finance than one of those dressed-up dolls of the
Quartier Bréda. He took not the faintest interest in the transactions
of the Bourse, and in that point alone revealed himself as no true
Parisian."

"Do you believe that he committed the murder?" asked Heathcote.

Sigismond Trottier shrugged his shoulders, and shook back his long gray
hair, as he slowly puffed his cigarette.

"Who knows?" he said. "I liked the man so well that I should hesitate
at saying I believe in his guilt. And yet the fact of his disappearance
from the hour of the murder is almost conclusive evidence; and I know
that he was savagely jealous of Maucroix."

"You judged him a man of strong passions, a man capable of a great
crime?"

"Yes, he was a man of intense feeling, strong for good or evil. A
volcano glowed under that calm outward aspect, that easy-going,
devil-may-care manner of his. I was very sorry for him. If Marie had
been but true--"

"You believe that she was his wife?"

"I do. His manner to her was in all respects the manner of one who
esteemed as well as loved her. He introduced her to his friends as his
wife. He loved her too well to have refused her that title."

"But for a man who scorned conventionalities, what reason could there
have been for concealment? Why should he not have introduced his
actress-wife to society? Why should he not have established a home?"

"The first question is easily answered. As he loathed society for
himself, he would hardly court it for his wife. The second can only be
answered by the fact that the man was an eccentric. He preferred the
freedom of an actress's lodging to the restrictions of a rich man's
house. His happiest days were spent wandering southward with the
swallows; yet so strange was the man's temper that he never stayed more
than a fortnight or three weeks away from Paris. The city seemed to
draw him back like a magnet."

"Yet he had no business here?"

"None that I ever discovered. He must have loved the city for its own
sake. He was here all through the siege and the Commune. I have heard
him say that the happiest days of his life were those on which the roar
of the Prussian guns made his only music, and when Marie and he used to
crouch and shiver over a handful of charcoal, and eat a supper of dry
bread and Carlsbad plums."

"He must have had some _pied-à-terre_ of his own, I conclude."

"He must have had his den somewhere in Paris; but none of us knew where
it was. The only address he ever gave was that of Marie Prévol, _alias_
Madame Georges, in the Rue Lafitte. He met his friends on the Boulevard
when the theatres were over. He was a man who enjoyed life to the
full--after his own fashion. He was the master-spirit of his little
circle--a daring wit, a bold politician, a trenchant critic. Paris
is the city of brilliant talkers, yet I have known few who surpassed
Georges as a conversationalist. I can see him now, with his long fair
hair falling over his flashing eyes, his sarcastic lip, and the proud
carriage of that leonine head. Not a common man by any means, and with
a laugh that was like music--a man for a woman to adore; and yet Marie
wavered in her fidelity directly a fashionable dandy made love to her."

"You have no idea what became of Georges after the murder?"

"If I had, I would not tell you. No, I have not the faintest inkling.
He vanished as a bubble that bursts upon the surface of a stream. As
a mere guess, I should say that he went back to the country of his
birth--that if he is still living, he is to be found in America under
another name."

"He was a rich man, you say. It is easier for a man to betake himself
from one country to another than to transfer his fortune. What became
of this man's French investments?"

"He may never have had any such investments. His fortune may have been
invested solely in America. He was a man who declared that he valued
liberty above all other blessings. He would scarcely have fettered
himself by investing any portion of his wealth in a country where he
was leading a life of pleasure, living as a pure Bohemian. His utter
indifference to all rumours about the Bourse would show that he had no
French investments. His wealth, I take it, came from some secure source
on the other side of the Atlantic."

"Did you ever hear him talk of an English friend, or a friend who
resided in England?"

"Never."

"And yet he must have had such a friend," said Heathcote.

He related the story of Léonie Lemarque's death, and the inducement
that had taken her to England, where she was to have met a friend
of her aunt's long-vanished lover. Sigismond Trottier listened with
keenest interest. All social mysteries, whether criminal or not, had a
charm for him.

"It is a very strange case," he said, "and I don't wonder that you
are following it up earnestly. No, I never heard Georges mention any
English friend. It was a bold stroke for the grandmother to send the
girl to a man who was the friend of the murderer of her daughter. A
drowning man will catch at a straw, says your proverb; and this poor
woman, penniless and friendless on her death-bed, may have caught at
the name of the only rich man upon whom she could advance the faintest
claim. And what was the nature of that claim? A packet of Georges'
love-letters. Compromising love-letters, perhaps, to be offered to
Georges' friend as the price of protection and aid for the orphan girl.
A strange story. And no one knows what became of those letters?"

"No one, as yet. No letters were found upon the girl. Even the handbag
she carried with her had disappeared."

"A very strange story. I wish I could help you to read the riddle.
Your interest in it I imagine to be something beyond the mere artistic
interest in a curious case."

"Yes, I am concerned in arriving at the truth, for the sake of one whom
I honour and revere. I shall be deeply grateful if you can help me."

"Then I will help you," answered the paragraphist quietly; and Edward
Heathcote felt that in this amateur detective he had a stronger ally
than in the old police-officer of the left bank.



CHAPTER III.


BOTHWELL BEGINS TO SEE HIS WAY.


Dreary days followed for Bothwell Grahame after that final interview
with Lady Valeria. He had broken his bonds, he had escaped from the
Circe whose fatal spells had held him captive so long. He was his
own man again, he could stand up before his fellow-men and fear no
reproach--nay, he could even dare to meet that kind old man whose
friendship had never been withheld from him. He could look General
Harborough in the face, and clasp his hand without feeling himself a
craven and a traitor, and that is a thing which he had not been able to
do for the last three years.

He was relieved, rejoiced at the breaking of that old tie, and yet
there was a touch of pain in such a parting. There came a bitter pang
of remorse now and again to disturb his sense of newly-recovered peace.
Such severances can never happen without pain. The man who can be
utterly indifferent to the agony of a woman he has once loved must have
a heart of stone. Bothwell was not stony-hearted. He knew that Valeria
Harborough was not a good woman--that she had been shamefully false
to the best of husbands--that she had abandoned herself recklessly to
the promptings of a fatal passion. But he had loved her once: and his
heart bled for her now in her misery and abandonment. He was haunted by
the vision of her face, as she had risen up before him, white as the
very dead, her eyes flashing, her lips quivering, her voice subdued by
passion to a serpent-like hiss, as she told him--

"You are in love with another woman!"

Yes, that was what it all came to. That was the sum-total of his
scruples, his remorse of conscience: or at least that is what it must
needs seem in the sight of the woman he abandoned. She would give him
no credit for many a remorseful pang, many a sting of conscience in the
past; yes, even in the noontide of passion, when he deemed that for him
Fate held not the possibility of another love. In her sight he was a
perjurer and a hypocrite. It was hard so to appear to the woman who
had worshipped him; hard to know that there was a heart breaking for
him yonder in the Italian villa on the hill above the sea.

"Why should I grieve about her?" he asked himself angrily. "I must be
a coxcomb to fancy that she is making herself unhappy for my sake. She
was angry with me the other day. It was rage, not wounded love, that
flashed from those brilliant eyes of hers; the rage of slighted beauty.
She is far more concerned for her losses on the turf than at the loss
of me. If my Dido mounts the funeral pyre, it will be because she has
made a bad book, and not for my sake."

But argue with himself as he might, Bothwell could not forget the agony
in the face that had once been his delight, the despair in the voice
which had bidden him farewell, the tremulous hand which had snatched
the love-token to fling it away in deepest scorn.

Perhaps Bothwell would have more easily forgotten these things if he
could have had the comfort of Hilda's society at this period of his
life. But Hilda and the twins and Fräulein Meyerstein had all gone off
to Dawlish for sea-bathing, and Mrs. Wyllard warned her cousin that he
must not attempt to follow them.

"You are on your probation, my poor Bothwell," she said, "and you must
be very careful how you act. If you were to go to Dawlish you would
only distress Hilda, who has promised not to see you till her brother
comes back from Paris."

"I am not going there. I would not distress her for worlds. I am to
wait patiently till Heathcote has made up his mind that I am not in the
habit of throwing girls over viaducts; and then I may go to my darling
and claim her promise. In the mean time I can at least write to her."

And he did write, within a few hours of his final interview with Lady
Valeria. His letter was full and straight in its significance.

       *       *       *       *       *

      "My dearest, I am my own man again. I am free, or as
      free as a man can be who is your most abject slave. I am
      told that I am not to be allowed to see you till I stand
      acquitted of the crime which Bodmin has judged me quite
      capable of committing. I think, little as you know of me,
      you know enough to be very sure that I am innocent upon
      that count.

      "But there was another count upon which I confess myself
      guilty, Hilda--and it was that old sin which made me hang
      back months ago when I longed to tell you of my love. I
      have been guilty of a foolish attachment to a married
      woman, an attachment which lasted with varying fervour
      for over a year, but which had quite worn itself out
      before I left India. The flame burnt fiercely enough for
      a little while, and then came total extinction. Only it
      is not always easy for a man to shake off old fetters;
      and it was not till your pure and noble love gave me
      courage that I dared to stand up boldly and say, 'That
      old false love is dead; let us bury it decently.' And now
      the old love is buried, Hilda, and I am all your own. No
      one is any the worse for that old sentimental folly. Such
      flirtations are going on in India every day. Some end
      in guilt and misery, no doubt; but there are more that
      finish as mine has finished, like the blowing out of a
      candle.

      "Can you forgive me, dear one, for having once cared for
      another? Remember it was before I knew you. Henceforward
      I am yours, and yours only. I claim your dear promise.
      I ask you to engage yourself to a man whom Bodmin looks
      upon askance as a possible murderer.

      "No, love, I will not exact so much. I will only tell you
      that I am all your own, and that I adore you. We will
      not talk about engagements till your brother comes back
      from Paris, convinced of my innocence as to that one
      particular charge, and until Bodmin has begun to forget
      that it ever suspected me.--Your adoring BOTHWELL."

       *       *       *       *       *

Having written this letter, Bothwell had nothing to do but to ride
about the hills, thinking of his sweetheart, till he received her
answer.

She wrote with unstinted tenderness, and recoiled in nowise from the
fulfilment of her promise.

"I hold myself engaged to you henceforward, dear Bothwell," she wrote,
"through good or evil fortune, good or evil report. But as I have
promised my brother not to see you while he is away, it might be well
that we did not write to each other again until after his return. I
think you know that I am steadfast, and that you can trust me."

Yes, he was very sure of her steadfastness. Was she not one woman in a
thousand to have pledged herself to him just when any ordinary woman
would have shunned him--would have recoiled from him as from some
savage monster? She had been calm, and steadfast, and unfearing, a
woman who could dare to judge for herself.

And now Bothwell Grahame felt that he had crossed the threshold of a
new life. He was no longer a solitary waif, with no one to think of
but himself. He had not only his own future to work out with patience
and courage. He had to think of the young wife, whom it might be his
blessed fate to claim before he was much older. He could no longer
afford to be vague and wavering. The problem of a gentleman-like
maintenance must be worked out by him somehow, and without loss of time.

He walked across the Cornish hills in those balmy afternoons of
September, full of thought and full of care; happy, yes, ineffably
happy in the knowledge of Hilda's love; but care went along with
happiness. He had to provide for his beloved. Long and thoughtful
self-examination brought him to one positive conclusion about himself.
Whatever he was to do in the future, if he were to do it well, must be,
in somewise, the thing that he had done in the past. He was a soldier
to the marrow of his bones, and it was in military work, or military
studies, that he must find his future living.

This was the plan which he worked out for himself during those solitary
rambles on the moor, sometimes with gun and dogs, sometimes with no
companion save his own thoughts. He would fall back upon the studious
habits of his earlier years, work at the science of soldiery as he
had worked then. He would take a house in one of the villages on the
wild coast of North Cornwall--at Trevena perhaps, in King Arthur's
country--some roomy old house with a good garden, and he would take
pupils to cram for the military examinations. He knew that he could
get on with young men. He had always been popular with the subalterns
of his regiment. He would work honestly, conscientiously, devotedly as
ever coach or crammer worked since the art of coaching and cramming
was first invented. It would be a jog-trot humble kind of life, a life
which could never lead to distinction, far from a brilliant future
to offer to such a girl as Hilda Heathcote. Yet he told himself that
it was such a life as would not be altogether distasteful to her. It
was a life in which husband and wife need be but seldom parted, in
which all their amusements and relaxations could be shared. They could
hunt, and shoot, and ride, and boat together on that wild coast. The
conventionalities would cost them very little. Fine clothes, fine
living would not be required of them: and in their rustic seclusion
they would escape the ghastly struggle to maintain showy appearances;
they could afford themselves all the comforts of a homely unpretentious
_ménage_.

Bothwell felt that it was in him to do good and honest work in such
a career as this; surely better than sheep-breeding or gold-digging
in some savage quarter of the earth, where the intellectual man must
gradually sink to the level of his companion brutes. He pictured to
himself the tranquil happiness of such a life. The long morning of
conscientious work, followed by the afternoon ride or ramble. The
summer holiday after a successful term; the adventurous excursion among
Scottish lakes or in some foreign land; the cherished home, gradually
developed and improved from its primitive homeliness into a thing of
beauty. The garden in which wife and husband and pupils worked together
towards the attainment of a lofty ideal. The union of a household which
should be as one family.

Cheered by such visions, Bothwell took up his old technical books with
an almost rabid hunger for study. He sent to London for the newest
treatises on gunnery. He flung himself with heart and mind into the one
line of study which had always interested him. Hilda had told him not
to write to her; but he could not deny himself the delight of unfolding
his newly-formed plan, which he explained to her upon five sheets of
closely-written note-paper.

"Let me have just one more letter from you, dearest," he pleaded in
conclusion, "to tell me what you think of my scheme, and where we ought
to look for a house. Shall it be Trevena or Boscastle or Padstow or
New Quay? I think we ought to be near the sea, so that our lads may
get plenty of boating and swimming. And I could teach you to row. We
would live at least half our lives in the open air, and we would study
natural history in all its branches. I fancy myself an ideal coach.
I know my pupils would adore me, while you would be to them as a
divinity. Our evenings could be devoted to music; we could get up one
of Sullivan's operas, and perform for the benefit of the school or the
church. We should be the most useful people in our parish. It would be
a humble jog-trot life, darling; but I believe it would be a happy one
for both of us. I know that for me it would be Paradise."

The answer came by return.

      "Yes, dear Bothwell, your scheme is charming. Trevena
      is a delicious place, and I should delight in living
      there. I shall have a little money when I come of age, I
      believe--more than enough to furnish our house. Shall
      we be mediæval or Chippendale? I say Chippendale. And
      we must get an old house, for the sake of the panelling
      and the staircase; and we must pull it all to pieces on
      account of the drains. And now you must not write to me
      any more till Edward comes home. I have had a curious
      letter from him. He is deeply absorbed in unravelling
      some dreadful mystery. He has not yet found the murderer
      of that poor girl, but I can see that he no longer
      suspects _you_. How could he ever have harboured that
      monstrous idea?"

Cheered by such a letter as this, Bothwell worked as if he had
been on the eve of some great examination--worked as if his life
depended on those long hours of toil. Yes, he would get a house
at Trevena--the sooner the better. He had felt of late as if the
atmosphere of Penmorval stifled him. He had been too long a hanger-on
upon his rich cousin. He was angry with himself for having dawdled and
procrastinated, and let life slide by him, while he waited as if for a
vision from heaven, to point out the road, in which he should walk. And
now the seraphic vision had been granted to him; but the angel wore
the shape of Hilda Heathcote. Hilda had inspired him with the desire to
stay in England, to earn his bread in his own country, and out of that
wish had arisen this scheme of his. He would lose no time in putting
his plan into execution. Of late he had read aversion in the eyes of
Julian Wyllard--or it may have been contempt for his idle life, for
his dependence. In any case there was that in Wyllard's manner which
rendered existence at Penmorval hateful for Bothwell Grahame.

"I suppose he, too, suspects me," Bothwell told himself. "He thinks it
quite possible that I flung that girl into the gorge. Society is always
ready to impute evil to an idler. There is that old doggerel of Dr.
Watts about the mischief that Satan finds for idle hands to do."

He rode across country to Trevena the day after he received Hilda's
frank and loving letter. He was not going to wait until his darling was
able to marry him before beginning his new life. He would set up his
establishment as soon as the thing could be done, take pupils at once,
get over all the roughness, the difficulty of the start, before he
asked Hilda to share his home. Nor was he going to furnish his house
with his wife's money. That was just one of the things he would not
consent to do. He had his idea as to how he should furnish his house
when he found one to his liking. Of course he was not going to decide
upon any house until Hilda had seen it and approved the choice. But in
the mean time he rode off to Trevena on a voyage of discovery.

It was a long ride, and a hilly road, but not too long for the new
hunter Glencoe, an animal with a tremendous reserve of force that had
to be taken out of him somehow, an accumulated store of kicks and
plunges which a clever rider could compound for in a good fast trot
along the road, or a swinging gallop across the moorland. Bothwell and
his horse were on excellent terms by the time they had gone three miles
together, although the brute had insisted on going through Bodmin in a
series of buck-jumps.

       *       *       *       *       *

Life at Penmorval had been just a shade more sombre in its hue for
the last week. Dora Wyllard had not been able altogether to overcome
her offended feeling at that unwarrantable burst of passion upon her
husband's part, which had followed Edward Heathcote's visit. That
he should upbraid and insult her, that he should be jealous--he for
whose sake she had jilted an upright and honourable man, he to whom
she had given all the devotion of her life! It seemed to her an almost
unpardonable weakness and littleness on Julian Wyllard's part. And she
had thought his character above all pettinesses common to meaner men.
She had loved him because he was noble-hearted and large-minded.

His indifference to Bothwell's good name, his selfish coldness upon
a question which to her was vital, had wounded her to the quick. She
was not a woman to give way to sullenness, to shut herself up in the
armour of angry pride, to give ungracious answers and scant courtesy to
the husband who had offended her. Yet there was a subtle change in her
manner and bearing which was perceptible to Julian Wyllard, and which
he felt keenly.

Neither husband nor wife had recurred by so much as one word or hint to
that scene in the yew-tree arbour. Life had glided by for these last
few days in just the same manner as of old; but the shadow was there
all the same. The mild genius of domestic love had veiled his face.

Dora was sitting in the library with her husband at post-time on the
day of Bothwell's ride to Trevena. Julian Wyllard was at his desk
writing, while his wife sat in her favourite window, absorbed in a new
book, with the open box from Mudie's at her feet, when the servant
brought in the post-bag. Dora watched her husband intently as he
unlocked the bag and took out a pile of letters and papers. He looked
up as he was sorting the letters, and surprised that earnest expression
in his wife's eyes.

"You are expecting some important letter?" he said.

"Yes, I am anxious to hear from Mr. Heathcote," she answered quietly.

It was the first time that name had been spoken by either of them since
the scene in the arbour.

"There is your letter, then, in Heathcote's hand, with the Paris
post-mark."

"Thank you." She rose, and walked across to the desk to receive her
letters. "I hope he has some good news for me."

She went back to the window, and opened Heathcote's letter, standing
by the open window in the full light of the September afternoon, her
husband watching her all the while. Her face brightened as she read.
There was no need for him to ask if the news were good.

"Your letter seems satisfactory," he said, unfolding the _Times_ as he
spoke.

"It is a good letter," she answered. "It tells me that Mr. Heathcote
has begun to see how wrong he was in suspecting Bothwell. He has
evidently made some discovery about that poor girl's fate. He, at any
rate, has found out who she is."

"Indeed!" said Wyllard, deep in a leading-article. "He has found out
who she is?"

"Yes. He writes her name as if I ought to know all about her. He is
still groping in the dark, he says, but he hopes to fathom the mystery
of Léonie Lemarque's death."

There was no answer. Mr. Wyllard was absorbed by the paper.

"You were not listening, Julian."

"O, yes, I was. Léonie Lemarque--a French name. We were right, then,
in supposing that the girl was French?"

He laid aside the newspaper, and began to open his letters; but he
said not a word more about Heathcote's news. Dora felt that he might
have been more interested--more sympathetic. It was her cousin whose
reputation and happiness were at stake. Affection for her should have
made these things of greater moment to her husband.

Bothwell came home in time for the eight-o'clock dinner, and in
excellent spirits. He had seen an old cottage standing in a large
garden, with a fine old orchard adjoining, a cottage which could be
converted, by considerable additions, into a capital house for himself
and his pupils. The situation was superb. The cottage stood on a
height, near the junction of two roads, and it commanded magnificent
views of sea and coast.

"I could make the additions I want for three or four hundred pounds,"
he told Dora, when he was alone with her in the drawing-room after
dinner. "I should be my own architect and my own builder. I should only
have to pay for labour and materials. I did a goodish deal in the
building line when I was in the army, you know, Dora, supervising the
alterations of the Jungapore barracks. I know more about bricks and
mortar than you would give me credit for knowing."

He had previously confided his idea of taking pupils, and Dora had
approved, and had promised her heartiest cooperation. He was sure of
her sympathy with all his endeavours to win an honourable independence
at home. The idea of his emigrating had always been unwelcome to her.

"And now, Dora, I am going to make a very audacious proposition,"
he said, when he had finished his description of the cottage at
Trevena. "I want you to lend me seven hundred pounds, to be repaid in
half-yearly instalments of one hundred pounds during the next three
years and a half, with or without interest, as you may think fit."

"Suppose we say nothing about the repayment, Bothwell," said his
cousin, smiling at him as she looked up from her embroidery. "You shall
have the seven hundred pounds; and we will decide by and by whether it
is to be a loan or a gift."

"Dora, you are too generous--" he began.

"Nonsense, Bothwell. I always intended to furnish you with a small
capital if you made up your mind to emigrate. I had much rather give
you the money to invest at home. You are the last of my clan--my only
near relative--and I don't want to lose you. I look to you and Hilda,
and your children, to brighten the decline of my life."

"O Dora, that seems a poor substitute for those who should be nearer
and dearer," cried Bothwell. In the next instant he would gladly have
recalled his words, for he saw the tears well up to his cousin's eyes,
and he knew that her childless marriage was a grief.

"You are too good, far more generous than I deserve," he went on
hurriedly. "But let the money be at least called a loan. If fortune
favour me within the next few years, it will be such a pleasure to give
you back your money. And if Fate prove unkind, I shall know I have not
a hard creditor. But I have made up my mind to be successful. I mean to
work as men seldom work--to make everything I do a labour of love. And
with such a wife as Hilda--"

"Hilda will be a wife in a thousand. I am sure your pupils will adore
her; and you must make your house very pretty, for Hilda's sake. Seven
hundred will not be half enough."

"It will be more than enough. You don't know how economically I can
build, and how cleverly Hilda and I will contrive to furnish. We will
ride over the country to overhaul all the cottages and farmhouses in
quest of neglected old bits of Chippendale and Sheraton. We shall
get lovely old things for a mere song, and find some clever jobbing
cabinet-maker to make them as good as new--"

"And in the end you will find they will have cost you more than if you
had bought them from Nosotti," said Dora, laughing at his eagerness. "I
know how costly that kind of economy is apt to prove in the long-run.
You had better get your Sheraton or your Chippendale furniture made on
purpose for you, new and sound and convenient, and of more charming
designs than Chippendale ever imagined."

"No, Dora. I am intense as a Chippendalist. I must have the real
thing--old, and inconvenient even, if you like."

"What a boy you are still, Bothwell! And now I am going to tell you
something that will please you."

"Hilda is coming here to-morrow," speculated Bothwell eagerly.

"No. Hilda is not coming back while her brother is away. That is not my
good news, Bothwell. It is even better than that."

And then she told him the contents of Heathcote's letter.

"I am very glad," he said quietly. "That is at least one knocked off
the list of my suspicious friends."

Julian Wyllard came into the drawing-room while the cousins were
sitting together talking, their heads bending towards each other. The
family likeness between them was very strong. They looked like brother
and sister; and they looked very happy.

Dora was in the garden next day when the postman brought his bag. She
was no longer anxious about her letters, having received the expected
tidings from Paris. She was moving slowly about among her roses, armed
with a basket and a pair of garden scissors, cutting off blind buds and
shabby blooms, making war upon her insect enemies--enjoying the balmy
air and warm sunshine of early autumn.

Julian Wyllard came out of the glass door while she was thus occupied.
She looked up at the sound of the familiar footsteps, and went across
the grass to meet him.

"My dear Dora, are you inclined to go for a week's holiday with me?" he
asked, in his cheeriest tones.

"I am always ready to go anywhere with you. Is it because you have not
been feeling well of late that you want to leave Penmorval?" she asked,
looking anxiously at him, remembering his strange irritation, that
burst of jealousy, which might be after all only the indication of an
overworked brain.

"I have not been feeling over well--a little worried and irritable, and
more than a little weak and languid," he answered. "But it is not on
that account I want to go away. You remember my losing the Raffaelle
last July?"

"Perfectly."

"Well, there is a still finer Raffaelle to be sold next week in Paris,
at the Hôtel Drouot. The great Rochejaquelin collection comes to the
hammer. There are some of the finest Greuzes in Europe. There are
Meissoniers of the highest quality, and a famous Delaroche. I may not
buy any of the pictures. No doubt the prices will be enormous. But I
should like to see the collection once more, before it is scattered
to the four winds. Would you mind running over to Paris with me for a
week, or would you rather stay at home while I go?"

"I should like very much to go. I have never been in Paris with you,
except hurrying through from station to station."

"Have you not? That is strange."

"I have never even seen the house where you lived when you were making
your fortune in Paris."

"That would not be much to see. A ground floor near the Madeleine. A
capital point for a business man; within ten minutes' walk of the
Bourse, and in that central spot where the idlers and the workers alike
congregate. A most uninteresting nest, Dora; nothing historical, or
picturesque, or romantic, within half a mile."

"It will be enough for me that you lived and worked there. You must
have worked very hard in those days."

"I was not one of the butterflies, I assure you."

"Mr. Distin told me that you turned your back upon all the dissipations
and pleasures of Paris, that you were a man of one idea, working only
for one end--to make a great fortune.

"That is the only way for a poor man to grow rich. I had to make
brain-labour and concentration serve me instead of capital. I had
the good luck to enter the Parisian Bourse at a period when fortunes
might be made by hard thinking--when to win in the game of speculation
was a question of mathematics. Nature and schooling had made me a
decent mathematician, and I used all the science I had in fighting the
_coulissiers_ with their own weapons. But I am talking a language which
you can't understand, Dora. Let the past be past. You and I have only
to spend the money I earned in those days."

"You are always spending your wealth for the good of others, Julian,"
his wife answered tenderly. "Providence ought to bless the riches you
earned in your laborious youth. I cannot imagine you caring for money
for its own sake."

"I never did so care for it, Dora. Money in my mind meant power. I
began life as a poor man's son, and tasted all the bitterness of narrow
means. In my boyhood I told myself that I would be rich before I grew
old, and to that end I worked as few men work. I was able to surround
my mother with luxury during the closing years of her life. I was
able to give my sister a dowry that helped the man of her choice to
make his way in the world years before he could have done so without
that aid. She did not live very long to enjoy her happiness, poor
girl; but her last days were brightened by prosperity. No, Dora, I was
not a money-grubber, but I made speculation a science, and I turned
the age in which I lived to good account. It is not often given to
a speculator to live in such a golden age as the days of Morny and
Jecker."

"I am sure you would do nothing that was not strictly honourable," said
Dora, with her bright trusting look.

"O, I belonged to the honourable section of the Bourse," replied
Wyllard, with a somewhat cynical smile. "I had my office and my agents
in London, and was a power on the Stock Exchange; and when I had
acquired a reputation as a financier on both sides of the Channel,
I founded the firm of Wyllard & Morrison, with one of the richest
merchants in London for my partner. A man in my position could soil his
fingers with no doubtful enterprise. Well, Dora, it is agreed you will
go to Paris with me?"

"With pleasure."

She was happier than she had felt since that cloud of anger had passed
across her domestic horizon. Julian's manner was franker, fonder,
more like his old self--the man who had won her away from that other
noble-minded man to whom she had promised herself--the man for whose
sake she had been willing to break her promise.

"Can you be ready to start to-morrow morning? The sale takes place
three days hence, and I want to have a good look at the pictures before
they come to the hammer."

"Yes, I will be ready whenever you like."

"Then we'll leave by the morning train, and go straight on to Paris by
the night mail. You will be able to see Heathcote, and hear how his
investigation progresses. Where is he staying, by the way?"

"At the Hôtel de Bade."

"I'll drop him a line, and ask him to call on us at the Windsor. It
is an old-fashioned family hotel, where I think you will be more
comfortable than at one of those huge palaces, where you may be
surfeited with splendid upholstery, but rarely get your bell answered
under a quarter of an hour. You will take Priscilla, I suppose?"

Priscilla was Mrs. Wyllard's maid, Cornish to the marrow, and a severe
Primitive Methodist.

"Priscilla in Paris? No, I think not. She was so wretched in Italy. The
very smell of the incense offended her."

"She will not be overpowered by incense in Paris nowadays. She is more
likely to be offended by a new Age of Reason. However, if you think you
can do without her--"

"I'm sure I can. We shall not be visiting, I suppose?"

"Hardly, I think. It is the dullest of dull seasons in Paris just now,
and I had never a large visiting acquaintance in that city. I was too
busy a man to go into society."

"You must have been a stoic to resist the temptations of Parisian
society--the writers, the painters, singers, actors--all that is
foremost and brightest in the intellectual world."

"There are circles and circles in Paris, as well as in London. I have
been in Parisian assemblies that were eminently dull," said Wyllard.

They started from Penmorval after breakfast next morning, and were
seated in the Dover mail at eight o'clock in the evening, after dining
at the Grand Hotel. Dora was in excellent spirits. Change of scene
had a brightening effect upon her mind, and she was very happy in the
idea of Hilda and Bothwell's happiness. She had handed her cousin a
cheque for seven hundred pounds, with which he was to open an account
at the local bank. And then he had only to wait for Hilda to approve
his choice, before he set to work with bricklayers and carpenters at
improving a cottage into an Elizabethan Grange. That was his idea.

"We will have an Elizabethan Grange furnished with real Chippendale,"
he said. "Incongruous, but charming."

"Then be sure that very few of your windows are made to open," said
Dora, laughing at his ardour, "if you want to be truly Elizabethan."

"Every casement shall open to its uttermost width--every corner of the
house shall be steeped in light and air," protested Bothwell.

And now Dora Wyllard was reclining in her corner of the railway
compartment, speeding towards Dover through the gray autumn night, by
Kentish hayfields and stubble, and across the gentle undulations of a
Kentish landscape, so different from the bold hills and deep gorges of
her native Cornwall.

There was a reading-lamp hanging on Mrs. Wyllard's side of the
carriage, and she had the October Quarterlies and a heap of papers to
beguile the journey. Among the papers, was the _Times_ supplement,
which she opened for the first time to look at the births, marriages,
and deaths. Mr. Wyllard had read the other part of the paper before
they reached Paddington, but he had not looked at the supplement.

While Dora was looking down the births, marriages, and deaths in a
casual way, her eye was suddenly caught by an advertisement at the top
of the second column.

"The person who was to have met Léonie Lemarque at Charing Cross
Station on the morning of July 5th last is earnestly requested to
communicate immediately with Messrs. Distin & Son, Solicitors,
Furnival's Inn."

"How strange!" exclaimed Dora; and then she read the advertisement to
her husband, who was sitting in an opposite corner, with closed eyes,
as if half-asleep.

He started at the sound of her voice.

"I beg your pardon, Julian. I did not see that you were asleep."

"I was only dozing. Léonie Lemarque! that was the name of the girl who
was killed, was it not? Then no doubt the advertisement is put in by
Heathcote. The reference to Distin indicates as much."

"He must have made some further discovery about that unfortunate girl,"
said Dora thoughtfully. "He must have found out the date of her arrival
in London, and that she came to meet some particular person. Do you
think it was that person who killed her, Julian?"

"My dear Dora, how can I think about a business of which I know
absolutely nothing? For anything we know, the girl's death may have
been purely accidental, and this person who was to have met her at the
station may be a figment of Heathcote's fancy, and this advertisement
only a feeler thrown out in the hope of obtaining information from some
unknown source. Why any of you should trouble yourselves to solve this
mystery is more than I can understand."

"Why, Julian, did not you yourself send for Mr. Distin? did you not say
that as a magistrate it was your duty--"

"To do all I could to further the ends of justice. Most assuredly,
Dora. But having engaged the assistance of the cleverest criminal
lawyer in England, and he having failed to fathom the mystery, I had
no more to do. I had done my duty, and I was content to let the matter
rest."

"So would I have been, if people had not suspected Bothwell. I could
have no peace while there was such a cloud upon my cousin's reputation."

"That shows how narrow a view even the cleverest and most large-minded
of women can take of this big world. Surely it can matter to no man
living what a handful of people in a little country town may choose to
think about him."

"Bothwell has to spend his life among those people."

"Well, you have had your own way in the matter, my dear Dora; and if
you will only allow me to forget all about it, I am content that you
and Heathcote should grope for ever in the labyrinth of that girl's
antecedents. A lady's-maid or a nursery-governess, I suppose, who came
to England to seek her fortune."

Dora was silent. Once again she felt that there was a want of sympathy
upon her husband's part in this matter. He ought to have remembered
that Bothwell was to her as a brother.

They were in Paris early next morning. Mr. Wyllard had telegraphed to
the proprietor of the Windsor, and had secured charming rooms on the
first floor, with a balcony overlooking the gardens of the Tuileries.
The outer shell of the palace still stood there, a memorial of the
brilliant historic past, and cabs and carriages and omnibuses and
wagons were driving across the once sacred grounds, on the new road
that had been lately cut from the Rue de Rivoli to the quay. It was
a splendid Paris upon which Dora and her husband looked out in the
clear freshness of the autumnal morning, but it was curiously changed
from that Imperial Paris which Julian Wyllard had known twenty years
before. It seemed to him this morning, looking across those ruined
palace-walls, the daylight streaming through those vacant windows, as
if he and the world had grown old and dim and feeble since those days.

Twenty years ago, and Morny was alive, and Jecker was a power on the
Parisian Bourse, and Julian Wyllard was laying the foundation-stones
of his fortune. He had started the Crédit Mauresque--that powerful
association which had dealt with the wealth of Eastern princes and
Jewish traders, had almost launched a company for the rebuilding of the
Temple at Jerusalem, had ridden gaily over the perilous ocean of public
enterprise for some time, and had made great fortunes for the four or
five gifted individuals whose second sight revealed to them the right
hour at which to withdraw their capital from the scheme.

Yes, it had been a glorious Paris in those days, a city in which a
young Englishman with a mathematical brain could court the goddess
Fortune more profitably than in his native capital. Julian Wyllard had
earned his bread upon the London Stock Exchange for some years before
he changed the scene of his labours to Paris; but it was upon the Paris
Bourse that he began to make his fortune.

Dora was tired after her journey, for she had been too full of thought
to sleep in the train, and even now her brain was too active for
the possibility of rest. So, after dressing and breakfasting, she
accompanied her husband to the great Parisian auction rooms to look at
the Rochejaquelin collection.

The inspection of the pictures lasted over two hours. Julian Wyllard
was an ardent connoisseur, and his wife sympathised with him in his
love of art. Together they criticised the gems of the collection, and
stood in silent admiration before the famous Raffaelle.

"It will fetch thousands," said Wyllard.

"Why not buy it, if you really wish to possess it?" said Dora. "Why
should we hoard our money? There is no one to come after us. Penmorval
may be a show place when you and I are gone, and your picture-gallery
will give pleasure to hundreds of tourists."

"Ah, there is the rub," sighed her husband, conscious of the latent
melancholy in his wife's speech. "'No son of mine succeeding.' When
you and I are gone there will be no one to care for Penmorval--no one
to cherish your garden, and say, 'My mother planted these roses, or
planned these walks'--no one to treasure the pictures I have collected,
for any reason except their intrinsic value."

"Will you take me to see the house in which you lived and worked?"
asked Dora, as they were leaving the auction-room.

"My dear Dora, I can show you the outside of that historic spot,"
answered her husband lightly; "but I doubt if I can introduce you to
the rooms in which I worked. The present occupant may not be inclined
to sympathise with your hero-worship.".

"O, but I should so like to see those rooms, and I am sure if the
occupier is a gentleman, he will not refuse such a natural request.
Here comes Mr. Heathcote," she exclaimed, as they turned into the
Boulevard.

"I was coming to the Hôtel Drouot in quest of you," said Heathcote, as
they shook hands. "I called at your hotel, and was told you had gone to
the auction-room. How well you are looking, Mrs. Wyllard--as if Paris
agreed with you!"

"Your letter took a weight off my mind," she said. "And now I hope you
will be kind to Bothwell and Hilda, and not insist upon too long an
engagement."

"It seems to me that Bothwell and Hilda have taken their lives into
their own hands, and don't want anybody's kindness," he answered. "I
have had a tremendous letter from Hilda, telling me her lover's plans.
They are the most independent young people I ever heard of. And pray
what brings you to Paris? Are you going on anywhere?"

"No, we have only come to look at the Rochejaquelin pictures,"
answered Wyllard. "I have two or three business calls to make in
the neighbourhood of the Bourse. Wyllard & Morrison have still some
dealings in Paris."

"And I am going to look at my husband's old apartments," said Dora. "I
have never stayed in Paris since our marriage. My only knowledge of the
city dates from the time when I spent a month at Passy with my dear
mother. What a happy time it was, and how much we contrived to see! It
was in sixty-nine, and people were beginning to talk about war with
Germany. How little did any of us think of the ruin that was coming,
when we saw the Emperor and Empress driving in the Bois!"

"Come back to the hotel and lunch with us, Heathcote," asked Wyllard.

"A thousand thanks; but I am too Parisian to eat at this hour. I
breakfasted at eleven o'clock."

"And we breakfasted less than three hours ago," said Dora. "I am sure
we neither of us want luncheon. Let us go and look at your old home,
Julian."

"It is not to be called a home, Dora," answered her husband, with a
touch of impatience. "A business man's life has only one aspect--hard
work. However, if you want to see the offices in which a money-grubber
toiled, you shall be gratified. The street is not very far off. Will
you walk there with us?" he added, turning to Heathcote.

"Gladly. I am a free man to-day."

"Indeed! Then your criminal investigation, your amateur-detective work
is at a standstill for the moment, I conclude?" said Wyllard, with an
ill-concealed sneer.

"For the moment, yes," answered the other quietly.

"And you have made some startling discoveries, no doubt, since you
crossed the Channel?"

"Yes, my discoveries have been startling; but as they relate to the
remote past, rather than to the period of that poor girl's death, they
are of no particular value at present."

"The remote past? What do you mean by that?" asked Wyllard.

"Ten years ago."

"May we ask the nature of these discoveries?"

"I'd rather tell you nothing at present. My knowledge is altogether
fragmentary. Directly I have reduced it to a definite form--directly I
have a clear and consecutive story to tell--you and Mrs. Wyllard shall
hear that story. In the mean time I had rather not talk about the case."

"You have all the professional reticence. And I see that you and Distin
are working together," said Wyllard.

"How do you mean?"

"We saw your advertisement in yesterday's _Times"_.

"How did you know that I had inserted that advertisement?"

"The girl's name was conclusive--Léonie Lemarque: that was the name of
the girl who was killed."

"Yes. But I did not think it was known to any one except Distin and
myself."

"You mentioned the name in your letter to me," said Dora.

"Did I really? Then it was unconsciously. I meant to have told nothing
till I could tell the whole story."



CHAPTER IV.


THE HOME OF THE PAST.


Mr. and Mrs. Wyllard and Heathcote walked on together to a quiet street
near the Madeleine, a street of offices and wholesale traders.

The house in which Mr. Wyllard had occupied the ground floor was one
of the best in the street, a large stone-fronted house, with a high
doorway and carved columns--not so richly decorated as those palatial
dwellings of Haussmannised Paris, built during the Second Empire, but a
handsome and somewhat florid style of house notwithstanding. It stood
at the corner of a narrow court, leading no one cared where. Doubtless
to some obscure slum in which the working classes had one of their
nooks--those hidden colonies which lurk here and there behind the
palaces of great cities.

The ground floor was no longer the home of finance and grave
transactions. The house in which Julian Wyllard had schemed and
laboured was now occupied by wholesale dealers in foreign goods of all
kinds, from china to toys, from travelling-bags to Japanese tea-trays,
chinoiseries, unbreakable glass, German lamps, English electro-plate.
The house had become one huge bazaar, which a stranger might enter
without much ceremony; albeit there is a strict etiquette in such
establishments, and no retail purchases were permissible. Only the
trade was allowed to buy anything in that dazzling chaos of small wares.

While all the upper floors had been made into warehouses, the lower
floor had been in somewise respected. The rooms in which Julian Wyllard
had worked were used as offices by Messrs. Blümenlein Brothers, while
one of the brothers had made his nest in Julian's old rooms at the back
of the offices.

"Upon my word, Dora," said Wyllard, pausing on the threshold of his old
abode, "I feel that we are going into this house on a fool's errand. I
don't know what excuse to make."

"Why make any excuse at all?" replied his wife. "Leave the whole
business to me, Julian. I want to see your old home, and I am
determined I will see it. I am not at all afraid of Messrs. Blümenlein."

"In that case I will leave you and Heathcote to manage the matter
between you," said Wyllard, with a sudden touch of impatience, of anger
even, his wife thought. "I have a business call to make near here.
Heathcote will take you back to your hotel."

He turned on his heel, and was gone before Dora could make any
objection. Again she had seen that dark look in his face which had so
startled and shocked her in the yew-tree arbour. Was it indeed jealousy
of her old lover which so changed him? Her pride revolted at the idea
of such want of faith in one to whom she had given so much.

She allowed no sign of disquietude to escape her, but went quietly into
the office of Messrs. Blümenlein, followed by Heathcote.

"Pardon me for intruding upon you, gentlemen," she said in French to
the two clerks who were seated at a desk in this outer room. "These
offices were some years ago occupied by my husband, and I should
esteem it a favour if you would allow me to see the rooms on this
floor."

A middle-aged man, who was standing near a window looking through some
papers, turned at the sound of her voice, and came over to her.

"With pleasure, Madame," he said. "Have I he honour of speaking to Mrs.
Wyllard?"

"Yes, Monsieur, I am Mrs. Wyllard. You were my husband's immediate
successor in these rooms, I conclude?"

"Yes, Madame, there was no other occupation. My brother and I bought
this house in 'seventy-one, almost immediately after the war; but Mr.
Wyllard was the occupant of this floor for some years after we were in
possession."

"Exactly two years," said a second Mr. Blümenlein, appearing from an
inner room. "Is it possible that Madame has not before seen these
rooms, in which her distinguished husband transacted so much important
business?"

"No, Monsieur, this is my first visit to Paris since my marriage. I am
much interested in seeing these rooms."

"It will be an honour and a pleasure to us to show them," said the
elder of the two brothers. "Gustav there, my younger brother, enjoys
the possession of the private apartments almost exactly as Mr. Wyllard
left them. He bought the furniture and fittings, pictures, bronzes,
everything except the books, _en bloc_, when Mr. Wyllard gave up his
Parisian establishment. Hardly anything has been altered. These offices
can have little interest for you, Madame. They are the _facsimile_ of
a thousand other Parisian offices. But the private apartments have a
certain individuality. Gustav, show Madame the rooms which were once
her husband's home."

There was a touch of German sentimentality about Mr. Blümenlein,
in spite of his Parisian training. He was full of sympathy for the
affectionate wife. He had lofty ideas about the sanctity of home.

The younger brother, Gustav, opened a padded door, and admitted the two
visitors into his bachelor nest.

The first room which they entered was the library, lined from floor to
ceiling with book-shelves, and lighted by a large skylight. It was a
room that had been built out into a yard. It was furnished with carved
oak, in the Henri Deux style, rich, antique, solid. The clock upon the
chimney-piece was a gem of mediæval metal-work. The covers of chairs
and sofas were of old tapestry, sombre, genuine, artistic.

Adjoining this was the _salon_ and dining-room in one, plainly
furnished in the modern style. The walls were decorated with etchings
of the most famous pictures of the Second Empire. It was a small room;
an almost severe simplicity was its chief characteristic. Nothing here
assuredly of the sybarite or the voluptuary, thought Edward Heathcote,
as he contemplated the home of his rival's solitary manhood.

Bedroom and bathroom completed the suite of apartments, and even to
these Mrs. Wyllard and her companion were admitted.

The bedroom was spacious, lofty, handsomely furnished in a solid and
sombre style. But it was not a cheerful room. It was situated at the
back of the house, and its windows, deeply recessed and heavily
curtained, derived their light from a narrow court. The lower part of
each window was of ground-glass; the upper sashes were violet-tinted,
and gave an artificial colour to the daylight. The curtains were of
dark-brown damask; the ponderous armchairs and sofa were upholstered in
dark-brown velvet.

By the fireplace there was the secrétaire at which Julian Wyllard had
worked, the large shaded lamp which had lighted his evening toil. Mr.
Blümenlein showed these things with pride. Nothing had been altered.

"I am a man of somewhat studious habits, like Mr. Wyllard," he said,
"and I often work late into the night. This room is a delightful room,
for none of the noises of Paris penetrate here. The court is very
little used after dark--a passing footstep, perhaps, once in half an
hour. It is an almost monastic repose."

The bed was in an alcove in a corner, entirely shrouded by brown damask
curtains like those which draped the windows.

"There is a door leading into the court, I see," said Heathcote, whose
keen eyes had scrutinised every feature of the room.

"What, you have perceived that!" exclaimed Mr. Blümenlein, with marked
surprise. "I thought it was quite hidden by the curtains."

"No, the top of the upper hinge is just visible above the curtain-rod."

"Strange! No one ever before noticed that door."

"It is not a secret door, I suppose?" said Heathcote.

"Certainly not. But it has never been used in my time, and I doubt if
Mr. Wyllard made much use of it," said Mr. Blümenlein, drawing back the
curtain. "The bed stood in his time just where it stands now, with the
head against the door."

"The bedstead is light enough to be moved easily if the door were
wanted," suggested Heathcote.

It was a small brass bedstead of English make. The voluminous curtains
made a kind of tent, independent of the bedstead.

"No doubt it could," replied Blümenlein, "but I fancy it could have
been no more wanted in Mr. Wyllard's time than it has been in mine. It
may have been made by some former inhabitant of these rooms, who wanted
free egress and ingress at any hour of the night, without exciting the
curiosity of the porter."

"You conclude, then, that the door was an after-thought," said
Heathcote, "and not in the original plan of the house."

"Decidedly. You will see how ruthlessly it has been cut through dado
and mouldings. An after-thought evidently."

Mr. Blümenlein pulled aside the bedstead and showed Mr. Heathcote the
door. It was a low narrow door, of plain oak, without panelling or
ornamentation of any kind. The fastening was a latch-lock, a Bramah,
with a small key, and a strong bolt secured the door on the inner side.

"A convenient door, no doubt," said Heathcote, "for a person of secret
habits."

Dora looked lingeringly round the room. Its gloom oppressed her. The
opaque windows, the tinted light from the upper sashes, the sombre
colouring, the heavy furniture--all contributed to that gloomy effect.
The only spot of brightness in the room was the writing-table, with
its brass fittings, its handsome brass lamp, and large green shade.
There her husband sat night after night, when the rest of Paris was
gyrating in the whirlpool of fashionable pleasure, light as autumn
leaves dancing in the wind. There he had sat brooding, calculating,
plotting, striving onward, in the race for wealth. It was for money
he had toiled, and to make a great fortune--not for science, or art,
or fame--not to be useful or great--only to be rich. It seemed a
sordid life to look back upon--a wasted life even--and Dora thought
regretfully of those long evenings spent in this gloomy room. The idea
of that monastic life had no charm for her. She would rather have heard
that her husband had been the light of an intellectual circle--the
favourite of fashion even. The picture of these studious nights spent
in brooding over the figures in a share-list, the pages of a bank-book,
chilled her soul.

And yet, in the maturity of his days, her husband had seemed to her
the most generous and high-minded of men, setting but little value upon
his wealth, caring nothing for money in the abstract.

"At the least he has known how to use his fortune nobly," she told
herself, as she turned to leave that gloomy bedchamber. "I, who
was born with good means, can hardly understand the eagerness of a
penniless young man to win fortune. It is a foolish idea of mine, after
all, that there is anything ignoble in working for riches."

"Well, Mrs. Wyllard, has your hero-worship been satisfied? Have
you seen enough of the temple which once enshrined your god?" said
Heathcote lightly.

"Yes, I have been very much gratified; and I must thank Mr. Blümenlein
for his kindness and consideration."

The merchant protested that he had rarely enjoyed so great a privilege
as that which Mrs. Wyllard had afforded him; and with exchange of
courtesies they parted, on the threshold of the outer office.

Heathcote and Dora walked to the hotel together. It was not a long
walk, and it took them only by crowded streets and busy thoroughfares,
where anything like earnest conversation was impossible. And yet Edward
Heathcote could but remember that it was the first time they two had
walked together since Dora had been his plighted wife. Ah, how cruel a
pang it gave him to recall those old days, and to remember all she had
been to him, all she might have been, had Fate used him more kindly!

He stole a look at the beautiful face as they walked slowly across the
Place Vendôme. Yes, she was no less lovely than of old; her beauty had
ripened, not changed. There was a more thoughtful look, there were
traces even of care and sorrow; but those indications only heightened
the spirituality of the face.

O, what worship, what devotion he could have given her now in the bloom
of her womanhood, in the maturity of his manhood--such whole-hearted,
thoughtful love as youth can never give! And it was not to be. They
were to be apart for ever, they two. They were to be strangers; since
this assumption of friendship, to which he had tried to reconcile
himself, was, after all, but a mockery. Chivalrous feeling might keep
his thoughts pure, his honour unspotted; but in his heart of hearts he
loved his first love as passionately as in the days of his youth.

And to-day, for the first time, he had heard her husband address her
coldly and curtly, with a touch of anger even.

He was not likely to forget that curt, impatient tone, and the frown
that had accentuated it.

"I was very glad to get your letter," she said presently. "Tell me once
more with your own lips that you have ceased to suspect my cousin."

"Ceased to suspect would, perhaps, be too strong an expression. But in
the discoveries I have made relating to that murdered girl there is
certainly nothing that in any way points to Mr. Grahame."

"I wish you would tell me all you have discovered--how near you are to
clearing up the mystery."

"I fear I am still very far from that. It is the history of a remote
crime which occupies me at the present, and I hope in that history of
the past to find the clue to poor Léonie's death. I shall know more in
a few days."

"How so?"

"You saw my advertisement in the _Times_. If that advertisement be not
answered within a week, I shall conclude that the man who was to have
met Léonie Lemarque on the morning of July 5th has some part in the
guilt of her death."

"And then--"

"And then it will be my business or Mr. Distin's business to find that
man."

They were at the door of the hotel by this time, and here Heathcote
bade Dora adieu.

"We shall meet again before you leave Paris, I daresay," he said. "If
Wyllard wants me he will know where to find me."

"You are not going home yet?"

"No; I am likely to stay here some little time."

"And poor Hilda is longing to have you back at The Spaniards. She will
not see Bothwell while you are away. She is bound by the promise you
exacted from her. Their future home--everything is in abeyance till you
return," pleaded Dora.

"The home must remain in abeyance a little longer. It is hard,
no doubt; but when I go back I may be able to give Bothwell some
substantial help in the matter of that future home."

"He will need only your sympathy and your advice. He can manage
everything else for himself."

"I understand. He has been helped already."

"Bothwell has always been to me as a brother and he can never be poor
while I am rich," answered Dora, as they shook hands.

Heathcote walked slowly back to the Boulevard, thinking over this
unexpected arrival of Mr. and Mrs. Wyllard in Paris. Why had they come?
That alleged reason of the picture-sale seemed rather more like an
excuse for a journey than a motive. True that Wyllard had been known
to go up to London on purpose to attend a sale at Christie & Manson's,
and there might, therefore, be nothing extraordinary in his going still
further on the same errand. But it was strange that the picture-sale
should coincide with Heathcote's presence in Paris. Could it be Dora's
eagerness to know the result of his researches that had brought her and
her husband to the Hotel Windsor? Was her impatience the motive of the
visit?

Hardly, he thought, for he knew the candour of her nature, and he
told himself that she would not have misrepresented the reason of her
journey. She had told him that the visit was a sudden whim of her
husband's, arising out of his passion for art.

Could it be that Julian Wyllard was so deeply interested in the
question of Bothwell's guilt or innocence as to make an excuse for
being on the scene of the investigation? He had seemed indifferent
almost to unkindness. He had wounded his wife's feelings by his
coldness upon this question. And now it seemed to Edward Heathcote
that his real motive in coming across the Channel must be to watch
the case with his own eyes. His manner to-day, when he inquired about
Heathcote's progress, had been seemingly careless: but beneath that
apparent indifference the lawyer had noted a keen expectancy, an
intent watchfulness. Yes, it was something of deeper moment than a
picture-sale which had brought Julian Wyllard to Paris, posthaste, at
a day's notice. His angry manner to his wife an hour ago had indicated
nervous irritation, a mind on the rack.

Yet, looking at the question from a worldly point of view--and
Heathcote considered Wyllard essentially a man of the world--there
seemed but little reason why he should be deeply concerned as to
whether Bothwell was or was not suspected of foul play in the matter
of the French girl's death. The evidence against the young man was of
far too slight and vague a character to endanger his life or liberty.
It was only just enough to cast a cloud upon his reputation; and that
his cousin's husband should put himself out of the way on this account
seemed to the last degree unlikely. Julian Wyllard's life, judged as
Heathcote judged it, was that of a man who had lived exclusively for
himself and his own happiness. An excellent husband to a wife whom he
adored, a good master, a liberal landlord; yet a man with whom self had
ever been paramount.



CHAPTER V.


A FACE FROM THE GRAVE.


A week passed. Julian Wyllard attended the sale at the Hôtel Drouot,
bought three of the smaller gems of the Rochejaquelin gallery, and
allowed the Raffaelle to pass into a national collection. His wife and
he had gone about Paris and its environs in the mean while; Dora very
happy in revisiting the spots she had admired in her youth.

The week had gone, and there had been no reply to Heathcote's
advertisement. But there had been a letter from Joseph Distin.

"The last few days have not been entirely barren in results," he wrote.
"Léonie Lemarque's handbag has been found at the Charing Cross Station;
it was left in the waiting-room on the morning of the 5th July,
immediately after the arrival of the mail train from Dover. The bag
is now in my office. It contains some linen, marked L. L., slippers,
brush, and comb; but not a document of any kind. Nothing to afford
the slightest clue to the girl's business in London. The police have
found a hansom-cabman who drove a tall, gentlemanlike man and a French
girl from Charing Cross to Paddington Station on the morning of the
5th of July, in time for the Penzance train. They had no luggage. The
cabman believes that he should recognise the man if he saw him again,
but can give no clear description of his appearance, except that he
was a fine-looking man in the prime of life. He talked French to the
girl, and the cabman supposes him to have been a Frenchman. He and the
girl appeared to be on very good terms. The cabman saw them go into the
Paddington Station together, about five minutes before the starting
of the train. The photograph of the dead girl has been shown to this
cabman, and he has identified it as the likeness of the little French
girl he drove in his cab."

This was all the progress that Joseph Distin's agents had made at
present. The facts looked dark against the man who had taken Léonie
Lemarque from station to station. If he had been innocent of all wrong
in relation to that helpless stranger, surely he would have replied to
the advertisement; he would have come forward to say what part he had
taken in the history of Léonie Lemarque.

Heathcote stopped the first advertisement, and inserted a second worded
thus:

"Monsieur Georges, who resided in Paris in the year '71, and for some
years previously, or any friend of Monsieur Georges now residing in
England, is earnestly requested to communicate with Messrs. Distin &
Son, Solicitors, Furnival's Inn."

He had not much hope of getting a reply to this advertisement, after
the failure of the previous appeal, but he thought it was well to
advertise this name of Georges. Some insignificant person, some
busybody who had known the man Georges at some period of his existence,
might reply; and any information so obtained might form a link in the
chain of that strange story of Marie Prévol and her mysterious lover.

Mysterious, Heathcote felt this man to have been, despite Trottier's
idea that he was only a rich American who lived a Bohemian life as a
matter of choice. It seemed to Heathcote as if there must have been
some stronger ground than mere whim for an existence so secluded, so
exceptional, spent in such a city as Paris, where the delight of the
rich and the idle is to spend their days and nights before the eyes
of an admiring crowd, and to have every movement and every caprice
chronicled in the newspapers.

And this man had been in the prime of his manhood, good-looking,
clever, brilliant, the lover of a beautiful actress. Hardly the kind of
person to hide his light under a bushel, unless there was some strong
motive for concealment.

What could that motive be? Heathcote wondered, as he brooded over the
imperfect story of Marie Prévol and her niece. Was this Georges a
swindler, who had come by his wealth in a criminal manner, and dared
not show himself in the light of day? Was he one of the many tricksters
and schemers of Paris, the birds of prey who live upon carrion, and who
know themselves the scorn of their fellow-men? or had he a wife from
whose jealous eye he was obliged to hide his devotion to Marie Prévol?
Heathcote believed that there must have been some guilty reason for the
life which shrank from the light of day.

He had been in Paris a fortnight, and he began to ask himself how long
this investigation to which he had pledged himself was likely to last.
At the beginning his progress had seemed rapid--triumphant almost.
Starting from utter ignorance of the name and position of the dead
girl, he had arrived in a few days at an exact knowledge of her name,
surroundings, and past history. Yet he was constrained to confess to
himself that, armed with all these facts, he was not one whit nearer
to finding the man who had murdered her. Given this history of Léonie
Lemarque's childhood and youth, it was still possible that Bothwell
Grahame had thrown her out of the railway-carriage.

The man who took her in a hansom from Charing Cross to Paddington might
have left her at the latter station. She might have gone alone upon
her way towards Penzance, to encounter a villain on the road, and that
villain might have been Bothwell Grahame. The thing was within the
limits of possibility; though in Heathcote's present mood it seemed to
him altogether unlikely. Yet firmly to establish the fact of Bothwell's
innocence, he must find the man who was guilty.

It seemed to him that the man who met Léonie Lemarque at the station,
who was known to have conducted her to another station, had in a
measure condemned himself by his silence. If he had not been guiltily
concerned in the girl's death, he would assuredly have replied to the
advertisement. He would have been apprised by that advertisement that
some evil had befallen Léonie Lemarque, and he would have been prompt
to come forward and tell all he knew of the girl who had been sent to
him for aid, a friendless orphan, a stranger in a strange land.

It seemed clear to Heathcote that Georges, the murderer, was still
living, still in dread of the gallows; and that the girl who went to
meet the friend of the murderer had fallen into a trap. The papers she
carried were doubtless of a compromising character; the girl herself
was the sole witness of the crime, the only living being who could
recognise the murderer. Papers and witness had disappeared together.

Heathcote was fond of Paris. It was not irksome to him to stay there
even in the dead season. He had the theatres for his evening amusement;
he had two or three friends who had not fled to the mountain or the
sea, and in whose drawing-rooms he was welcome. He had the National
Library in the Rue Richelieu for his club; and he had the ever-varying
life of the Boulevard for his recreation. Time therefore did not hang
heavily on his hands; and he knew that while he watched and waited in
Paris, Joseph Distin would not be idle in London. Every clue, were it
the slightest, would be patiently followed by that expert investigator.

In his saunterings in the Rue de Rivoli and on the Boulevards Mr.
Heathcote had hunted assiduously for a photograph of Marie Prévol; but
so fleeting is the fame of beauty, which leaves nothing behind it save
a tender memory, that for some time he had failed utterly in his quest.
Her name was hardly remembered by the people who sold photographs. And
yet twelve or thirteen years ago the portrait of Marie Prévol was in
every shop-window. It had been sold by thousands, had adorned every
album in Paris and Brussels, and had been hung over many a bachelor's
mantelpiece, worshipped by half the beardless boys in France and
Belgium.

At last Heathcote lighted upon an elderly shopman, who was a little
more intelligent and had a much better memory than the men he had
encountered hitherto. The man perfectly remembered Marie Prévol and her
photographs.

"We had a photograph of her by Nadar," he said--"a portrait that
was the rage. It was soon after her first appearance at the Porte
Saint-Martin, and it was the costume in which she made her _début_. She
was the Genius of Evil, in a black satin bodice and a black tulle skirt
starred with gold. The close-fitting black bodice set off her graceful
figure, and her superb shoulders, and her hair, which was positively
magnificent, fell down her back in a horse's tail. It was like a stream
of molten gold. I saw her in that character half a dozen times. All
Paris rushed to see her, though she was never much of an actress.
Her beauty made her famous all over Europe. We used to send her
photographs to St. Petersburg. But there is a fashion in these things;
and I daresay almost every one of those photographs has found its way
to the rubbish-heap. If you call to-morrow I may be able to supply you
with what you want; but I shall have to hunt over a good deal of our
old stock to get at it."

"I shall be greatly obliged if you will do so," answered Heathcote. "I
suppose Mademoiselle Prévol had the weakness of our lovely ladies in
England, and was fond of being photographed."

"In the first year or so, when she began to be celebrated for her
beauty, there were a good many different photographs of her--in this
costume and in that; and, you know, in those fairy spectacles every
handsome actress wears at least half a dozen costumes. But after that
first year there were no more of Mademoiselle Prévol's photographs
to be had for love or money. Our firm applied to her, offered her a
liberal royalty--five sous upon every photograph--if she would sit to
Nadar, in all her costumes, and give us the sole privilege of selling
her portraits. But she declined. She was never going to sit again.
She did not want herself vulgarised by having her portrait sold for
a franc to every _calicot_ in France. Our firm felt insulted by her
reply, which was given to one of our principals, through an impertinent
sempstress, who worked by the day for Mademoiselle Prévol, and who
almost shut the door in our principal's nose. Our firm took the trouble
to find out why Mademoiselle objected to the fame which photography can
alone bestow upon beauty; and we discovered that there was a lover in
the case--a mysterious lover; a man who kept himself curiously dark--"

"Stay!" exclaimed Heathcote. "I will give you a thousand francs for a
photograph of that lover."

The shopman shrugged his shoulders and smiled.

"A liberal offer, Monsieur, and a very safe one. Except that the man's
name was Georges, I know nothing about him. The police would have given
me twice as much as you offer, for his photograph, if I could have
furnished them with one ten years ago, immediately after the murder of
Marie Prévol."

And then the man proceeded to relate the story of the actress's death,
and the impression which it made in Paris at the time. Heathcote
listened, and affected ignorance: for, even in these recollections,
there might be some detail to suggest a clue. There was nothing,
however. The man told the story as it had been told in the newspapers,
and as it was already known to Heathcote.

He went back to the shop on the following day, and the shopman showed
him three different photographs of Marie Prévol.

Two were of the carte de visite size, in costume. They had both grown
pale with age, and had an old-fashioned look. They were full-length
portraits, showing the perfection of an exquisite figure, as displayed
in the scanty drapery of a burlesque costume: a graceful girlish form,
delicately fashioned, a perfect face, small refined features, a head
crowned with masses of platted hair. But, in these small photographs,
the soul was wanting. Beyond the one fact, that the original was
exquisitely lovely, they revealed nothing.

The third was of cabinet size, and here the woman herself appeared.
Here, in the face of the photograph, Edward Heathcote looked back
across ten years, and saw the face of the living woman, the smile on
the lips, the light in the eyes. It was a head vignetted, the head
only, carelessly draped with a cloud of tulle, which framed the oval
of the face and veiled the rich masses of hair. It was an exquisite
face, eyes large and dark and dreamy, shadowed by long dark lashes,
an expression of pensive tenderness about the perfect lips, the nose
small and straight, the chin delicately moulded. It was not the bold
bright beauty of an actress, accustomed to challenge the admiration of
the vulgar crowd; it was a beauty instinct with tender womanly feeling,
and serious thought, an essentially feminine loveliness; and its chief
characteristic was purity. It would have been impossible to associate
such loveliness with an evil life, a dissolute mind.

The colour of this larger photograph was almost as good as if it had
been taken yesterday: the portrait had a living look, which struck
Heathcote painfully. It was sad to think that lovely face had been
lying in the dust for years--that the sweet smile in those eyes was
nothing more than a memory.

He was to dine at the Windsor that evening--a farewell dinner, since
Julian Wyllard talked of leaving Paris next morning. He wanted to
take his wife to Switzerland, perhaps to the Italian lakes. Dora was
pleased at the idea of revisiting the scenes in which her honeymoon
had been spent. They seemed far away in a dim past, those days of
early married life, when all the world was decked in the vivid hues
of hope and gladness. Her union with Julian Wyllard had been a happy
one, but there had been something wanting. That lonely old house at
Penmorval chilled her sometimes, with its silent corridors, its empty
rooms. It would have been so sweet to her to hear baby feet pattering
along those corridors--baby voices--that glad childish treble, which is
like the piping of young birds, in those spacious rooms. There were so
many rooms, there was so much vacant space in the old house which only
children could have filled. And now she told herself that the dream
was past and done with. She felt as if she were growing old, and that
somehow, she knew not how, she and her husband were further apart than
they had been. It might be that the disappointment of a childless union
was preying upon his mind--that he felt the burden of a great fortune
for which he had toiled over-much in his youth, renouncing every social
pleasure, friendship, love, all things, only to heap up wealth for
which there should be no heir.

The dinner at the Windsor was bright and pleasant, albeit Heathcote was
the only guest. Julian Wyllard was in excellent spirits, full of plans
for making the most of the bright weather in Switzerland. Dora was
pleased at his gaiety. She had been going about a good deal with him,
revisiting all the places she had seen with her mother--the churches,
the galleries, the law-courts, that brand-new Palais de Justice, so
splendid, so imposing, so uninteresting. They had been to Versailles.

"Did you go to Saint-Germain?" asked Heathcote. "There is not much
to see in the chateau where poor old James Stuart shed the light of
exiled royalty; but the old town, and the terrace, and the forest are
delightful."

"No; we did not go to Saint-Germain. We had arranged to go yesterday,
but Julian mistook the time at which the train started, and we reached
the station too late for the only train that would have suited us."

"You have never been to Saint-Germain?" asked Heathcote.

"O yes; I was there with my mother years ago," answered Dora. "We
stayed at the Henri Quatre for a week. I have ridden and rambled all
over the forest. I was charmed with the place. I should like to have
gone there again with Julian."

"There may be time when we return from Switzerland," said her husband.

"Why not delay your journey for a day, and let us all go to
Saint-Germain to-morrow?" said Heathcote. "Suppose you dine with me at
the Henri Quatre. I have a morbid interest in that hotel, and in the
forest."

"Indeed! But why?" asked Dora.

Instead of any verbal answer, Heathcote took from his pocket the
photograph of Marie Prévol, and handed it to Mrs. Wyllard. She and
her husband looked at it together. She had drawn closer to him after
dinner, as they sat at the small round table, and now they were sitting
side by side, like lovers.

There was a silence as they looked at the portrait.

"What an exquisite face!" exclaimed Dora at last. "I don't think I ever
saw lovelier eyes or a sweeter expression. Who is the original? Do you
know her?"

"She has been dead ten years. I never saw her," answered Heathcote
gravely.

"But what has this portrait to do with your morbid interest in the
forest of Saint-Germain?" asked Dora.

"It is the likeness of a woman who was cruelly murdered there just ten
years ago. She was an actress known as Marie Prévol. The murder made a
great sensation at the time. You must have heard of it, Mr. Wyllard;
for I think you were a resident in Paris in '71?"

"I was a resident in Paris till '73. Yes, I perfectly remember the
murder of Marie Prévol and her admirer. But it was one of those crimes
which do not excite any deep or lasting interest. The case was too
common, the motive too obvious. An outbreak of jealous fury on the
part of a jilted lover. Had the murderer and his victims belonged to
the working classes, society would scarcely have heard of the crime,
certainly would have taken no notice of it. But because she was an
actress and her admirer a man of fashion, there was a fuss."

"Then you do not consider such a murder interesting?" asked Heathcote.

"Assuredly not," replied Wyllard. "To be interesting a murder must be
mysterious. Here there was no mystery."

"Pardon me. I think you must have forgotten the details of the story.
There was a mystery, and a profound one; but that mystery was the
character of the man Georges, who was known to have been Marie Prévol's
devoted lover, and who was by some supposed to have been her husband."

"Ah, yes, I remember," answered Wyllard. "These things come back to
one's mind as one discusses them. Georges was the name of the supposed
murderer. He got off so cleverly as to baffle the keenest police in
Europe."

"Did you know any thing of him?"

"Nothing. He was a nobody, I believe. A man of ample means, but of no
social standing."

"His life was a social mystery; and it is in that mysterious existence
that I find an interest surpassing anything I have hitherto met with in
the history of crime."

"Really!" exclaimed Julian Wyllard, with something of a sneer in his
tone. "I perceive you have begun the business of amateur detective on
a large scale. I understood from Dora that you were coming to Paris
solely with a view to finding out anything there was to be discovered
about that poor little girl who tumbled off the viaduct, and whom, I
think, you call Louise Lemarque."

"Léonie Lemarque. That was the girl's name. Léonie Lemarque's death is
only the last link in a chain of events beginning with the murder of
Marie Prévol."

Julian Wyllard started impatiently from his chair.

"My dear Heathcote, I thought you the most sensible man I ever met,
but really this sounds like rank lunacy. What in Heaven's name can the
murder at Saint-Germain ten years ago have to do with the death of that
girl the other day?"

"Only this much. Léonie Lemarque was Marie Prévol's niece: and I have
the strongest reason for believing that she went to London to meet the
murderer of her aunt."



CHAPTER VI.


STRUCK DOWN.


As Edward Heathcote uttered those words, the conviction of their
truth flashed into his mind. In thoughtful days and wakeful nights
this question as to the identity of the person who was to meet Léonie
Lemarque at the railway-station had been a perplexity to him, the
subject of many a new theory: and now it came upon him all at once that
this assertion, which he had made on the spur of the moment, in the
heat of argument, was the true solution of the mystery.

It was to Georges himself--her daughter's generous adoring lover,
her daughter's suspected murderer--that Madame Lemarque had sent her
granddaughter, as to one who, of all other men, would be most inclined
to act generously to the orphan girl, were it only in remorse for his
crime.

He tried to realise the thoughts of the lonely old woman, dying in
penury, leaving her orphan grandchild to face the world without a
friend. She would go over the list of those whom she had known in the
past--those who were rich enough to be generous. Alas! how few there
are who remain the friends of poverty! One man she had known of,
although she had never seen him--rich, generous to lavishness. She had
at one time believed him to be the murderer of her daughter. But it
might be that she had afterwards modified her opinion, that she had
received some communication from this Georges, that he had assured
her of his innocence, that he had sent her money, had helped her to
struggle on against adverse times, had helped her for a while, and
then grown weary. And she, knowing the place of his exile, had, in her
desperation, determined upon committing her grandchild to this man's
care; rather than to the pitiless world of strange faces and careless
hearts, the outside world, to which one helpless girl the more is but
as one drop in the ocean of sorrowing humanity. She had sent Léonie
Lemarque to meet this man, and the girl had recognised the murderer of
her aunt.

And yet this could hardly be, since the cabman's evidence showed that
Léonie had been on the best possible terms with the person in whose
company she drove to Paddington Station.

After that speech of his, Edward Heathcote had no longer the power to
withhold any details of his investigation from Julian Wyllard and his
wife. He told them in fewest words all that he had discovered since he
crossed the Channel.

Dora was intensely interested in the story. The passionate love and
passionate jealousy were very human feelings that appealed to her
womanly tenderness. She could not withhold her pity from the murderer.

"Strange that, in all your Parisian experience, you never met this
Monsieur Georges," she said to her husband.

"Hardly, since I seldom went out in the evening; while this man was
evidently a thorough Bohemian, who only began to live after midnight,"
answered Wyllard.

He was sitting in a thoughtful attitude, his elbow on the table, his
chin leaning on his hand, and that photograph of Marie Prévol lying
before him. He was looking intently at it, perusing every lineament.

Presently he raised his eyes, slowly, thoughtfully, from the photograph
to the face of his wife.

"Yes," said Heathcote, "I know what you are thinking. There _is_ a
likeness. It struck me this evening when I came into this room. There
is a curious likeness between the face of the living and the dead."

That morning, on studying the countenance in the photograph, Heathcote
had been perplexed--worried, even--by a sense of familiarity in that
face of the dead. It smiled at him as a face he had known of old--a
face out of the past. Yet it was only in the evening, when he came into
the _salon_ at the Windsor, and Mrs. Wyllard turned towards him in the
lamplight, that he knew what the likeness meant. It was not an obvious
or striking likeness. The resemblance was rather in expression than in
feature, but one face recalled the other.

"Yes, there is a likeness," said Wyllard coldly, passing the
photograph back to its owner, who rose to take leave, just as the clock
on the mantelpiece struck eleven.

"I shall look in to-morrow, and see if you are inclined for an
afternoon at Saint-Germain," he said, as he shook hands with Dora.

"You are very kind," she said, "but your invitation is no longer
tempting. You have spoiled my interest in that sweet old place. I shall
always think of it as the scene of Marie Prévol's death."

"But surely that is an additional charm," said Wyllard mockingly. "If
you are gifted with Mr. Heathcote's detective temper--the genius of
the heaven-born police-officer--Saint-Germain will be all the more
interesting to you on account of a double murder--and perhaps a suicide
into the bargain; for it is not unlikely that the murderer's bones are
mouldering in some gravel-pit."

"You forget Drubarde's story of the travelling-cap," said Heathcote.

"That was a shrewd hypothesis on your ex-police-officer's part, but it
is by no means conclusive evidence," answered Wyllard.

Heathcote called at the Windsor upon the following afternoon, to
inquire if Mr. and Mrs. Wyllard had left for Switzerland. He was
shocked to hear that Mr. Wyllard had been taken seriously ill in the
night, and that there had been two medical men with him that morning.
Madame was terribly distressed, the waiter told him, but she bore up
admirably.

Heathcote sent in his name, and was at once admitted to the _salon_,
where Dora came to him after the briefest delay.

She was very pale, and there were signs of terror, and of grief in her
countenance.

"I am glad you have come," she faltered. "I should have sent for you,
only--" she hesitated, and stopped, with tears in her eyes, feeling
that in another moment she might have said too much. He was her oldest
friend, the man to whom her thoughts turned naturally in the hour of
trouble, the man whom, of all others, she most trusted; but he was her
old lover also, and she felt that never again could she dare to appeal
to his friendship as she had done for Bothwell's sake.

"Is there anything very serious?" he asked.

"Yes, it is very serious. Paralysis. Only a slight attack, the doctors
say. But there are signs of a physical decay which may end fatally--an
overworked nervous system, the English physician says. And yet his life
has been so easy, so placid, for the last seven years."

"No doubt; but his life in this city was a life of excitement and
anxiety, the fever of the race for wealth. He is suffering now, most
likely, for the high pressure of that period. Is his mind affected by
the shock?"

"Not in the least. His mind was never clearer than it has been to-day."

"When did the illness begin?"

"Early this morning, five hours after you left us. We sat up till
nearly one o'clock, talking of our trip to Switzerland and Italy.
Julian was in wonderful spirits. I have never known him more cheerful.
He planned a tour that would last all through the winter, as I told
him. It was one o'clock when I went to bed, and I left him sitting in
his dressing-room, reading. The door was half open, and I could see
him, as he sat by the table, in the bright light of the lamp. I had
slept for hours, as it seemed to me, when I was awakened by hearing my
name called in a strange voice. I sprang out of bed; frightened by that
unknown voice, and then I heard the name again, and knew all at once
that it was Julian's voice, only altered beyond recognition. I rushed
to him. He had sunk back into his armchair. I asked him what was the
matter, and he told me that he could not move. There was numbness in
all his limbs. His arms were as heavy as lead. I seized his hand and
found it deadly cold. I rang the bell with all my might, and at last
one of the women-servants came to my help. She roused the porter, and
sent him to fetch a doctor. It was not quite four o'clock when she came
to me, but it was past five o'clock before the doctor arrived. He told
me at once that my husband had had a paralytic shock, and he helped
me to get him to bed, while the porter went in search of a nurse. I
wanted to have nursed Julian myself, without the help of any stranger,
whose presence might worry him: but the doctor said that would be
impossible. I must have a skilled nurse in attendance. There would be
plenty for me to do in helping her, he said. So I submitted, and the
nurse was with us in less than an hour--a nursing-sister of the order
of St. Vincent de Paul, a very nice person."

"Is your doctor a clever man?"

"The Frenchman who came in the morning seems clever; and, at my
request, he brought Dr. Danvers, an English physician. I am told he is
the best English doctor in Paris. They are both of the same opinion as
to the nature of the attack; but Dr. Danvers is inclined to look upon
it more seriously than the French doctor. He declared that Julian's
brain must have been frightfully overworked within the last few years;
and when I told him that my husband's life had, to my knowledge, been
one of rest and tranquil monotony, I could see by his face that he did
not believe me."

"Mr. Wyllard is better, I hope, since the morning."

"Yes, he is much better. There is still a feeling of heaviness and dull
pain; but he is so patient, he will hardly confess he is in pain,
though I can see from his face that he suffers."

The tears rushed to her eyes, and she walked hastily to the window,
where she stood for a few minutes holding her handkerchief before her
face, with her back to Heathcote, who waited silently, knowing the
uselessness of all consolatory speeches at such a time.

She conquered herself, and came back to her seat presently.

"Struck down in the prime of his manhood, in all the force of his
intellect," she said. "It is a deathblow."

"Your English doctor may exaggerate the danger."

"God grant that it is so. I have telegraphed to Sir William Spencer,
entreating him to come to Paris by to-night's mail. The question of
cost is nothing; but I fear he may not be able to leave his practice so
long--or he may be away from London."

"When did you telegraph?"

"An hour ago. I am expecting the answer at any moment. I hope he will
come."

"What is it this Dr. Danvers apprehends?"

"He fears an affection of the spinal marrow, a slow and lingering
malady, full of pain. O, it is too dreadful!" cried the agonised wife,
clasping her hands in a paroxysm of despair. "What has he done to be so
afflicted? how has he deserved such suffering, he who worked so hard,
and denied himself all pleasures in his youth--he who has been so good
and generous to others? Why should he be tortured?"

"Dear Mrs. Wyllard, pray do not give way to grief. The doctor may be
mistaken. He ought not to have told you so much."

"It was right of him to tell me. I begged him to keep nothing from
me--not to treat me as a child. If there is a martyrdom to be borne, I
will bear my part of it. Yes, I will suffer with him, pang for pang,
for to see him in pain will be as sharp an agony for me as the actual
torture can be for him. He is resting now, dozing from the effect of
the morphia which they have injected under the skin."

"I trust if Sir William Spencer come that he will be able to give you a
more hopeful opinion."

"Yes, I am putting my trust in that. But I am full of fear. Dr. Danvers
has such a shrewd clever air. He does not look the kind of man to be
mistaken."

"But in these nervous disorders there is always room for error. You
must hope for the best."

"I will try to hope, for Julian's sake. Goodbye. I must go back to my
place at his bedside. I don't want him to see a strange face when he
awakes."

"Good-bye. Remember, if there is any service I can render you, the
slightest or the greatest, you have only to command me. I shall call
this evening to hear how your patient progresses, and if Spencer is
coming. But I shall not ask to see you."

He left the hotel full of trouble at the agony of one he loved. He
thought of Dora in her helplessness, her loneliness, watching the slow
decay of that vigorous frame, the gradual extinction of that powerful
mind. What martyrdom could be more terrible for a tender-hearted woman?

He called at the Windsor in the evening. The patient was much the
same. Sir William Spencer was expected at eight o'clock next morning.

Edward Heathcote was watching in front of the hotel when the physician
drove up in a fly from the station. Dr. Danvers had gone into the hotel
a few minutes before. Heathcote waited to see Sir William Spencer leave
the hotel in the same fly, accompanied to the carriage door by Dr.
Danvers. They were talking as they came out of the _porte-cochère_,
and their faces were very grave. Heathcote felt that the great English
doctor had not left hope behind him in those rooms on the first floor,
with their sunny windows facing the palace-garden. He had not the heart
to intrude upon Dora immediately after the consultation, though he was
very anxious to hear Sir William's verdict. He watched the fly drive
away, while Dr. Danvers walked briskly in the opposite direction: and
then he strolled along the Rue de Rivoli towards the Palais Royal,
hardly knowing where he went, so deeply were his thoughts occupied by
the grief of the woman he loved.

What if Julian Wyllard were to die, that successful rival of his, the
man who had stolen his plighted wife from him? The thought would come,
though Heathcote tried to shut his mind against it, though he hated
himself for harbouring so selfish an idea. The question would shape
itself in his mind, would be answered somehow or other.

If Julian Wyllard were to die, and Dora were again free to wed whom
she chose? Would the old love be rekindled in her heart? Would the old
lover seem nearer and dearer to her than any other man on earth? Would
she reward him for long years of patient devotion, for a faithfulness
that had never wavered? Alas, no, he could hope for no such reward, he
who had married within a year or two of losing her, who had, in the
world's eye, consoled himself speedily for that loss. Could he go to
her and say, "I never loved my wife; I married her out of pity; my love
was given to you, and you alone!"

That was his secret. To Dora Wyllard he must have seemed as fickle as
the common herd of men, who change their loves as easily as they change
their tailors. He could put forward no claim for past constancy. No,
were she once again free, it would be by the devotion of the future
that he must win her.

And then he recalled what the physician had said about Julian Wyllard's
malady. It would be a slow and lingering disease--a decay of years,
perhaps. He saw the dark possibility of such a martyrdom. Dora's life
would be worn and wasted in the attendance upon that decaying frame,
that sorely tried mind and temper. She would sacrifice health, spirits,
life itself, perhaps, in her devotion to her afflicted husband.
And when the end at last came--the dismal end of all her care and
tenderness--would she be a woman to be wooed and won? Would not life
for her be over, all possibility of happiness for ever gone? Only a
little respite, a little rest remaining before the grave should close
on her broken heart.

No, there was no ground for selfish rejoicing, for wicked hope, in
Julian Wyllard's malady.

Heathcote ordered a simple breakfast in one of the quietest cafés in
the Palais Royal, and lingered over the meal and the newspapers till
he was able to present himself with a better grace at the Windsor.
He had some difficulty in reading the news of the day with attention,
or even comprehension, so full were his thoughts. He recalled Julian
Wyllard's manner and bearing during the last few months, and wondered
at the vigour, the freshness of mind, the power which had been so
obvious in every look, and tone, and gesture. That such a man could
suddenly be struck down without a day's warning, without any imaginable
cause, had seemed almost incomprehensible. Had the nature of the attack
been different, the thing would have appeared less inexplicable. An
apoplectic fit striking down the strong man in his might, as if from
the blow of a Nasmyth hammer, would have seemed far more in character
with the nature of the patient, his vigorous manhood, his appearance of
physical power.

Heathcote called at the Windsor between twelve and one o'clock, and had
only a few minutes to wait in the _salon_ before he was joined by Mrs.
Wyllard.

She was very pale, but she was more composed than on the previous day.
Her countenance had a rigid look, Heathcote thought; as if she had
schooled herself to composure by a severe mental effort. The hand she
gave him was deadly cold.

"I trust you have good news for me," he said. "Is Spencer more hopeful
than your Paris physician?"

"No, there is no hope. I had a long talk with both the doctors after
their consultation. It was very difficult to wring the truth from them
both--to get them to be quite candid. They seemed to pity me so much.
They were full of kindness. As if kindness or pity would help me in
my trouble for _him!_ Nothing can help me--no one--except God. And
perhaps He will not. It seems that in this life there are a certain
number of victims, chosen haphazard, who must suffer mysterious,
purposeless agonies. And Julian is to be one of those sufferers. It is
bitter, inexplicable, cruel. My soul revolts against these fruitless
punishments."

"Tell me what Sir William said."

"The worst. Julian's symptoms indicate a disease of the spinal cord:
progressive muscular atrophy, Sir William called it, a disease
generally caused by excessive muscular activity, but in this case due
to the strain upon the mind. He will waste away inch by inch, hour
by hour, and he will suffer terribly. Yes, that is the worst. This
gradual decay will be a long martyrdom. He will be dependent on opiates
for relief. I am to take comfort in the thought that his pain can be
soothed by repeated injections of morphia; that a sleeping draught will
give him a little rest at night. He is to exist under the influence of
narcotics; he who a few months ago seemed the incarnation of health and
vigour."

"A few months ago, you say. Then you have remarked a change in him of
late?" inquired Heathcote.

"Yes, there has been a change, subtle, mysterious. I could not describe
the symptoms to Sir William Spencer. But there was a curious alteration
in his ways and manner. He was much more irritable. He had strange
intervals of silence."

"Can you recall the beginning of this alteration?"

"Hardly. It was a change that seems to have had no beginning. It was
so gradual--imperceptible almost. It was during that very oppressive
weather early in August that I noticed he was looking ill and haggard.
I thought that he was angry and worried about Bothwell, and that he
was vexed at the stupidity of his bailiff, who had mismanaged one of
the farms, and involved him in a law-suit with a tenant. I fancied
these things were worrying him, and that the excessive heat was making
him ill. I begged him to take medical advice; but he was angry at the
suggestion, and declared that he never felt better in his life."

"What does Sir William advise?"

"That we should go back to Penmorval at once, or at least as soon as
the proper arrangements can be made for the journey. I have telegraphed
to Julian's valet to come here immediately, and Sir William will send a
trained nurse from London by the evening mail. We shall have plenty of
help. Fortunately it is Julian's own wish to go back to Cornwall."

"Is there any improvement in his state today?"

"I dare not say there is improvement. He is very calm, quite resigned.
The physicians told him the nature of his malady; but they did not tell
him that it is hopeless. They left his own intelligence to discover
that; and I fear he knows the truth only too well already. Would you
like to see him, if he is inclined to receive you?"

"Yes, I should much like to see him."

Dora went into the adjoining room, and closed the door behind her. She
reopened it almost immediately, and beckoned to Heathcote, who went in
with careful footstep and bated breath, almost as he might have entered
the chamber of death.

Julian Wyllard was reclining on a sofa, his head and shoulders propped
up by pillows, his legs covered with a fur rug. There was something in
the very position of the body, so straight, so rigid a line from the
waist downwards, which told of that death in life that had fallen upon
the strong man; the man whom Edward Heathcote had last seen erect, in
all the vigour of manhood, tall, broad-shouldered, powerful.

"Well, Heathcote, you have come to see the wreck of proud humanity,"
he said, with a half-sad, half-cynical smile. "You did not know when
you were with us the other night that my race was so nearly run, that I
was to break down in the middle of the course. I have had my warnings,
but I made light of them, and the blow came unexpectedly at last. But
it has left the brain clear. That is some comfort. Sit down; I want to
talk to you--and Dora--seriously."

He was very pale--white even to the lips, and his wife was watching him
anxiously, surprised at the signs of profound agitation in him who had
been so calm after the physicians had left him.

"I am very sorry for you, Wyllard; sorry with all my heart," said
Heathcote earnestly, as he took the chair nearest the sofa, while Dora
seated herself on the other side, close to her husband.

"You are more than good. I am assured that everybody will--pity me,"
this with a smile of bitterest meaning. "But I want to talk to you
about two people in whom you and Dora are both interested--your very
lovable sister, and my wife's scapegrace cousin. They are devoted to
each other; it seems, and except for this little cloud upon Bothwell's
character, I take it you had no objection to the match."

"That was my chief objection."

"Forgive me for saying that it was a most foolish one. Because a few
country bumpkins take it into their heads to suspect a gentleman--"

"Pardon me, Mr. Wyllard, if I confess that I was among those bumpkins.
Mr. Grahame's refusal to answer Mr. Distin's questions, and his obvious
agitation, led me to believe that he was concerned in that girl's
death. I am thankful to be able to say that my discoveries on this side
of the Channel all point in a different direction, while on the other
hand my sister assures me that her lover has satisfactorily explained
the reason of his peculiar conduct at the inquest."

"You have no further objection to Bothwell as a husband for your
sister?"

"No, my esteem for the race from which he sprang is a strong reason
why I should sanction the match; although worldly wisdom is decidedly
against a girl's marriage with a man who was a soldier, and who
is--nothing."

"It shall be our business--Dora's and mine--to reconcile worldly wisdom
and foolish love. My wife tells me that her cousin has turned over a
new leaf--that he has schemed out a new career, and has set to work
with a wonderful amount of energy--just that strong purpose which has
been lacking in him hitherto."

"I have heard as much, and a good deal more than this, from my sister."

"Well, then, my dear Heathcote, all I need add is that means shall not
be wanting to my wife's kinsman to enable him to carry out the scheme
of life which he has made for himself, comfortably and creditably. Dora
and I are both rich. We have no children. We can afford to be generous
in the present; and those we love must naturally profit by our wealth
in the future. Dora's fortune will, in all likelihood, go to Bothwell's
children. In a word, your sister is not asked to marry a pauper."

"I have never thought of the question from a financial standpoint."

"But it must be not the less agreeable to you to know that the
financial aspect is satisfactory," answered Wyllard. "And now what is
to hinder a speedy marriage? It is my wife's wish, Bothwell's wish,
mine, everybody's, so far as I can understand, except yours. You are
the only hindrance. Heathcote, I want to see Bothwell and Hilda married
before I die."

"Julian!" cried his wife, with a stifled sob.

"O my dearest, I am not going to leave you yet awhile," answered her
husband, clasping her hand, and raising it to his lips with infinite
tenderness. "My doctors promise me a slow deliverance. But when a man
has begun to die, were it never so gradually, it is time for him to set
his house in order. I should like to see Bothwell and Hilda married
in Bodmin Church, before the eyes of the people who have maligned my
wife's kinsman. I should like the wedding to take place as soon as
possible."

"I am sure Hilda's brother will not refuse your request," said Dora,
with a pleading look at Heathcote.

"If Hilda and her lover can fulfil their own scheme of happiness by a
speedy marriage, I will not be a stumbling-block," said Heathcote.

After this they talked for a little while on indifferent subjects, and
of the journey back to Cornwall--that tedious journey of a helpless
invalid which would be so different from any previous experience
of Julian Wyllard's. He spoke of it lightly enough, affecting a
philosophical disdain for the changes and chances of this little life:
but Heathcote marked the quiver of his lip, the look of pain, which
neither pride nor stoicism could suppress.

Yes, it was a hard thing for such a man, in the very prime of life,
handsome, clever, prosperous, to be so struck down: and it could but be
said that Julian Wyllard carried himself firmly under the trial.

Heathcote and Dora parted sorrowfully outside the sick-room.

"Is it not good of him to wish to see Bothwell's happiness secured?"
she said.

"It is very good of him to think of any one except himself at such a
moment," answered Heathcote.

"I am so glad he has won your consent to an early marriage. And now
that you have given that consent--now that we are all assured of the
folly of any suspicion pointing at Bothwell--I conclude that you will
trouble yourself no more about the mystery of that poor girl's death."

"There you are mistaken. I shall go on with my investigation, in the
cause of justice. Besides, Bothwell's character can never be thoroughly
rehabilitated till the real criminal is found; and, for a third reason,
I am interested in this strange story as a work of art. Good-bye,
Mrs. Wyllard; if I can be of any use to you to-morrow in helping to
move your invalid, pray send for me. If not, I suppose we shall not
meet till I call on you at Penmorval. I leave the business of Hilda's
marriage to your discretion. She cannot have a better adviser than you,
and whatever plans you make I shall sanction."

He left the hotel and strolled slowly towards the Madeleine, hardly
knowing what he should do with the rest of his day. He had an
appointment with Sigismond Trottier in the evening. That gentleman
and he were to meet at the Gymnase at the first performance of a new
play, and they were to sup at Vachette's afterwards, when Heathcote was
to hear any fresh facts that the paragraphist might have gathered for
him relating to the mysterious Georges and the once celebrated Mdlle.
Prévol. Trottier had promised to hunt up the few men who had been
intimate with Georges, and to get all the information he could from
them.

In front of the Madeleine Heathcote was overtaken by that good-natured
merchant, Gustav Blümenlein, who had felt so much pleasure in showing
his apartments to Mrs. Wyllard. They walked on together for a short
distance, in the direction of the Blümenlein establishment, and
Heathcote told the merchant of his predecessor's sudden illness.

Monsieur Blümenlein was interested and sympathetic, and as they were
now in front of his office, he insisted upon Mr. Heathcote going in to
smoke a cigarette, or share a bottle of Lafitte with him. Heathcote
refused the Lafitte, but accepted the cigarette, not sorry to find
an excuse for revisiting his rival's old abode. He blamed himself
for this curiosity about Julian Wyllard's youth, as an unworthy and
petty feeling: yet, he could not resist the temptation to gratify that
curiosity which chance had thrown in his way.

They went through the offices, where clerks were working at their
ledgers, and warehousemen hurrying in and out, and passed into the
library--that handsome and somewhat luxurious apartment, which remained
in all things, save the books upon the shelves, exactly as Julian
Wyllard had left it.

"Did you know him twenty years ago?" asked Blümenlein, after they had
talked of the late tenant, and his successful career in Paris.

"No, I never saw him till just before his marriage, about seven years
ago."

"Ah, then you did not know him as a young man. I have a photograph
of him in that drawer, yonder," pointing to a writing-table by the
fireplace, "taken fifteen years ago, when he was beginning to make his
fortune; when the Crédit Mauresque was at the height of its popularity.
It went to smash afterwards, as, no doubt, you know; but Wyllard
contrived to get out of it with clean hands--only just contrived."

"You mean to say that his part of the transaction was open to doubt?"

"My dear sir, on the Bourse, during the Empire, everything was, more
or less, open to doubt. There were only two irrefragable facts in the
financial world of that time. There was a great deal of money made,
and a great deal of money lost. Mr. Wyllard was a very clever man, and
he contrived to be from first to last on the winning side. Nobody ever
brought any charge of foul play against him; and, in this matter, he
was luckier, or cleverer, than the majority of his compeers."

"I should like to see that photograph of which you spoke just now,"
said Heathcote.

"You shall see it. A clever face, a remarkable face, I take it,"
answered Blümenlein, unlocking a drawer, and producing a photograph.

Yes, it was a fine head, a powerful head, instinct with wondrous
vitality, with the energy of a man bound to dominate others, in any
sphere of life; a master of whatever craft he practised. It was not
the face of abstract intellect. The white, cold light of the student
did not illumine those eyes, nor did the calm of the student's tranquil
temper inform the mouth. There was passion in the face; strongest human
feelings were expressed there; the love of love, the hate of hate.

"It is a marvellous face for a money-grubber," exclaimed Heathcote,
"an extraordinary countenance for a man who could shut himself from
all the charms of the world, such a world as the Second Empire--a man
who could be indifferent to art, beauty, wit, music, social pleasures
of all kinds, and live only for his cash-box and bank-book. Difficult
to reconcile this face with the life which we are told Wyllard led in
these rooms."

"It is more than difficult," said Blümenlein; "it is, to my mind,
impossible to believe in so monstrous an anomaly as that sordid life
endured for nearly ten years by such a temperament as that which the
photograph indicates. I am something of a physiognomist, and I think
I know what that face means; if faces have any meaning whatever. It
means strong feeling, a fervid imagination, a mind that could not be
satisfied with the triumphs of successful finance. It means a nature
in which the heart must have fair play. Whatever Julian Wyllard's life
may have appeared in the eyes of the men with whom he had business
relations--however he may have contrived to pass for the serious
genius of finance, old before his time, the embodiment of abstruse
calculations and far-seeing policy--be sure that the life was not a
barren life, and that fiery passions were factors in the sum of that
existence."

"But his life seems to have been patent to all the world."

"Yes, Mr. Heathcote, the life he led in public. But who knows how he
may have plunged into the dissipations of Paris after office hours?
That little door in the alcove has its significance, you may be sure.
I made light of it in Mrs. Wyllard's presence, for I know that women
are jealous even of the past. Why should I deprive her of the pleasure
of considering her husband a model of propriety, in the remote past
as well as in the present? I affected--for that dear lady's sake--to
believe the side door the work of a prior tenant to Mr. Wyllard. But I
happen to have documentary evidence that Mr. Wyllard had the door made
for him in the third year of his tenancy. I found the receipted account
of the builder who made it, among some papers left by my predecessor at
the back of a cupboard."

"Then you think that Wyllard was a man with two faces?"

"I do," replied Blümenlein: "I think that Wyllard, the speculator and
financier, was one man--but that there was another man of whose life
the world knew nothing, and who went out and came in between dusk and
dawn by that side door in the court."



CHAPTER VII.


THE GENERAL RECEIVES A SUMMONS.


While Bothwell was working out the scheme of an industrious
unpretentious life, to be spent with the woman he loved on that wild
Cornish coast on which he had been reared, and which was to him as
a passion, Lady Valeria Harborough was shining in the county and
military society within twenty miles of Plymouth--admired, envied, to
outward seeming the most fortunate of women. She went everywhere, she
received every one worth receiving. She had brought something of the
easy manners, the unceremonious gaiety, of Simla to her Devonshire
villa. Her afternoon parties were the liveliest in the neighbourhood.
Her weekly musical evenings were the rage. She engaged the best
professional talent obtainable for these evenings. She rigidly
eschewed the amateur element. She selected music and songs with an
extraordinary tact, and contrived that no hackneyed composition
should be ever heard at her parties. The newest ballads, the last
successes in modern classical music, were first revealed to county
society at Fox Hill. There people heard the gavotte that was going
to be fashionable, the song that was to be the rage next season. And
on these evenings, when the flowery corridors and the long suite of
rooms were filled with guests, when the spacious music-room, with its
two grand pianos and magnificent organ, was thrown open to the crowd,
Lady Valeria circulated amidst the throng, a queen among women, not so
beautiful as the fairest of her guests, but by far the most attractive
of them all. There was a subtle charm in those dreamy eyes and in
that languid smile. Beardless subalterns worshipped her as if she had
been a goddess; and many a man, who could hardly have been included
in Lady Valeria's list of "nice boys," felt his heart beat faster as
she lingered by his side for a few minutes. She had a smile and a word
for every one who crossed her threshold; the most insignificant guest
was greeted and remembered. She seemed a woman who lived only for
society, who had fulfilled her mission when she had been admired. The
General was proud of his young wife's success, delighted that his house
should be known as the pleasantest in the county. He could afford that
money should be spent as if it were water. He never complained of the
expenses of his establishment, but he knew the cost of everything, and
paid all accounts with his own cheques. Unluckily for Lady Valeria,
old habits of strict accountancy, acquired in the early days when he
was adjutant of his regiment, had clung to him. He liked accounts, and
was in some measure his own house-steward. There was no possibility of
Lady Valeria's gambling debts being paid out of the domestic funds.
Everything was done on a large scale, but by line and rule. A royal
household could not have been managed more rigidly. Thus it was that
Lady Valeria's money difficulties were very real difficulties; and it
was only by a full confession of her folly that she could have obtained
her husband's help.

It was just this confession, this humiliation, to which Lady Valeria
could not bring herself. Candour was the very last virtue to which
she inclined. She had not been brought up in the school of truth.
Her father had been a tyrant, her mother a dealer in expedients, a
diplomatist, a marvel of tact and cleverness, able to achieve wonders
in domestic management and in social policy. But life at Carlavarock
Castle had been a constant strain, and duplicity had become an instinct
with mother and children. There had been always something to hide from
the Earl--a son's debts, a daughter's flirtation, a milliner's bill, a
debt of honour. Valeria had been oppressed with gambling debts before
she was twenty. She had played deep, and borrowed money in her first
season. She had married, hoping that General Harborough's wealth would
be hers to spend as she pleased; but in this she had been disappointed.
She had married the most generous of men; but she had married a man of
business. He made a magnificent settlement before marriage; he made a
will after marriage, leaving the bulk of his fortune to his young wife,
to be hers, and in her own control, if there were no children--hers
without an embargo against a second marriage. She had pin-money that
would have been a liberal allowance for a countess; but she had not the
handling of her husband's income. She could not have cheated him out of
a five-pound note. He had told her in the beginning of their married
life that it would be so. He was a man of business, and she was too
young to be troubled with the sordid details of domestic life.

"Order what you like, love. Make our home as beautiful as you can. I
will pay your bills, and take care that you are not cheated by your
tradesmen."

At the outset Lady Valeria had accepted this arrangement as altogether
delightful; but there came a time when she found that it had its
inconveniences.

To-night, in the balmy September weather, the windows of the villa
were all open to the sky and the garden, open to the music of the
distant sea, and Lady Valeria was sitting in the verandah where a
week ago she had bidden farewell to Bothwell Grahame. It was nearly
midnight, and the crowd was concentrated in the music-room, where Herr
Stahlmann was playing a new Sauterelle on his violoncello. The moon was
shining over the sea yonder, gleaming upon the long white line of the
breakwater; and the distant view of town and harbour looked even more
Italian than in the daytime. Lady Valeria wore a long flowing gown of
an almost Grecian simplicity, a gown of dead-white cashmere, bordered
with a marvellous embroidery of peacocks' feathers, which fell in a
slanting line from shoulder to hem, the brilliant colouring flashing
in the moonlight, as the wearer slowly fanned herself with a large
peacock-feather fan.

"Are you not afraid to wear so many peacocks' feathers?" asked a
gentleman who was sitting at her elbow, a handsome man of about
forty--a man who was not altogether good style in dress or manner, but
who had a certain ease and authority which indicated good birth and the
habits of fashionable society.

This was Sir George Varney, a personage in the racing world, but
reputed to have been utterly broken for the last three years. In the
racing world there is always a chance so long as a man can keep his
head above water; and Sir George might still have a future before him.
Although he was supposed to have spent his last farthing and mortgaged
his last acre, he always contrived to get money when he wanted it; and
he had contrived to lend money to Lady Valeria.

"Why should I not wear peacocks' feathers?" Lady Valeria asked
languidly.

Her profile was turned to him, her eyes were looking towards the line
of moonlight on the sea, the white walls of barracks and storehouses.
She did not take the trouble to turn her face to her companion as she
spoke to him. Pale, languid, dreamy, she seemed the very image of
indifference.

"Because they are considered so"--casting about for a mild
expression--"confoundedly unlucky. I remember the morning of the
Oaks, the year my Cherryripe shut up like a telescope half a furlong
from the winning-post, my sister Grace drove up to Hatchett's to
meet the drag--I was to drive her and a lot of 'em to Epsom, don't
you know--with an infernal pork-pie hat made out of a peacock's
breast. 'What did you wear that damn thing for?' I asked. 'Because
it's the fashion,' says she. 'Shouldn't wonder if my mare lost the
race on account of your damn tile,' says I. Grace chaffed me for my
superstition; but the mare made a most unaccountable mess of herself,
don't you know, and the Devil himself or that peacock-feather hat must
have been at the bottom of it."

"I don't think the peacocks' feathers will make any difference to me,"
replied Valeria wearily. "I have been unlucky all my life."

"Well, Fate has been rather hard upon you," said Sir George, drawing
his chair a little nearer to hers, gazing at the delicate profile
with a more ardent look than was quite within the lines of friendship
and good-fellowship. "A beautiful young woman married to a man old
enough to be her grandfather, carried off to broil away her existence
in Bengal, when she ought to have been one of the queens of London
society--stinted to a bare allowance of pin-money, hardly enough to
pay her dressmaker, by Jove, when she ought to have had the command of
her husband's purse. Why not cut the whole business, Valeria, and go
to the south of France with me, directly after the Newmarket week? I
stand to win a pot of money, and we can spend it merrily at Monaco. I
know how to make plenty more when that's gone. And by and by, when the
General goes off the hooks, we can make things fair and square with the
world--or before, if you'd rather not wait. The thing can be so easily
managed. Look at your cousin, Lady Cassandra, and the Colonel, and the
Duke and his Countess--change of partners all round."

He tried to encircle the slim waist with his strong arm--the arm of
a man who had won cups at Lillie Bridge in days gone by--but Valeria
snatched herself from him with a disdainful laugh, rose from her
chair, and walked to the other end of the verandah, he following her,
sorely disconcerted. He had been watching for his opportunity, and he
fancied the opportunity had come. He had neither creed nor principles
of his own, and he believed that people who pretended to be better than
himself were all hypocrites. Like Dumas' hero, he was ready to admit
that there might be good women in the world, only he had never happened
to meet with one.

He had made himself useful to Lady Valeria: had told her what horses to
back, and had helped her to win a good deal of money since her return
to England. Her losses had been the result of her own inspirations: and
of late, when she had so lost, Sir George had found her the money to
settle with the bookmen. And having done all this, and having devoted
all his leisure to the cultivation of Lady Valeria's acquaintance,
he deemed that the time was ripe for him to ask her to run away with
him. He had run away with so many women in the course of the last
twenty years that his manner of proposing the thing had become almost
a formula. He modified his appeal according to the rank of the adored
one--had his first, second, and third class supplications; but it
was not in his nature to be poetical. Had he been making love to an
empress, he could not have risen to any loftier height than that which
he had reached to-night.

Lady Valeria turned at the end of the verandah, and faced him
deliberately in the bright, cold moonlight, a white and ghostlike
figure, with pale face and flashing eyes. She measured him from head
to foot with a look of unqualified scorn; gazed at him steadily, with
eyes that seemed to read all the secrets of his evil life; and then,
slowly unfurling her peacock fan, she broke into a silvery laugh, long
and clear and sweet, but with a ring of contemptuousness in its every
note.

"You are mistaken, Sir George," she said quietly, moving towards the
open window of the corridor, as if to return to the house. "Your almost
infallible judgment is at fault. I am not that kind of person."

She would have passed him and gone into the house, but he put himself
between her and the open window. He barred her way with all the hulk of
his handsome, over-dressed person. That ringing laughter, the insolent
sparkle in her magnificent eyes, goaded him to madness. Sir George had
a diabolical temper, and the insensate vanity of a successful _roué_.
That any woman could really despise him was beyond his power of belief;
but a woman who pretended to despise him put herself beyond the pale of
his courtesy.

"No," he muttered savagely. "You are not that kind of person. You are
not that kind of person for me, because for the last three years you
have been that kind of person for somebody else. I thought you must
have been tired of Bothwell Grahame by this time, and that I should
have had my chance."

In a breath, as if from the stroke of a Cyclops hammer, George Varney
had measured his length upon the tesselated pavement under the
verandah. It was an old man's arm that felled him; but an athlete of
five-and-twenty could not have struck a firmer blow.

General Harborough had stolen into the gardens to smoke a solitary
cigar, while Herr Stahlmann played his Sauterelle, and, coming quietly
round the house, he had approached the verandah just in time to hear
Sir George's last speech. He had not hesitated a minute as to the
manner of his answer.

"Go to your guests, Valeria," he said, with quiet command; "I will see
to this blackguard."

Valeria obeyed half mechanically. The shock of those last few moments
had made thought impossible. Her mind seemed to have suddenly become a
blank. She went through the brilliant rooms, wondering at the lights
and flowers and smartly-dressed people, seeing everything vaguely,
with a puzzled doubtfulness as to her own identity. She talked and
laughed with more than usual animation for the rest of the evening.
She had a friendly smile and a pleasant word for each departing guest.
She enchanted the artists by her appreciation of their work; yet she
had no more consciousness of what she said or to whom she spoke than a
condemned criminal might have on the eve of his execution.

It was nearly two o'clock when she went to her own rooms--those
spacious rooms, with their windows looking different ways, over hill
and valley, town and sea; rooms beautified by all that art and wealth
can compass in the way of luxury; rooms in which she had sat hour after
hour, day after day, brooding treason, caring more for one look from
Bothwell's dark eyes than for all that glory of sea and land, for all
the luxuries with which an adoring husband had surrounded her.

She had seen the General moving about among his guests at the last. She
had heard the strong cheery tones of his voice as he parted with some
particular friend; and now she wondered if she would find him in her
morning-room, where on such a night as this they had been wont to spend
half an hour in light, careless talk, after the people were gone, he
sitting out on the balcony, perhaps, smoking a final cigar.

Yes, he was there before her, sitting on a sofa, in a meditative
attitude, with his elbow on his knee, far from the lamp, with its
low, spreading shade, a lamp which shed a brilliant light upon Lady
Valeria's own particular writing-table, and left all the rest of the
room in shadow.

Then at the sight of that familiar figure, the bent head, the honoured
gray hairs, all the horror of the scene in the verandah flashed back
upon her. The unmitigated insult of Sir George's speech, such insult as
might have been flung at the lowest woman in London, speech shaped just
as it might have been shaped for such an one. That she, Lady Valeria
Harborough, should have such dirt cast in her face, and that the man
who had so spoken could live to tell other men what he had said, to
boast of himself at the clubs!

"Would to God that blow had killed him!" she said to herself; and then
she went across the room and knelt at her husband's feet, and took his
strong hand in hers, and covered it with kisses.

"God bless you for defending me," she said. "I am not a good woman, I
am not worthy of you, but I am not such a wretch as that man's words
would make me. You will believe that--won't you, Walter?"

"Yes, my dear, I believe that. I cannot think you a false wife,
Valeria, though you may be an unloving one. I have thought for a long
time that the sweet words, and sweeter smiles which have made the light
of my life might mean very little--might mean just the daily sacrifice
which a young wife makes to an old husband, and nothing more. Yet I
have contrived to be happy, Valeria, in spite of all such doubts; and
now this man's foul taunt comes like a blast from a Polar sea, and
freezes my blood. What did it mean, Valeria? I thought Bothwell Grahame
was my friend. I have been almost as fond of him as if he were my son."

"He is your friend, Walter; yes, your true and loyal friend--more
loyal than I have been as your wife."

"What disloyalty have you practised towards me?" he demanded, grasping
her by the shoulder, looking into those frightened eyes of hers with
his honest steady gaze, the look of a man who would read all secrets
in her face, even the worst. "What has there ever been between you
and Bothwell which could involve disloyalty to me? Don't lie to me,
Valeria! There must have been some meaning in that man's speech. He
would not have dared so to have spoken if he had not known something.
What has Bothwell been to you?"

"He loved me----" faltered the pale lips.

"And you returned his love?"

She only hung her head for answer, the beautiful head on the slim and
graceful throat, circled with that string of pearls which had been her
husband's last birthday gift.

"You returned his love, and you encouraged him to come to your
husband's house, to be your chosen companion at all times and seasons,
the 'nice boy' of whom you spoke so lightly as to disarm suspicion.
By Heaven, I would as soon have suspected your footman as Bothwell
Grahame!"

"He was never more to me than a friend. I knew how to respect myself,"
she answered, with a touch of sullenness.

"You knew how to respect yourself, and you spent half your days in the
society of a lover! Is that your idea of self-respect? It is not mine.
You respected yourself, and you were careful of your own interests so
far as to refrain from running away with the man you loved. What need
of an elopement, when the sands must soon run down in the hourglass,
and the gray-haired veteran would be gone, leaving you a rich widow,
free to marry the man of your heart? No need to defy the world, to
outrage society, when everything would work round naturally to give you
your own way. O Valeria, it is hard for a man to have his eyes opened
after years of blissful blindness! I was better off as your dupe than I
am as your confessor."

He laughed bitterly, a contemptuous laugh, at the thought of his own
folly. To think that he had believed it possible this woman could
love him--this lovely, spiritual creature, all light and flame; to
suppose that such a woman could be happy as an old man's darling,
that this young bright soul could be satisfied with the worship of
declining years, the steady glow of affection, constant, profound,
but passionless! No, for such a soul as this the fiery element was a
necessity. Love without passion was love without poetry.

Well, the dream was over. He could believe that this proud woman had
not dishonoured him, that she could stand before the eyes of men
stainless, a faithful wife, as the world counts faithfulness. But he
felt not the less that the dream of his declining years was over--that
she could never more be to him as she had been, the sweet companion
of his leisure, the trusted partner of his life. That was all over
and done with. He was not going to revile her, or to torture her, or
to thrust her from him. To what end? The gulf would be wide enough,
they two living side by side. He would pay her all honour before the
world to the end of his days. To live with her, and to be kind to her,
knowing that her heart belonged to another, should be his sacrifice,
his penance for having tied that young sapling to this withered trunk.

"I have noticed that Grahame has kept aloof from us of late," he said,
after a long silence. "Why is that?"

"We agreed that it was better we should see no more of each other," his
wife answered quietly.

"I hope you will always remain in that agreement," said the General.

He sat up till daybreak, and he occupied part of his time in writing
the rough draft of a codicil to his will, which he meant to take to his
London solicitors at the earliest opportunity.

The codicil lessened Lady Valeria's fortune considerably, and allotted
40,000£ to a fund, the interest of which was to be distributed in
the form of pensions to twenty widows of field-officers who had died
in impoverished circumstances. This subtraction would still leave an
estate which would make Lady Valeria Harborough a very rich widow, and
a splendid prize in the matrimonial market.

"She will marry Bothwell Grahame, and forget the days of her slavery,"
thought the General, as he wrote the closing paragraph of his codicil.

It was from no malignant feeling against his wife that he made this
change in the disposition of his wealth. He felt that the act was mere
justice. To the wife whom he had believed wholly true he bequeathed
all. To the woman who had been only half loyal he left half. A mean
man would have fettered his bequest by the prohibition of a second
marriage; but General Harborough was not that kind of man.

He wondered whether Sir George Varney would take any action in the
matter of that blow. He had assisted the fallen man to a chair in the
verandah, and had taken him a tumbler of brandy, which Sir George drank
as if it had been water. In his half-stunned condition the Baronet had
sworn an oath or two, and had walked off muttering curses, which might
mean threats of speedy vengeance.

"If he is the scoundrel I think him, he will send me a summons, in
order to drag my wife's name before the public," thought General
Harborough; nor was he mistaken, for the summons was served within two
days of the assault. It was delivered at the villa in the General's
absence. He had started for Bath by an early train that morning, in
order to attend the funeral of an old friend and brother officer upon
the following day. He had an idea of going on from Bath to London, to
see his solicitors, and to execute the codicil which was to diminish
Lady Valeria's future means.

At the station he met Bothwell Grahame, who was on his way to Dawlish.

There had been a reserve in the young man's manner of late which had
puzzled the General. He had been inclined to put down the change
to a deterioration in Grahame's character, a gradual going to the
bad, for he had an instinctive prejudice against a soldier who could
voluntarily abandon his profession. It was bad enough for a man to be
thrown out of active service in the prime of life, in accordance with
new-fangled rules and regulations; but that a young man should abandon
soldiering for any other career seemed to General Harborough at once
inexplicable and discreditable. "Bothwell Grahame is getting a regular
hang-dog look," thought the General; "and I am not surprised at it.
He has thrown away splendid opportunities, and is leading an idle,
good-for-nothing life."

And now the General knew the meaning of that hang-dog look, that
reserved manner which had struck him as the outward sign of an inward
deterioration in the man he had loved as a son. He could understand
what agonies of shame and remorse Bothwell must have felt when their
hands touched, what self-contempt was expressed in that cloudy brow and
furtive glance.

What, then, was his surprise this morning to see Bothwell approach him
with a beaming countenance, holding out the hand of friendship!

"My dear General, I am so glad to see you. It is such an age since we
met," he exclaimed, in cheeriest tones.

Yes, there was the old ring in his voice, the old heartiness which
had made Bothwell so different from the race of languid foplings--the
haw-haw tribe.

"Yes, it is some time since we met," answered the General coldly; "but
I daresay you and my wife have seen each other pretty frequently
during that time. You are the kind of man our neighbours call _l'ami de
la maison_. We English have a less honourable name for the species. We
call them tame cats."

Bothwell reddened, and then grew pale. Never before had those kindly
eyes of the veteran's looked at him as they looked to-day. Never before
had General Harborough addressed him in a tone which sounded like
deliberate insult.

"I have been proud to be Lady Valeria's guest," he said quietly, his
heart beating furiously the while, "and have never considered myself
degraded by any attention I was able to show to her. I hope she is
well."

"She is very well. How long is it since you were at Fox Hill?"

"Nearly a fortnight."

"So long?"

"I have been very much occupied," said Bothwell, divining that
something had occurred to excite the General's suspicions, and that it
behoved him to speak frankly of his new hopes. "I have been working
a good deal harder than I have ever worked since I passed my last
examination. But we are just going to start. May I get into the same
carriage with you?"

"If you like," said the General, which hardly sounded encouraging;
but Bothwell, who was virtuously travelling third-class, got into a
first-class compartment with the General.

"And, pray, what new trade are you working at?" asked the old man,
fixing Bothwell with the clear keen gaze of honest gray eyes, eyes
which had almost the brightness of youth.

Bothwell explained his new plans, the General listening with polite
attention, but with none of the old friendliness, that cheery kindness
which had so often been to Bothwell as a whip of scorpions, torturing
him with the sense of his own meanness.

"And, pray, what may be the motive of this industrious spurt?" asked
the General. "What has inspired this idea of a useful life?"

"A very old-fashioned and hackneyed motive, General. I am engaged to
be married, and have to think of how I can best provide a home for my
wife."

"Indeed! Is the engagement of long standing?"

"Not at all. I have been engaged within the last fortnight; but I have
known and admired the lady for a long time."

General Harborough looked at him searchingly. Was this a lie--a ready
lie invented on the spur of the moment, to dispel suspicion? Bothwell
had doubtless perceived the alteration in his old friend's feelings
towards him; and he might consider this notion of an engagement the
readiest way of throwing dust in a husband's eyes.

"Do I know the young lady?" he asked quietly.

"I think not. She has not been much away from her home, but her brother
is a well-known personage in Plymouth. The lady is Hilda Heathcote,
sister of Mr. Heathcote, the coroner for Cornwall."

"Indeed! I have heard of Mr. Heathcote. So you are going to marry Miss
Heathcote? Rather a good match, I suppose?"

"I have never considered it from a worldly point of view. Miss
Heathcote is a most lovable girl, and has all the charms and
accomplishments which the most exacting lover could desire in his
betrothed. I am infinitely proud of having won her."

He met the General's eyes, and the steady light in his own was the
light of truth. General Harborough doubted him no longer. If he had
ever loved Valeria, that passion was extinct, dead as the flames
of Dido's funeral pyre. The man who sat face to face with General
Harborough to-day was a happy lover, his countenance radiant with the
light of a pure and authorised love.

"When are you going to be married?" asked the General, after a longish
pause.

"As soon as I can set my house in order and induce Hilda to name the
day," answered Bothwell frankly. "My dear girl has to be submissive to
her brother's will in this matter, and he is now in Paris. Nothing can
be finally settled till he comes back. I am stealing a march upon him
to-day in going to see the lady--who has been sent to Dawlish to be out
of my way."

"O, she is at Dawlish, is she?"

"Yes; she is staying there with her nieces and their governess. I am
going to consult her about our house."

"Our house!" What pride there was in the utterance! The General's
doubts were gradually melting away. He could not believe that a man
who was so obviously in love with his betrothed could have ever cared
much for Valeria. To have loved her, and to have exchanged her love for
that of any other woman living, seemed to the General an impossibility.
He began to think that his wife had exaggerated the situation the
other night, in the overwrought state of her nerves, stung to madness
by Varney's insolent speech, excited by her husband's retaliation.
He began to think that there had been only the mildest flirtation
between Bothwell and his wife--the ordinary up-country sentimentality,
meaningless, puerile.

He tried to comfort himself with this view of the case. His natural
kindness of heart prompted him to help Bothwell if he could. He wanted
to respect the wife he loved, to think well of the man who had saved
his life.

"My dear Bothwell," he said, "you have come to a crisis in life which
most men find as costly as it is delightful. If by any chance you
happen to be what our young people call 'short,' I hope you will allow
me to be your banker."

"You are too good," faltered Bothwell, strongly moved. "You have always
been too good to me--ever so much better than I deserved. No, I am
wonderfully well off. My cousin has advanced me a sum of money which
she wishes me to take as a gift, but which I intend to treat as a loan."

"That is generally a distinction without a difference--when the
transaction is between relations," said the General, smiling.

"O, but in this case I hope the loan will be repaid, for the repayment
will hinge upon my prosperity. I have opened a banking-account at
Bodmin, and feel myself a moneyed man."

General Harborough encouraged Bothwell to talk of his sweetheart and
his prospects all the way to Dawlish; and then, when the train stopped
at the little station beside the sea, Bothwell and his old friend shook
hands cordially; and Bothwell felt that he could clasp that honest hand
without a pang of conscience. Little did he think that it was the last
time that hand would rest in his.

"Let me know the date of your wedding," cried the General, as the train
moved off; and Bothwell went in high spirits to look for the temple,
in the shape of a pretty little house in a garden by the sea, which
enshrined his goddess.

Fortune seemed to be showering her gifts upon him with a bounteous
hand. Nothing could have been more propitious than this meeting with
General Harborough, who had promised all the help his influence could
afford to the army coach.

       *       *       *       *       *

The General went on to his destination. The gay white city of Bath had
no attraction for him upon this particular afternoon. He called on the
widow of his old friend, and comforted her as much as it was possible
for any one to comfort her in her great sorrow. He dined alone and
sadly at his hotel; and as he sat and pondered on the events of the
last week, he began to speculate how much or how little grief _his_
widow would feel when her day of mourning came. Would her eyelids be
puffy and red as poor Mrs. Thornton's had been this afternoon, when he
was talking to her? Would her swollen lips quiver, and her distorted
features twitch convulsively? Would her whole frame be shaken with sobs
when she talked of the departed? He could not imagine Lady Valeria with
puffy eyelids or swollen lips. He pictured her mourning gracefully,
clad in softest white draperies, reclining in a darkened room, in an
atmosphere perfumed with tuberose and stephanotis. He pictured her with
a sphinx-like countenance, calm, beautiful, an expression which might
mean deepest grief or stoniest indifference, as the world chose to
construe it.

No, honestly, after considering the question from every possible point
of view, General Harborough did not believe that his wife would grieve
for him.

"It will be a relief to her when I am gone," he said to himself. "How
could I expect her to grieve as Thornton's wife grieves? Those two were
boy and girl together, had been husband and wife for thirty years."

His dinner had been only a pretence of dining, a mockery which had made
the head-waiter quite unhappy. Nothing so distresses a good waiter as
a guest who won't eat. The waiter would have been still more troubled
in mind had he known that this fine-looking old man, with the erect
figure and broad shoulders, had eaten hardly anything for the last
three days. The General had been suffering all that time from a fever
of the brain which had brought about a feverish condition of the body.
He could neither eat nor sleep. He lay broad awake in the unfamiliar
room at the hotel, staring at the blank white blinds, faintly
illuminated by the lamps in the street below--he lay and thought over
his wedded life, which unrolled itself before him in a series of
pictures, and he saw the bitter truth underlying his marriage with Lord
Carlavarock's daughter.

He had been nothing but a convenience to Valeria, the provider of fine
houses and fine gowns, horses and carriages. She had not even cared for
him as friend and protector. She had lived her own life; paying him for
all benefits with sweet false words, and sweeter falser kisses.

And now the spell was broken; the dream had come to an end all at
once. He could never believe in sweet words or kisses again. He had
looked into the heart of this woman he had loved so well, and he knew
that it was false to the core.

       *       *       *       *       *

The next day was wild and stormy--rain and wind, wind and rain--a gray
sky, a heavy pall of cloud, through which the sun pierced not once in
the long bleak day; one of those days which Nature keeps in stock for
the funerals of our friends.

General Harborough stood in the dreary cemetery, and let the wind and
rain beat upon him unflinchingly for about forty minutes. He paid
every tribute of respect that could be paid to his old comrade and
then he went off to the railway-station, to go back to Plymouth by the
train which left Bath at five o'clock, and would arrive in Plymouth a
little before eleven. He had given up the idea of going on to London to
execute the codicil. That could be done at Fox Hill, if need were. He
felt tired and ill and shivery. He thought he had taken a chill in the
cemetery, and that the best thing he could do was to go home.

He had a bad night, disturbed by a short, hard cough, which was worse
next morning. Lady Valeria sent for the doctor, who pronounced the
indisposition an acute attack of bronchitis. The patient was very
feverish, and the utmost care was needed. Happily, the valet was a
good nurse, and Lady Valeria seemed devoted. She sat by her husband's
bedside; she read to him, and ministered to him with the tenderest care.

"You could not be better off," said the medical man, who was of the
cheery old school. "We shall make you all right in a day or two,"
knowing perfectly well that the patient was in for a fortnight's close
confinement and severe regimen.

The General endured his poultices and blisters meekly, but chafed at
the hot room and the hissing steam-kettle.

"It is worse than being wounded on the field of battle," he said.

And then, half asleep and half delirious, he began to talk about Sir
George Varney's summons.

"The scoundrel wants to make a public scandal," he muttered; "he will
bring my wife's name before the public. 'I thought by this time you
must have been tired of Bothwell Grahame,'" he said, repeating the
words which had stung him almost to madness.

Valeria knelt by her husband's pillow and laid her head against it,
listening intently to those muttered speeches. She found out that Sir
George Varney had sent the General a summons to a police-court; that
the story of the blow in the verandah would be sifted in a public
inquiry; that the insult offered to the wife, the prompt retaliation
of the husband, would be reported in the newspapers, written about,
commented upon everywhere. It was just the kind of thing to get into
the society papers: and although Lady Valeria's relations had not
unfrequently figured in those very papers, with various degrees of
discredit to themselves and amusement to the general public, she shrank
with an abhorrent feeling from the idea of seeing her own name there.

The day named in the summons was a week off; and, judging from General
Harborough's condition, it did not seem likely that he would be in a
fit state to answer to the summons in person. The idea of it evidently
preyed upon his mind, and added fuel to the fire of the fever.

The day came, and General Harborough had obeyed a mightier summons, and
had gone to appear before the bar of a greater court. Lady Valeria was
a widow.

The codicil had not been executed: so Lady Valeria was a very rich
widow.



CHAPTER VIII.


WIDOWED AND FREE.


Mr. and Mrs. Wyllard made their way slowly back to Penmorval. It was
a melancholy journey for those two who had travelled so gaily in days
gone by--the young wife so full of hope, so proud of her husband, who
was her senior and superior, versed in the knowledge of that wide outer
world of which the Cornish heiress knew so little. She had loved him
with a reverent, admiring love, looking up to him, honouring him and
deferring to him in all things, pleased to be dependent upon him: and
now he was the dependent, looking to her for help and comfort.

He bore his calamity with an almost awful calmness, which at times
was more painful to the tender, sympathetic wife than fretfulness and
complaining would have been. The dull agony of neuralgic pain wrung no
groan from him; he endured the anguish of racked nerves and aching
limbs with stoical composure.

"It is not a surprise to me, Dora," he said quietly, when his wife
praised his patience; "I have expected some such attack. There have
been sensations--strange feelings at odd times--which, although slight
enough, have not been without their meaning. Life was very smooth for
me here at Penmorval. Very different from my life in the past; the
struggles of my boyhood; the hard work and hard thinking of my manhood.
Your love made existence full of sweetness. I had the world's esteem
too, which must always count for something, let a man pretend to
despise the world as he may. Yes; it was a full and perfect life, and
I told myself that I had come off a winner in the lottery of Fate. And
now all things are changed. There was this last lot waiting for me at
the bottom of the urn."

"My dearest," murmured his wife, nestling closer to him among the
heaped-up pillows of his sofa, "it would be too hard, too cruel that
you should be thus smitten, if this life were all. But, praised be
God, it is not all! There is a bright eternity waiting for us--a long
day of rest in the land where there is neither sorrow nor pain."

Her husband answered with an impatient sigh.

"My dear Dora, I have neither your sweet simplicity nor your pious
faith in the letter of an old book," he answered. "This life is so
palpable and so painful just now, that I cannot comfort myself by
looking beyond it towards a life of which I know nothing."

They were at Penmorval. Mrs. Wyllard had established her husband in her
own particular sanctum, which was the prettiest room in the house--a
spacious airy room on the first floor, with a large Tudor window facing
southward, and an oriel in the south-western angle. Julian Wyllard had
decorated and furnished this room for his young wife; and all things it
contained had been chosen with reference to her tastes and pursuits.
It opened into her dressing-room, and beyond the dressing-room there
was the chief bedchamber of Penmorval, the chamber of the lord of the
manor from time immemorial, the birth-chamber and the death-chamber.
Its very spaciousness and grandeur gave to this state apartment an air
of gloom, a gloom intensified by the prevailing tints of the tapestry,
a series of hunting scenes, executed in a sombre gradation of bluish
greens and grayish browns. The elaborately carved oak wardrobes were
like monuments in a Gothic cathedral. The bed, with its embroidered
velvet hangings, fluted columns, and plumed ornaments, suggested a
royal catafalque: while the fireplace, with its sculptured pillars
and heavy decoration in black and white marble, recalled the entrance
to the Capulets' tomb. Not a room assuredly for the occupation of an
invalid--not a room in which to suffer sleepless nights and long hours
of dull, wearing pain.

This was what Dora thought; and at her order her dressing-room, which
was airy and sufficiently spacious, was transformed into a bedroom
for Mr. Wyllard, while her morning-room was arranged for his daily
occupation. It would be easy to wheel his sofa from one room to the
other. All her orders had been telegraphed beforehand, and everything
was in its place when the sufferer arrived.

"It is a special privilege to be nursed by a good fairy," he said,
smiling up at his wife, with that rare smile which had so peculiar
a charm in her eyes--the smile of a man who has not the same set
graciousness for all comers.

After this there came the dull monotony of suffering--the life of
routine, that death-in-life from which all possibility of action is
gone, all power of choice, all changes and chances of the outer world
cut off for ever--a life in which a man feels that he has suddenly
dropped back into infancy, and is as helpless as a child upon his
mother's knee. The child has all the unexplored future before him, the
infinitive potentialities of life. The man turns his sad eyes backward
and reviews the past. All the things he has done and the things he
has left undone pass in a shadowy procession before his mind's eye.
He sees how much wiser he might have been. The faults and follies of
those departed years are unrolled before him as on a magic scroll. His
maturer judgment, his colder blood, condemn the sins of his passionate
youth.

Dora was her husband's companion through many an hour of gloom and
depression. There were times when he would talk to her with a kind of
feverish animation--talk of the books he had read, or of the men he had
known--recall the memories of his youth--his boyhood even.

"I can only live in the past," he said, "and in your love. You are my
present and my future, Dora. Were it not for you and your love I should
have anticipated annihilation. The grave could hardly reduce me to more
complete nothingness than this death-in-life here."

He looked round the room with an impatient sigh. And then, touched by
the pathetic look in his wife's face, he added,

"Were it not for you, Dora. I have infinite riches while I possess your
love. If I were to lose that now----"

"You know that you can never lose it. My love is a part of my life."

"Yes, but there might come a crushing blow that would kill it. Or if I
were to sink into feebleness and imbecility--if the mind were to decay
like the body----"

"The only difference would be to make me love you more fondly, knowing
that you stood in greater need of my love," answered his wife quietly.

"Yes, I believe you are noble enough for the extremity of
self-sacrifice," he said, gazing at her with a searching look, a look
of the deepest love and keenest pain, a look that told of anguish
surpassing the common woes of humanity. "Yes, I believe it is within
the compass of a woman's nature to love a human wreck like me, or even
to love a creature stained with blackest sin. There is no limit to the
sublimity of a woman's love."

His wife was kneeling by his couch, her head leaning against his
pillow. There were times when she could find no words of comfort, when
she could only comfort him with the light touch of her lips upon his
brow, her sympathy, her presence, her hand laid gently upon his.

"I love to hear you talk of your youth," she said one day, when he had
been talking of his boyhood at Marlborough, and at home--the dull old
parsonage--the house-mother, always busy, and often scolding, troubled
about many things; the father, chewing the cud of somebody else's
sermon, in a shabby little den of a study, reeking of tobacco; a sermon
to be dribbled out slowly next Sunday morning, in a style of elocution,
or non-elocution, happily almost extinct.

"Tell me about your life in Paris," she went on, encouraging him to
forget his present pains in those old memories. "That must have been
full of interest."

"It was a life of grinding toil, and gnawing anxiety," he answered
impatiently. "There is not a detail that could interest you."

"Everything in your past history interests me, Julian. I know how hard
you worked in Paris. I saw your desk, the place where you sat night
after night, the lamp that lighted you. Mr. Blümenlein has altered
nothing in your rooms."

"Vastly civil of him," muttered Wyllard, as if revolting against
patronage from a dealer in fancy goods.

"But however hard you worked, you must have had some associations with
the outer world," pursued Dora. "You must have felt the fever and the
excitement of that time. You must have been interested in the men who
governed France."

"I was interested in the stocks that went up and down, and in the men
who governed France, so far as their conduct influenced the Bourse.
A man who is running a race, neck or nothing, a race that means life
or death, has no time to think of anything outside the course. The
external world has no existence for him."

"And you knew nothing of the master-spirits of the Empire, the men of
science, the writers, the painters?"

"My child, how innocent you are! The men who write books and paint
pictures have no more direct influence upon an epoch than the tailors
who build coats and the milliners who make gowns. The master-spirits
are the politicians and financiers. Those are the rulers of their age.
All the rest are servants."

Bothwell had shown himself deeply moved by the affliction that had
fallen on his cousin's husband. Every feeling of ill-will vanished in
a breath before the face of that supreme misfortune--a life smitten
to the dust. Bothwell was too generous-hearted to remember that the
master of Penmorval had not been altogether kind in the past. His only
thought was how he could help, were it by ever so little, to lighten
Julian Wyllard's burden. He was all the more sympathetic when he found
that the sufferer had thought of him and of his interests even in the
hour of calamity, while the blow that crushed him was still a new thing.

"It was more than good of you to consider my happiness at such a time,"
said Bothwell, when Dora had told him of her husband's conversation
with Heathcote.

"My dear Bothwell, my wife's interests are my own; and I knew that
she was keenly interested in your happiness. Heathcote has not found
out very much about the girl who was killed; but he has found out
just enough to dispel his suspicions about you, and he withdraws all
opposition to your marriage with Hilda. Now, it is my earnest desire to
see you happily married before I am called away; and as life is always
uncertain--trebly uncertain for a man in my condition--the sooner you
are married the better."

"I shall not plead for delay," said Bothwell, "if I can win Hilda's
consent to an early marriage. But I hope, my dear Wyllard, that you may
live to see our children growing up."

"That is to hope for the indefinite prolongation of an incurable
disease, and is hardly a kind wish on your part. All you have to do is
to hurry on this marriage."

"Unfortunately the house I have pitched upon will want three or four
months' work before it can be habitable."

"What does that matter? You can live at Penmorval till your house is
ready. There is room for half a dozen families in this rambling old
place. There will be no one here to interfere with your privacy. You
may be almost as much alone as in your own home, and Hilda's presence
in the house will help to cheer my poor wife. Hurry on your marriage,
Bothwell, while Heathcote is in the humour to accept you. Don't be
hindered by any absurd consideration about houses; secure your good
fortune while you can."

He spoke with an almost feverish impatience, the fretfulness of a sick
man who cannot bear the slightest opposition to his will.

"My dear Julian, you may be sure that Bothwell will be only too glad to
act on your advice," said his wife soothingly.

"Let him do so, then, and don't let him talk about houses," retorted
Wyllard.

Bothwell was to meet his betrothed the next day at Trevena, where she
was to go with Fräulein Meyerstein to inspect the old-fashioned cottage
which her lover wanted to turn into a commodious house. There could not
be a better opportunity for pleading his cause.

He rode across country, and arrived in time to receive Hilda and her
chaperon, who had posted from Launceston to Trevena. It was a delicious
autumn day, and, after the cottage had been inspected and approved, the
lovers wandered about the wild crest of Tintagel, utterly happy in each
other's company; while that discreet spinster, Miss Meyerstein, sat on
a grassy bank in the valley below, absorbed in a strip of honeycomb
knitting, intended to form part and parcel of a counterpane, which
great work had been in progress for the past ten years.

Bothwell was the bearer of a letter from Dora, entreating Hilda to go
to her at the Manor, and stay there until Heathcote's return. Bothwell
was to stay at Trevena meanwhile, and set the builders at work upon his
improvements. The old cottage and the land about it had been secured on
a lease for three lives, Bothwell being one, Hilda another, and one of
the twins the third. Bothwell hoped to be able to buy the place long
before any of these lives gave out.

       *       *       *       *       *

"You and I have so much to arrange and to talk about," wrote Mrs.
Wyllard--"your furniture, your linen, your trousseau. I venture to
think I am your nearest friend, and the person you would be most
likely to consult in these matters. Your presence will comfort me,
dear, and hinder me from dwelling too exclusively on my great trouble.
Julian, too, will be glad to have you in the house, and to hear your
songs sometimes of an evening. He has his good days and his bad days;
and there are times when he is cheerful and likes company. Do come
to me at once, Hilda. I am sure you must be tired of Dawlish by this
time. It is a very nice little place, but I can imagine a limit to its
attractions, and the season is rather late for your favourite diversion
of swimming. You shall be free to return to The Spaniards when your
brother comes back to England; but in the mean time I am sure I want
you more than Miss Meyerstein, who has those all-absorbing twins
to occupy her cares and thoughts. I shall expect you the day after
to-morrow, by the afternoon train. I shall send a carriage to meet
you.--Yours lovingly, DORA WYLLARD."

       *       *       *       *       *

What could Hilda say to such an invitation from one who had been to her
as an elder sister, and whom she loved as fondly as ever sister was
loved? She wrote to Dora at the hotel where they lunched and took tea,
and gave her letter to Bothwell.

"You are going to Penmorval," he said.

"Yes, I am going there the day after to-morrow."

"And I am to be banished. I am to live here and see that my plans are
carried out properly. I daresay my cousin thinks that if I were to
stay at Penmorval while you are there I should forget all the serious
business of life; lapse into a rapturous idiotcy of love. Well, I
am too happy to complain. I shall be happy in the thought that I am
building our nest. I shall watch every brick that is laid, every timber
that is sawn. You shall not have a badly baked brick or a plank of
green wood in your house. I shall think of the plans night and day,
dream of them--leap out of my sleep in the dead of the night to make
some improvement."

"If you chop and change too much you will have dear to pay," said Miss
Meyerstein; and then she launched into a long story about a German
Grand Duke, with an unpronounceable name, who built himself a summer
palace which cost three times as much as he intended, because of his
Serene Highness's artistic temperament, which had beguiled him into
continual tampering with the plans.

Never in his life had Bothwell felt happier than on that breezy
September day, pottering about the old cottage on the hillside,
planning the house and gardens of the future--the study, the
drawing-room, the ingle-nook in the dining-room, the little
entrance-hall which would hardly be more than a lobby, the closets and
clever contrivances, and shelves, and cosy nooks, which were to make
this house different from all other houses--at least in the eye of its
possessor--the quaint old lattices which were to be retained in all
their primitive simplicity, and still quainter casements which were to
be added--here an oriel and there a bow--an Early English chimney-stack
on one side, and a distinctly Flemish weathercock on the other.
Bothwell could draw well enough to show the builder what he wanted
done. He had his pocket-book full of sketches for chimneys, pediments,
doors and windows, and ornamental ventilators.

"One would think you were going to build a town," said the practical
Fräulein.

Never had Bothwell been happier than as he rode across the moors in
the fading daylight, thinking of the day that was over. What a simple
domestic day it had been--so homely, so tranquil, so sweet; ending
with the cosy tea-drinking in the parlour at the inn, Hilda presiding
at the tea-tray, and as self-possessed as if she and Bothwell had
been married for ten years. The time of tremors and agitations was
past. They were secure in each other's love, secure in the consent and
approval of those who loved them. Henceforward their lives were to sail
calmly on a summer sea.

How different was this newer and purer love of his from the old
passion, with its alternations of fever and remorse! How different his
simple-minded sweetheart of to-day--gentle, unselfish, conscientious,
religious--from the woman who had been all exaction and caprice;
insatiable in her desire for admiration, self-indulgent, luxurious,
caring not a jot how the world outside her own boudoir went on, who
suffered or who was glad, provided her wishes were gratified and her
vanity fed!

It was dinner-time when Bothwell arrived at Penmorval, and the
dinner-hour was of all seasons the most melancholy, now that the master
of the house was a helpless invalid on the upper floor, perhaps never
again to enter that stately dining-hall, where the butler insisted upon
serving Bothwell's dinner in just as slow and ceremonial a manner as
if family and guests had been assembled in full force.

Vainly did Bothwell plead against this ceremony.

"I wish you would ask them to cook me a chop, Stodden," he said. "A
chop and a potato would be ample. I hate a long dinner at any time, but
most especially when I am to eat it alone. You need not take so much
trouble as you do about me."

But Stodden ascribed all such speeches to overweening modesty on Mr.
Grahame's part. The poor young man knew that he was in somewise an
interloper; and he did not wish to give trouble. It was a very proper
feeling on his part; and Stodden was resolved that he should not be
a loser by his modesty. Stodden gave him an even handsomer dinner on
the following day, and when remonstrated with smiled the smile of
incredulity.

"Lor, sir, you know you like a good dinner," he said. "You mayn't wish
to give trouble; but you must like a good dinner. We all like a good
dinner. It's human nature."

After this Bothwell felt that remonstrance was useless.

Mrs. Wyllard dined with her invalid husband. She rarely left him except
when he was sleeping under the influence of morphia, or when he asked
to be alone. There were hours in his long and weary day in which even
his wife's presence seemed a burden to him, and when he preferred to
fight his battle in solitude.

Upon this particular evening of Bothwell's return from Trevena his
cousin joined him at the dinner-table, an unexpected pleasure.

"I want to hear all your news, Bothwell," she said. "Julian is asleep,
and I have half an hour free."

Bothwell told his news gladly, gaily.

"She is coming the day after to-morrow," he said, "and I am to be
banished, like Romeo. But I am not afraid of Romeo's ill-luck. You
won't give my Juliet a sleeping potion, and bury her alive while I am
away, will you? I have taken two rooms in a cottage at Trevena, with an
old goody who is to do for me. That will be ever so much cheaper than
the inn; and you know that in my position I ought to be economical."

"You ought not to make yourself uncomfortable for the sake of a few
pounds."

"Ah, that is your spendthrift's argument. He never can understand that
he ought to save a few pounds; and so he dies a pauper; while the man
who has a proper respect for pounds--and pence, even--blossoms into
a millionaire. I shall be very comfortable with my goody. I shall be
out all day, superintending the builder. I shall live upon chops and
porter; and I shall sleep like a top every night, in a dear little
bedroom smelling of lavender. My goody is clean to a fault. She cast an
evil eye at my boots as I went up-stairs. All the articles of furniture
in her rooms are veiled with crochet-work, as if the wood were too
precious to be exposed to the light. But how grave you are looking,
Dora! Has Wyllard been any worse to-day?"

"No; he has been much the same--a sad monotony of suffering. It was of
you I was thinking, Bothwell. I saw some news in the county paper which
I know will grieve you."

"There has been no accident between Launceston and Dawlish, has there?"
gasped Bothwell, starting up from his chair; "the train got back all
right----"

"You foolish boy! If there had been an accident, how do you suppose
I could hear of it?" exclaimed his cousin, smiling at his vehemence.
"How like a lover to imagine that any ill news must needs be about your
betrothed, though you only left her three hours ago! No, Bothwell, my
bad news concerns an old friend of yours, General Harborough."

"What of General Harborough?" asked Bothwell anxiously.

"The announcement of his death is in the county paper."

"His death? Impossible! Why, I met him less than ten days ago. He
seemed hale and hearty as ever."

"He caught a severe cold at the funeral of a friend, and died of
bronchitis after a very short illness. Poor Bothwell! I can sympathise
with your sorrow for so staunch a friend. I have often heard you say
how good he was to you in India."

Dora had heard of General Harborough only as an Indian friend of her
cousin's. She knew of Lady Valeria's existence, and that was all. No
rumour of Bothwell's flirtation with that lady had ever reached her
ears. She did not know that Bothwell's frequent journeys to Plymouth
had been on Lady Valeria's account; that his mysterious journeys
to London had been made in her interests--troublesome journeys to
interview Jew money-lenders, to renew bills and tide over difficulties.

And now Valeria was a widow, and would have been able to exact the
fulfilment of old vows--breathed under tropical stars, far away in that
Eastern land which they both loved: she would have been able to claim
him as her slave, if he had not boldly broken his fetters in that last
interview at Fox Hill.

"Thank God I delayed no longer!" he said to himself; "thank God I got
my release before this happened!"

And then he thought sadly, affectionately, of his old friend; and he
remembered with thankfulness that last meeting, that farewell grasp of
the good man's hand which he had been able to return as honestly as it
was given.

"Why did I ever sin against him?" he asked himself. "What an arrant
sneak I must have been!"

"You will go to General Harborough's funeral, I suppose?" said Dora
presently.

"Yes, of course I must be at the funeral. When does it take place?"

"To-morrow."

"Yes, I shall go without doubt. I shall join the procession at the
cemetery. As I am not invited, there will be no need for me to go to
the house."

"I suppose not. The poor widow will feel the blow terribly, no doubt."

"Yes, I have no doubt she will be sorry."

This was not a lie. Bothwell thought that even Valeria could not fail
to feel some touch of sorrow for the loss of that chivalrous friend
and benefactor, the man who had given so much, and had received so
poor a return for his gifts. There would be the anguish of a guilty
conscience; even if there were no other form of sorrow.

"But, as I suppose she is elderly too, perhaps she will not survive him
very long," pursued Dora, infinitely compassionate for the woes of a
broken-hearted widow.

"Lady Valeria elderly!" exclaimed Bothwell. "She is not thirty."

"What, was your good General Harborough so foolish as to marry a girl?"

"Yes. It was the only foolishness of his life that I have ever heard
of; and he was so kind to the woman he married that he might be
pardoned for his folly."

"I hope she was fond of him, and worthy of him."

Bothwell did not enter upon the question, and his reticence about
Lady Valeria Harborough struck Dora as altogether at variance with
his natural frankness. And then she remembered that unexplained
entanglement which he had confessed to her--an entanglement with a
married woman--and it flashed upon her that Lady Valeria might be the
heroine of that story. He had spoken of General Harborough, but never
of General Harborough's wife. There had been a studied reserve upon
that subject. And now Dora discovered that Valeria Harborough was a
young woman.

The invitation to the funeral came by next morning's post--a formal
invitation sent by a fashionable firm of undertakers--and Bothwell had
no excuse for staying away from Fox Hill, where the mourners were to
assemble at three o'clock in the afternoon. He had no fear that Lady
Valeria would be present upon such an occasion; but there was just the
possibility that she might send for him when she knew he was in the
house. She had always been reckless of conventionalities, carrying
matters with such a high hand as to defy slander.

His heart sank within him as he approached the classic portico of the
villa. Deepest regret for his dead benefactor, deepest remorse for
having wronged him, weighed down his heart as he entered the darkened
house, where rooms built for brightness and gaiety looked all the more
gloomy in the day of mourning. The hall was hung with black, and in
the midst stood the plain oak coffin, draped with the colours which
the General had fought for forty years before among the wild hills
of Afghanistan. Crosses and wreaths of purest white were heaped upon
the coffin, and the atmosphere of the darkened hall was heavy with
the perfume of stephanotis and tuberose; those two flowers which the
General had always associated with his wife, who rarely decorated
herself or her rooms with any other exotics.

Bothwell stood amidst the mourning crowd, with heavily-beating heart.
There was no summons from Lady Valeria, and he heard some one near him
telling some one else that her grief was terrible--a stony, silent
grief, which alarmed her people and her medical attendant. She would
see no one. Lady Carlavarock had come all the way from Baden, where
the poor dear Earl was doctoring his gout; but Lady Valeria had only
consented to see her mother for half an hour, and poor Lady Carlavarock
had not even been asked to stay at Fox Hill. She had been obliged to
put up at an hotel, which was a cruelty, as everyone knew that the
Carlavarocks were as poor as church mice.

"Perhaps Lady Valeria has not forgiven her family for having sold her,"
said the second speaker, in the same confidential voice.

"Sold her! Nothing of the kind. She adored the old General."

"You had better tell that to--another branch of the service," muttered
his friend, as Bothwell moved away from the group.

It was past five before the funeral was over, and there was no train
for Bodmin till seven; so Bothwell strolled into the coffee-room of the
Duke of Cornwall and ordered a cup of tea.

While he was drinking it he was joined by a young officer who had been
at the funeral, and whom Bothwell had often met at Fox Hill--quite a
youth, beardless, and infantine of aspect, but with a keen desire to
appear older than his years. He affected to have steeped himself in
iniquity, to have dishonoured more husbands and fleeced more tradesmen
than any man in the service. He hinted that his father had turned him
out of doors, and that his mother had died of a broken heart on his
account. He was a youth who loved gossip, and who went about among
all the wives and spinsters of Plymouth, the dowagers and old ladies,
disseminating tittle-tattle. Hardly anything he said was true, hardly
anybody believed him; but people liked to hear him talk all the same.
There was a piquancy in slander uttered by those coral lips, which had
not long finished with the corals of babyhood.

"My dear Bothwell, what a tragedy!" he exclaimed, as he seated himself
in front of a brandy-and-soda.

"It is a sad loss for every one," Bothwell answered tritely.

"Sad loss--but, my dear fellow, what a scandal! Everybody in Plymouth
is talking about it. There has been hardly anything else spoken of at
any of the dinners I have been at during the last ten days."

"I thought old maids' tea-parties were your usual form," retorted
Bothwell, with a sneer. "What is your last mare's nest, Falconer? The
General's death, or the General's funeral?"

"The circumstances that preceded the dear old man's death. That's the
scandal. Surely you must have heard----"

"Consider that I have been buried among the Cornish moors, and have
heard nothing."

"By Jove! Do you mean to say that you don't know there was a
dreadful row one night at Fox Hill? Sir George Varney insulted Lady
Valeria--called her some foul name, accused her of carrying on with
a young man. The General came up at the moment and smashed his head.
Sir George went all over the place next day, abusing my lady, sent the
General a summons to the police-court, where the whole story must have
come out _in extenso_, as those, newspaper fellows say. A very ugly
story it is--betting transactions, borrowed money, and a lover in the
background. An uncommonly queer story, my dear Grahame. Plymouth was on
the _qui-vive_ for a tremendous scandal. You know what these garrison
and dockyard towns are, and a man in the General's position is a mark
for slander. The thing was altogether too awful, and the poor old
General wouldn't face it. He wouldn't face it, old chap, and he died."

"You mean to say that he----"

"I mean to say nothing. There was no inquest. The poor old man kept his
bed for a week, and the cause of death was called bronchitis; but there
are people I know who have their own idea about the General's death,
and a very ugly idea it is."

"Your friends have a _penchant_ for ugly ideas, Falconer," answered
Bothwell coolly.

He did not believe a word of the subaltern's story, and yet the
thought of it troubled him as he sat alone in his corner of the
smoking-carriage, trying to solace himself with a pipe, trying to think
only of the girl he loved, and of his brightening prospects.

That mention of a lover! How much or how little did it mean? Could
it be true that General Harborough had knocked a man down in his own
house? Such an act on the part of the most chivalrous of men must
have been the result of extraordinary provocation. Only a deliberate
insult to a woman could excuse such an outrage against the laws of
hospitality. He remembered that Lady Valeria had talked of borrowing
money from Sir George Varney; and what could she expect but insult
if she placed herself under obligation to a notorious _roue?_ He had
warned her of the folly of such a course. He had urged her to confide
in her husband. And now that good and loyal friend and protector was
gone; and this last act of his wife's had left her to face the world
with a damaged reputation.

He told himself that there must be some grain of truth in the
subaltern's story, some fire behind this smoke. The scandal too nearly
touched actual facts to be altogether false.

"God help her if her good name is at the mercy of such a scoundrel as
Varney!" thought Bothwell.

He left Penmorval in a dog-cart next morning, carrying his portmanteau
and a box of books at the back. He was to have the use of the
dog-cart and Glencoe while he stayed at Trevena, so that he should
not feel himself altogether banished. He could ride over to Penmorval
occasionally.

"You must not come too often, mind," said Dora, when she was bidding
him good-bye. "Indeed; on reflection, I think you had better only come
when you are invited. You may have no discretion otherwise. It will not
do for you to be really living here, and only pretending to live at
Trevena."

"It is unkind of you to suggest that a man must be an utter imbecile
because he is in love, Dora," remonstrated Bothwell. "Of course I
understand that I am sent away as a sacrifice to the proprieties. I
am banished in order that Mrs. Grundy may be satisfied--that same Mrs.
Grundy who was willing to suspect me of murder on the very smallest
provocation. No, my dear Dora, I am not going to be troublesome. I
will only come when I have your permission. I suppose I may come next
Sunday?"

"O Bothwell, this is Wednesday; Sunday is _very_ near."

"It will seem ages off to me. Yes, I shall certainly come on Sunday.
Even servants are allowed to go and see their friends on the Sabbath.
Is your cousin less than a hireling that he should be denied? I shall
ride over in time for breakfast on Sunday morning."

"You will have to get up at six o'clock."

"What of that? I have had to get up at four, and even at half-past
three, for cub-hunting."

He arrived at Trevena early in the afternoon, settled himself
comfortably in his cottage-lodgings, and arranged his books in a corner
of the neat little parlour, with its superabundant crochet-work and
crockery, which ornamentation he artfully persuaded his landlady to put
away in a cupboard during his residence.

"Men are so clumsy," he pleaded. "They always spoil things."

Goody confessed that the male sex was inherently awkward, and had an
innate incapacity to appreciate crochet antimacassars. She sighed as
she denuded her best parlour of its beauties. "The place dew look so
bare," she said.

Bothwell gave up his afternoon to a long interview with the builder,
who was a smart young man, and as honest as he was smart. The old
cottage was thoroughly overhauled and inspected, with a view to the
carrying out of those extensions and improvements which Bothwell had
planned for himself, and for which he had made drawings that were very
creditable to an amateur architect. His experience as an Engineer stood
him in good stead.

He modified his plans somewhat on the advice of the smart young
builder; but the alterations were to be carried out very much upon
his own original lines--the builder's modifications were chiefly in
detail. And then they had to fight out the question of time. The
builder asked for six months; Bothwell would only grant four. Finally,
time and cost were settled; everything was agreed upon; Bothwell having
given up his original idea of being his own builder and buying his own
materials; and the contract was to be taken to Camelford next day,
to be put into legal form. For four hundred and fifty pounds the old
cottage was to be transformed into a comfortable house. The two little
parlours and the kitchen were to be made into three little studies or
bookrooms, communicating with each other. These were for Bothwell and
his pupils to work in. A new drawing-room, dining-room, and kitchen
were to be built, and over these three good bedrooms.

"I shall add a billiard-room with a large nursery over it later on,
when I am beginning to make my fortune," thought Bothwell. "I know we
shall want a billiard-room; and I hope we shall want a nursery."

The builder had gone home to his young wife and baby, in a cheerful
red-brick cottage of his own construction; and Bothwell was pacing the
old neglected garden alone, in the autumn sunset, when he looked up
suddenly, and saw a dark figure standing in the narrow path between him
and the rosy western sky.

It was the tall slender figure of a woman, robed in black and thickly
veiled. That black figure seemed to shut out all the warmth and beauty
of the glowing west. Bothwell's heart grew cold within him at sight of
it.

He had not a moment's doubt or hesitation, though the woman's face was
hardly visible under the thick crape veil.

"Valeria!" he exclaimed.

"Yes, it is Valeria."

"How, in the name of all that's reasonable, did you come here?"

"A pair of post-horses brought me; that was easy enough when I knew
where to find you. I heard at Bodmin Road station that you were here.
You had been seen to drive by, and you told the station-master where
you were going."



CHAPTER IX.


TWO WOMEN.


They stood face to face in the evening light, Bothwell and Valeria;
those two who had loved each other, who had once been wont to meet with
smiles and gladness, hand clasped in hand--they stood pale and silent,
each waiting for the other to speak.

"How could you do so mad a thing as to come here, Lady Valeria?"
Bothwell asked, at last.

His heart was beating passionately, not with love, but with anger.
He was indignant at the unfeminine feeling shown by this pursuit of
him, this persecution of a man who had frankly owned a new and wiser
attachment.

"It is not the first madness I have been guilty of for your sake," she
answered. "There was the madness of loving you, in the first instance;
and the still greater madness of being constant to you; even when I
suspected that you had grown tired of me. But it was not weariness of
me that influenced you, was it, Bothwell? It was the false position
which grew irksome; the falsehood towards that good, brave man. It
was that which made you desert me, was it not? That is all over now.
My bondage is over. I am my own mistress, answerable to no one for my
conduct; and I am here to remind you of old vows made three years ago
beside the fountain at Simla."

"Those old vows have been cancelled, Lady Valeria," said Bothwell
coldly. "Surely you have not forgotten our last parting, and the old
love-token which you threw away."

"I was beside myself with anger," she answered hurriedly. "You could
not have meant all you said that day, Bothwell. You wanted to escape
from a false position; you could not guess that my release was to come
so soon, that in less than a month I should be free, that in a year I
might be your wife."

"Stop!" he cried; "for pity's sake not another word. I am engaged to
marry another woman--bound heart and soul to another. I have no other
purpose in life but to win her, and to be happy with her."

Lady Valeria looked at him in silence for some moments. She had thrown
back her veil when she first addressed him. Her face was almost as
white as the crape border of her widow's bonnet, but on each cheek
there was one spot of hectic--a spot that looked like flame--and in her
eyes, there was the light of anger.

"It is true, then! You are in love with another woman!"

"It is true. I am in love with her; and I am bound to her by all those
feelings which are sweetest and most sacred in the mind of a man--by
gratitude, by love, by respect, by admiration for her noble qualities.
I am to be married to her almost immediately. You can understand,
therefore, Lady Valeria, that as I hope always to be your friend--your
champion and defender, if need of championship should ever arise--I
am justified in remonstrating with you for your folly in coming here
alone, upon the day after your husband's funeral."

"My champion, my friend!" she repeated mockingly. "What amazing
generosity, what sublime chivalry! You offer me your friendship--you
who swore to be my husband, to give me the devotion of your life,
whenever it pleased God to set me free from an unnatural union. You who
were bound to me by the most sacred vows."

"You released me from those vows when you threw away the love-token. I
asked you for my freedom, and you told me that I was free. You cannot
recall that release, Lady Valeria."

"I released you from a false position. That is over now: and your
alleged motive--your compunction, your remorse of conscience--must be
over too."

Bothwell was silent. He had said all that could be said. He stood
before Lady Valeria motionless, dumb, ready to bear the brunt of
her anger and submit meekly to her reproaches, were they never so
ungenerous.

"Do you know what you have done for me?" she demanded passionately. "Do
you know what you have cost me--you who pretended to be my slave, who
pretended to worship me, and whose flimsy passion could not stand the
wear and tear of three short years? You have blighted my life; you have
ruined my good name."

"That last charge cannot be true, Lady Valeria. You were much too
careful of your reputation--you knew much too well how to keep your
slave at a proper distance," answered Bothwell, with a touch of scorn.

"But I did not know how to hide my love for you. There were eyes keen
enough to read that. Do you know that my husband assaulted Sir George
Varney in his own house on my account?"

"Ah, then the story was true," muttered Bothwell.

"You have heard about it, I see. Did you hear the nature of the insult
which provoked that punishment?"

"No."

"It was the mention of your name--your name flung in my face like an
accusation--cast at me as if my position were notorious--as if all
society knew that I had been guilty of an intrigue."

"Sir George is a blackguard, and no act of his would surprise me; but
Sir George is not society. You need not be unhappy about any speech of
his. If you want me to call him out, I am quite willing to go over to
Blankenberghe and ask him to meet me there."

"You know that such an act as that would intensify the scandal. No,
Bothwell, there is only one way in which you can set me right, a year
hence, when my year of widowhood is over, when I can marry again
without disrespect to my husband's memory. That is the only way of
setting me right with the world, Bothwell; and it is the only way of
setting me right in my own self-esteem."

"My dear Lady Valeria, I wonder that you have not learnt to understand
society better--you, who are essentially a woman of society. Do you
think the world would applaud you or respect you for making a very poor
marriage--for uniting yourself to a man without pursuit or means or
position? You, who with beauty, rank, and wealth, might marry almost
any one you pleased. The world does not smile on such marriages, Lady
Valeria. The world worships the star which mounts higher in the social
firmament, not the star which bends earthward. You have your future
before you, free and unfettered. You have wealth, which in this age
means power. You can have nothing to regret in a foolish love of the
past, love that drooped and died for want of a congenial atmosphere."

"Is that your last word upon this subject?" asked Valeria, looking at
him intently with those angry eyes.

They were beautiful even in anger, those violet-dark eyes; but the
light in them was a diabolical light, as of an evil spirit.

"My very last."

"Then we will say no more; and we will enter upon a new phase of our
existence--the period of friendship. Perhaps you will be kind enough to
take me back to the inn where I left my carriage, and order some tea
for me?"

"I shall be very happy," said Bothwell quietly; and they walked off
towards the inn, which was less than half a mile from the cottage.

"May I ask what you were doing in that deserted garden?" inquired Lady
Valeria.

"I have been planning the improvement of my future home."

"Indeed! You are going to live in that desolate spot, with nothing but
the sea and the sky to look at?"

"The sea and the sky, and some of the finest coast-scenery in
England--the sands and the rocks and the wild hills. Don't you think
that ought to be enough for any man to look at?"

"For a hermit, no doubt, not for a man. A man should have the city and
the Forum. Ah, Bothwell, if you were my husband, there would be no
limit to my ambition for you! And you are going to vegetate in a place
like this?"

"I am going to work here, and to be useful in my generation, I hope. I
shall help to make the soldiers of the future;" and then he told Lady
Valeria his plans.

"What a drudgery!" she exclaimed; "what a wearisome monotonous round,
from year's end to year's end! I would as soon be a horse in a mill. O
Bothwell, the very idea is an absurdity. You a schoolmaster! You!"

She measured him from head to foot with a scornful laugh; trying
to humiliate him, to make him ashamed of his modest hopes. But she
failed utterly in this endeavour. Bothwell was too happy to be easily
put out of conceit with his prospects. Even that opprobrious name of
"schoolmaster" had no terrors for him.

"Tell me about my friend's last illness," he said presently, gravely,
gently, anxious to bring Lady Valeria to a more womanly frame of mind.

He thought that she must surely have some touch of tenderness, some
regret for the husband who had been so good and loyal in his treatment
of her; the man to whom she had been as an indulged and idolised
daughter rather than as a wife; escaping all wifely servitude, seeking
her own pleasure in all things, allowed to live her own life.

Lady Valeria told Bothwell about those last sad days: how the strong
frame had been burnt up with fever, the broad chest racked with pain;
how patiently weakness and suffering had been endured.

"He was a brave, good man," she said; "noble, unselfish to the last.
His parting words were full of love and generosity. 'You will marry
again,' he said. 'I have left no fetter upon your life. My latest
prayer will be for your happiness.'"

"I wish we had both been worthier of his regard," said Bothwell
gloomily.

He wondered at the supreme egotism of a nature which could be so little
moved by this good man's death.

"That is past wishing now. Nothing that you or I can do will cancel the
past. No, Bothwell," she said, looking at him steadily, "nothing will
cancel the past."

They were at the hotel by this time. Bothwell ordered tea, then went
out to the stables to order the carriage. He left Lady Valeria to take
her tea in mournful solitude, while he walked up and down in front of
the hotel, waiting to hand her into her carriage. He was indignant
with her for the unwomanly step she had taken. He wondered that he
could ever have cared for such a woman, a woman who could assume the
dignity of an empress, and yet stoop to follies at which a dressmaker's
apprentice might have hesitated; a creature of caprice and impulse,
governed by no higher law than her own whim.

He walked up and down in the autumn darkness, listening to the murmur
of the waves, seeing the stars shine out, pale and far apart in the
calm gray, glancing now and then at the window of the sitting-room,
where Lady Valeria was seated in the glow of the fire, a tall slim
figure in densest black.

She came out after the carriage had been waiting some time.

"O, you are there, are you?" she exclaimed, seeing Bothwell by the
hotel-door. "I thought you had gone."

"I waited to hand you to your carriage."

"You are vastly polite. I hardly expected so much attention."

"There is a train from Bodmin Road a few minutes after nine. You will
be in time for it if your coachman drives pretty fast."

"The road is not the safest in the world for fast driving, but you can
tell him to catch the train, if you please. Good-night."

Bothwell told the coachman not to waste his time when he had a level
road; and as the habit of Cornish coachmen is to spring their horses
up-hill and canter them gaily down-hill, there was every chance that
Lady Valeria would be in time.

The carriage drove off, and Bothwell went back to his lodgings,
wondering whether he had seen the last of the lady. Her coming had
introduced a new element of doubt and fear into his mind. A woman
capable of such foolishness might stop at no desperate act. All the
serenity of Bothwell's sky had become clouded over.

He turned his face in the direction of Penmorval, and looked across the
hills, through the cool, dark night. O, what a different nature that
was, the nature of the girl who was to be his wife! What rest, what
comfort in the very thought of her love!

"God bless you, my darling," he said to himself. "I send my love and
blessing to you, dearest, over the quiet hills, under the silent
stars."



CHAPTER X.


ROSES ON A GRAVE.


While Bothwell was watching the builder's men upon the green hill
beside the Atlantic, Edward Heathcote was slowly, patiently,
laboriously following the thin thread of circumstantial evidence which
was to lead him to the solution of Léonie Lemarque's fate. He had
taken this task upon himself in purest chivalry, an uncongenial duty,
entered upon in unselfish devotion to the woman he loved. He pursued it
now with a passionate zest, a morbid interest, which was a new phase
in his character. Never had he followed the doublings of some cunning
old dog-fox across the moors and heaths of his native land with such
intensity as he followed that unknown murderer of Léonie Lemarque. That
she had been murdered--deliberately sacrificed--as the one witness of
a past crime, was now his conviction. He had ceased to halt between
two opinions. Léonie had gone to meet the murderer of her aunt, and she
had fallen a victim to the folly of the dying woman who had sent her to
seek protection from such a source.

Who was that murderer, and for what reason had he carried his helpless
prey to a remote Cornish valley? Why should he not have tried to get
rid of her in the great wilderness of London, where the crime would
have excited much less curiosity, and would have been less likely to be
discovered?

Entering deliberately into the thoughts of the assassin, following out
the working of his mind, his fears, his calculations, his artifices, it
seemed to Heathcote that a man familiar with the line between Plymouth
and Penzance might scheme out just such a murder as that which had been
committed, might fix on the very spot at which the deed was to be done,
knowing that at that particular point the palisades had been removed,
and the viaduct left unprotected. He would speculate that the fall of
a strange girl at such a spot would be accepted as purely accidental.
He would trust to his own cleverness for finding the way to disconnect
himself from the catastrophe; he would imagine that in the hurry
and confusion following such an event it would be impossible for the
murderer to be identified. Who was to select from all the travellers
in a train that one traveller whose arm had thrust the girl to her
doom? A little cleverness and watchfulness on his part would render
such identification impossible. A man provided with a railway key
could get from one carriage to another easily enough, in the surprise
and horror of the moments following upon the girl's fall. Few men are
quite masters of their senses during such moments, and all eyes would
be turned towards the gorge at the bottom of which the girl was lying;
everybody's thought would be as to whether she was living or dead. Very
easy in such a moment for an active man to pass from one carriage to
the other, unobserved by any creature in or about the train.

Mr. Blümenlein's remark about the hidden door in the alcove had
impressed Heathcote strongly: the door opening into a dark and obscure
court, a narrow passage piercing from one street to another, and with
only a side door here and there leading into a yard, and here and there
the grated windows of a warehouse or an office; an alley in which,
after business hours, there were hardly any signs of human habitation.
Heathcote inspected this passage after he left the merchant's office.
He followed it to its outlet into a narrow street, which led him into
another and busier street parallel with the Rue Lafitte. A curious
fancy possessed him; and he made his way, by narrow and obscure
streets, behind the Grand Opera and the Grand Hotel, into the Rue
Lafitte. By this way, which was somewhat circuitous, and which led
for the most part through shabby streets, he avoided the Boulevard
altogether.

That speech of Mr. Blümenlein's haunted him, like the refrain of a
song. The words repeated themselves over and over again in his mind,
with maddening reiteration.

"Wyllard, the speculator, was one man; but there was another man of
whom the world knew nothing, and who went out and came in between dusk
and dawn by that side door in the court."

It was a bold speculation on the part of the German merchant, and might
have very little foundation in reality: yet the fact that such a side
door had been made at Julian Wyllard's expense implied a desire for
independent egress and ingress, a wish to be free from the espionage of
porters and porters' wives, to go out and come in unobserved, to have
no comment made upon the hours he kept.

For such a man as Wyllard had appeared in the eyes of the world, for
a hard-headed plodder, a moneymaking machine, this easy access to the
Boulevard and the pleasures of a Parisian midnight would have been
useless.

But for a man who led a double life, who was the hard calculating man
of business by day, and who at night took his revenge for the toil and
dulness of the money-grubber's career in the dissipations of the gayest
city in the world--for such a man the facility afforded by the side
door in the court would be invaluable.

Had Wyllard been such a man? Had Wyllard lived a double life during the
ten years of his Parisian existence?

Such a thing seemed to the last degree unlikely. Difficult to suppose
that he could have given his nights to pleasure and folly--he who
had succeeded as a foreigner in a field where native talent had so
often failed; he who had penetrated the innermost labyrinths of the
financial world, and had always been a winner in the hazardous game
where the reckless and the idle must inevitably end as losers; he who
had the _flair_ for successful enterprises which had been spoken of to
Heathcote as little short of inspiration; he who had been respected
by the cleverest men on the Paris Bourse, looked up to as the hardest
worker and keenest thinker among them all. No, such a man could not
have given his nights to pleasure, could not have rioted among foolish
revellers betwixt midnight and morning--to go back to his den in the
early dawn, and to begin a new day, half rested, bemused by wine and
folly.

No, such a man could not have habitually lived the Boulevard life,
could not have been the associate of fools and light women. He could
not so have lived without the fact of his folly being known to
everybody in Paris. And Edward Heathcote had heard his rival praised
for the sobriety and steadiness of his life, wondered at as a miracle
of industry and good conduct, a man of one idea and one ambition. He
had heard Julian Wyllard so spoken of by men who knew their Paris. He
had heard his character discussed and sifted years ago, at the time of
his marriage with Dora Dalmaine.

That Julian Wyllard could have lived a profligate life was impossible;
but that theory of a double life did not necessarily imply dissipation
or folly. What of a man who concealed from the world his inner life,
the life of passion and emotion, who abandoned himself in secretness
and obscurity to his all-absorbing love for a woman whom he dared not
acknowledge before society? Such a man might verily be said to lead a
double life--and Julian Wyllard might have been such a man.

Heathcote looked at his watch when he entered the Rue Lafitte. He had
walked the distance in a quarter of an hour.

He had made a note of the number of the house in which Marie Prévol
had lived. It was 117, about half-way between the Boulevard and the
Rue Lafayette. It was to this house that he now directed his steps,
impelled by the desire to see the rooms in which the beautiful young
actress had lived--if it were possible to see them. In this dead
season, when so many of the residents of Paris were absent, there
was just the chance that some good-natured _concierge_--and the
_concierge_ is always amenable to the gentle inducement of a five-franc
piece--might consent to admit a respectable-looking stranger to a view
of the third floor of No. 117.

The house was a quiet reputable-looking house enough--one of the older
and smaller houses of the street, untouched by the hand of improvement,
and of somewhat shabby appearance externally.

The person who opened the door, and who occupied a little den at the
back of the entrance-hall, was a woman of about forty, cleaner and
fresher looking than the generality of portresses and caretakers. She
was decently attired in a smart cotton gown, which fitted her buxom
figure to perfection. Her face was clean, and her cap spotless. She had
a pleasant open countenance, and Heathcote felt that he might believe
anything she told him.

He asked if there were any apartments to be let in the house.

No, the portress told him. There were only old-established families
living there. There had not been a floor to let for three years.

"Indeed! Not the third floor, for example?"

"No. But why does Monsieur inquire especially about the third floor?"
the portress-asked, looking at him keenly with her bright black eyes.

"I confess to having a particular curiosity about the third floor,"
replied Heathcote, judging that frankness would serve him best with
this outspoken matron, "and if by any chance the family were absent----"

"Monsieur would like to indulge a morbid curiosity," interrupted the
portress, "to see the rooms which were occupied by a beautiful woman
who was murdered. There was a time when I had twenty, forty, fifty such
applications in a day, when all the idlers in Paris came here to spy
about and to question. If the murder had been done in one of those very
rooms instead of in the wood, I should have made my fortune. As it was,
people stared and pried and touched things; as if the very curtains and
the sofa cushions had been steeped in blood. But that was ten years
ago. I wonder that Monsieur should feel any curiosity after all those
years."

"You were living in this house ten years ago, at the time of the
murder?" questioned Heathcote eagerly.

"Yes, Monsieur, and for three years before that. I was with Madame
Georges from the day she first entered this house to the day she was
carried out of it in her coffin. I am Barbe Leroux, born Girot. If you
have heard of the murder of Marie Prévol, you must have heard of Barbe
Girot, her servant. I was one of the chief witnesses before the _Juge
d'Instruction_."

"Madame, I have read your evidence," replied Heathcote. "I am deeply
interested in the history of that terrible murder, and I rejoice in
having met a lady who can, if she pleases, help me to unravel a mystery
which baffled the police."

"The police!" exclaimed Madame Leroux contemptuously; "the police are a
parcel of no-great-things, or they would have found the man who killed
my mistress and Monsieur de Maucroix in a week."

"Provided that he stopped in Paris to be found. But it seems evident
that he got away from Paris, and instantly, or he would have been taken
red-handed."

"I have reason to know that he was in Paris long after the murder,"
said Barbe decisively.

"What reason? Pray consider, Madame, that I am brought to this house
by no idle curiosity, no morbid love of the horrible. It is my mission
to discover the murderer of Marie Prévol. Give me your confidence, I
entreat, Madame. You who loved your mistress must desire to see her
assassin punished."

Barbe Leroux shrugged her shoulders with an air of doubt.

"I don't quite know that, Monsieur. Yes, I loved my mistress; but I
pity her murderer. Come, we cannot talk in this passage all day. Will
you walk into my room, Monsieur, and seat yourself for a little while?
and then, if you are anxious to see the apartment in which that poor
lady lived, it may perhaps be managed."

"You are very good," said Heathcote, slipping a napoleon into Barbe
Leroux's broad palm.

Had it been half a napoleon she would have considered herself repaid
for ordinary civility; but the larger coin secured extraordinary
devotion. She would, in her own phrase, have thrown herself into
the fire for this gentlemanly stranger, whose hat and coat were so
decidedly English, but who spoke almost as a Parisian.

She ushered him into her little sitting-room, the very sanctuary and
stronghold of her domestic life, since there was a bed in a curtained
corner, while there was a cradle sunning itself in the few rays of
light which crept down the hollow square of brick and stone on which
the window opened. The _pot-au-feu_ was simmering on a handful of
wood-ashes in a corner of the hearth; and Madame Leroux's plethoric
work-basket showed that she had been lately occupied in the repair of a
blue linen blouse.

"Leroux is one of the porters at the Central Markets," she explained.
"It is a hard life, and the pay is small; but there are perquisites,
and between us we contrive to live and to put away a little for the
daughter there," with a nod and a smile in the direction of the
cradle, whence came the rhythmical breathing of a fat baby.

"The only one?" inquired Heathcote.

"Yes, Monsieur."

"And you have lived in this house for thirteen years, Madame Leroux?"

"Nearer fourteen, Monsieur, when all is counted. I was a dresser at
the Porte-Saint-Martin when Mademoiselle Prévol first appeared there.
It was a wretched life--bad pay, late hours, hard work. I caught cold
from going to and fro on the winter nights, thinly clad; for I had
an old mother to support in those days, and I could not afford warm
clothing. I had a cough which tore me to pieces; but I dared not give
up my employment, and my fear was of being sent away on account of bad
health. I had not a friend in Paris to help me. Then it was, Monsieur,
that Mademoiselle Prévol took pity on me. She spoke about me to a
doctor who used to come behind the scenes and was on friendly terms
with all the actors and actresses. She asked him to prescribe for me;
but he told her that medicines would be of no use in my case. I was
young, and I had a good constitution. All that was needed for my cure
was warmth and comfort. I was not to go out of doors after dark, or in
bad weather, if I wanted to cure myself. I almost laughed at the doctor
for his advice. I lived on the Boulevard de la Chapelle, and had to
walk to and fro in all weathers, good or bad. It was January at this
time, and the snow was on the ground."

"It was then that Mademoiselle Prévol took you into her service?"
speculated Heathcote.

"Yes, Monsieur. There are not many ladies in her position who would
have cared what became of a drudge like me. She was new to the theatre,
and she had just become the rage on account of her beauty. The papers
had all been full of her praises. Cigars, hats, fans, shoes were called
after her. The public applauded her songs and dances madly every night.
Admirers were waiting in crowds at the stage-door to see her leave the
theatre, in the shabby little forty-sous that used to take her home.
She dared not walk, for fear of being followed and mobbed. She was
young enough to have had her head turned by all this fuss; but she
seemed to care hardly anything about it. One honest man's love would
be worth all this rubbish, she said to me once, when I asked her if she
was not proud of being the rage with all Paris. I was proud of dressing
her; and I used to take the greatest care in everything I did for her;
and I suppose it was this that made her so good to me. She knew that
I loved her; and the poor dresser's love was honest love. In a word,
Monsieur, she asked me if I would like to be her servant. She was going
to leave her mother's lodgings, where she was not comfortable, and to
take an apartment of her own. I might have to work hard, perhaps, she
told me, and I should have to be careful and saving, as she had only
her salary to live on. She was not like those ladies who rolled their
carriages and lived in the Bois yonder; but she would feed me and lodge
me well, and she would give me as much money as I was getting at the
theatre, without either food or lodging."

"Naturally, you accepted?"

"With delight, Monsieur. And three days after, I came to this house. My
young mistress had taken the third floor for five years. The landlord
put the rooms in order for her; and she furnished them very modestly,
scantily even, partly out of her little savings since she had been at
the theatre, partly on credit. She was to pay so many francs a week to
the upholsterer till all was paid for. She had no extravagant tastes,
no craving for finery or luxurious living. If you had seen her rooms in
those days, you might have thought them the rooms of a nun--all things
so simple, so neat, so pure."

"But there came a change afterwards, I suppose?"

"There came a time when Monsieur Georges loaded her with presents,
and the apartment changed gradually under his influence. He sent her
easy-chairs, velvet-coloured tables, a bookcase, an escritoire, satin
curtains, rich carpets, pictures, china, hothouse flowers. He showered
his gifts upon her; but I knew that she would have been better pleased
to live in her own simple way. She had a horror of seeming like those
other ladies of the theatre, with their luxurious houses and fine
clothes. She spent very little money on herself; she lived almost as
plainly as a workman's wife."

"Was she called Madame Georges when she first came to this house?"

"No, Monsieur; she did not even know the name of Monsieur Georges at
that time. She only knew that she had a mysterious admirer, who came
to the theatre every night, who used to sit in a dark corner of a
small private box close to the stage, who never showed himself to the
audience, and who was always alone. This was all she knew of Monsieur
Georges in those days."

"Do you know how their acquaintance advanced from this point?"

"No, Monsieur. I hardly know anything of the progress of their
attachment. There were letters--gifts--which came to the house. And I
know that, in the spring nights of that first year, my mistress used to
walk home from the theatre, escorted by Monsieur Georges. But he never
entered our apartment till after Madame's return from England, where
she went during the summer vacation. She had been very silent about her
strange admirer--she had told me nothing--but she had shed many tears
on his account. That was a secret which she could not hide from me.
She had spent many wakeful nights, breathed many sighs. When she told
me she was going to England, I thought all was over. She had fought
hard to be true to herself, poor girl: she had struggled against her
fate: but this man's love had conquered her."

"She did not tell you that she was going away to be married?"

"No, Monsieur; but when she came back, after a fortnight's absence, she
showed me her wedding-ring, and she told me that she was to be called
Madame Georges henceforward. This I took to mean that Monsieur Georges
had married her while in England, and I believe it still. He loved her
too well to degrade her by making her his mistress."

"He loved her well enough to murder her," said Heathcote. "I suppose
that is about the highest flight for a lover."

"He loved her as women are not often loved, Monsieur," replied Barbe,
with conviction. "I saw enough to know that from first to last he
adored her; that the jealousy which devoured him later--the jealousy
which made him act like a madman many times in my hearing--was the
madness of intense love. I have listened outside the door, trembling
for my mistress's safety, ready to give the alarm to the house, to rush
in and rescue her from his violence; and then the storm was lulled by
her sweet words, her gentleness, and he became like a penitent child.
Yes, Monsieur, he loved her as few men love."

"If this were so, why did he keep her in such a discreditable position?
Why did he not introduce her to the world as his wife?"

"I cannot tell. There must have been reasons for his secrecy. He seldom
came to this house before nightfall. He never showed himself anywhere
with Madame till after the theatre."

"Since he was rich enough to be lavish, why did he not remove her from
the stage?"

"That was one of the causes of unhappiness towards the last, Monsieur.
It was his wish that she should leave the theatre, and she refused.
I believe it was at this time she became acquainted with Monsieur de
Maucroix."

"You stated before the _Juge d'Instruction_ that you believed the
acquaintance between your mistress and Monsieur de Maucroix to have
been an innocent acquaintance. Is that still your belief?"

"It is my conviction, Monsieur. I never doubted my dear mistress's
honour, though I doubted her wisdom in allowing herself to think about
Monsieur de Maucroix. It must be pleaded for her excuse that he was
one of the most fascinating men in Paris. At least that is what I
have heard people say of him. I know that he was young, handsome, and
remarkably elegant in his appearance."

"And now tell me how you happen to know that Georges remained in Paris
after the murder? Did you ever see him?"

"Yes, Monsieur. It is rather a long story. If I were not afraid of
tiring you----" Madame Leroux began deprecatingly.

"You will not tire me. I want to hear every detail, however
insignificant."

"Then, Monsieur, you must know that in consequence of Madame's kindness
and of the lavish generosity of Monsieur Georges, and also by reason
of a good many presents from Monsieur de Maucroix, who threw about
his money with full hands, I was very comfortably off at the time of
Madame's sad death. I had buried my poor mother two years before,
and I had been able to save almost every penny of my wages. I felt,
therefore, independent of service. The term would have to be paid by
Madame Lemarque, who inherited all her daughter's property, and as
she had a horror of the rooms in which her poor daughter had lived,
and could not bear to be alone in them for an hour, she asked me to
stay till the end of the quarter. Then, as I told you, people came in
crowds to see the rooms; and as I had power to show them, or to refuse
to show them, just as I pleased, I need not tell you that I made a
good deal of money in this way. I did not make a trade of showing the
rooms, Monsieur; I never asked any one for money, but on the other hand
I did not refuse it when it was offered to me. This continued for some
weeks; then came the sale. All the handsome articles of furniture, all
the pictures and ornaments, fetched high prices. They were bought by
fashionable people as souvenirs of the beautiful Marie Prévol. But
the plainer furniture, the things which my mistress had paid for out
of her own earnings, were sold for very little, and these I bought.
I had conferred with the landlord, and he had agreed to retain me as
his tenant. With the furniture which I bought at the sale, and with
other things which I picked up cheaply among the secondhand dealers, I
contrived to make the rooms very comfortable as furnished lodgings, and
from that time to this I have carried them on with reasonable profit.
Three years later I was able to take the fourth floor; and two years
after that, on the second floor falling vacant, I ventured to become
tenant for that also. There remains only the first floor, which is let
to an old lady of ninety; and if Providence prospers Leroux and me, we
ought to be able to take the first floor by the time the old lady dies."

"You will then be lessees of the whole house; a bold speculation,
Madame, but one which with your prudent habits will doubtless succeed.
But to return to this man Georges, whom you saw in Paris after the
murder."

"I was accustomed to go every week to the cemetery of Père Lachaise,
Monsieur, to look at my dear mistress's grave, and to lay my humble
offering of flowers upon the marble slab which had been placed there
at Madame Lemarque's expense. It bore for inscription only the one
word--Marie: Madame Lemarque dared not describe her daughter as a
wife--she would not record her name as a spinster. Marie was enough.
For the first month after her burial I found the slab covered with
flowers, wreaths, crosses, bouquets of the costliest flowers that can
be bought in Paris. I noticed that among the variety of flowers there
was one wreath frequently renewed, and always the same--a wreath of
Maréchal Niel roses--and I knew that these had been her favourite
flowers, the flowers she always wore, and had about her in her rooms.
I had often heard her call the Maréchal Niel the king of roses. Months
passed, and on my weekly visits with my poor little bunch of violets,
or snowdrops, or jonquils, I found always the wreath of yellow roses.
All through the winter, when even other token had ceased to adorn the
grave--when the beautiful actress was beginning to be forgotten--the
yellow roses were always renewed. I felt that this could be done only
by some one who had devotedly loved Marie Prévol. For her admirers of
the theatre her death had been a nine days' wonder. They had covered
her grave with flowers, and then had gone away and forgotten all
about her; but the wreath of yellow roses, renewed again and again,
all through the dark dull winter, was the gift of a steadfast love, a
grief which did not diminish with time. I questioned the people at the
gates, but they knew nothing of the hand which laid those flowers on my
mistress's grave. I hoped I should some day surprise the visitor who
brought them; but though I altered the days of my visits, never going
two weeks running on the same day, I seemed no nearer finding out that
constant mourner. At last, early in the February after my mistress's
death, I resolved upon going to the cemetery every day, and remaining
there, in view of the grave, as long as my stock of patience would
allow me. I spent three or four hours there for six days running, till
my heart and my feet were alike weary. But I had seen no one: the roses
had not been renewed. The seventh day was a Saturday, the day I always
devoted to cleaning the apartment, which was now in the occupation of
an elderly gentleman and his wife. I was not able to leave the house
till late in the afternoon. The day had been foggy, and the fog had
thickened by the time I left the omnibus, which took me to the Rue de
la Roquette. At the gates of the cemetery it was so dark that if I had
not been familiar with the paths which led to my mistress's grave, I
should hardly have been able to find my way to the spot. The grave is
in a narrow path, midway between two of the principal walks; and as I
turned the corner between two large and lofty monuments, I saw a man
standing in the middle of the path in front of Marie Prévol's grave. A
tall figure, in a furred overcoat, a figure I knew well. I had not an
instant's doubt that the murderer of my mistress stood there before me,
looking at his victim's grave."

"Did you accost him?"

"Alas, no! He was not more than a dozen yards from the spot where I
stood, and I quickened my footsteps, intending to speak to him; but at
the sound of those footsteps he looked round, saw a figure approaching
through the fog, and hurried off in the opposite direction. I ran
after him, but he had reached the other end of the path before I could
overtake him; and when I got there it was in vain that I looked for any
trace of him either right or left of the pathway. He had disappeared in
the fog, which was thicker at this end of the path, as it was on lower
ground. My mistress's grave was on the slope of the hill, and there the
fog was less dense.

"I went back to the grave and looked at the flowers on the slab. A
wreath of yellow roses, fresh from the hothouse where they had been
grown, lay on the marble, surrounding that one word 'Marie.'"

"Are you sure that the man you saw was Georges?"

"Perfectly sure. I knew his figure; I knew his walk. I could not be
mistaken in him. And who else was there in Paris who would come week
after week, in all weathers, to lay the roses my mistress loved upon
her grave? Many had admired her on the stage; but only two men had been
allowed to love her, to know anything of her in her private life. Of
those two, one was the murdered man, Maxime de Maucroix; the other was
the murderer Georges."

"Did you find the flowers renewed after this day, or did the murderer
take alarm and avoid the cemetery?"

"The roses were renewed week after week for more than a year after that
foggy Saturday afternoon; but I never again saw the person who laid
them there. I had, indeed, no desire to see him again. I had satisfied
myself as to his identity. I did not want to betray him to the police.
The shedding of his blood might have avenged my dear mistress's death,
but it could not have restored her to life. It could have been no
consolation to her in purgatory to know that this man, whom she had
once loved, who had loved her only too well, was to die on the scaffold
for her sake. I hated him as the murderer of my mistress, but I pitied
him even in the midst of my hatred. I pitied him for the reality of his
love."

"You say the flowers appeared on the grave for more than a year after
that February afternoon?" said Heathcote. "Did the tribute fall off
gradually? Was the wreath renewed at longer and longer intervals till
it ceased altogether, or did the offering stop suddenly?"

"Suddenly. In the March of the second year after Madame's death I found
a faded wreath on my weekly visit, and that faded wreath has never been
replaced."

"That would be in March 1874?"

"Yes, Monsieur."

"You never saw Georges again, either in the cemetery or anywhere else?"

"Never."

"I have been told that he was a French Canadian. Have you any knowledge
as to his country or his family history?"

"None, Monsieur. I always supposed him to be a Frenchman. I never heard
him speak in any other language."

"Did he speak like a Parisian?"

"No, Monsieur. He did not speak exactly like the people about here, or
the actors at the Porte-Saint-Martin. I used to think that he was a
provincial."

"Did you hear from your mistress what part of England she had visited?"

"I heard, Monsieur, but have forgotten. The names of places were
strange to me--such queer names--but I know it was a place in which
there were lakes and mountains."

"Was it in Scotland or Ireland?"

"No, it was in England. I am sure of that. And now, if Monsieur would
like to see the third floor."

Heathcote said he was most anxious to do so; and he followed Madame
Leroux up-stairs, to a landing out of which the door of the apartment
opened. The rooms were small and low, but well lighted, and with a
balcony looking out on the street. The little _salon_ was neatly
furnished, with those very chairs and tables which Marie Prévol had
bought out of her first economies as an actress. The things were meagre
and shabby after the wear and tear of years; but the perfect neatness
and cleanliness of everything made amends. Barbe Leroux was one of
those admirable managers who by sheer industry and good taste can make
much out of little.

There was a tiny dining-room opening out of the _salon_, with a
window overlooking chimneys and backs of houses, and this window had
been filled with painted glass in the time of Monsieur Georges. All
the other elegances and luxuries with which he had embellished the
cosy little rooms had been disposed of at the sale of Marie Prévol's
effects. There had been Venetian mirrors and girandoles on the walls of
the dining-room, Barbe explained.

"Madame used to light all the wax candles when she came in from the
theatre. There were candles on the supper-table with rose-coloured
shades. There were fruit and flowers always. Everything was made to
look pretty in honour of Monsieur Georges--and there had to be some
delicate little dish for supper, and choicest wine. Monsieur was not
a man who cared much what he ate or drank; but Madame wished that
everything should be nicely arranged, that the supper-table should look
as inviting as at the Café de Paris or at the Maison d'Or."

The bedroom opened out of the _salon_. There was a dressing-room
between that and the little back room in which Barbe had slept, when
she was in Mademoiselle Prévol's service. On her occasional visits
Léonie Lemarque had occupied a truckle-bed in Barbe's room.

"How is it that Léonie Lemarque in all her visits never happened to see
Monsieur Georges?" inquired Heathcote, when he had looked at all the
rooms, peopling them in his imagination with the figures of the actress
and her lover.

"Madame took good care to prevent that. She told me that Monsieur
Georges hated children, and that the little one was to be kept out of
his way."

"Did he never spend his mornings here? Was he only here at night?"

"Only at night. It was for that reason Madame Lemarque used to call
him the night-bird. I think she was very angry because she was never
allowed to see him--never invited to supper. Monsieur Georges used to
take a cup of coffee early in the morning, and he left the house before
most people were up. As early as five o'clock in summer, never later
than half-past six in winter."


END OF VOL. II.



WYLLARD'S WEIRD

A Novel


BY THE AUTHOR OF

"LADY AUDLEY'S SECRET," "VIXEN,"
"ISHMAEL," ETC.


IN THREE VOLUMES

VOL. III.


LONDON

JOHN AND ROBERT MAXWELL

MILTON HOUSE, SHOE LANE, FLEET STREET

AND

35 ST. BRIDE STREET, E.C.

1885



CONTENTS OF VOL. III.

        I.  WEDDING GARMENTS
       II.  LADY VALERIA FIGHTS HER OWN  BATTLE
      III.  AN ELOPEMENT ON NEW LINES
       IV.  IN THE LAND OF BOHEMIA
        V.  REAPING THE WHIRLWIND
       VI.  HOW SUCH THINGS END
      VII.  ONE WHO MUST REMEMBER
     VIII.  THE LAST LINK
       IX.  WAITING FOR HIS DOOM
        X.  "ALIKE IS HELL, OR PARADISE, OR HEAVEN"
       XI.  "SWEET IS DEATH FOR EVERMORE"
      XII.  "WHO KNOWS NOT CIRCE?"
     XIII.  "HOW LIKE A WINTER HATH THY ABSENCE BEEN"



WYLLARD'S WEIRD



CHAPTER I.


WEDDING GARMENTS.


Hilda's presence at Penmorval was full of comfort and solace for Dora
Wyllard. She had known Hilda all her life, had seen her grow from
childhood to womanhood, had loved her with a sisterly love, trusting
her as she trusted no one else. Hilda had been only a child at the time
of Dora's engagement to Edward Heathcote; yet, even at eleven years of
age, Hilda's tender heart had been full of sympathy for her brother
when that engagement was broken off, and when Dora became the wife of
another man. She had been angry, with vehement, childish anger. That
Dora should like any man better than him who, in the fond eyes of the
younger sister, seemed the prince and pattern of fine gentlemen, was an
unpardonable offence.

Hilda at eleven was precocious in her knowledge of books, and very
self-opinionated in her judgment of people. She told her brother she
would never speak to Dora again, that she would run a mile to avoid
even seeing her: and then, a few months after Dora's marriage, finding
that her brother had forgiven that great wrong with all his heart,
Hilda melted one day suddenly, at meeting Mrs. Wyllard on the moor, and
fell into her old friend's arms.

"I have tried to hate you for being so wicked to my brother," she
sobbed, as Dora bent over her and kissed her.

"Your brother forgave me ever so long ago, Hilda," said Dora. "Why
should you be less generous than he?"

"Because I love him better than he loves himself," cried Hilda, in her
vehement way; "because I know his value better than he does. O Dora,
how could you like any one else better than Edward?"

"You must not ask me that, my darling. Those things cannot be
explained. Fate willed it so."

"And I suppose you are very happy in your grand house?" said Hilda
sullenly.

"I am very happy with the husband I love, Hilda. The grand house makes
no difference. And now we are going to be good friends, aren't we,
dear? and we are never going to talk of the past. How you have grown,
Hilda!"

"Out of all my frocks," answered Hilda, glancing contemptuously at
her ankles. "It is perfectly degrading never to have a frock long
enough for one--and never to have one's waist in the right place. The
dressmaker says I have no waist yet. Dressmakers are so insulting to
girls of my age. I think I shall positively trample upon my dressmaker
when I am grown up, to revenge myself for all I have suffered from the
tribe."

"My Hilda, what an old-fashioned puss you have grown!"

"How can I help being old-fashioned? I never see any young people.
Edward never comes to The Spaniards now. You have driven him away."

"Hilda, if we are to be friends--"

"Well, I won't say it again; but you have, you know. It is awfully
dull at home. I suppose I may say that?"

"I hear you have a new governess. I hope you like her?"

"You needn't hope that, for you know girls never do. She is a poor
sheep of a thing, and I don't suppose I hate her quite so much as
some girls hate their governesses. But she is dreadfully dreary. She
makes her own gowns; and of an evening her needle goes stitch, stitch,
stitch, in time to the ticking of the clock, while I practise my
scales. I don't know which I hate most, the clock, or the piano, or the
needle."

"Poor Hilda, you must spend half your time with me in future. I shall
call to-morrow, and ask your father's permission to have you at
Penmorval as often as I like."

"He won't refuse, if there's any consistency in him," replied Hilda,
"for he is always grumbling about the noise I make, and about my
sliding down the banisters. How did _he_ go downstairs I wonder, at
my age? Those broad banisters at The Spaniards must have been made
for sliding. But fathers are so inconsistent," concluded Hilda. "I
shouldn't wonder if he wouldn't rather have me and my noise at home
than allow me to be happy at Penmorval."

"Let us hope that he will be reasonable," said Dora, smiling, "even
though he is a father."

Mrs. Wyllard called at The Spaniards next day, and was not too
graciously received by Mr. Heathcote--old Squire Heathcote, as he was
called in that part of the world. He was a testy invalid, a sufferer
from some chronic complaint which was so obscure in its complications
as to seem only an excuse for ill-temper, and he had not forgiven
Dora for jilting his son. He softened gradually, however, melted by
the sweetness of her manner, and by memories of days that were gone,
when he had admired her mother, and had been ruthlessly cut out by her
father. The eyes that looked at him seemed to be the eyes that he had
loved in his youth.

"If you care to be troubled with the girl, I ought to be grateful
for any kindness you may show her," said the Squire. "She makes more
noise than a regiment, and she is always disobeying her governess,
or neglecting her lessons; and then I am called upon to interfere. I
wouldn't mind if they would fight it out between them, and leave me in
peace."

"You shall be left in peace very often, if you will allow me to have
Hilda for my little companion at Penmorval," said Dora. "And I promise
you that her education shall not be altogether neglected while she is
with me."

"If you can teach her manners, I shall be eternally your debtor," said
the Squire. "I would much rather a young woman should know how to
behave herself in society than that she should be able to read Æschylus
or take a degree in mathematics."

Thus it came about that Hilda spent a great deal of her life at
Penmorval, where the sheep-like governess escorted her, or whence she
fetched her with unfailing patience, grateful exceedingly when she was
rewarded with a cup of tea in Mrs. Wyllard's pretty drawing-room, or in
the yew-tree arbour.

And thus in the seven happy years of Dora Wyllard's married life--her
apprenticeship, as she had called it playfully last June, when the
anniversary of her marriage came round--Hilda had been her chief
companion. The girl had grown up at the young matron's side as a
younger sister, and had been a link between Dora and Edward, albeit
these two saw each other but seldom, for Edward's home had been in the
neighbourhood of Plymouth until within the last two years.

The old Squire did not long survive that interview in which he
complained of his young daughter's hoydenish manners. He did not live
to see the hoyden soften into a graceful, modest girl, reserved and
silent among strangers, full of vivacity among those she loved. His
elder son succeeded him in the possession of The Spaniards, a bachelor,
and an enthusiastic sportsman. He was one of those ideal brothers with
whom a sister can do just what she likes; and under his _régime_ Hilda
learnt to ride to hounds, and contrived to enjoy herself as much as any
girl in Cornwall. She mourned him passionately when he was snatched
away in the flower of his manhood, victim to a cold caught during a
fishing tour in Connemara.

Edward's rule was almost as kind, but not quite so easy. He had
narrower ideas about the rights of young ladies, especially in relation
to the hunting-field.

"When I hunt you can go with me," he said, "but I will not have you
flourishing about the country with no one but a groom to look after
you;" and this narrower rule deprived Hilda of many a day's sport.
Courtenay, the elder brother, had never missed a day with fox-hounds
or harriers, and he had allowed his sister the run of his stables, and
much latitude in all things.

While Hilda was growing up under Dora Wyllard's wing, while Edward
Heathcote changed from bachelor to married man, and then to widower,
Bothwell Grahame was serving his Queen and his country in the far East.
He could just remember having seen Hilda now and again as a child. He
came back to Cornwall to find her a woman, or a girl on the verge of
womanhood; and it was not long before he grew to believe in her as the
very perfection of girlhood and womanhood in one--girlhood when she
was gay, and in her more serious moods altogether womanly.

In these darker days, under that heavy cloud which had fallen upon Dora
Wyllard's life, Hilda's presence was an inestimable blessing. Dora
was able to put aside the thought of her own great sorrow every now
and then, while she entered with all her heart into the life of her
young friend--this fresh young life, so full of hope in the future,
of earnest purpose and sweet humility. If a king had stooped from his
throne to woo her, Hilda could not have been prouder of her royal lover
than she was of Bothwell. She spoke of him as of one who honoured her
by his affection, and she seemed full of fearfulness lest she should
not be good enough for her hero. It never occurred to her that it was
Bothwell who ought to be thankful, that it was he who had won the prize.

There was a sweet self-abnegation in this girlish love which touched
Dora deeply, she being all unconscious of her unselfish worship of
her husband, her own surrender to the lover who stole her from her
betrothed.

Hilda was very fearful of intruding her new joys and hopes upon her
friend's sorrow.

"I ought not to chatter about our prospects, Dora; when you are so
weighed down with care," she said apologetically.

But Dora insisted upon hearing all about the new home which was to be
made out of the old cottage. She insisted upon discussing the trousseau
and the linen-closet, glass and china, and even hardware; albeit her
own lines had fallen in a mansion where all these things were provided
on a lavish scale, and left to the care of a housekeeper, to be
destroyed and renewed periodically, for the benefit of old-established
tradesmen.

"You never had a linen-closet to look after, Dora," said Hilda,
pitying her friend. "That is the worst of being so rich. There is
no individuality in your home-life. I mean to be a regular Dutch
housewife, and to keep count of every table-cloth in my stock. I shall
make and mark and mend all the house-linen; and I shall be much prouder
of my linen-closet than of my gowns and bonnets. And the china-closet,
Dora, ought not that to be lovely? One can get such delicious glass
and china nowadays for so little money. I have looked at the Plymouth
china-shops, and longed to buy the things, before I was engaged; and
now I can buy all the glass and china for our house--I have saved
enough money out of my allowance to pay for all we want in that way."

"What an independent young person you are, Hilda!" said her friend,
laughing at her; "but you must not spend all your money on cups and
saucers--"

"And teapots!" interjected Hilda--"such sweet little china teapots. I
will have one for every day in the week."

"Teapots are all very well; but you will have your trousseau to buy.
You must keep some of your money for frocks."

"I have no end of frocks; more than enough," protested Hilda. "I shall
buy just two new gowns--my wedding-gown, and a tailor gown for riding
outside coaches in the honeymoon. Bothwell proposes that we should go
round the south coast as far as the Start, and then across country to
Hartland, and home by Bude. That is to be our honeymoon tour."

"Very nice, and very inexpensive, dearest. And then you are to come
here to live till your new home is ready?"

"I am afraid we shall be very much in your way."

"You will be a comfort to me, Hilda; both you and Bothwell will be a
help and comfort to me."

Hilda spent her evenings for the most part in the invalid's room.
Her sympathetic nature made it easy for her to adapt herself to the
necessities of a sick-room. She could be very quiet, and yet she could
be bright and gay. She could be cheerful without being noisy. She sang
with exquisite taste, and sang the songs which are delightful to all
hearers--songs that appeal to the heart and soothe the senses.

Julian Wyllard was particularly fond of her German ballads--Schubert,
Mendelssohn, Jensen, old Volks-Lieder; but once when she began a little
French song, "Si tu savais," he stopped her with a painful motion of
his distorted hand.

"Not that, Hilda. I detest that song;" and for the first time Hilda
doubted the excellence of his judgment.

"I wonder you dislike it," she began.

"O, the thing is pretty enough; but it has been so vulgarised. All the
organs were grinding it when I lived in Paris."

"And those organs disturbed you at your work sometimes, perhaps,"
said Dora, seated in her accustomed place beside his pillow, ready
to adjust his reading-lamp, to give him a new book, or to discuss
any passage he showed her. He read immensely in those long hours of
enforced captivity, but his reading had been chiefly on one particular
line. He was reading the metaphysicians, from Plato and Aristotle to
Schopenhauer and Hartmann; trying to find comfort for the anguish of
his own individual position in the universal despondency of modern
metaphysics.

"A man chained to a sick-bed ought to be able to console himself with
the notion that the great world around him is only an idea of his own
brain; and yet even when convinced of the unreality of all things,
there remains this one central point in the universe, the sense of
personal pain. Such a belief might reconcile the sufferer to the idea
of suicide, but hardly to the idea of existence. Ah, my Dora, if you
are only a phantasm, you are the sweetest ghost that ever a man's brain
invented to haunt and bless his life."

"Don't you think you might read more interesting books while you are
ill, Julian?" suggested his wife.

"No, dear. These books are best, for they set me thinking upon abstract
questions, and hinder me from brooding upon my own misery."

What could Dora say to him by way of comfort, knowing too well that
this misery of his was without hope on earth; knowing that this burden
of pain which had fallen upon him must be carried to the very end; that
day by day and hour by hour the gradual progress of decay must go on;
no pause, no respite; decay so slow as to be almost imperceptible, save
on looking back at what had been?

"Thank God the brain is untouched," said Julian Wyllard, when his wife
pitied him in his hours of suffering. "I should not have cared to sink
into imbecility, to have only a dull vague sense of my own identity,
like a vegetable in pain. I am thankful that Spencer assures me the
brain is sound, and is likely to outlast this crippled frame."

       *       *       *       *       *

Bothwell rode over on Sunday morning as he had threatened, and
appeared at the parish church with his cousin and Hilda, much to the
astonishment of some of the parishioners who had suspected and almost
condemned him. They were now veering round, and had begun to inform
each other that Mr. Grahame had been a much-wronged man, and that
there was evidently a great deal more in the mystery of the strange
girl's death than any one in Bodmin had yet been able to fathom. No
doubt Mr. Distin, the famous criminal lawyer, knew all about it, and
his cross-examination of Bothwell Grahame had been only a blind to
throw the press and the public off the right scent. The very fact of
his coming all the way from London to attend a Cornish inquest argued
an occult knowledge, a shadow behind the throne. Some among Bothwell's
late detractors hinted that the business involved a personage of very
high rank, and were disposed to transfer their suspicions to a local
peer, who was not so popular as he might have been, having but recently
refused to remit more than one-third of his farmers' rents, or to renew
leases at less than half the previous rental, while he was known to
have narrow views about ground game.

And now Bodmin beheld Bothwell Grahame seated in the Penmorval pew
between his cousin and Hilda Heathcote, and Bodmin opined that his
engagement to Miss Heathcote must be a settled thing, since it was
known that he had taken a house at Trevena, and was building and
improving there on a large scale. There were some who approved, and
some who condemned; some who wondered that Squire Heathcote could
allow his only sister to marry such a reprobate, others who declared
that Bothwell was a high-spirited fellow, who had been a fine soldier,
and would make a capital army-coach; but these differences of opinion
helped to sustain conversation, which sometimes sank to a very low ebb
in Bodmin for lack of matter.

It was a lovely autumn day, and Bothwell strolled in the rose-garden
with his sweetheart, between luncheon and five-o'clock tea, talking
over their house and their future.

"And now, dearest, there is only one point to settle," said Bothwell,
when they had discussed furniture and china and glass to their hearts'
content, and when Bothwell had given a graphic description of sundry
Chippendale chairs and Early-English bureaux which he had discovered
and bargained for in cottages and farmhouses within twenty miles of
Trevena. "I had a little talk with Wyllard before luncheon. He is most
cordially disposed towards us; and he wants to hurry on our marriage in
order that he may be present at the ceremony. He feels just able to go
down to the church in a Bath-chair. His chair could be wheeled up the
aisle, and placed within sight and sound of the altar, without being in
anybody's way. He says if we delay our marriage he may no longer have
the power to do even this much; and for this reason he is urgent that
we should marry almost immediately. What do you say, dearest? Will you
take up your burden as a poor man's wife? Will you be mine soon; at
once almost? The week after next, for instance."

"O Bothwell!"

"Think, dear love, there is nothing to delay our marriage, except want
of faith in each other, or in ourselves. If you have any doubt of me,
Hilda, or any doubt as to your own love for me--"

"I have none, Bothwell--not a shadow of doubt."

"Then let us be married on Tuesday week. That is the day Dora
suggested. She tells me that you are the most sensible girl she ever
met with, and that you are not going to buy a wagon-load of clothes in
order to overdress your part in that old, old play called _Love in a
Cottage_: so you see there is nothing to wait for."

"But I must have a wedding-gown, Bothwell, and a gown for travelling."

"Then you have just a week in which to get them made, dear. Not an hour
more."

There was some further discussion; but in the end Hilda yielded to her
lover's pleading. It should be any day he liked--it should be Tuesday.
The two gowns should be ordered next morning. Edward Heathcote had
given Dora full powers, and he would doubtless hurry home at her
bidding in time to arrange the terms of Hilda's marriage-settlement,
and to be present at the wedding.

Bothwell was almost beside himself with gladness for the rest of the
day; but good-feeling impelled him to restrain his exuberance, and
to be grave and quiet in the presence of the patient sufferer, whose
pale calm face told but little of mental struggle or bodily pain. The
evening was spent in Julian Wyllard's room. There was a good deal of
conversation, and Hilda sang some of her favourite songs; a sacred song
of Gounod's, "There is a green hill far away," which Dora especially
loved, and again, "Ave Maria," by the same composer. Bothwell sat in a
corner by the pretty little cottage piano, listening to the rich full
voice of his beloved, watching her slender fingers as they strayed over
the keys, ineffably happy. He had no thought of evenings in the years
that were gone, when he had listened to another singer, and watched
other hands, delicate nervous fingers, glittering with diamonds. The
voice of that old time was a thinner voice, a somewhat reedy soprano,
and those tapering fingers had something of a bird's claws in their
extreme attenuation; but he had thought the thin voice passing sweet in
the days that were gone, and the hand of the siren had seemed to him a
thing of beauty.

He left Penmorval soon after daybreak next morning, to ride back to
Trevena. He was to return on the following Saturday to take up his
abode there until the wedding-day; while Hilda was to go back to The
Spaniards almost immediately, to collect her belongings, and make
herself ready for her new life. All the business of furnishing could be
done after the wedding, in that interval which the young couple were to
spend at Penmorval.

Hilda was up in time to watch from her bedroom window while her
lover rode away in the misty morning; but she was much too shy to go
downstairs and wish him good-bye. She would have quailed before the
awful eye of Stodden, the butler, had she ventured to show herself at
such an unseemly hour, unchaperoned, unsanctioned by the presence of
a matron. So she hid behind the window-curtain, and watched her true
knight's departure, and did not even fling him a flower by way of
love-token.

When horse and rider were out of sight, Hilda went to her desk and
wrote to her brother, urging him to come back without delay, explaining
and apologising for the early date named for her wedding--reminding
him as to her marriage-settlement that she wished Bothwell to profit
as much as possible by her small independence--an altogether womanly
letter, brimming over with love for her betrothed.

She went home that morning, and she and Fräulein Meyerstein began
immediately to busy themselves with preparations for the wedding.
It would naturally be the quietest of weddings, since Mr. Wyllard's
condition forbade all festivity. Hilda said she would have the twins
for her bridesmaids, and no others. They were to be dressed exactly
alike, and all in pure white, like biscuit-china figures; they were
to have little Pompadour frocks and petticoats and mob-caps. There
was a tremendous consultation that Monday afternoon with the chief
dressmaker of Bodmin, a person of high reputation among those steady
old-fashioned people who liked to spend their money in their own
town, and who were naturally looked down upon by that other section
of county society which had all its clothes from London or Paris. The
dressmaker had made Hilda's frocks ever since she was a baby, and was
inclined to be doleful at the idea of this trousseaux-less entrance
into matrimony; but on being put upon her mettle she declared that
the neat little white satin wedding-gown and the handy little olive
cloth travelling-gown should be perfection after their kind; and then
came a lengthy discussion about sleeves and velvet waistcoat, and
the all-important question of buttons was treated exhaustively. Miss
Pittman, the dressmaker, had been told of Doré and of Redfern, and had
lain awake of a night thinking of their productions; she had been shown
dresses from Swan & Edgar and from Lewis & Allenby; but she believed
that for the hang of a skirt or the fit of a sleeve she could hold her
own with any house in London. And then she favoured Hilda and the
Fräulein with a little lecture upon the righteous and the unrighteous
manner of making and putting in a sleeve, which was eminently
interesting from a technical point of view.

The first three days of that week seemed to Hilda to pass like a dream.
She managed to maintain an outward aspect of supreme calmness; but
her brain seemed to her in a whirl all the time. She went in and out
of the house, and wandered about the gardens without knowing why; she
went hither and thither, half her time hardly conscious where she was.
She began one thing after another, and never finished anything. She
was always waiting for Bothwell's letters, which came by every post,
albeit a third person might have supposed that he could find very
little to write about. For Hilda the letters were full of interest, and
she made as much haste to answer them as if she and Bothwell had been
heads of parties carrying on the business of the nation at a crisis.
She was anxious to receive her brother's answer to her letter; but
when it came, though satisfactory upon some points, the reply was not
altogether agreeable.

      "Mrs. Wyllard is quite justified in saying that I left
      the arrangement of your wedding in her hands," wrote
      Heathcote. "You could have no kinder friend or wiser
      counsellor, and to her decision, as to the date of your
      marriage, I bow. But I regret to say that I shall not
      be present at the ceremony. I have business which still
      detains me in Paris; and I have other reasons which
      hinder my being a witness of your wedding. You must not
      suppose that this decision on my part arises from any
      unfriendly feeling to Bothwell Grahame. I have reconciled
      myself to his marriage with you; and I shall do my
      uttermost in the future to prove myself his friend as
      well as yours. He will find that the instructions I have
      sent as to your settlement are framed with a due regard
      to his interests.

      "There is one thing, however, in which I desire to alter
      Mrs. Wyllard's scheme, kind and hospitable as her idea
      is--namely with regard to your residence after your
      marriage. I cannot allow you to spend the first few
      months of your married life under Mr. Wyllard's roof,
      while your brother's house is more than large enough to
      hold you and your husband. It is my wish, therefore, that
      Bothwell should bring you back to The Spaniards after
      your honeymoon, and that you and he should live there
      till your new home is ready for you. You will, in all
      probability, be very little troubled with my company, as
      I am likely to remain in Paris for some time to come;
      and you and Bothwell can ride my hunters and consider
      yourselves master and mistress of everything. I must beg
      that upon this question my wishes shall be regarded,
      and that you will carry out my plan, even at the hazard
      of offending Mrs. Wyllard, whom you know I esteem and
      respect above all other women.

      "And now, my dear girl, I have nothing to do but to wish
      you all the blessings which a good and true-hearted woman
      deserves when she marries the man of her choice, and to
      request your acceptance of the enclosed cheque for your
      house and your trousseau.--Your very affectionate brother,

      "EDWARD HEATHCOTE."

The cheque was for two hundred and fifty pounds; but liberal as the
gift was, it did not reconcile Hilda to the idea of her brother's
absence on her wedding-day.

"It is extremely unkind of him not to come," she said, throwing the
letter and enclosure into her desk. "And it is not kind of him to alter
Dora's plans. I know she looked forward to having us at Penmorval. But
I shall go and see her every day, poor darling."

This idea of her brother's absence on her wedding-day--that most
fateful day in a woman's life--cast a shadow across the sunlight of
Hilda's bliss. She could think of nothing else after the receipt of
Heathcote's letter; and she was full of wonder as to his reasons for
thus absenting himself upon an occasion when duty and good feeling both
demanded his presence.

What could be his motive? she asked herself. He was not the kind of man
to spare himself the trouble of crossing the Channel, even had it been
necessary for him to return to Paris directly after the wedding. He had
never spared himself trouble or shirked a duty. It was clear to her,
therefore, that he had some very strong motive for absenting himself
from the marriage ceremony.

She could only imagine one reason for his conduct. She told herself
that her brother, in his heart of hearts, still doubted Bothwell,
and still disapproved of her marriage. He had allowed himself to be
talked over by Mrs. Wyllard. The influence of that unforgotten love had
prevailed over his own inclination. He had allowed his consent to be
wrung from him; and now that it was too late to withdraw that consent
he was not the less Bothwell's enemy. He could not bring himself to
look on as an approving witness at a marriage which he regretted. He
had told his sister that his discoveries in Paris had gone far to
convince him of Bothwell's guiltlessness in relation to the French
girl's death: but there was still something in the background, some
prejudice yet undispelled, some doubt which darkened friendship.

It was the Wednesday before her wedding-day, and her preparations
and arrangements had been for the most part made. There had been,
indeed, but little to do, since her return to The Spaniards as a
bride would simplify matters, and give her ample time for packing her
belongings--namely, those books and nicknacks which had beautified
her own rooms; her jewels, chiefly an inheritance from her mother;
and those few wedding presents which had arrived from the three or
four intimate friends who had heard of her engagement. Among these
gifts there was an immense satin-lined work-basket, from Fräulein
Meyerstein--a basket provided with an orderly arrangement of tapes,
buttons, cottons, and needles, such as a careful housewife must needs
require in the repair of the family linen. The Fräulein had made a
special journey to Plymouth in order to purchase and furnish this
treasury of usefulness; and had brought it back in triumph.

"I cannot give you beautiful things," said the kind creature
apologetically. "You have too many valuable jewels of your own to care
for any trinket which I could offer; but in this basket you will find
all which an industrious wife needs to preserve order and neatness
in her household goods. There is flourishing thread of every quality
to darn your table linen. There are pearl buttons of every size for
your husband's shirts; angolas of every shade for his socks; needles
of every number; bobbins; scissors of every kind; and lastly, for
remembrance of an old friend, there is this golden thimble, which I
hope you will wear every day."

And with this little speech the Fräulein plumped her basket down in
front of Hilda, and burst into tears, remembering how she, too, had
once been engaged, and how adverse Fate had hindered her marriage.

"You are a dear kind soul," said Hilda, kissing her affectionately;
"and I am sure you could not have given me anything I should have liked
better. I shall think of you every day when I use this delightful
basket. There is nothing like a useful gift for recalling an old
friend."

Dora's present arrived the same day. A George II. tea-service, with two
little caddies for black tea and green tea, holding about a quarter of
a pound each. Hilda thought her silver teapot the sweetest thing that
had ever been made, and she sat gazing at the service for an hour at
a stretch, and thinking how delightful it would be to make tea for
Bothwell in the cosy winter dusk, when they two should be settled in
their own house above the great Atlantic sea, the curtains drawn across
their old-fashioned lattices, the wind raving over the hills, the waves
roaring, and they two beside the domestic hearth, wrapped in a blessed
calm--two hearts united and at rest.

She had been so happy yesterday in the thought of her future; and
now to-day her brother's letter seemed to have changed the aspect
of things. She was full of a vague disquietude--could not settle to
any occupation, did not even care to take her usual walk across the
hills to the Manor to inquire about Mr. Wyllard's health, and to spend
an hour in confidential talk with Dora. To-day she sent a messenger
instead, and sat all day in her own room brooding over Heathcote's
letter. She felt unequal to facing the twins or the Fräulein, and
pleaded a headache as a reason for not going down to luncheon; and
indeed her troubled thoughts about that letter from Paris had given her
a very real headache.

It was four o'clock in the afternoon, when she heard a carriage drive
up to the hall-door, and thought with horror that she would be summoned
to receive callers. Her window commanded only an angle of the porch.
She could just see a shabby-looking vehicle, which she knew could only
be a fly from the station; and her heart began to beat violently as she
thought that perhaps her brother had changed his mind, and had come
home to do honour to her wedding.

No; it was no such pleasant surprise, only a strange lady who asked to
see her. She had sent up her card:

"LADY VALERIA HARBOROUGH."

"The lady will be greatly obliged if you will see her," said the
servant. "She has come from Plymouth on purpose to see you."

"Of course I will see her," answered Hilda cheerfully. "You have shown
her into the drawing-room, I suppose?"

"Yes, ma'am."

"Take in tea as soon as you can."

Hilda glanced at her glass before she left the room. Her plain cashmere
gown was neat enough, and her hair was tolerably tidy, but her eyes had
a heavy look, and she was very pale.

"I'm afraid I don't look a joyful bride, or do Bothwell credit in any
way," she said to herself.

She had heard her lover speak once or twice of General Harborough as
his kindest and most powerful friend in India. She had heard from Dora
of the General's death, and that Bothwell had attended the funeral.
And now she felt flattered exceedingly at the idea that the General's
widow had taken the trouble to come to see her; no doubt from pure
friendliness for her dead husband's _protégé_--deeming that there
was no better compliment she could pay Mr. Grahame than to assume an
interest in his betrothed. She, like Dora, took it for granted that
old General Harborough's wife would be an elderly woman; and she went
down to the drawing-room expecting to see a portly matron, gray-haired,
bland, perhaps a little patronising in her double rank of Earl's
daughter and General's widow. She was surprised beyond all measure
when a tall and slender figure rose to meet her, and she found herself
face to face with a young woman whose brilliant eyes and interesting
countenance were more striking than commonplace beauty.



CHAPTER II.


LADY VALERIA FIGHTS HER OWN BATTLE.


The two women stood face to face in silence for a few moments. Surprise
made Hilda dumb. She gazed in unconcealed wonderment at the small pale
face framed in white crape, the delicate high-bred features, refined
almost to attenuation, the luminous violet eyes with their long dark
lashes, eyes which alone gave life and colour to the face.

Lady Valeria looked at the girl with so piercing a scrutiny that those
brilliant eyes of hers seemed to burn into the face of her rival--a
scathing look, measuring and appraising that modest girlish beauty,
cheapening those innocent charms in scornful wonder.

And this was the woman for whose sake she, Valeria, had been flung
away like an old glove--this girl-face, with its candid blue eyes and
babified bloom, its broad white forehead ringed round with infantile
curls of golden brown, its delicately pencilled eyebrows, its coral
lips, and small white teeth.

"For people who admire babies the girl is well enough," thought Lady
Valeria.

Yet even her small knowledge of physiognomy taught her that the broad
full forehead and the firmly-moulded lips meant force of character
and firmness of purpose--that this girlish beauty was the beauty of a
good and brave woman--that here there was no reed for her to twist and
rend at her own passionate will, but a nature that was firmer and more
concentrated than her own. Equal forces had met in these two--the force
of passion and the force of principle.

"So you are Miss Heathcote," said the pale lips at last, after that
silent interval, in which Hilda had heard the beating of her own heart;
"you are the Miss Heathcote who is to marry Bothwell Grahame?"

"Yes, Lady Valeria. Bothwell has told me how kind a friend he had in
General Harborough," returned Hilda calmly, trying to feel at her ease
under that searching gaze. "I am very much flattened that you should
come to see me."

"I fear you will feel less flattered when you know the motive of my
visit. No, thanks; I prefer to stand," she said curtly, as Hilda
wheeled a chair towards her guest, and courteously invited her to be
seated. "You will hate me, no doubt, when you know why I am here; and
yet I am come to do you a service--perhaps the greatest service which
one woman can render to another."

"What service, Lady Valeria?" asked Hilda, whose girlish bloom had been
momently fading, and who was now almost as pale as her visitor.

"I am here to save you from a most unhappy union--from a fatal
union--from marriage with a man who loves another woman!"

"That is not true," said Hilda very calmly. "Whoever your informant
may have been, you have been misinformed. I am as firmly convinced of
Bothwell Grahame's love, and of the worth of his character, as I am of
my existence. I would as soon doubt one as doubt the other."

"You are like most girls of your age reared in the country," said
Lady Valeria, with quiet scorn. "You are very ignorant, and you are
very vain. I suppose you imagine that you are the first woman Bothwell
Grahame ever loved--that at seven-and-twenty he brings you a heart
hitherto untouched by beauty; that his senses only awake from a
life-long torpor at sight of your exquisite charms; that nothing less
than your exceptional loveliness could kindle that cold nature into
flame."

"Lady Valeria, if you came here only to insult me--" began Hilda,
moving towards the door.

"I came here to read you a lesson, to save you from a life of misery if
I can; and you shall hear me," said Valeria passionately. "I am here
for your sake, do you understand?--to save you and your lover from an
irreparable folly. He would sacrifice his own happiness and a brilliant
future, from a mistaken sense of honour to you. Now, I want you at
least to know what manner of sacrifice he is going to make for you;
and if you are not made of wood--if you have a woman's heart in your
bosom--you will release him."

"Release him! What do you mean, Lady Valeria? This is sheer madness.
Mr. Grahame sought me of his own accord--chose me deliberately for his
wife, in the face of great difficulties. We are both completely happy
in our love for each other--our faith in each other. There never was a
fairer prospect of a happy domestic life than that which smiles upon
us. There is not a cloud, or the shadow of a cloud, between us."

A footman brought in a little bamboo table, and arranged the
old-fashioned silver tea-tray; and during this brief interruption
hostilities were suspended, and both women composed their faces to
placid neutrality. Lady Valeria declined Hilda's cup of tea, proffered
with a tremulous hand; and directly the man had gone, she coldly
pursued her interrogation.

"Answer me one question, Miss Heathcote. Do you believe yourself Mr.
Grahame's first love?"

"No," faltered Hilda. "I know that there was some one else--that there
was an entanglement from which Mr. Grahame released himself, honourably
and completely, before I accepted him as my future husband. I made that
condition when first he asked me to be his wife. I waited until he
could give me his assurance upon this point before I consented to marry
him."

"O, then you did know that there was some one?" exclaimed Lady Valeria,
with crushing scorn. "You did know that there was an entanglement--or,
in plain words, you knew that you were stealing another woman's lover."

"Lady Valeria, you have no right to say such a thing."

"I have every right. Yes, you knew well enough what you were doing,
in spite of your provincial bringing up. Every woman is wise in these
matters. An entanglement, you say. Do you know, girl, that this
entanglement, of which you speak so flippantly, was a passionate
all-absorbing love--a love that had lasted three years, that had braved
all consequences, that had laughed at danger--a love that burns in
every line of these letters? Read them; read them, girl, and see what
your 'entanglement' means."

She had opened her reticule, and had taken out a packet of letters
while she was speaking. She flung the packet on to a table near Hilda.

"Read them, Miss Heathcote. I suppose you know Mr. Grahame's
handwriting. I suppose he has written to you."

"I can see that they are in Bothwell's hand," said Hilda, looking down
at the bundle of letters, as if they had been a nest of scorpions; "but
I decline to read letters that are not addressed to me."

"You are afraid to read them?"

"I will take it upon trust that they are love-letters. May I ask if
they were written to you--General Harborough's wife?"

The calm and measured accents, the steady gaze of those honest eyes,
the resolute attitude, the small well-balanced head proudly erect,
the nervous hands clasped firmly on the back of a chair by which
the girl was standing, surprised Lady Valeria, and with a far from
pleasant surprise. She had expected Hilda to be more easily crushed.
She had expected to see a love-sick girl sobbing at her feet, ready to
surrender her sweetheart at the first attack. And instead of girlish
weakness, she found a woman prepared to do battle for her love.

"The letters are addressed to me. I should much like you to read them,
in order that you may understand the nature of Bothwell Grahame's
'entanglement'."

"I decline to read them. It is quite enough for me to know that he was
in love with a married woman, and that she encouraged his love--she,
the wife of a good and brave old man--she who, by the right of her
noble birth, should have been prouder, truer, purer than women of
meaner race. She stooped so low! I am sorry that you came here, Lady
Valeria. I am sorry that we have ever met--very sorry that you have
told me your secret."

"It is everybody's secret by this time. A woman in my position is
surrounded by lynx-eyed friends, who read her inmost thoughts.
Everybody knows that Bothwell Grahame loved me, and that I returned his
love. To you this seems terrible, no doubt. Yet I can tell you that I
was a true wife to my husband, as the world estimates truth, and that
he died honouring me. You, with your provincial inexperience and your
narrow mind, cannot imagine a love which, although unconquered, could
remain pure--passionate, intense, devoted, but unstained by sin. Such
a love I cherished for Bothwell Grahame, and he for me. We had promised
each other that, whenever my release came--and in the course of nature
it was not likely to be long deferred--our lives should be linked, our
love should be blest. I lived on that hope, and to Bothwell, as those
letters would tell you, that hope was no less dear than to me. Honour,
right feeling, honesty, were all involved in the promise which bound
Bothwell Grahame to me; and I never for an instant doubted that he
would keep that promise, never doubted that he was mine till death.
But in an evil hour he met you. He was under a cloud. He was maddened
by the idea that his neighbours thought the most horrible things of
him. You interposed with your girlish sympathy, your sentimental
prettiness. You consoled, you encouraged him in his dark hour; and that
impulsive nature was moved to a step which he has repented ever since.
He committed himself by an avowal which left him no possibility of
retreat; and to be true to you he has broken the most sacred promise
that man ever made to woman."

"You released him from that promise, Lady Valeria."

"Never. Some hasty words passed between us on one occasion, and we
parted in anger. But there was no question of a release from his solemn
engagement to me."

"He told me that the lady he had once loved had released him," said
Hilda, terribly crestfallen.

She could not believe that Lady Valeria Harborough would tell her a
deliberate lie. She was convinced, in spite of herself. Bothwell had
deceived her.

"I beg you to read those letters," urged Valeria. "If you do not read
them, you may think just a little worse of me than I deserve. I do not
pretend to be a good woman; but I want you to know that my attachment
to Bothwell Grahame never degenerated into a low intrigue. You may hear
the vilest things said of me, perhaps, by and by, when it is known that
Mr. Grahame is not going to marry me."

Hilda looked at the letters. She knew that the reading of them
would wring her heart; and yet the temptation was too strong to be
steadfastly resisted.

Slowly, reluctantly, almost as if under the influence of a mesmerist,
Hilda's hand was extended to the packet of letters. She took it up, and
looked at it for a few moments, still hesitating.

The letters were folded lengthwise, without their envelopes. Bothwell's
bold large hand was easy enough to read, even at a glance. Without
untying the packet Hilda could see the nature of those letters. "My
dearest love," "My life," "My ever beloved." Such words as those
scattered on the folded pages told the character of the correspondence.

She had known from the first, from his own lips, that he had cared for
another woman, that he had been in some manner bound to that other
woman--his future life so compromised that he must needs win his
release from that tie before he could offer himself honourably to his
new love. She had known this, and yet the sight of those impassioned
phrases in the hand of her betrothed tortured her almost to madness.
She flung the packet from her, flung it at her rival's feet, as if it
had been some loathsome reptile that had fastened on her hand.

"It is shameful, abominable!" she cried. "Such words as those written
to another man's wife! I will read no more--not a line--not a syllable."

"But you shall read, or you shall hear," said Valeria, taking up the
packet. "You shall know what kind of vows this man made to me, this man
whom you are going to marry."

She drew out a letter haphazard, and thrust it into Hilda's
hand--forced her to read by sheer strength of will, watching her with
flashing eyes all the while.

Hilda read words of such passionate vehemence that it was difficult to
believe that transient feelings could have inspired them--words which
told of rapturous delight in a reciprocal love, and fondest hope of
future union; words that made light of all things in earth and heaven
as weighed against that all-absorbing love. She read of that scheme of
the future in which the ultimate marriage of the lovers was counted on
as a certainty.

And it was for her sake he had abandoned this old dream--this plan
of a life so long cherished. It was for her, an obscure, country-bred
girl, who could bring him neither fame nor fortune, that he had
surrendered all hope of calling this brilliant high-born woman his wife.

And now the hour had come when he might have claimed her, when, his
years of servitude being over, he had but to wait the brief span
society demands, before he faced the world with this woman by his
side, the sharer of her social status, her ample means. Surely this
would have been a happy fate for him, if there were any truth in these
words of his, words which seemed to scorch Hilda's brain as she stood,
silent, motionless, poring over them.

"You see," said Lady Valeria, after a long silence, "that once at least
your lover loved me."

"I thought that once in such things meant for ever," answered Hilda,
with a quiet sadness, as of one who speaks of the dead. "Yet the man
who wrote this letter has talked and written of his love for me as
tenderly, if not as passionately, as he has written here. Yes, I knew
that he had cared for some one else, but not like this. I did not
think such a love as this could come twice in a lifetime."

"You are wiser than I expected to find you," said Valeria, with languid
insolence. "No, child, men do not love like that twice in a lifetime.
I had Bothwell Grahame's heart at its best--his constancy, his
devotion--and he would have been true to me till the end of his life
had it not been for that business of the murder, which made men look
askance at him, and your childish pity, which touched his heart when it
was sorest. He was caught in the toils of his own affectionate nature.
His grateful heart, which always melted at the least kindness, betrayed
him. And because he was sympathetic and grateful you thought he loved
you; and now you stand between him and his first love. You are the only
barrier to a marriage which would make Bothwell Grahame a rich man, and
me the happiest of women."

"If you had heard him talk of our future, if you had seen him planning
our home, you would hardly doubt that he meant to be happy with me,
Lady Valeria," said Hilda.

"My child, I have seen your future home; I have heard what kind of
a life Bothwell Grahame is to lead as your husband. He is to be a
schoolmaster, cramming dull boys for impossible examinations; grinding
mathematics and theoretical engineering all day long and every day,
till his brain is weary; going over the same ground again and again
like a horse in a mill. He is to be a nobody, a plodding bread-winner,
living year after year in a God-forsaken village, far away from the
great arena of life; ground down by the fathers and patronised by the
mothers of his pupils. He is to cherish no higher ambition than to be
able to pay the butcher and the baker, and to get himself a new coat
before the old one is threadbare. _That_ is the life to which your
generous love would condemn him."

"We are not going to be quite such paupers as you imagine, Lady
Valeria. I have a small income of my own, which will at least pay the
baker; and I do not think Bothwell's rich cousin would see him in want
of a coat."

"My dear Miss Heathcote, it is only a question of degree. Granted that
Mr. Grahame is sure of his breakfast and dinner, his existence as
a private tutor will be none the less a life of exile from all that
makes life worth living--from the world of art and letters, from the
strife and the glory of politics, from the great world of distinguished
men and women. As my husband he would have the ball at his feet. His
fortune would be large enough to command an opening in any career he
might choose for himself, his connections on my side of the house would
be powerful enough to help him, and his talents would undoubtedly bring
him to the front. In the House his career would be assured. With his
knowledge of India and Indian war tactics, he would inevitably make his
mark. There are hardly three men in the House of Commons who have any
real knowledge of that vast Eastern world for which English politicians
legislate. You see I have dreamed for him, thought for him. All my
ambition is for him, and not for myself."

"I am willing to believe that you love him, Lady Valeria," said
Hilda, with frigid distinctness, looking her rival full in the face,
"since nothing but the blindest love could induce any woman in
your position to lower yourself as you have done--first in India as
General Harborough's wife, and secondly to-day as General Harborough's
widow--when you come to me and ask me to give up my betrothed husband,
the man to whom I am to be married next Tuesday; for I suppose that is
the gist of all you have said to me."

"I ask nothing from you, Miss Heathcote. I know the narrow view which
most girls of your age, brought up as you have been, take of life and
its obligations. I do not expect large-minded ideas from a young lady
with your surroundings." This was said with infinite scorn of Hilda's
rustic rearing. "But I think it well that you should know how much
Bothwell Grahame surrenders for the privilege of having you for a wife.
Of course it is quite possible that the recompense may be worth the
sacrifice. It is for you to judge of that. I wish you good-day."

Hilda bowed and rang the bell, without a word. She did not accompany
her visitor to the drawing-room door, but stood in a stony silence
looking out at the window in front of her, with fixed eyes.

It was only when the outer door had closed on Lady Valeria that the
girl flung herself on the nearest sofa and abandoned herself to her
grief.

Alas, this entanglement of the past had been something more than a
garland of roses. It had been a chain from which her lover had tried to
release himself, but whose iron links yet hung about him.

All the happiness was gone out of her life, all the sweet tranquillity
which had been the holiest charm in her love for Bothwell, the deep
faith in her beloved, the assurance of his trustworthiness, his
unalloyed love for her. How could she ever again believe in that love,
after she had heard the history of his passion for another, after she
had read of that wild infatuation in his own hand, after she had seen
the woman he had thus loved and thus addressed--a woman to win and hold
the love of men, a woman whose face had that subtle charm of supreme
refinement and distinction which is far above the peach-bloom tints and
perfect lines of stereotyped beauty? In Valeria the broken-hearted girl
acknowledged a siren before whose fascinations the wisest man might
be as a fool. She compared herself with her rival. She walked across
the room and stood before the long console-glass, contemplating her
own image, half-scornfully, half-sorrowfully. The pale tear-blotted
face appeared at its worst, robbed of the freshness that constituted
half its beauty. The slight and girlish figure looked insignificant as
compared with Valeria's statelier bearing.

The girl turned herself about, and looked at herself at every angle, as
if she had been trying on a gown at her milliner's.

"What a dowdy I am!" she said to herself. "Just the very pattern for
a schoolmaster's wife. I doubt if Lady Valeria is more than an inch
taller; and yet she looks a queen. It is the way she carries her head,
I suppose, and the way she walks, like a woman accustomed to command.
Yes, a man might well be proud of such a wife, and of the position
such a wife could give him. Bothwell in Parliament. Bothwell a great
authority on Indian affairs. How strange it sounds! But I know how
clever he is, how well he can talk upon any subject. It would be a
splendid career for him. And for my sake he is to forego all that, and
to drudge as a tutor in a Cornish village. Yes, I suppose it would be
a dreary life for such a man--though it seemed so full of brightness
when we two talked about it last week. For my sake. No, Bothwell," she
said to herself resolutely, striking her clenched hand upon the marble
table. "No, Bothwell, not for my sake! You shall not surrender fame and
fortune for my sake!"

And then, seating herself on the old-fashioned window-seat, with
clasped hands lying in her lap, and steadfast eyes brooding on the
ground; in an attitude of deepest thought, she retraced the history of
Bothwell's courtship. She asked herself if she had verily been, as Lady
Valeria had insinuated, herself half the wooer. She remembered how, in
the beginning of their acquaintance, she had admired Dora Wyllard's
cousin--how his riding, his singing, his conversation had alike seemed
perfection. How she had contrasted him, to his wondrous advantage,
with the country squires around and about. It was just possible that
in her girlish inexperience she had betrayed her admiration, had
flattered Bothwell into the idea that he liked her. And then, when
the hour of trouble came, it was true that she had made no effort to
hide her feelings; she had given Bothwell her sympathy almost unasked;
she had, perhaps, lured him into declaring himself as her lover, when
the feeling which inspired him was but the impulse of the moment, a
transient emotion, born of gratitude.

She could understand how, in his self-contempt, his wounded honour, he
had believed that his love for Valeria was a thing of the past, and had
been glad to release himself from the ignoble bondage. But now that
Valeria was free, his first love, fondly attached to him, valuing her
fortune and position only as a means for his advancement, who could
doubt that the old love would revive in his breast with all the old
fervour; that his heart would go back to his first beloved, as a bird
returns to its nest?

And was his whole life to be sacrificed because of this one mistaken
impulse? No, the wrong was not yet irreparable. The marriage planned
for next Tuesday need never take place.

Hilda began deliberately to scheme out the manner in which she should
set her lover free. If the thing was to be done, it must be done
bravely and thoroughly--not by halves. There must be no half-hearted
action, no wavering, no pretence of surrender offered in the hope that
Bothwell would refuse to accept his liberty. No; she must make the
sacrifice as full and as effectual as that of Jephthah's daughter. She
gave her life to save her father's honour. She (Hilda) could give her
happiness, her fair future, the sweet ideal she had dreamed of, the
life which to every good woman seems of all lives most perfect, an
existence spent in tranquil seclusion with the husband of her choice.

After long brooding, deepest thought interrupted ever and anon by a
burst of passionate weeping, tears which would not be restrained, Hilda
had made her plan. She would go away, quite away, where Bothwell could
not follow her. She would write him a letter which would leave him free
to return to his old allegiance, while she herself would disappear,
drop quietly out of the circle in which she was known, and remain
hidden from all her friends for the next few months, perhaps for a
year: at any rate until the joy-bells had rung for Bothwell's marriage
with his old love. Alas, those joy-bells! She had imagined them ringing
for her own wedding; she had heard their sweet music in her dreams.

Where should she go? What should she do with herself during the time
of hiding? That was the question; and it was a difficult one for this
inexperienced girl to answer. She had travelled so little, that all
the wide world outside her own home was no more familiar to her than
a chapter of geography. She knew the names of mountains and rivers,
she had made her dream-pictures of beautiful places and scenes in
far-away lands; but of railways and steamers, of the mode and manner of
journeying from one place to another, of hotels and custom-houses, and
the exchange of money, she knew hardly anything.

"I must go very far away, to some place where he would not think of
following me, where he could never find me," she said to herself,
supposing that it would be a point of honour with Bothwell to follow
her, to keep his plighted troth, if it were possible.

She wanted to set him free, to make it easy for him to go back to his
old love. She told herself that Lady Valeria had spoken the truth, and
that it was not possible for him to have forgotten that old love.

When he had married Valeria, she, Hilda, would be free to come back to
her home, to take up the thread of her broken life and follow it on to
the dreary end. What joy could she have in her life, having lost him?
Only the joy of knowing that she had loved him better than herself,
cared more for his happiness than her own--the joy of woman's martyrdom.

After long deliberation, after having thought of a trip to Canada or
a voyage to Australia, after having meditated upon various possible
and impossible journeys, she decided upon a very commonplace course of
proceeding. She had often heard it remarked of a levanting criminal
that if he had stayed in London or any populous city, he would in all
probability have escaped his pursuers; he would have been lost in the
press of humanity, like a bubble in a running stream; whereas the man
who goes to America is almost inevitably traced and trapped.

She would not go to London, a city she hated, and where she might at
any moment run against her Cornish friends, all of whom paid occasional
visits to the metropolis. She would go to Paris, where she would be
lost among strangers; where she could live quietly in some obscure
quarter, improving herself as a singer and a pianiste, until her time
of probation was over, and the announcement of Bothwell's marriage told
her that her sacrifice had been consummated. She would so plan her
life that her brother could know that she was well and well cared for;
but even he should not know the place of her residence, lest he should
betray her secret to Bothwell.

This idea of Paris was partly traceable to an old influence. Until a
year ago she had taken lessons from a bright little Frenchwoman who had
taught her music and singing, and who had helped her incidentally with
her French. The lessons had been going on for three years, when Hilda
was pronounced to have finished her musical education, or at least
to have learnt as much as Mademoiselle Duprez could teach her, and in
those three years the little Frenchwoman had been a weekly visitor at
The Spaniards, coming all the way from Plymouth to give her lesson, and
being driven back to the station by her pupil, after a cheery luncheon,
which the little woman thoroughly enjoyed.

Mademoiselle Duprez claimed kindred with the famous French tenor of
that name, and had herself been a small celebrity in her way. She
had sung at the Opera House in the Rue Lepelletier, in the days when
Falcon was Diva, and Halevy's Juive was the success of the hour. Then
came a fatal fever, caught at Nice, where she had gone to fulfil an
autumnal engagement. Louise Duprez lost the voice which had been
her only fortune. Happily, though the voice was gone, the exquisite
method learned from Garcia, and ripened at the feet of Rossini, still
remained; and by her excellence as a teacher of singing and piano,
Mademoiselle Duprez had contrived to make a comfortable living, first
in Paris, and afterwards at Plymouth, whither she had come at the
suggestion of Edward Heathcote, who had made her acquaintance at the
house of one of his Parisian friends, and who had recommended her
to try a residence in Devonshire as a cure for her delicate chest,
promising at the same time to do all in his power to help her in
finding pupils at Plymouth, where he was at that time Town Clerk.

Mademoiselle Duprez had followed Mr. Heathcote's advice, and had
not waited long before she found herself fairly established in the
Devonshire sea-port. Hilda had been her first pupil, and Hilda she
loved almost as a maiden aunt loves the prettiest and most amiable
of her nieces. It was Hilda she quoted to all her other pupils. "You
should hear a dear young friend of mine, Miss Heathcote of Bodmin, sing
that song," she would say; and an eloquent shrug of her shoulders and
elevation of her eyebrows would express how wide the difference between
Miss Heathcote's perfection and the shortcoming of the performer then
in hand.

Hilda was very fond of the lively little Parisienne: loved to hear her
talk, and to learn of her; hung upon her words as she expounded the
delicacies of her native language. Hilda had petted and made much of
the little woman whenever she came to The Spaniards; had never spent a
day in Plymouth without paying her old mistress a visit. And now in her
sorrow and difficulty it was of Louise Duprez she thought, as the one
friend whom she could trust with her secret, and who would be able to
help her.

Hilda went to her own room before Fräulein Meyerstein returned from
her afternoon walk with the twins. Those well-brought-up infants were
ruthlessly sent from their playroom, their rocking-horse, and their
doll's house, an hour after their early dinner, and were taken for
afternoon drill by the Fräulein. Needless to say that they detested the
formal trudge along dusty lanes, and abhorred the beauties of Nature
encountered on the way; but their health no doubt profited by this
severe regimen.

Hilda shut herself in her own rooms for the rest of the evening; with
the usual plea of a headache. But she was up before daybreak next
morning, and by six o'clock she had packed a small portmanteau and a
Gladstone bag with her own hands, and carried them down surreptitiously
to the stable-yard, where she gave them to an underling, with
directions to put them in the pony-cart, and take them to Bodmin Road
station in time for the eight-o'clock train. She herself intended to
walk to the station, as her appearance on foot would be less likely to
attract attention than in the pony-cart with the luggage.

So in the dewy morning, alone and unattended, with ashen cheeks and
eyelids swollen by long weeping, Hilda Heathcote crept out of her
brother's house, and walked across the hills, trusting to the keen
breath of the autumn wind to obliterate the traces of a night of
anguish before she arrived at the station.

She had written a long letter to Bothwell. This she carried with her,
to post in Plymouth; and she had left letters for her brother and for
the Fräulein. No one need be made uneasy at her disappearance.



CHAPTER III.


AN ELOPEMENT ON NEW LINES.


Mdlle. Duprez occupied a first floor in an airy terrace of houses
overlooking the Hoe. She was the kind of little woman to whom eating
and drinking and fine dress are matters of very small moment, but
who could not have endured to live in a shabby house or an ugly
neighbourhood. All her surroundings were neat and bright and fair to
look upon. She had brought over her furniture from Paris. It was the
remnant of that furniture which had adorned her great-grandmother's
house at Versailles, before the fiery spirits of the _tiers état_ met
in the tennis-court, and the Revolution began. There was not much of it
left, but that little was of the best period in French cabinet-work,
and in the most perfect taste.

Louise Duprez loved this heritage from her ancestors as if the chairs
and sofa, cabinet and writing-table, had been living things. She
used to sit and contemplate them sometimes, between the lights, in a
dreamy mood, and think how much they might have told her about Marie
Antoinette and her court, and the old days of the Oeil de Boeuf, if
they could but have found a voice. The _bonheur du jour_, with its
ormolu mounts, looked very human as the firelight shone upon it. The
goats' heads seemed to wink and twinkle like human eyes, while the
floral mouldings assumed the form of a broad human grin, as who should
say, "Ah, I could tell you some fine farces about those ladies, if I
could but speak!"

Mademoiselle's rooms were always the pink of neatness; not a book
out of line on the shelves above the secrétaire, not a scrap of work
or a stray pin-cushion littering the tables; newspapers, pamphlets,
magazines, all in their places; while Mademoiselle herself was one of
those dainty little women who never have a pin awry in their toilet.

So when Miss Heathcote was ushered into the singing-mistress's _salon_
at half-past nine in the morning, her unexpected appearance at such an
early hour caused neither confusion nor annoyance.

Mademoiselle had been breakfasting at a table in front of the open
window--a temperate meal of coffee and roll, neatly arranged on a
tray. Spotless damask and pretty china made the tray a picture, with
Mademoiselle's pink cambric gown and bright little face for background.

"My dear child, how early! I am enchanted to see you!" she cried,
jumping up and kissing her old pupil on both cheeks. "What a good girl
to come to me before my day's work begins! This is one of my full days,
from eleven till five. Squall, squall, thump, thump, every kind of
outrage upon the genius of harmony must these poor ears of mine suffer;
and I must be very polite, all the same; must not lose patience and
cry aloud--ah, how I long to do it sometimes!--'My love, you have no
more voice than a peacock, no more ear than a four-post bedstead; your
accent is diabolical, and you are the very embodiment of idiotcy.' You
see one must not be quite frank with one's pupils. But, Hilda, my pet,
what is the matter? You have been crying!"

"Not since last night, Mademoiselle," answered Hilda, looking at her
friend with hard, dry eyes; "I cried so much last night that I don't
think I shall ever shed a tear again. There must be an end, you know,
even to tears."

"My sweetest child, what in Heaven's name has happened? Your brother,
Mr. Effecotte!"

Louise Duprez gasped as she spoke the name. Edward Heathcote was her
benefactor, that one Englishman whom she admired and honoured with
all her heart and mind, whom she thought almost equal to the typical
Frenchman, the French gentleman of a _régime_ that is almost forgotten,
of a day that is dead.

"My brother is quite well, at least as far as I know," answered Hilda,
with sisterly indifference; and then she made Mdlle. Duprez sit down,
and knelt at her feet, clasping her hands, and looking up at her
earnestly. "My dear, kind friend, I want you to help me in a crisis of
my life," she said.

"To help you to run away with Mr. Grahame, I suppose. No, no, Hilda,
_pas si bête_; I am your brother's friend above all things. If Mr.
Effecotte disapproves of your marriage, I will do nothing to further
it."

"Pray don't be in such a hurry," said Hilda. "Hear my trouble first,
and then help me to lighten it, if you can. I think you ought to know
that I am not the kind of girl to make a runaway marriage."

"Indeed, I know nothing of the kind about any English girl. Runaway
marriages seem as common in this country as runaway knocks at my door."

"Englishwomen run away before marriage, and Frenchwomen after,"
retorted Hilda.

"I don't think your English matrons such irreproachable creatures,"
said the Parisienne. "There is your Lady Valeria Harborough, for
instance, who had one of the best husbands in Christendom, and yet was
always surrounded by a bevy of admirers, and made herself more talked
about than any woman in Plymouth."

"Was she really talked about?" asked Hilda eagerly.

"Really, really. I don't mean to say that she was supposed to be
actually incorrect in her conduct; but she brought her Indian manners
back to England with her, and she had always her court of fools and
fops about her. And now the papers are beginning to be impertinent
about her--or, at least, this stupid little paper, which models itself
on some of the London society papers."

Mdlle. Duprez pointed to a periodical on the table at her side--a sheet
of eight pages, printed on pink paper, and calling itself the _Plymouth
Censor_. Hilda snatched it up, and ran her eye rapidly along the
paragraphs, till she came to one worded thus:

"Rumours are already afloat in privileged circles as to the
probabilities of a second hymen for the beautiful widow of a general
officer, lately gone over to the majority. Foremost in the betting
stands a certain _ci-devant_ captain of Engineers, who saved the
General's life by a dexterous shot in the jungle, and who has been _du
dernier bien_ with the General's charming wife ever since. Ours is an
age of rehabilitations."

"Lady Valeria was right," murmured Hilda. "People know all about her
folly. Her only redemption will be her marriage with Bothwell."

And then she opened her heart to her old friend--told her everything
that had passed between herself and Lady Valeria--told her how she had
made up her mind to sacrifice her own happiness rather than to let
Bothwell's life be spoiled by a mistaken engagement. At first Mdlle.
Duprez ridiculed her plan as Quixotic to absurdity, and refused to
have anything to do with it. But the girl's indomitable resolution,
her intense earnestness of purpose, prevailed at last over the
Frenchwoman's scruples. Louise Duprez, at four-and-forty years of age,
was as romantic as the simplest schoolgirl. She had spent the last
fifteen years of her life almost entirely among girls. She had been
the confidante of their love-affairs, their fond dreams of the ideal;
she had counselled and lectured them, had sympathised and sorrowed and
joyed with them. And now she was quite ready to be impressed by the
heroic element in Hilda's intended sacrifice. The happiness of one
young life given away to secure the fame and fortune of another and
dearer life. It was a romantic scheme which kindled all Louise Duprez's
warmest fancies.

"Would I were young again, to do such a thing myself for my beloved!"
she thought to herself, with a tender sigh for her only lover, who had
perished, a burly major of Artillery, on the bloody field of Sedan.

"How shall I ever answer to your brother--my best of friends--if I
assist you in rebellion against him?" asked Mdlle. Duprez, after a
thoughtful silence.

"I am not rebelling against my brother. I am only leaving my home in
order to break an engagement which Edward always disapproved. He gave
his consent reluctantly at the last, to please Mrs. Wyllard. He will be
very glad to hear that the engagement is cancelled."

"But you have no right to conceal your whereabouts from him."

"The concealment need not last long--only till Bothwell has gone back
to his old love; and that I should think will be very soon," with a
stifled sob. "There is no use in your being unkind to me. If I do not
find a home in France with your aid, I shall find it without you. I
have made up my mind to go on to Southampton by the midday train, and
to cross to Havre to-night. The steamer leaves Southampton at ten
o'clock. There will be plenty of time for me to get there."

"And you are going alone, without even a maid?"

"Absolutely alone."

"You cannot possibly live alone among strangers--it is out of the
question," protested Mademoiselle.

"That is why I ask you to give me an introduction to some friends
of yours in a quiet part of Paris, who will take me into their
family circle, and help me to carry on my musical education at the
Conservatoire. The Conservatoire has been the dream of my life. You
must know of such people, with your numerous acquaintance among the
musical profession--"

"Yes, no doubt I know of such people. But how am I to reconcile the
idea of giving you such an introduction with my duty to your brother?"
argued Mdlle. Duprez.

"Your duty to my brother--if there is any such thing--is to find me a
respectable home in Paris," said Hilda. "I tell you once for all that
I have made up my mind to start for Paris to-night--to live there in
some quiet quarter for the next year or so. I shall go forth in the
strength of my own ignorance and courage, like Miss Bird in her journey
across the mountains, if you don't help me. Perhaps I may fall among
thieves: and mind, if I do, it will be your fault."

She spoke with extraordinary resolution, with an animated air which
seemed hardly compatible with grief. Yet this spurious gaiety of hers
was the worst symptom of all, and was very close to hysteria.

Louise Duprez could read the meaning that underlay that false air
of good spirits. She saw that the girl was nearly heart-broken, and
that this resolution of hers which she had taken up so heroically was
perhaps the very best possible issue out of her sorrow: for Louise
accepted Hilda's own view of the case, and took it for granted that
Bothwell was willing to go back to his old love. With her experience as
a woman of the world, having seen how selfishness and self-love are the
motive-powers that propel the machine called society, Mdlle. Duprez was
ready to believe that General Harborough's death, and Lady Valeria's
position as a rich widow, would entirely alter Bothwell's views.

It was very hard for Hilda: but still human nature is human nature, and
a young man with his way to carve in the world would hardly regret such
an opportunity as a marriage with Lady Valeria Harborough.

Had Hilda allowed matters to take their course, the poor young man
would no doubt have gone quietly to his fate; he would have marched
heroically up to the altar; he would have settled down with his young
wife in the village home he had planned for himself; he would have
drudged as a teacher of stupid lads; and he would have repented ever
afterwards. What happiness could possibly come to Hilda in a life spent
with a disappointed man, who would remember, every day of his toilsome
existence, that he had missed fame and fortune for his wife's sake?

"That a man should be fond of teaching for its own sake--_ce n'est
pas Dieu possible!_" exclaimed Mdlle. Duprez, with a shuddering
reminiscence of her own sufferings.

So, having reasoned thus, she made up her mind to help Hilda to carry
out her act of self-abnegation.

"If I did not believe that you are acting for your own ultimate
happiness, I would not aid you in this matter by one jot or one
tittle," said the little woman, in her own energetic way; "but, as it
is, I am going to put on my bonnet and take you to Paris."

This was said in so quiet a manner that Hilda thought her friend was
joking.

"You don't mean to go with me?" she began.

"I don't mean to let your brother's sister travel alone, arrive alone,
and a stranger, in such a city as Paris. There is no Rue des Fèves now,
with its famous Lapin Blanc, where Eugène Sue's thieves used to keep
their rendezvous; but for all that has been done, Paris is Paris--and
if you have set your mind upon going there, I must go with you."

"But, dear Mademoiselle, think of the trouble, the fatigue--and your
lessons."

"My lessons must stand over till my return. I shall be back next
Monday. Don't say another word, Hilda. There's no time to be wasted
in talk. You are going to eat your breakfast. I'll wager you left home
without so much as a cup of tea."

"There was nobody up," faltered Hilda, who had eaten nothing since Lady
Valeria's visit, and who was suffering all the pangs of exhaustion.

"Of course not; and you have been walking and travelling, and are ready
to faint at this moment," protested Louise, ringing as she spoke. "You
are going to have some nice hot coffee--I have taught them to make
coffee in this house, I who speak to you--and an egg, while I write
to my pupils to apologise for my sudden disappearance; and precisely
at twelve o'clock there will be a fly at the door to take us to the
station."

"I have a cheque to cash at the Bank," said Hilda. "Perhaps the maid
could get it cashed for me."

"For how much is your cheque?"

"Two hundred and fifty pounds."

"Do you think I would let my poor little slavey trot about Plymouth
with two hundred and fifty pounds?" cried Mdlle. "She is as honest as
the day; but the magnitude of the sum would turn her brain. She would
walk into the harbour unawares. No, if you have such a cheque as that
to cash, you must take it to the Bank yourself; and instead of carrying
all the cash with you to Paris, you had better draw only fifty, and
leave the two hundred on deposit. You can draw more when you want it."

The slavey answered the bell, a neat little handmaiden in pink cotton,
who was told to get breakfast for Miss Heathcote, and to order a fly to
be at the door at a quarter to twelve.

"That will allow us fifteen minutes for the Bank," said Mademoiselle,
opening her desk, and beginning her letters.

Everything was done in a brisk business-like manner. It was only when
they were in the train which was to take them by way of Exeter to
Salisbury, and then to Southampton, that Hilda had leisure to realise
the step which she had taken.

She had written to Bothwell in perfect frankness, had opened her
heart to him, telling him that his happiness was dearer to her than
her own, that his honour was paramount in her mind over every other
consideration. And she told him that honour should constrain him to
marry the woman who had been compromised by his love in the past, and
who loved him unselfishly and devotedly in the present, holding her own
pride as nothing when weighed against her love for him.

"No woman could act as Lady Valeria has acted this day to whom love was
not all in all," she wrote, pleading her rival's cause, because she
thought it was the cause of right, and Bothwell's cause also. "Think
how such a woman must have lowered herself in her own self-respect
when she came to me, her inferior in social station, her junior by ten
years, to make confession of her love. It was for your sake she stooped
so low, Bothwell.

"Do not try--out of a mistaken sense of duty--to follow me, or to
dissuade me from a decision which is irrevocable. When you receive
this letter I shall have entered upon a new phase of life, in which it
would be almost impossible for you to find me--and if you did find me,
to what end? My mind is made up. Do not allow your kind heart to be
tormented by needless remorse. My heart is not broken, dear Bothwell;
I mean to live my life peacefully, contentedly; to cultivate new ideas
of happiness, wider horizons. You need never be troubled at the thought
that this cancelled engagement of ours has broken my life. Be sure only
of one thing--that my dearest hope, wherever I may be, will be for your
welfare. To know that your life is happy will be enough to fill my cup
of joy."

She had written from the depth of her faithful heart, resigning him
willingly, having no sense of ill-usage, no anger even against Lady
Valeria: only some touch of contempt for a woman who had been an
unworthy wife to a noble husband.

And now the thing was done. Her letter, posted in Plymouth by her own
hand, was on its way to Bothwell. Could she doubt, knowing what she
knew, that the letter would come upon him as a welcome release, would
relieve him from a most embarrassing position? And then she remembered
that wretched paragraph in the _Censor_; and it seemed to her that
Bothwell's first duty in life was to set Lady Valeria right before the
world. Even if he had ceased to love her, his duty was not the less
clear; but who could doubt that the old love still held the first place
in his heart?

The journey from Plymouth to Southampton seemed woefully long that
bright autumn day. The sun was almost as strong as it had been in
August, and the light glared in upon Hilda as she sat in the corner
of the carriage, very white and very silent, but perfectly calm and
collected. Her eyelids were heavy and swollen after the night of
weeping, but her eyes were tearless. Louise Duprez gave a furtive look
every now and then, to see if the girl was quietly weeping behind the
newspaper which she pretended to read; but there were no tears in the
wistful eyes, so full of troubled thought.

Once, when they had the compartment to themselves for a little while,
between station and station, Louise put out her hand and clasped
Hilda's as it held the newspaper.

"Have you changed your mind?" she asked; "you have had plenty of time
for thinking in this creeping omnibus-train. Shall we take another
train at Exeter, and go back again?"

"Not for the world," answered Hilda firmly. "Do you suppose I did not
deliberate before I made up my mind last night? I was thinking all
night long."

Mdlle. Duprez gave a little submissive sigh. In her own philosophic
mind she was sure the girl was right; but then Mdlle. Duprez had
arrived at an age when the surrender of a lover may be borne; and she
was keen-witted enough to know that these things were different for
Hilda.

It was only in the afternoon of the next day that they arrived at
the Saint-Lazare terminus, whence they drove at once to the Hôtel du
Bon Lafontaine, on the left side of the Seine, a house much affected
by bishops and abbés, and having a semi-clerical and old-world air
altogether different from the smart caravanserais in Anglo-American
Paris. Hilda was too unhappy to feel any delight in the grandeur of
Boulevards, churches, and palaces, which she passed on her way from
the station to the hotel. Her aching eyes saw all things dimly, as in
a dream. She had only a vague sense of wide streets, glancing river,
stupendous architecture, white in the autumn sun: and then when the
carriage had crossed the river there came narrower streets, shabbier
houses, an air of busier and more homely life.

Mdlle. Duprez ordered lunch at the hotel, where she was known and
welcomed with friendliest greeting by manageress and head-waiter; and
Hilda, for the first time in her life, found herself sitting in the
public dining-room of a Parisian hotel. Happily at this hour of the
day the room was empty; and Hilda and her friend were as much alone at
their little table looking into the quaint old Parisian garden as they
could have been at The Spaniards.

And now Mdlle. Duprez unfolded her plans. She knew of a family living
in the Rue du Bac, an artistic family, the father and sons painters,
engravers, caricaturists; one of the daughters literary, another
musical and a pupil at the Conservatoire; the mother all that there
is of the most _bourgeoise_, but a good creature, devoted to her
children--a woman to whose care Mdlle. Duprez felt that she could
safely confide her young friend.

"It will be a long jaunt from the Rue du Bac to the Conservatoire in
the Rue du Faubourg Poissonniére," she said, "but you and Mathilde can
go there together, and it will do you good to take long walks. The only
danger is that you may run against your brother on the Boulevard."

"I should not think Edward would stay much longer in Paris," said Hilda.

"Perhaps while he is in Paris it would be safer for you to go in the
omnibus," suggested Mdlle. Duprez. "Mr. Heathcote is not likely to be
riding in omnibuses."

The little woman trotted off to the Rue du Bac, leaving Hilda to amuse
herself with a flabby copy of _L'Univers_, three days old; or to
gaze despondently at the stony quadrangle, with its bust of the good
Lafontaine, and its three or four evergreens. Seen by those melancholy
eyes of hers, the garden looked like a family vault, with the good
Lafontaine for the father of the race.

Mdlle. Duprez came back in less than an hour. She had seen that dear
good soul Mdme. Tillet, and had settled everything. Mdme. Tillet would
be happy to receive Miss Heathcote, and would be to her as a mother.
By putting her two daughters into one room, she could contrive to
spare a neat little sleeping apartment for the new inmate. Things
were somewhat Bohemian in the house; but what would you expect with a
gifted and eccentric family? Everything was scrupulously clean. There
triumphed the household genius, Mdme. Tillet, born in an old farmhouse
in Brittany, where you might have eaten your dinner off the red brick
floor.

Mathilde Tillet, the musical daughter, was prepared to welcome Miss
Heathcote as a sister. There was no one in the family besides herself
who cared a straw for classical music, from Beethoven to Raff. The
brothers all believed in the _Madame Angot_ school, and had no sympathy
for anything loftier. Poor Mathilde had been pining for sympathy; and
to have a young companion who would toil at Bach's fugues and preludes,
and cram Chopin, Raff, and Brahms, and trudge to the Conservatoire with
her, would be delightful.

"They are going to make much of you," said Louise Duprez, "I will
answer for that in advance. My only fear is that the three brothers
will all fall in love with you, and then there will be storms. They
are rather fiery spirits."

"I shall not give them any provocation," said Hilda; and indeed the
pale grave face, with the troubled look in the eyes, was not suggestive
of coquetry.

"Mdme. Tillet promises to be ready to receive you to-morrow," continued
Mdlle. Duprez. "I have agreed for you to pay her her own terms, which
I do not think exorbitant, considering that everything in Paris is
execrably dear. You are to pay her ten pounds a calendar month, which
is to include everything, even to your laundress."

"It sounds very cheap," said Hilda, and she would have said the same if
the sum had been twenty pounds, or even forty. She was not in a state
of mind in which to consider pounds, shillings, and pence.

Mdlle. Duprez insisted upon taking her to see some of the sights
of Paris--Notre Dame, the Louvre--and then they drove to the
Conservatoire, and made inquiries as to the conditions under which
Miss Heathcote, as a stranger, might be allowed to take lessons from
the professors attached to that institution. She was to take singing
lessons from Monsieur Somebody of great renown, and music lessons from
Madame Somebody of equal renown. She was to have in all four lessons a
week, on four different days; and it seemed to Mdlle. Duprez that she
would thus be too closely occupied to have leisure for brooding on her
grief. The professors of the Parisian Conservatoire are very severe in
their teaching, and a good deal of work is required of a pupil. The
pianiste must play her portion of Chopin and her tale of Bach without
book at the second time of hearing. The vocalist must give proof that
she has laboured earnestly at her _solfeggi_.

After the business interview at the Conservatoire, where the name of
Mdlle. Duprez was a power, the kindly little Frenchwoman ordered the
coachman to drive by the Boulevard and the Parc Monceau to the Bois
de Boulogne. She steeped her young friend in the glory and beauty of
Paris, hoping to prevent the possibility of much thought amidst so new
and bright a world. And then she proposed that they should get seats at
the Comédie Française, where a new play of Sardou's was being acted.

Hilda roused herself from the lethargy in which she had looked at the
splendours of the Faubourg Saint-Honoré, and the brightness of the
Bois, to protest against the idea of the theatre.

"I am not going to pretend to amuse myself when I am miserable," she
said. "I mean to forget Bothwell by and by, or to think of him only as
a dear friend whose happiness makes me happy; but I cannot pretend to
have forgotten him to-day. I won't go to the theatre and make believe
to be amused. I should feel as if I were seeking pleasures abroad when
there was some one that I loved lying dead at home. But that need
not prevent your seeing Sardou's play, dear Mademoiselle. I can stay
quietly at the hotel, and read myself to sleep."

"My child, I don't care a straw for Sardou's play, except as a means
of making you forget your troubles. We will go and take a quiet cup
of tea with Mdme. Tillet, so that you may get reconciled to your new
surroundings. That will be much better; and then you must go to bed
early and get a good night's rest."

They dined at the hotel, in the odour of sanctity, as it were, for
a bishop and a curé were dining at the table next them, and dining
uncommonly well with a nice appreciation of the _plat du jour_, and
of some excellent chambertin which appeared towards the close of the
entertainment.

"I hope you won't be horrified when you hear that the Tillets live over
a shop," said Mdlle. Duprez, as she and Hilda were walking down the Rue
de Grenelle on their way to the Rue du Bac. "It is only a quiet little
glover's shop, but I thought the idea might shock you."

"I am not at all shocked. I should not be, even, if Mdme. Tillet kept
the shop," answered Hilda, smiling her faint sweet smile, which told of
a gentle nature and a heart in pain.

They came to the glover's shop presently, a very obscure little shop in
a street where there are many big shops; shops of renown, even, like
the Petit Saint-Thomas, and the Bon Marché, the Whiteley of Paris.
There was a private door beside the glover's. A narrow passage and a
dark staircase conducted to the abode of the Tillets, which was on the
second floor, and the approach to which echoed with sonorous laughter
and manly voices, with an admixture of girlish treble.

"The children are all at home," said Mdlle. Duprez, who had been
accustomed to hear Mdme. Tillet talk of her bearded and well-grown
brood as "mes enfants."

Hilda found herself presently in the bosom of the family, being
embraced by Mdme. Tillet, who was a stout, comfortable-looking matron
in a gray cashmere gown and black mittens. The family sitting-room was
a spacious apartment, with piano, book-cases, easels, drawing-tables,
work-tables, all the means of various kinds of study and art; and it
seemed overflowing with human life. Half-buried in an armchair by
the hearth reclined the father; the three sons, Adolphe, Victor, and
Frédéric, were seated at different tables, each with his particular
lamp; and the two daughters sat on each side of a large work-basket,
stitching industriously at a new gown which they were making together.

"Welcome, my sweet young friend," said Mdme. Tillet, and then proceeded
to introduce her children.

Adolphe, the eldest, was distinguished for his etchings, and rose
from his delicate work upon a sheet of copper to receive the new
inmate. He was a big bearded fellow, with a mahogany complexion and
slouching shoulders, in manners and disposition as simple as a child.
Victor was a wood-engraver, who worked for Hachette on the Boulevard
Saint-Germain, hard by, and earned more money than any one else in the
family. Frédéric was the genius, a caricaturist. He drew for the _Petit
Journal_ and the _Vie Parisienne_, and devoted his days and nights
to the concoction of _bêtises_ for those papers. Ten years ago the
father had been on the high road to fame and fortune as a painter of
_genre_; but he had let other runners in the race go by him, somehow;
and now the family _pot-au-feu_ was supplied by the industry of the
children, while the father dreamed his day-dreams, and reviled his more
successful contemporaries, by the domestic hearth. The sons were great
hulking, soft-hearted fellows, who adored their mother, tolerated their
father's idleness without a murmur, and had no fault except that of a
disposition to fall in love at the very slightest provocation.

Marcelline, the elder daughter, gained her share of the family
_pâtée_ by the exercise of her pen. She wrote for two or three
fashion-magazines, and was an authority upon the ways and customs,
the houses and gowns, of the great world, under various high-sounding
_noms de plume_. She signed herself in one paper La Comtesse Boisjoli,
in another La Marquise de la Vallière. Needless to add that she had
never crossed the thresholds of those great houses which she described
so glibly. She obtained her information from shopkeepers, her glimpses
of society from the pavement on which rank and beauty alighted for an
instant in their passage from the carriage to the hall-door. All the
rest was evolved from a lively inner-consciousness.

Mathilde was the more serious sister, devoted to art for art's sake;
believing in Bach and the severe school as the highest ideal in life,
worshipping the memory of Berlioz, and despising those vanities which
occupied the thoughts of her elder sister.

All the family made Hilda welcome. They praised her French, pronounced
falteringly in a paroxysm of shyness. The girls took off her hat and
jacket, and installed her in a comfortable chair, while Madame bustled
about with the _bonne_, and set out a tea-tray and a feast of sweet
cakes such as Frenchwomen love. Nothing could be more fortunate than
that dear Mdlle. Duprez and her sweet young friend had dropped in to
tea this evening, protested Mdme. Tillet, for they were momentarily
expecting a visit from one of the most intellectual men in Paris,
Sigismond Trottier. "You must have heard of M. Trottier," said Madame;
"his name must be known in London as well as it is in Paris."

Hilda blushingly admitted that she knew very little of London, and that
she had never heard of M. Trottier.

"Really! But he must have a world-wide fame. The _Taon_, for which he
writes, has made a greater sensation than even the _Lanterne_ in the
days of Napoleon III. The last defeat of the Government was ascribed
to the influence of the _Taon_. The _Taon_ has done more to undermine
the Conservative party than any other paper," said M. Tillet from the
depths of his easy-chair. "Yet politics are not Trottier's chief forte.
As a politician he is trenchant and effective, but as a writer upon
social topics he is really great."

The _bonne_ opened the door and announced "M. Trottier," and Hilda
looked anxiously at the newcomer, finding herself for the first time in
her life in the company of a literary genius.

She would have liked to see the literary genius in a cleaner shirt; but
she had stories of Chatterton, of Savage, and Johnson and Goldsmith at
heart; and it seemed to her only natural that genius should be rather
dirty, and clad in a greasy olive-green coat, that genius should have
long gray hair, bushy eyebrows, and a cadaverous visage. She sat in
her corner silently, and did not expect to be noticed; but M. Tillet
presented his friend to her in a special manner, and to her surprise
the olive-green genius gave a little start at mention of her name.

"Effecotte!" he exclaimed; "are all the English people, who are not
Smith or Brown, called Effecotte? Or is this young lady related to my
old friend M. Edouard Effecotte, of Cornouailles?"

"Grand Dieu," exclaimed Mdlle. Duprez, "what a small world it is we
live in!"



CHAPTER IV.


IN THE LAND OF BOHEMIA.


Hilda looked nervously to the right and to the left, like some wild
creature brought to bay, seeking some outlet whereby she could escape.
Those keen black eyes scrutinising her from under shaggy gray eyebrows,
that cadaverous countenance with its lantern jaws, seemed to her as
the face of a grinning fiend. This man, whom she had never seen in her
life before, had but to hear her name mentioned, and at once knew all
about her. This Paris, which she had thought of as a wilderness where
she and her sorrow might hide, was a kind of trap into which she had
fallen. Above all things she had wished to avoid any encounter with
her brother, whose affection or whose idea of brotherly duty might
interfere with her scheme of self-sacrifice.

Sigismond Trottier contemplated her curiously with his cynical smile,
amused at her embarrassment, reading whole histories in her changing
colour, her look of absolute terror. Something wrong here, he told
himself. A pretty girl, fallen among this band of Bohemians in Paris,
without the knowledge of her kindred. One of those social mysteries
which Sigismond had such a happy knack at unravelling.

"Edward Heathcote is my brother," faltered Hilda, at last, "but he does
not know that I am in Paris. I do not wish him to know."

"Consider me dumb for ever upon the subject of your residence here,
Mademoiselle," said Sigismond, with a respectful bow. "A lady's wish is
a command."

He shook hands with his old friend the painter. They had been chums
for the last twenty years; and it was to his delight in Sigismond
Trottier's society, among other causes, that M. Tillet owed his
decadence as an artist. It was not that he had loved art less, but
he had loved the Boulevard more. He had given up his nights to wit
and pleasure; and he had found his working days curiously shortened
in consequence. He had been renowned as one of the finest talkers,
upon art, famed for his burning eloquence when he praised the great
painters of the past, and for his scathing wit when he ridiculed the
little painters of the present; for he had even thus early fallen to
that stage in the idler's career, when a man's chief consolation is
to undervalue contemporaneous merit. He had lived and enjoyed his
life in those days, had spent his money faster than he earned it, and
had fallen into the ranks of failure, to be supported by the toil of
his wife and her children, to be the family log, the family disease.
They were all very patient, those children of his. They worked for
him and admired him, believed in him almost. They admired the great
genius he might have been if he had only worked. They valued him for
potentialities of greatness of which he talked sometimes, in his dreamy
way; as if those idle aspirings had been actual achievements.

The shabby old _salon_, with its dark-red paper, stained and faded with
age, was glorified by some of M. Tillet's pictures, painted before his
slothful hand had begun to lose its cunning. There hung the portrait
of a beautiful duchess, exquisitely painted--a lovely head, an ideal
neck and shoulders, in white satin and brown fur, like an old Venetian
picture. The head had been successful, but shoulders, arms, and
draperies were still unfinished. The picture had been a commission, an
offering from the Duchess to her distinguished father, a Minister of
State, on his fête. But the fête had come and gone, and the portrait
was not ready. Time had been conceded, and more time, and still the
draperies remained unfinished, and still the picture was not fit to
leave the painter's studio. Finally the commission had been cancelled.
Some lesser genius had painted the Duchess, briskly, punctually,
readily, out of hand. These meaner souls can go in harness. And the
meaner soul received the seven thousand francs which were to have been
paid to M. Tillet, and the painter had his unfinished picture, as a
kind of pendant to his incomplete life. Happily, those trustful sons
and daughters of his were very proud of that unfinished portrait, and
of the four or five sketches for _genre_ pictures, never painted, which
adorned the family _salon_. There was not another man in France who
could paint like their father, they said, or who had such talent in
composition. Meissonier would have been nowhere in the race if Eugène
Tillet had but stuck to his easel.

Trottier and Tillet began to talk, and the sons went on with their
work in a free-and-easy manner, while Madame and the daughters waited
upon their guests. Poor Hilda had been so unnerved by this unexpected
encounter with a friend of her brother's that she could only falter
the feeblest replies to Marcelline and Mathilde, who tried to make
themselves at home with her.

Marcelline, who was rather strong-minded, lost patience at last, and
asked Mdlle. Duprez, in an undertone, as she handed a plate of _petits
fours_, if her young friend was not just a trifle stupid.

"She is as clever as you and your sister, and that is saying a good
deal," replied Louise Duprez, in the same undertone; "but she has just
suffered a great heart-blow, and that kind of thing is not calculated
to make one particularly lively."

This was enough for Marcelline, who was very tender-hearted. She went
back to her seat next Hilda, and took her hand at the first opportunity.

"I hope we are going to be great friends," she murmured, "although you
and Mathilde will have more in common. I long to hear you sing. Mdlle.
Duprez says you have such a lovely voice. But perhaps you are too tired
to sing to-night."

"If you will excuse me," faltered Hilda.

"Of course, we will excuse you. You must be very tired, after
travelling all night. And you were dreadfully sea-sick, no doubt?"

"No, I escaped that suffering. I am never sea-sick."

"Good heavens, is that possible? If I go but a little way on the sea,
the least little way, I suffer tortures, veritable agonies. And you
others, you English, do not seem to suffer at all. You are a kind of
sea-dogs, to whom waves and tempest are a natural element."

"I was brought up near the coast," answered Hilda. "I have been out in
all weathers."

And then she thought of that wild, rock-bound coast on which she and
Bothwell were to have lived, they two, all in all to each other,
ineffably happy amidst simplest surroundings. She thought of the boat
they were to have had--the cockle-shell rowboat in which they were
to have gone dancing over the waves from Tintagel to Boscastle, or by
Trebarwith sands, shining golden in the sunlight--in a bright world
of life and clamour, the bird-world of gulls and cormorants, a winged
populace, rejoicing in sea-foam, and light, and the music of the winds.
She thought of the life that was to have been--the fairy fabric of
the future, which had seemed so beautiful and so real, and which her
ruthless hand had shattered.

Had she done right in so surrendering that fair future? Yes, again
and again yes. The level domestic life which would have been so sweet
to her as a woman would have been stagnation, a slow decay for an
ambitious man. Her simple rustic rearing had prepared her for such a
life. The monotony of a village existence was all-sufficient for her
narrower views, her more concentrated nature. But Bothwell had seen the
world, had lived in the thick of the strife; and it was most unnatural
that he should resign all ambition, and live from day to day, working
for his daily bread, like a labourer in the fields. He was to do this
for her sake, his sole reward her love. It would have been, indeed, a
one-sided bargain.

Hilda heard the light, airy talk around her--the talk about art and
music and theatres, about the great world and its scandals--as in a
dream. It was a world of which she knew nothing; and the conversation
around her seemed as if it had been carried on in a kind of verbal
hieroglyphics. The French she heard to-night was a new language--made
up of catchwords and slang phrases--lines from new plays, words twisted
into new meanings--in a word, the language of the Palais Royal Theatre,
and the _Vie Parisienne_. Hilda listened and wondered, most of all when
Mdlle. Duprez, that most classical and academical of speakers, showed
herself perfectly at home in this little language of Bohemian Paris.

Sigismond Trottier was a favourite in the Tillet household. His visits
were rare, and he never appeared before nine o'clock in the evening. He
came nominally to tea, and the weak infusion of Bohea and the dainty
little dishes of sweet cakes were always set forth at his coming; but
the refreshment he most cared for was absinthe, and a small bottle of
that dangerous liqueur and a carafe of water were always placed on the
little table near the host's armchair, and from this bottle M. Trottier
supplied himself. That greenish hue of his complexion was the livery of
the absinthe-drinker, whose skin gradually assumes the colour of his
favourite stimulant.

Trottier was dear to Eugène Tillet as a link with that brilliant past
which was now but a memory. He liked to hear the journalist talk of
the great men who had failed, and of the little men who had succeeded
in art and literature. Strange that all the great men should have gone
to the dogs, while all the little men had been pushing forward to the
front.

It was like a game at draughts, in which the white men seem to be
winning with a rush, when somehow the black men edge in stealthily here
and there, in front, behind, at odd corners, until those splendid white
fellows are all pushed off the board. To hear Trottier and Tillet talk,
it would seem as if the chief characteristic of true genius was an
irretrievable bent towards the gutter.

The journalist's visits in the Rue du Bac were never long. He had to
leave at half-past ten, in order to write his paragraphs for the next
number of the _Taon_, to be issued early next morning.

Mdlle. Duprez took leave at the same time as M. Trottier, and the
journalist offered to escort the two ladies to their hotel, an
arrangement which the Frenchwoman had foreseen. The street was very
quiet at this hour, and as the pavement was narrow Mdlle. Duprez had an
excuse for asking Hilda to walk a few yards in front, while she herself
talked confidentially with M. Trottier.

"You no doubt think it is very strange that my young friend should be
in Paris without her brother's knowledge," she said tentatively.

"Life is so full of strange events that I have long left off wondering
or speculating about anything," he replied easily. "I have no doubt
Mees Effecotte is a most charming young person."

"Ah, but I want you to know more about her than that. I want you to
understand that she is just as good as she is charming. She is brave,
unselfish, noble, capable of self-sacrifice--and there are a good many
charming girls who are none of these things. There is nothing underhand
in her presence in this city without her brother's knowledge. I, Louise
Duprez, give you my word for that, and ask you as a favour to respect
her secret."

"I have already pledged myself to do that, _chère demoiselle_. Indeed,
I am not likely to see much more of Mr. Effecotte. He wanted my help
in a matter in which I was at first willing to aid him, but in which I
afterwards saw peril to a man whom I had known and liked in the past."

"I wished you to know that Mr. Heathcote's sister is in no way unworthy
of her brother's love and protection. She is here to break off an
engagement which would in all probability have ended unhappily."

"You need tell me no more. Your young friend is in very good hands.
Mdme. Tillet is one of the best women I know; the true heart of
motherhood beats under that broad chest of hers. She will take good
care of your young friend in this dangerous city of Paris."

They parted at the entrance to the Bon Lafontaine, where Hilda and her
friend had two little bedrooms adjoining each other, and where Hilda
slept a troubled sleep, wearied by the fatigue of her journey, but
haunted by sad thoughts even in the midst of her slumbers.

She transferred herself and her few belongings to the Rue du Bac next
morning, and then went with Mdlle. Duprez to the Bon Marché, where she
bought all she wanted, including two neat little ready-made gowns, one
of gray alpaca, and the other of black cashmere, and a black velvet
toque which gave her the true Parisian air.

"It was very wise of you to bring so little luggage. English gowns
would have stamped you at once as an Englishwoman, and would have made
people stare at you. In those neat little frocks you may pass anywhere
unobserved," said Mademoiselle approvingly.

"Except for your fair young face, which is brighter than the typical
face of the Boulevard," thought Louise Duprez, who did not care to
praise her _protégée_ too much.

She only stayed to see Hilda fairly installed in her new home, and
left Paris by an afternoon train which would take her to Havre in time
for the evening boat. She would be at Southampton next morning, and at
Plymouth in the afternoon. Hilda went to the railway-station with her
friend, full of gratitude for her kindness, kissing her with warmest
thanks at parting.

"Heaven knows whether I have done right or wrong, child, in helping
you," said the Quixotic little woman, with a doubtful sigh. "I have
allowed myself to be guided by the instinct of my heart, and a woman's
heart is not always a wise counsellor. If that young man of yours does
not care for his wealthy widow, a nice mess I have helped you to make
of two lives."

"But he does care for her. He loved her devotedly for three years. A
man cannot change all at once," argued Hilda; "and she is so elegant,
so aristocratic--fascinating, no doubt, when she chooses. Bothwell
could not help loving her."

"Then he ought not to have pretended to love you," retorted Louise
Duprez severely.

"That was my fault," said Hilda, with a sigh.

The signal for departure sounded, and the friends said good-bye.
Mathilde had accompanied Hilda to the station, and had waited
discreetly at a little distance during those last confidences. The two
girls walked home to the Rue du Bac together, Hilda fearing lest she
should run against her brother at any moment.

And now Hilda's new life began in earnest, a life in a strange
household, amidst new surroundings. She was to try and find consolation
in hard work, in her love of music--to create for herself new
interests, if it were possible, while every moment of her life was
haunted by thoughts of the lover she had deserted, and the home that
was to have been hers.

She took her first lesson at the Conservatoire on the following Monday
morning, and the professor who taught her was very encouraging about
her voice and talent. He told her she possessed an organ worthy of the
highest cultivation, capable of the grandest development. He put aside
the little German song which she had taken with her, and gave her a
solo of Glück's.

"You were taught by Mdlle. Duprez, I understand," he said. "An
admirable woman, quite an admirable manner--one of Garcia's best
pupils, and one of the few women capable of profiting to the uttermost
by Garcia's teaching. You have been taught in the best school,
Mademoiselle, and you have nothing to unlearn. That is saying a great
deal. On the other hand, I need not tell you that you have a great deal
to learn."

"I am sure of that, sir. I have come to Paris on purpose to profit by
your instructions."

"With a view to appearing in opera?"

"O, no," exclaimed Hilda, blushing; "I have no such lofty ambition. I
only want to sing a little better than I do--to amuse my brother."

"That is a very limited horizon."

"And for my own pleasure in good music."

"I see. Art for art's sake. There are very few nowadays who care to
work for art in the abstract. I shall be very proud of such a pupil."

Hilda's fresh young face--fresh in its youthfulness, despite the
settled sadness in the eyes--her blushes and simplicity, had fascinated
the gray-headed singing-master. Louise Duprez had hinted at Hilda's
story--a broken engagement, a girl's first sorrow. He had been told
that his new pupil was an English girl of good family, brought up in
a remote province, inexperienced, pure-minded; and he who had for the
last forty years been steeped in the vanity, vices, and falsehoods of
the great garish city felt his heart drawn towards this gentle girl,
with her faint perfume of well-bred rusticity.

"You have a very fine voice, my dear child, and it is a great pity you
are not obliged to earn your own living," he said, smiling at her, as
he rose from the piano. "I shall expect you to sing me that scena in
first-rate style next Wednesday."



CHAPTER V.


REAPING THE WHIRLWIND.


To be on the very threshold of Paradise, within the sound of celestial
birds and the perfume of celestial flowers, to be on the point of
entering the blissful place, with heart full of hope and pride, and to
have the gates suddenly slammed in one's face, and to hear the voice of
the angel at the gate crying "Ye cannot enter now," would be perhaps
to feel as Bothwell Grahame felt after he had read and read again that
calmly worded letter in which Hilda Heathcote renounced him and his
love.

His senses staggered under the force of the blow. He cursed Valeria
Harborough in the rage of his tortured heart. This was her work. This
was the work of that serpent who had beguiled him to forfeit good faith
and honour in the past, and who wanted to ruin his life in the present.
Those ideas of fortune, of a lofty ambition to be realised through
Valeria's aid, which Hilda put forth in her letter, hardly entered
into his mind; but had Valeria been able to make him Prime Minister,
or Viceroy of India, by a motion of her hand, he would have cared for
her no more than he cared for her in her present insignificance, as a
well-born widow with so many thousands a year.

The infatuation which had once held him was a thing of the past, the
glamour was over, the light extinguished. He looked back and wondered
that he could have ever been so enslaved, so poor a creature as to
worship a thoroughly artificial woman.

His first feeling about Hilda after reading her letter was one of
anger. He told himself that this renunciation had another motive than
that expressed in the letter. It was not in order to give him back to
Lady Valeria that his betrothed revoked her promise. It was in order
that she herself might escape from an engagement which for some secret
reason had become distasteful to her.

"She draws back at the eleventh hour," he said to himself. "Perhaps
even at the last she has begun to doubt me--to believe that I may be
after all the miscreant my kindly neighbours thought me, the murderer
of a helpless girl. Who knows? That idea was rooted in her brother's
mind at the time. It may have transferred itself to her mind when she
found herself on the eve of marriage with a suspected man. Women are
given to curious fancies and caprices; and she--she whom I thought so
brave, so noble, so straight--she too may have her crooked moments, her
waverings, and unstableness, like the rest of her sex."

He read the letter again--tried to project his mind into the mind
of the writer, to look behind the words, as it were, and by sheer
intensity of thinking to get at the hidden meaning between those lines.
No, she was not the unstable being he had been inclined to think her
in his first agony of wounded feeling. No--a thousand times no. This
letter of hers had been written in all simplicity, in all honesty. She
gave him up to another, believing that his happiness lay that way. And
it was Valeria who had done this thing--Valeria who had come between
him and happiness. In his savage anger he felt inclined to rush off to
Plymouth, to lie in wait for that old idol of his--that false goddess
with feet of basest clay--to insult her before the face of society, to
put some public inextinguishable slight upon her.

She was a woman, exempt in her feebleness; and he could do nothing
except rage impotently at the thought of her iniquity, gnash his teeth
at that inexcusable foolishness of his past life which had made him her
slave.

Her slave? No, not her slave; that he would never be. Her victim,
perhaps, yes. She might blast his hopes in their fulness; she might
ruin his life; but she should never bend his neck to the yoke.

"Her money, her influence, my position as her husband! Are those the
baits with which she tempts me to her net?" he said to himself. "How
little she knows me! how little she knows the value of a true woman
when weighed against a false one! My true love is more to me than an
empress. Millions would not buy my allegiance to her."

He went to the inn stables where Glencoe was at livery, and saddled the
powerful beast with his own hands, in his eagerness to be on the way to
Bodmin. Glencoe had enjoyed a day of leisure and meditation in a very
dark stable, and he left the little village of Trevena in a series of
buck-jumps, arching his vigorous back and sniffing the ground with his
quivering nostrils, shying ferociously at every stray pig, and standing
up on end at the vision of a donkey, until the corrective influence of
the spur brought him to a better state of mind, whereupon he collected
himself, and settled into a grand rhythmical trot.

The hunter was white with dust and foam by the time Bothwell rode him
into the stable-yard at The Spaniards, where nothing but disappointment
awaited him. He heard that Miss Heathcote had left home early on the
previous morning. One of the lads had taken her portmanteau to Bodmin
Road, and she had walked there alone, in time for the eight-o'clock
train for Plymouth. She had taken a ticket for Plymouth, the boy
believed. Mr. Heathcote had not yet returned from France. There was
nobody at home except Miss Meyerstein and the little girls.

Bothwell asked to see Miss Meyerstein, and was shown into the
drawing-room, where that worthy woman soon came to him, full of
trepidation. Her eyelids were swollen with weeping, and her cheeks were
pallid with care.

"Mr. Heathcote may think it my fault," she said. "I have telegraphed to
him; but there has been no answer yet."

"Do you know where Miss Heathcote was going when she left this house?"

"I haven't the faintest idea. All I know is what the boy told me. I
have tried to make the best of things to the servants, for I don't want
them to suppose that Hilda was running away; but they must have their
own ideas about it, knowing as they do that she was going to be married
next Tuesday."

"Never mind the servants," said Bothwell impatiently. "Let them think
what they please. But have you no idea where she would be likely to
go--to what friend, in what direction? She cannot have so many friends
from whom to choose in such a crisis. She would go to the house where
she was most sure of a welcome, where she would know that her secret
would be kept. What friends has she in Plymouth?"

"None. She never went to Plymouth except for shopping, sight-seeing,
concerts, or something in that way, with her brother, or with me. She
knows no one in Plymouth except her old singing mistress."

"She may have gone to her," said Bothwell eagerly.

"Hardly likely. Mdlle. Duprez lives in two rooms. Hilda would scarcely
ask for hospitality there."

"I don't know. She is very fond of Mdlle. Duprez. I have heard her
say so. That is a clue, at any rate. I shall go to Mdlle. Duprez this
afternoon. I must walk across to Penmorval and see my cousin first. She
may know more of Hilda's plans than you do."

"That is very likely. Mrs. Wyllard is Hilda's most intimate friend."

"There was a lady came to call upon Miss Heathcote a few days ago,"
said Bothwell. "Did you happen to see that lady?"

"I did not," answered the Fräulein, looking at him curiously. "Yet
I can but think that lady had something to do with Hilda's strange
conduct. She is an old friend of yours, I believe--Lady Valeria
Harborough."

"Yes, I have known her for some years. Was she long with Hilda?"

"She was closeted with her for at least an hour, and from that time to
this I have not seen Hilda's face. She went to her room soon after Lady
Valeria left. She excused herself from appearing at dinner on account
of a headache, and when I went to her door later in the evening she
refused to let me in, and I could hear from her voice that she had been
crying. I went to her room again at seven o'clock next morning, for my
mind had been uneasy about her all night; but she was gone. I found two
letters, one for Mr. Heathcote, and one for me."

"Would you be kind enough to show me the letter she wrote to you?"

The Fräulein reflected for a few moments, being an eminently cautious
person, and then produced Hilda's note from her pocket-book.

"I do not think there can be any harm in showing it to you," she said.
"There is so little in it."

The letter ran thus:

      "Dear Fräulein,--Do not be alarmed at my disappearance. I
      have good and sound reasons for cancelling my engagement
      with Mr. Grahame--not because of any wrong act upon his
      part, but for motives of my own; and I have decided upon
      leaving home for some time, as the best way of getting
      over the difficulty. Pray let no fuss be made about this
      sudden change in my plans. Very few of our neighbours
      knew anything about the intended marriage; so I hope
      there will be less talk than there usually is under such
      circumstances. You need have no uneasiness about me,
      as I am going to act under the advice of a clever and
      experienced friend, and I mean to be quite happy in my
      own way, amidst new surroundings, and to carry out an
      old desire of my heart. You shall hear of me directly I
      feel myself at liberty to tell you more.--Always lovingly
      yours, HILDA."

"An old desire of her heart," said Bothwell slowly, staring at the
letter, with the keenest mortification expressed in his countenance.

That cheerfulness which Hilda had assumed in her letter to the
governess smote her lover to the heart. A man's mind is not subtle
enough to cope with the subtleties of a woman's conduct. Hilda's chief
aim in writing that letter had been to hoodwink the Fräulein, to
satisfy her with the assurance that she, Hilda, was going away from
home in tranquil spirits and with hopeful views of the future. Bothwell
saw in this cheery letter the evidence of a stony heart, a heart that
had never loved him.

"'An old desire of her heart,'" he repeated, with a helpless air. "What
can that mean?"

"I haven't a notion," replied the Fräulein, reflecting his helplessness
upon her own commonplace countenance, "unless it were that she has
an idea of going on the stage. So many girls are mad about the
stage nowadays. And Hilda is so pretty. I know when we had private
theatricals here last Christmas for the twins' juvenile party,
everybody was in raptures with Hilda's acting. People told her she
would make a great sensation if she were to appear in London."

"People are a parcel of idiots!" cried Bothwell savagely. "Yes, I
remember the theatricals. I was at the party, you know; and there was
a cub who made love to Hilda. Yes, I remember."

The cub in question was the eldest son of a neighbouring landowner, and
heir to a fine estate; but Bothwell had looked on the innocent lad with
abhorrence, even in those early days when his own attachment to Hilda
had been in its dawn.

"No, she would not think of going on the stage," said Bothwell, after
a pause, during which he had paced up and down the room two or three
times in an agitated way; "that is impossible. She would not be mad
enough for that. There must be something else. The desire of her heart.
What can it mean?"

The Fräulein could not offer any suggestion, except that idea of the
stage. "She is so passionately fond of Shakespeare," she said. "I have
heard her recite the whole of Juliet and Portia without faltering. She
has such a memory. I shouldn't be surprised if she were to come out as
Juliet at Covent Garden next week."

Miss Meyerstein's sole knowledge of the London stage was derived from
biographies of the Kembles and their contemporaries. She believed
in the two patent theatres as existing facts; and she thought that
Shakespearean _débutantes_ were appearing and taking the town by storm
periodically all the year round.

"I must go to Plymouth by the five-o'clock train," said Bothwell
hurriedly. "Will you kindly let my horse stay in your stables and be
looked after till to-morrow morning, Miss Meyerstein? I rode him over
here at a rather unmerciful rate, and he'll be all the better for a
rest. I shall walk to Penmorval, and get myself driven from there to
the station. Good-bye."

He had gone before the Fräulein could answer him; but that good-natured
person rang the bell and requested that Mr. Grahame's horse might be
taken care of for the night, and that anything he required might be
given to him.

Bothwell found his cousin full of sympathy, but was unable to give
him any advice or assistance, as Miss Meyerstein had been. To Dora he
opened his heart fully, showing her Hilda's letter, and breaking out
every now and then into angry denunciations of Lady Valeria.

"Hush, Bothwell, don't be so violent," pleaded Dora, putting her hand
to his lips. "I agree with you that it was a wicked thing for Lady
Valeria to do--to put forward her own weakness in the past and your
wrong-doing as a claim upon you in the present. I can understand poor
Hilda's conduct. She was only too ready to believe that you must
naturally care more for Lady Valeria than for her."

"Help me to find her, Dora. That is all I want. I will soon teach her
which it is I love best. But I don't believe she really cared for me.
She had some other fancy--some other dream."

"No, Bothwell, no."

"I have seen it in her own handwriting," said Bothwell moodily; and
then he told his cousin of that letter which Hilda had written to the
Fräulein, and that curious phrase about an old desire of her heart.



CHAPTER VI.


HOW SUCH THINGS END.


"An old desire of her heart," repeated Dora wonderingly. "What could
that be? I am sure she had but one wish in this world, and that was to
make your life happy."

"If that had been so, if she had been single-hearted, she would not
have been so easily frightened away from me," argued Bothwell. "She
would have laughed Valeria to scorn, strong in the power of her own
love. No, it was because she was half-hearted that she gave way. There
was this old desire of her heart, which could only be gratified by
throwing me over."

"Bothwell, you are unworthy of her when you talk like that."

"She has proved herself unworthy of me," retorted Bothwell savagely.
"Perhaps, after all, it was that beardless cub, young St. John, she
cared for--an Etonian of nineteen, with a pretty face and missish
manners. Perhaps it was of him she was thinking when she wrote about an
old desire of her heart."

"Bothwell, I am ashamed of you. Hilda's heart is one of the truest that
ever beat in a woman's breast. This very foolishness in running away
from her own happiness is only a new proof of her noble nature."

"An old desire of her heart," harped Bothwell; "read me that riddle if
you can."

"I can only read it in one way," answered Dora, after a thoughtful
silence. "Ever so long before your return from India, Hilda had an
ambition to do something great in music. She had been told that her
voice was of the finest quality, and only required severe training
in order to become an exceptional voice. She wanted to go abroad--to
Milan, Leipsic, Paris--she talked of different places in her
castle-building--and to give herself up to the study of music and
the cultivation of her voice. The only difficulty was, that as Mr.
Heathcote's sister, and with an independence inherited from her mother,
there was no excuse for her taking up music as a profession, while it
would have seemed unreasonable to leave her friends and her home merely
to improve herself as an amateur. We often discussed this question
together, and I used to advise her to abandon the idea of leaving her
brother, whose life would have been altogether lonely without her. I
told her that if ever Mr. Heathcote married again, she would then be
free to do what she liked with her life. But by and by you appeared
upon the scene, and Hilda resumed her love for fox-hunting, and
neglected her piano. After this I heard no more of her yearning for a
higher school of music than she could find in England."

"Perhaps you are right," said Bothwell, with a penitent look. "There is
only one person to whom Hilda would be likely to go in Plymouth, and
that is her old singing mistress."

"Mdlle. Duprez; yes, that is a person whom she would naturally
consult," answered Dora. "I know all about Mdlle. Duprez, a sweet
little woman."

"Dora, will you let one of your people drive me to the station, in time
for the next train?"

"With pleasure. But you must have something to eat before you go. You
look as if you had not had any lunch."

"I daresay I look very miserable. No, I have not been in the humour for
eating since I got Hilda's letter this morning. I walked half a mile to
meet the postman, in my impatience for my true love's letter, and when
it came it was a staggerer."

"And you have ridden all the way from Trevena, and have had nothing to
eat?"

"I forgot all about it; but I will take a crust and a glass of wine
before I start. Has Wyllard heard of Hilda's disappearance?"

"Yes, he has been very much troubled about it. He had set his heart
upon this marriage, and on its celebration while he is well enough to
be present. God knows how long he may have strength enough to bear even
as much fatigue as that. He is very angry with Hilda."

"He must not be angry with her. It is my sin that has caused this
misery. I have sown the wind, and I have reaped the whirlwind. You are
very good to bear with me in my trouble, Dora."

She was infinitely patient with him, sitting by him while he took a
sandwich and a tumbler of claret; soothing him in his indignation
against Lady Valeria; listening to his remorseful confession of
wrong-doing in the past; bearing with that most tedious of all human
creatures, an unhappy lover. But she had a sense of relief when he
was gone, and she heard the dog-cart wheels rolling along the avenue.
Her thoughts of late had been so concentrated upon her husband and
his suffering that it was painful to be obliged to think of anything
outside that sick-room and its sadness.

Bothwell found only disappointment at Plymouth. The little maid-servant
had been thoroughly coached by Mdlle. Duprez before she left, and had
been warned against any mention of Miss Heathcote.

She faced Bothwell with a stolid countenance, prepared to commit any
enormity in the way of false statements; for she was one of those
faithful creatures who, although the soul of truthfulness upon their
own account, will lie valiantly to serve those they love. She said that
Mdlle. Duprez had gone away on business.

"Was she alone?" asked Bothwell.

"Yes, sir."

"You are sure of that?"

"Quite sure, sir."

"But she was to meet some one at the station, perhaps. There was some
one going away from Plymouth with her."

"I think not, sir. I feel sure Mdlle. Duprez would have told me if
there had been any one going with her."

"When was Miss Heathcote last here?" asked Bothwell abruptly. "You know
Miss Heathcote--a pupil--a young lady from Bodmin?"

The girl put on a countenance of profound thought, as if she were
calling upon her memory for a stupendous effort, looking back into the
night of ages.

"I'm sure I can't say, sir; but it was a long time ago--quite early in
the summer."

"You are sure she was not here yesterday?"

"O yes, sir. Mademoiselle left Plymouth a week ago, and nobody called
yesterday."

"O, she left Plymouth a week ago, did she, and nobody called
yesterday?" repeated Bothwell, with a despairing helplessness which
smote the slavey's heart.

It seemed a cruel thing to deceive such a nice-looking, outspoken
gentleman--about his young lady, too--for it was evident to Mary Jane
that Miss Heathcote must have been keeping company with this gentleman,
and that she had broken off with him. If Mary Jane's fidelity to the
little Frenchwoman had not been firm as a rock, she would have given
way at this point, and told Bothwell the truth.

"Kindly give me Mdlle. Duprez's address," he said. "I have very
important business with her, and should like to telegraph immediately."

"Mademoiselle did not leave any address, sir."

"Not leave any address? A woman of business! But she would have her
letters sent after her, surely," urged Bothwell.

"No, sir. She did not wish her letters to be sent. She would be on the
move, she said; and she would rather risk leaving the letters here than
having them follow her from place to place."

There was an air of reality about these particulars that convinced
Bothwell, whereby he showed his inexperience; for liars always go into
particulars, and prop up their falsehoods with a richness of detail
that is rare in truthful statements.

"Then you really don't know where Mdlle. Duprez is to be found?"

"No, sir; but I am expecting her home at any moment. She might walk in
while we are standing here."

"I wish she would," said Bothwell. "I want much to see her."

He left his card, and went away, cruelly disappointed.

And now he set his teeth, like a man who is going to meet his foe, as
he turned his face towards that white-walled villa on one of the hills
above the town, that fair and pleasant place where he had dawdled away
so many summer afternoons, all the while wishing himself anywhere
rather than in that Armida garden, feeling himself a knave and a
dastard for being there. He hated the place now with a deadly hatred.
It seemed to him that those white walls had been built of dead men's
bones, as if the house within and without savoured of the charnel.

The good old man, so fooled, so wronged by a false wife and false
friend, was gone, lying at rest in the cemetery yonder, and Armida
reigned alone in her enchanted garden.

Bothwell walked to Fox Hill at his fastest pace, hurrying on with bent
brow, unobservant of anybody or anything that he passed on his way, as
if he would walk down the angry devil within him. But the devil was
not subjugated when Bothwell entered the classic portico. His livid
countenance, his gloomy eyes scared the sleek young footman from his
after-dinner listlessness.

Yes, Lady Valeria was at home. Bothwell was ushered into the
shadowy drawing-room--a place of summer darkness, sea-green plush
and tawny satin, an atmosphere of perfume. The verandah beyond the
richly-curtained windows was filled with exotics; creamy-white blossoms
were languishing in Venetian vases on tables and piano. A Japanese
embroidered curtain draped the door of an inner room, and, as Bothwell
entered, this curtain was lifted by those slender fingers he knew so
well, and Valeria stood before him, very pale, seeming taller and
slimmer than of old, in her black cashmere gown. She wore no crape
to-day, only that plain cashmere, silkily soft, of densest, most
funereal black, falling in straight folds from the graceful shoulders,
clasped at the throat with a large jet cross, the thin white arms
showing like marble under the long loose sleeves, which fell open from
above the elbow. The flowing draperies had a conventual air, as of an
abbess of some severe order; but the uncovered head, with its coils of
soft brown hair, was like the head of a Greek statue.

Bothwell uttered no word of greeting. He took Hilda's letter from his
breast-pocket, and handed it open to Lady Valeria.

"This is your work," he said.

She read the letter slowly, deliberately, and not a sign of emotion
stirred the marble pallor of her face as she read. She seemed to weigh
every syllable.

"A very sensible little letter," she said. "I did not think it was in
Miss Heathcote to take so broad and generous a view of our position.
She is a noble girl, and I shall honour her all the days of my life.
She has cut the knot of a great difficulty."

Bothwell looked at her incredulously, as if he doubted his own ears.

"Do you suppose that I shall abide by this letter?" he asked, in
harsh husky tones, which made his voice seem altogether unfamiliar to
Valeria, as if a stranger were speaking to her in Bothwell's semblance.

"Naturally, my poor Bothwell," she answered, with her easiest air. "I
cannot think that your engagement to this very good commonplace girl
was anything more than a _pis aller_. You were afraid of your position
here, and it seemed to you that the only safety was in a respectable
marriage. The young lady has a little money, I understand, just enough
to keep the wolf from the door, but not enough for any of the delights
of life. And you told yourself that you would do penance for those
happy days up at the hills, that you--you, Bothwell Grahame--would
would settle down into a grinder of mathematics. A curious fancy--like
that of some knight of old who, after a youth of passion and storm,
turns hermit, and vegetates in a cave. No, Bothwell, I do not for a
moment believe that you ever seriously cared for this country-bred
girl."

"Your estimate of my feelings in this matter can be of very little
consequence to either of us," replied Bothwell, without relaxing a
muscle of his moody countenance. "It is Miss Heathcote I mean to marry,
and no other woman living. You have stooped so low as to come between
me and my plighted wife. You have put off my marriage, hindered my
happiness, frustrated the desire of my heart; but nothing that you or
any one else can do will lessen my love for the girl I have chosen. If
I cannot win her back, I shall go down to my grave a broken-hearted
man. This is what you have done for me, Lady Valeria."

She was silent for some moments, while she stood looking at him with
her pale fixed face, her large violet eyes full of reproachfulness.

"This is what I have done for you," she said slowly, after a long
pause: "This is what I have done for you. I have tried to secure to you
a life of independence, wealth, the respect of your fellow-men, who in
these days have but one standard of merit--success. I have flung myself
at your feet, with all the advantages of my birth and fortune--friends
who could help you--an assured position; I have offered myself to you
as humbly as an Indian dancing-girl, have debased myself as low, made
as little of my merits and my position. And all I have asked of you is
to keep the solemn vows you made to me in that sweet time when we were
both so happy. I have asked you to be true to your word."

"After you had released me from its obligations, Lady Valeria, after
you had flung away the old love-token. Was not that an end of all
things between us?"

"It might have been. I accepted my doom. And then Fate changed all
things. I was free, and there was nothing to hinder our happiness,
except your falsehood--your double falsehood. You were false to your
truest friend, my husband, when you loved me; and now that you could
love me with honour you are false to me."

"I am as God made me," answered Bothwell gloomily, "weak and false
in the days gone by, when my love for you was stronger with me than
gratitude or honour, but loyal and true to the girl who won me away
from that false love. Shall I go back to the old love now because it is
my interest to do so? O Valeria, how you would despise me! how all good
and true women would scorn me if I could be base enough to be false to
that dear engagement which redeemed me from a false position, which
set me right in my own esteem and before my fellow-men! Granted that
I have been weak and inconstant, that I have proved myself unworthy
of the regard with which you honoured me," he went on, with a touch
of tenderness in the voice that had been so hard just now, moved to
compassion perhaps by that pale, despairing look of hers, "granted that
I am a poor creature, you can hardly wonder that my soul sickened at
a tie which involved blackest treason against a good man, and my best
friend; you can hardly wonder that I welcomed the dawning of a new
love, a love which I could confess before the world, and on my knees to
my God. That love meant redemption, blessing instead of cursing. And
do you suppose that I am afraid of poverty, or hard work, or a life of
obscurity, for the sake of my true love?"

"You have not changed your mind, then?" said Valeria, trying to be
supremely cool, though the hectic spot upon that ashen cheek told of
passionate anger. "You mean to marry Miss Heathcote, and teach dull
lads in a Cornish village for the rest of your life?"

"With God's help I mean to win back the girl from whom you have parted
me. I came here this afternoon to tell you that your work has been
only half successful. You have hindered my marriage, but you have not
changed the purpose of my life. Farewell, Valeria, and I pray God that
word between you and me may mean for ever."

"Farewell," she answered mockingly. "Fare according to your deserts,
truest, most generous of men."

She put her finger on the little ivory knob of the electric bell, and
the sustained silvery sound vibrated in the silent house. Then, with a
haughty inclination of her head, she disappeared through the curtained
archway as Bothwell left the room by the opposite door.



CHAPTER VII.


ONE WHO MUST REMEMBER.


Edward Heathcote had been away from Paris when Miss Meyerstein's
telegram arrived at the Hôtel de Bade. He had gone on a journey of
something over a hundred miles on the Western Railway, a journey
undertaken with the idea of adding one more link to the chain which he
had been slowly putting together; one more chapter in the history of
Marie Prévol.

He had been disappointed in those who were to have helped him in his
task; and it was to his own patience and resources that he was for
the most part indebted for such progress as he had made. Drubarde,
the ex-police-officer, had been able to do no more than to supply the
formal record of the evidence before the _Juge d'Instruction_. He could
throw no light upon the previous history of the supposed murderer: he
could offer no clue to his subsequent fate.

Sigismond Trottier, from whose keen wit Heathcote had hoped for such
valuable aid, had broken down altogether. He had failed to furnish any
further reminiscences of his old acquaintance Georges.

"I want to know what the man was like," said Heathcote, at their last
interview. "If you could put me into communication with any artist
friend of yours who knew Georges well, and can remember him well enough
to give me his likeness from memory--were it the slightest sketch--I
would pay your friend liberally for his work, and be very grateful to
you for bringing the matter about."

"I know no such man," answered Trottier curtly.

"That is very strange. Surely there must be some such person among
those who can remember Georges. You say that his only friends were of
the literary and artistic world."

"_Nom d'un nom_", exclaimed Trottier impatiently, "I suppose I had
better be frank with you. Yes, it is quite possible there may be
some one who knew Georges, and who could give you such a sketch
as you want. But I will not help you to find that person. I liked
Georges--liked him well, mark you. I have profited by his generosity,
have gone to him for help when I was in very low water. I am not going
to turn and sting my benefactor. Granted that he was an assassin. I can
find excuses even for that crime, for I know how he loved Marie Prévol.
I am not going to help you to hunt him down. If he is alive and has
repented his sin, let him alone, to be dealt with by his Creator and
his Judge. What are we that we should pretend to condemn or to punish
him?"

"I have sworn to myself to find the last link in the chain."

"Why should you want to hunt this man down?"

"That is my secret. I have a motive, and a very powerful one. It may
be that I have no intention to betray the wretch to justice; that when
the tangled skein shall be unravelled, and the mystery of that man's
life made clear, that in the hour of success I may be merciful, may
hold my hand, and keep the murderer's secret from the outside world.
But I want to know that secret, I want to be able to stand face to face
with that man and to say, 'You are the murderer of Marie Prévol and
her lover; you are the murderer of the helpless girl who went alone to
England, having in her possession certain papers which threw too strong
a light upon your guilty past. You, who have held your head erect
before the world, and have passed for a man of honour and probity, you
are the remorseless villain whose life stands twice forfeited to the
law.'"

Heathcote was pacing up and down the room, intensely agitated. He had
abandoned himself wholly to the passion of the moment, forgetful of
Trottier's presence, forgetful of all things except that one fixed
purpose of his mind which had become almost monomania.

"What would you gain by this?" asked Trottier, wondering at this new
aspect of his English friend.

"Revenge! There is enough of the old Adam left in the best of us to
make revenge sweet. What must it be to a man who has lost the one
delight that made life worth living?"

"I cannot help you to your revenge," answered Trottier. "I was fond of
Georges. I hope you may never be able to look in his face and accuse
him of the past. I hope he may be spared that shame. I cannot for the
life of me understand why you should pursue a stranger with such deadly
hatred."

"That is my secret, I say again. If you will not help me, so be it. I
must go on working on my own account. But the face--the face--that is,
perhaps, the only identification possible. The links of the chain fall
into their places--the facts that I have slowly gathered all point to
one conclusion; but absolute identification is impossible until I can
find a portrait of the man who called himself Georges."

"You are not offended with me, I hope?"

"No, Trottier, I understand your refusal; I respect your loyalty to an
old friend. But I must get the portrait I want, somehow, without your
help."

Thus ended all hope of aid from Sigismond Trottier. Drubarde, on
the other hand, had assured his client that he saw no new clue to
the discovery of the missing murderer. If that murderer were indeed
identical with the man who met Léonie Lemarque at Charing Cross, if he
had surpassed himself in crime by the murder of that helpless girl, it
was for the English police, to hunt him down. With such a man as Joseph
Distin to inspire their movements, the English police--making due
allowance for the dulness of a _rosbif_-eating nation--ought to work
wonders; and here was a case which offered the chances of distinction;
here was an assassin going about red-handed, as it were, after a murder
not three months old.

"You expect me to find the murderer of Marie Prévol, a man who escaped
us ten years ago; and here are your pampered and over-paid English
detectives who cannot find the man who threw Léonie Lemarque out of a
railway-carriage last July. Is that common sense, do you think, Mr.
Heathcote? No, sir; in Paris I am on my own ground. I know this great
city from cellar to garret--her bridges, her suburbs, her quarries,
her sewers, and caverns, and waste places, all the holes and crannies
where crime and vice have hidden for the last forty years; but from
the moment your criminal has got to the other side of the Channel, I
wash my hands of him. My talents can serve you no further."

Mr. Heathcote recompensed the police-officer handsomely for the very
little he had done; and so they parted, M. Drubarde vastly pleased with
his client, but still better pleased with himself. He was a man whose
benign consciousness of his own value in the social scale mellowed with
advancing years.

Having been thus abandoned by both his gifted coadjutors, Edward
Heathcote worked on by his own lights. There was one person, he told
himself, who might be able to assist him--one person whose chief desire
in life must be to see the murderer of Marie Prévol and her lover
brought to his doom. Among the few scraps of information which Trottier
had given to his friend there was the fact that the dowager Baronne de
Maucroix, the widowed mother of the murdered man, was still living. She
resided at her château in Normandy, where she led a life of strictest
seclusion, devoting herself to acts of charity and to the severest
religious exercises.

It was in the hope of obtaining an interview with this lady that
Heathcote left Paris upon the very morning on which Miss Meyerstein
telegraphed the news of Hilda's flight. He had no letter of
introduction, no credentials to offer to Mdme. de Maucroix, except
the one fact of his keen interest in the after-fate of her son's
murderer. There was some audacity in the idea of so presenting himself
before a venerable recluse of ancient family, a woman who, according
to Sigismond Trottier, had been distinguished in her youth for pride
and exclusiveness; a woman who had ranked herself with the Condés and
the Mortemarts, who had ignored the house of Orleans, and loathed the
Imperial rule.

The château of the Maucroix family was about five miles on the eastward
side of Rouen. It was situate on low ground, a little way from the
banks of the Seine--an imposing pile of Gothic architecture, guarded by
a moat, and approached by an avenue of funereal yews. The surrounding
landscape was flat and uninteresting. The broad bright river, winding
in bold curves across the level meads, with here and there a willowy
islet, gave a certain charm to scenery which would otherwise have been
without a redeeming feature. Far off in the distance the chimney-shafts
and spires of Rouen rose dark against the gray October sky.

Edward Heathcote felt the depressing influence of those level fields,
the gloom of that dark avenue and sunless day. It seemed to him as if
he were going into a grave, a place whence life and hope had fled for
ever.

He crossed the low stone bridge which spanned the moat, and found
himself in an old-fashioned garden of that stately period which gave
grandeur to the fountains and parterres of Versailles. Here, too, there
were large marble basins, Tritons and Nereids: but the fountains were
not playing; there was no pleasant plashing of silvery water-drops to
break the dreary stillness of that deserted garden. Everything was in
perfect order, not a withered leaf upon the velvet lawns or the smooth
gravel paths. But even amidst this neatness there was a neglected
look. No flowers brightened the dark borders. There were only the
gloomy evergreens of a century's growth, some of them pyramids of dark
foliage, others cut into fantastic shapes, an artistic development of
the gardeners of the past, which had been carefully preserved by the
gardeners of the present.

A white-haired _maître d'hôtel_ came out into the echoing hall to
answer the stranger's inquiries.

"Madame la Baronne is at home," he replied stiffly. "Madame rarely goes
out of doors, except to her church, or, under peculiar circumstances,
to her poor. Madame la Baronne receives no one except her priest."

"I hope that Madame will make another exception in my favour," said
Heathcote quietly. "Be good enough to take her that letter."

He had written to Mdme. de Maucroix before leaving Paris, and he hoped
that this letter would serve him as an "open sesame."

      "Madame,--For particular reasons of my own, I am keenly
      desirous to trace the murderer of your son; and,
      believing myself to be already on the right track, I
      venture to entreat the favour of an interview. I am
      an Englishman of good birth and education, and I shall
      know how to respect any confidence with which you may
      honour me. Accept, Madame, the assurance of my high
      consideration, EDWARD HEATHCOTE.

      "To the Baroness de Maucroix."

Heathcote was shown into a room leading out of the hall, the first of
a suite of rooms opening one into another in a remote perspective. The
doors were open, and the visitor could see to the end of the vista.
The parquetted floors, with the cold light reflected on their polished
surface from the high narrow windows, the sculptured pediments above
the doors, the crystal girandoles, the sombre-looking pictures--all had
an old-world air, and gave the idea of a house which strangers visited
now and then as a monument of the past, but which had long been empty
of domestic life and warmth and comfort. The far-off echo of his own
footsteps startled Heathcote as he slowly paced the polished floor.

He had not long to wait. The _maître d'hôtel_ appeared after about ten
minutes' interval, evidently astonished at the result of his mission,
and informed Heathcote that the Baroness would see him.

"Mdme. la Baronne is old and in weak health, Monsieur," said the
servant, who had grown gray in the service of his mistress, and who
worshipped her. "I hope your business with her is not of an agitating
kind. She seemed much troubled by your letter. A violent shock might
kill her."

"There will be no violent shock, my friend," replied Heathcote kindly.
"I shall be obliged to talk to Mdme. la Baronne of painful memories,
but I shall be careful of her feelings."

"I hope Monsieur will pardon me for making the suggestion."

"With all my heart."

The old servant led the way up the wide semicircular staircase to a
corridor above, and to a suite of rooms over those which Heathcote had
seen below. They passed through an anteroom, and then entered by a
curtained doorway which led into Mdme. de Maucroix's sitting-room, the
only room which she had occupied for the last ten years. The _salons_
and music-rooms, the library and card-room on the lower floor, had
remained empty and desolate since her son's death. Her bedchamber and
dressing-room were situated behind this small _salon_, and another door
opened into the suite of apartments which had been occupied by her son.
These she visited and inspected daily. They were kept in the order in
which he had left them, on his last journey to Paris. Not an object,
however trifling, had been changed.

There were logs burning on the hearth, although the first chill winds
of autumn had not yet been felt: but the Baroness kept a fire in her
room all the year round. The cheery blaze and a large black poodle
of almost super-canine intelligence were her only companions. On an
exquisite little buhl table by her armchair lay her missal and her
_Imitation of Christ_. These two books were her only literature.

The poodle advanced slowly across the Persian carpet to meet the
visitor, and made a deliberate inspection. The result was satisfactory,
for he gave three or four solemn swings of his leonine tail, and then
composed himself in a dignified position in front of the fire.

The Baroness, who was seated in a deep and spacious armchair,
acknowledged Heathcote's entrance only by a dignified bend of her head.
She was a woman of remarkable appearance even in the sixty-seventh year
of her age. She possessed that classic beauty of feature which time
cannot take away. No matter that the pale pure skin was faded from its
youthful bloom, that the lines of care and thought were drawn deeply
upon the broad brow and about the melancholy mouth: the outline of the
face was such as a sculptor would have chosen for a Hecuba or a Dido.

She was above the average height of women, and sat erect in her
high-backed chair with a majestic air which impressed Edward Heathcote.
Her plainly fashioned black silk gown and India muslin fichu recalled
Delaroche's famous picture of Marie Antoinette, and her cast of
countenance in some wise resembled that of the martyred queen; but the
features were more perfect in their harmony, the outline was more
statuesque. In a word, the Baroness had been lovelier than the Queen.

She motioned Heathcote to a chair on the opposite side of the hearth.

"You are interested in tracing the murderer of my son," she said. "That
is strange--after ten years--and you an Englishman! What concern can
you have in the fate of that man?"

There was the faintest quiver in her voice as she spoke of her son,
otherwise her tones were clear and self-possessed; her large dark eyes
contemplated the stranger with calmest scrutiny.

"That is in some wise my secret, Madame," replied Heathcote. "I will be
as frank with you as I can; but there are motives which I must keep to
myself until this investigation of mine has come to an end--until I can
tell you that I have found the murderer of Marie Prévol, that I have
proof positive of his guilt."

"And then, Monsieur--what then?" asked the Baroness.

"Madame, it is perhaps you who should be the arbiter of the murderer's
fate; in the event of such evidence as may be conclusive to you and
me being also strong enough to insure his conviction by a French jury.
French jurymen are so merciful, Madame, and your judges so full of
sentiment. They would perhaps regard the death of those two young
people--slain in the flower of their youth--as an outbreak of jealous
feeling for which the murderer was to be pitied rather than punished.
The law is always kind to the shedders of blood. It is the child
who steals a loaf, or the journalist who by some carelessly edited
paragraph wounds the fine feelings of our aristocracy--it is for such
as these there is no mercy. But in the event of my being able to find
the assassin, and to furnish conclusive evidence of his guilt, what
would be your line of conduct, Madame?"

The Dowager was slow to reply. She waited with fixed brows, meditative,
absorbed, for some moments.

"There was a time," she said at last, "when I should have been quick
to reply to such a question--when I thirsted for the blood of my son's
murderer. Yes, when my parched lips longed to drink that blood, as
the savage laps the life-stream of his foe. But years have worked
their chastening influence--years given up to religious exercises,
mark you, Monsieur, not wasted upon the frivolities of this world. I
have sought for consolation from no carnal sources. Pleasure has never
crossed the threshold of my dwelling since my son's corpse was carried
in at my door. Some people try to forget their griefs; they steep
themselves in the banalities of this life; they stifle memory amidst
the intoxications of a frivolous existence. I am not one of those. I
have nursed my sorrow, lived with it, lived upon it, until looking back
it seems to me that even in these long slow years of mourning I have
not been actually separated from my dead son. In my prayers, in my
thoughts, in my waking and sleeping, his image has been ever present,
the most precious part of my existence. I believe that he is in heaven,
that such prayers as have been breathed for him, together with the
services of the Church, must have shortened his time of purgation, that
his purified soul is at rest in the blessed home where I hope some day
to rejoin him. Confession, penance, mortifications of all kinds have
subjugated the natural evil in my character. My cry for vengeance has
long been dumb. If that cruel murderer yet lives, I hope that he may be
brought by suffering to repentance. I do not hunger for his death."

There was such an air of lofty feeling, such absolute truth in the tone
and manner of Madame de Maucroix, that Heathcote could but admire and
respect this cold serenity of grief.

"He has brought my gray hairs in sorrow to the grave," said the
Baroness softly, "but I have been taught to pity all sinners, as our
Saviour pitied the worst and vilest, with inexhaustible compassion."

"Madame, if you who so loved your son can be merciful, there is no one
living who has a right to exact the murderer's blood. And now forgive
me if I venture to question you about that sad story. For some time
past I have devoted myself to this case. I have slowly put together
the links of a chain of evidence, until there is but little wanting to
complete the circle. Your knowledge may furnish me with those missing
links. Tell me in the first place whether you believe--and have always
believed--that the man called Georges was the murderer of your son."

"I have never doubted his guilt. There was no one else; no one whom my
boy had ever offended. Remember, Monsieur, he was but three-and-twenty
years of age, amiable, generous, accomplished, beloved by all who knew
him. He had not an enemy, except the man whose jealousy he had aroused."

"Did he know the man Georges?"

"Unhappily, yes. Had he never known Georges he would never have
fallen in love with Mdlle. Prévol. Georges was an intimate friend of
an artist whom my son patronised; a remarkably clever painter, who
twelve or thirteen years ago promised to become famous, but who never
fulfilled that promise. Maxime sat to this M. Tillet for a half-length
portrait--the man had a genius for portraits--and Tillet introduced him
to the Bohemian circle in which Georges was living. It was a very small
circle, consisting of about a dozen men in all, mostly journalists and
painters. Georges appeared to have a liking for my son; Maxime's youth
and freshness interested him; he said, in a world where everybody was
_blasé_. He invited him to little suppers of three or four intimates,
at which Marie Prévol was present. From that hour my son's head was
turned. He fell passionately in love with this actress. He thought
of her by day and night, abandoned himself utterly to his idolatry,
desired ardently to make her his wife."

"He did not believe that she was married to Georges?"

"That was his difficulty. In his love and reverence for her he could
not endure to think of her as in a degraded position; yet if she
were already a wife, Maxime could never hope to win her. In his mad,
headstrong love he was ready to forgive her past career, to redeem her
from her degraded position, and make her the Baroness de Maucroix.
He, who had been educated in the pride of race as in the gospel, was
willing to marry an actress with a tarnished character!"

"Did he make you the confidante of his passion, Madame?"

"For some time he kept his secret from me; but I knew that he was
unhappy, and I knew that there was only one kind of grief possible in
such a life as his, where nature and fortune had been alike lavish.
He had been my companion and adviser from the day of my widowhood;
and we were nearer and dearer to each other, and more in each other's
confidence, than mothers and sons usually are. More than once I had
entreated him to tell me the nature of his trouble, to let me help
him, if that were possible; and he had told me that there was no one
who could help him in the great crisis of his life. 'I must be either
the happiest or the most miserable of men,' he said. One night I went
into his room and found him ill, feverish, in a half-delirious state,
raving about Marie Prévol. This broke the ice, and during the brief
illness that followed--the effect of cold, fatigue, excitement, and
late hours--I obtained his confidence. He told me the whole story of
his love for this beautiful actress; how at their first meeting he had
been enslaved by her exquisite loveliness, her indescribable charm of
manner. He protested that her nature was purity itself, despite her
false position. She was the victim of circumstances. And then he told
me that Georges spoke of her as his wife, treated her with a respect
rarely shown to women of light character; and this thought that his
idol was another man's wife filled my unhappy son with despair."

"You warned him of the danger of his position, no doubt, Madame."

"Not once only, but again and again. With all the fervour of a mother's
prayers did I implore him to escape from this fatal entanglement. I
urged him to travel, to go to Spain, Italy, Africa--Algiers was at that
time a favourite resort for men of fashion--anywhere so long as he
withdrew himself from the fascination which could end only in ruin. But
it was in vain that I pleaded. Passion was stronger than common sense,
duty, or religion. He was caught on a wheel from which he would not
even try to extricate himself."

"And your affection could do nothing."

"Nothing. From that time my son was lost to me. He shrank from
confiding in me, not because I had been severe--never had I breathed
one uncharitable word against the woman he loved. His love made her
sacred to me; but I had spoken the words of common sense. I had tried
to stand between him and his own folly. That was enough. He loved his
madness better than he loved me--he who had been until that time almost
an adoring son. When the time came for us to come here for the autumn
he refused to leave Paris, and I was too anxious to allow him to remain
there alone. I stayed at our house in the Rue de l'Université, where
my son had his apartments, his private keys and private staircase,
by which he could come in at any hour, without his movements being
known to the household. I hardly know how he lived or what he did
during those long days of July and August, while all our circle of
acquaintance were away by the sea or in the mountains, and while we
seemed to be alone in a deserted city. Several of the theatres were
closed during those months; but the Porte-Saint-Martin had made a great
success with a fairy piece, and kept open for the strangers who filled
Paris.

"I believe that my son went every night to the theatre, that he saw
Marie Prévol at every opportunity, and that his only motive in life
was his love for her. For me the days went by in dull monotony. A
presentiment of evil oppressed me, waking or sleeping. Long before
the coming of calamity I felt the agony of an inevitable grief. I knew
not what form my misery would take; but I knew that my boy was doomed.
When they brought home his bleeding corpse in the summer evening,
four-and-twenty hours after the murder, I met the messengers of evil as
one prepared for the worst. I had lost him long before his death."

She spoke with infinite composure. She had familiarised herself with
her sorrow, lived with it, cherished it, until grief had lost its power
to agitate. Not a tone faltered as she spoke of that tragical past. Her
countenance was as calm as marble. Every line in the noble face spoke
of a settled sorrow, every line had become unalterable as the lines of
a statue.

"You say, Madame, that the painter Tillet was upon intimate terms with
Georges," said Heathcote. "Is this M. Tillet still living?"

"I believe so. I never heard of his death. He has clever sons whose
names are before the public. I have heard people mention them, though I
have never seen their works. My knowledge of secular art and literature
ceased ten years ago."

"I should be glad to find M. Tillet," said Heathcote. "He is the very
man I want to discover--a man whose pencil could recall for me the face
of the missing Georges. You say, Madame, that he was an intimate friend
of Georges, and that he was a clever portrait-painter. Such a man would
not have forgotten his friend's face."

"If you knew what Georges was like, do you suppose you could find him?"
asked the Baroness, without eagerness, but with a grave intensity,
which accentuated the severe lines of her countenance.

"Yes," replied Heathcote. "I believe that in four-and-twenty hours I
could lay my hand on the assassin's shoulder and say, 'Thou art the
man.'"

"In four-and-twenty hours? There is a distance, then, between you. The
man you suspect is not in Paris."

"No, he is not in Paris."

"And if, by means of M. Tillet's art, you are able to assure yourself
of his identity, how will you deal with him? Would you deliver him up
to justice?"

"Ah, Madame, who knows? Our great poet has said that there is a
divinity which shapes our ends--not as we have planned them. If the
assassin of your son is the person I believe him to be, he is already
punished. He is a doomed man. Joy and hope and comfort are dead for
him. The criminal court and the guillotine could be no harder ordeal
than the suffering of his daily life. If he is guilty, Heaven has
not been blind to his sin. The Eternal Doomsman has pronounced his
sentence."

A faint flush illuminated the settled pallor of Mdme. de Maucroix's
countenance, a light sparkled in her eyes.

"I knew that he would not escape," she said, in a low voice. "Heaven is
just."

"If you will kindly give me M. Tillet's address, Madame, I shall be
deeply obliged."

"I can only tell you an address of ten years ago. M. Tillet lived at
that time in the Rue Saint-Guillaume. He was then in the flush of
success, and I have heard my son say that he had a handsome apartment.
Where he may live now in his decadence I know not. But his sons are
known, and you will have no difficulty in getting information."

"I apprehend not, Madame. And now, if you will permit me, I would ask
one more question."

"As many as you please, Monsieur."

"Have you in your possession any scrap of Georges' writing--any note,
however brief?"

"No. There was no such thing found among my boy's effects. The police
requested that such a letter or letters should be looked for. They,
too, were anxious to procure a specimen of the suspected man's writing;
but, although I looked most carefully through all my son's papers,
I discovered no such letter. There were two or three notes from
Tillet conveying invitations from Georges, but there was no direct
communication from the man himself."

"He was doubtless a man who had taken the old saying to heart," said
Heathcote. "'_Litera scripta manet._' I have to thank you, Madame, for
your gracious reception, and, above all, for your candour."

"In a life like mine, Monsieur, there is no room for untruthfulness
or hypocrisy. My existence moves in too narrow a circle. I have no
interest outside my son's grave, and my own hope of salvation.
Perhaps, before you leave this house, you would like to see the
apartments in which Maxime lived. They have been kept just as he
left them when he went back to Paris for the last time after the
shooting-season."

"I should like much to see them," said Heathcote, standing hat in hand
before the Baroness.

It seemed to him that she had a melancholy pleasure in dwelling on the
image of her murdered son; that it would gratify her to show the rooms
which he had inhabited, even to a stranger.

The Baroness rose, a tall erect figure, dignified and graceful in
advancing age as she had been in the bloom of her beauty, when Louis
Philippe was king. She moved with stately steps towards the door at the
end of her _salon_, and led the way into the adjoining room.

It was a large room, richly furnished, and full of such luxuries as a
young man loves. Dwarf book-cases lined the four walls. On one side,
above the array of richly-bound volumes, appeared a costly collection
of arms, both modern and antique. The fireplace was a kind of alcove,
furnished with luxurious seats, upholstered in copper-red velvet. Old
tapestry, old miniatures, bronzes, curios of all kinds filled the room
with endless varieties of form and colour. A tapestry curtain screened
the door of the adjoining bedchamber. The Baroness drew aside the heavy
tapestry with her wasted hand, and led the stranger into the room where
her son had slept through so many peaceful nights in his happy youth.

A carved ivory crucifix of large size, a _chef-d'oeuvre_, yellow
with age, hung over the pillow on which that young head had so often
slumbered. The attenuated form of the Redeemer showed in sharp relief
against the olive-velvet draperies of the bed. Heathcote observed that
the Persian rug beside the bed was worn in the centre, as if with much
use, and he could guess whose knees had left the trace of prayerful
hours upon the fabric, as he saw the eyes of the Dowager fixed upon
that pallid figure of her martyred Saviour.

"I have lived half my days for the last ten years in this room," she
said quietly. "I hope to die here. If I have sense and knowledge left
me, I shall creep here when I feel that my end is near."

Over the mantelpiece hung Maxime de Maucroix's portrait, the picture of
a bright young face, perfect in form and colouring, but most beautiful
by reason of the hope and gladness that shone in the sunny eyes, the
frank clear outlook of an untainted soul. Heathcote could understand
the fascination exercised over a woman like Marie Prévol by such a man
as this, with all the adjuncts of rank, talent, wealth, and fashion.

They went back to the Baroness's _salon_, and Heathcote took his leave,
to return to Rouen, where he stayed the night.



CHAPTER VIII.


THE LAST LINK.


Heathcote returned to Paris on the morning after his interview with the
Baronne, and found Miss Meyerstein's telegram, and with it Hilda's long
and explanatory letter. The girl expressed herself so temperately, with
such firm resolve, such generous feeling, that her brother could not
find it in his heart to be angry with her for what she had done. He had
never desired her marriage with Bothwell Grahame; he desired it least
of all now. Wedding-bells would have been indeed out of tune with the
dark purpose for which he was working. He had yielded at Dora Wyllard's
entreaty; he had yielded because his sister's happiness had seemed to
be at stake. But now that she had of her own accord relinquished her
lover, he was not inclined to interfere with her decision.

Nor was he alarmed at Miss Meyerstein's telegram, informing him of
Hilda's departure in the early morning. His faith in his sister's
common sense and earnestness was of the strongest. The tone of her
letter was not that of a girl who was bent upon any perilous course of
action. He felt assured that she would do nothing to bring discredit
upon her name or her family; and that if it pleased her to disappear
for a little while, so as to give her lover the opportunity of jilting
her in a gentleman-like manner, she might be safely intrusted with the
management of her own life.

She was well provided with money, having the cheque which her brother
had sent her a few days before her flight. There was therefore no
ground for uneasiness at the idea of her helplessness among strangers.
A girl of nineteen, sensibly brought up, with strong self-respect, and
two hundred and fifty pounds in her possession, could hardly come to
grief anywhere.

"I wish she had taken her maid with her," thought Heathcote, and this
was almost his only regret in the matter.

For not a moment did he doubt that Bothwell would take advantage of his
recovered liberty, and go back to his old love. Hilda had dwelt in her
letter upon Lady Valeria's grace and distinction, her fortune, and the
position to which she could raise her husband. Edward Heathcote did
not give Bothwell credit for the strength of mind which could resist
such temptations. A weak, yielding nature, a man open to the nearest
influence. That was how he judged Bothwell Grahame.

He remembered the young man's conduct at the inquest, his resolute
refusal to say what he had done with his time in Plymouth, rather than
bring Lady Valeria's name before the public. That dogged loyalty had
argued a guilty love; and could Heathcote doubt that when called upon
to choose between the old love, and all its surrounding advantages, and
the new love, with its very modest expectations, Bothwell would gladly
return to his first allegiance?

Assured of this, Heathcote was content that his sister should live
down her sorrow after her own fashion. Better, he thought, that she
should take her own way of bearing her trouble; just as he himself
had done in the days long gone, when the light of his life had been
suddenly extinguished. It was not in sluggish repose that he had sought
the cure for his grief, but in work, and in movement from place to
place. He remembered Hilda's often-expressed desire to study at one of
the great musical academies of the Continent; and he thought it very
likely she had gone to Florence or Milan. He had seen Mdlle. Duprez and
Hilda putting their heads together, had heard the little woman protest
that such a voice as Hilda's ought to be trained under an Italian
sky. He could read some such purpose as this between the lines of his
sister's letter. This being so, he was content to let things take their
course; more especially as his own mind was full of another subject,
and his own life was devoted to another purpose than running after a
fugitive sister. He wrote a reassuring letter to poor Miss Meyerstein,
and he waited patiently for further tidings from Hilda.

His first business after his return to Paris was to find Eugène
Tillet, the portrait-painter. He had noticed the signature of Tillet
on some of the illustrations in the _Petit Journal_, and he inquired
at the office of that paper for the artist's address, and for other
information respecting him. He was told that M. Tillet lived in the Rue
du Bac, with his father and mother, and that he was one of a numerous
family, all artistic. His father was Eugène Tillet, who had once been a
fashionable painter, but who had dropped out of the race, and was now
almost entirely dependent on the industry of his sons and daughters.

This made things easy enough, it would seem: but Heathcote remembered
his failure with Sigismond Trottier, and he feared that in Eugène
Tillet he might perhaps encounter the same loyal regard for an
unfortunate friend. Again, Tillet might have been warned by Trottier,
and might be on his guard against any act which could betray the
assassin whom he had once reckoned amongst his friends.

It was certain that the painter would remember his friend's face;
it was probable that he had some likeness of the missing man in
his sketch-book. He was out-at-elbows, idle, a man content to live
luxuriously on the labour of others. Such a man would be especially
open to pecuniary temptation. He had begun with brilliant successes,
had ended in failure and obscurity. Such a man must have suffered all
the acutest agonies of wounded vanity, and he would be therefore easily
moved by praise.

Arguing thus with himself during his walk to the Rue du Bac, Heathcote
arranged his course of action. He would approach M. Tillet as an
amateur, a collector of modern art, and would offer to purchase some
of his sketches. This would lead naturally to an inspection of old
sketch-books, and to confidences of various kinds from the painter.

As a lawyer and a man of the world, Edward Heathcote considered himself
quite equal to the occasion.

It was three o'clock in the afternoon when he rang the bell on
the second floor of the house over the glover's. The neat-looking
maid-servant who answered his summons informed him that M. Tillet
_père_ was at home. Everybody else was out. The _ci-devant_
portrait-painter was smoking the pipe of peace by the family hearth, a
human monument of departed ambitions, bright hopes that had melted into
darkness, softly and slowly, like the red light of a fusee.

He yawned as he rose to receive his visitor. He stood in front of the
hearth, tall, long-limbed, slouching, slovenly, but with a countenance
that still showed traces of intellectual power, despite the evident
decadence, physical and mental, of the man. His complexion had the
unhealthy pallor which indicates a life spent within four walls;
and already that pallor was assuming the sickly greenish hue of the
absinthe-drinker.

"I have to apologise for intruding upon you without any introduction,
M. Tillet," began Heathcote, taking the seat to which the painter
motioned him; "but although I have neither card nor letter, I do not
come to you entirely as a stranger. I was yesterday with the Baronne
de Maucroix, a lady whom you must remember, as her son was once your
friend."

"Mdme. de Maucroix, poor soul!" muttered the painter. "I am not likely
to forget her. I believe that portrait of mine has been of more comfort
to her than anything else in the world since her son's unhappy death."

"It is a remarkable portrait," said Heathcote, with enthusiasm.

He was careful to show neither interest nor curiosity about the
circumstances of Maucroix's death. He was there in the character of an
amateur, interested solely in art.

"It is one of the finest pictures I ever saw," he went on. "Neither
Reynolds nor Gainsborough ever painted anything better."

"Monsieur is too good. Your English painters have produced some very
fine portraits. There are heads by Gainsborough and Reynolds which
leave very little to be desired; though the treatment of the arms and
hands is sometimes deplorably flimsy. You others have not the realistic
force of the Paris school. Your Millais has a Rubens-like _brio_, but
he paints with a butter-knife. Your Leighton has grace, and a keen
feeling for beauty, but he is cold and shadowy. So you saw my portrait
of poor Maucroix? Yes, I think it was in my best manner. But it was in
the portraiture of women that I was strongest. I have been told by too
partial judges that the head over the escritoire yonder is worthy of
Titian."

"It is an exquisite piece of colour," answered Heathcote, rising to
scrutinise the unfinished Duchess.

"I was a genius when I painted that picture," said Tillet, with a
moody look; "but it is all past and done with. I am glad to think you
appreciated my portrait of the Baron de Maucroix, a splendid subject, a
fine young fellow. May I ask the name of my gracious admirer?"

"My name is Heathcote," said the visitor, laying his card upon the
table in front of M. Tillet.

The painter stared at him with a look of extreme surprise.

"Heathcote!" he repeated, and then examined the card.

"You seem surprised at the mention of my name," said Heathcote. "Have
you ever heard it before to-day?"

The painter had recovered himself by this time. He told himself that
his visitor was in all probability Hilda's brother, and that it was
his duty to his fair young friend to conceal the fact of her residence
under that roof.

He was capable of so much perspicuity as this, but he was quite
incapable of prompt action. He was too listless to make an excuse for
leaving his visitor, in order to put the servant upon her guard, and
so prevent Hilda's appearance before Mr. Heathcote's departure. The
chances were, thought Tillet, that the Englishman's visit would be
brief; while, on the other hand, Hilda had gone to the Conservatoire,
and was not likely to return for some time.

Having argued thus with himself, the painter was content to trust to
the chapter of accidents, which had been of late years the principal
chapter in the history of his life.

"If you don't mind smoke," he murmured, with a longing look at his
cigarette-case.

"I am a smoker myself, and I delight in it."

On this, Monsieur Tillet offered his case to the Englishman, and
lighted a cigarette for himself.

"Yes, I have heard your name before," he said slowly and reflectively.
"I think it must have been from my friend Trottier, Sigismond Trottier,
one of the contributors to the _Taon_. He has mentioned an English
acquaintance called Heathcote. Perhaps you are that gentleman?"

"Yes, I know Trottier," answered Heathcote, far from pleased at finding
that the painter and the paragraphist were intimate.

It was not unlikely that Trottier had warned his friend against
answering any inquiries about Georges.

"Then I think you must have heard a good deal about me," said Eugène
Tillet, with a satisfied smile. "Trottier knew me when I was in the
zenith of my power--glorious days--glorious nights those. The days
of Gautier and Gustave Planche, Villemessant, Roqueplan--the days
when there were wits in Paris, Monsieur. Ah! you should have seen
our after-midnight _cénacle_ at the Café Riche. How the pale dawn
used to creep in upon our talk! and how we defied the waiters, when,
between two and three o'clock, they tried to put out the gas and get
rid of us! I remember how, one night, we all came with candle-ends in
our pockets, and when the waiters began to lower the gas, lit up our
candles--a veritable illumination. They never tried to put out our
lamps after that. Yes, those were glorious nights, and art was honoured
in those days. There was a man called Georges, a French Canadian, I
believe; a man of large fortune and splendid brains--he came to a bad
end afterwards, I am sorry to say"--this with airiest indifference. "He
used to give little suppers at the Café de Paris or the Maison d'Or,
suppers of half a dozen at most--banquets for the gods. I was generally
one of that select circle."

"You painted this friend of yours, no doubt," suggested Heathcote,
"this Monsieur Georges."

"No; he had a curious antipathy to sitting for his portrait. I wanted
to paint him. He had a fine head, highly paintable. A fine picturesque
head, which was all the more picturesque on account of a particularly
artistic wig."

"Do you mean to say that he wore a wig?"

"Habitually. He had lost his hair in South America after a severe
attack of fever, and it had never grown again. He wore a light auburn
wig, with hair that fell loosely and carelessly over his forehead,
almost touching his eyebrows. The style suited him to perfection, and
the wig was so perfect in its simulation of nature, that I doubt if any
one but a painter or a woman would have detected that it was a wig. He
dressed in a careless semi-picturesque style--turn-down collar, loose
necktie, velvet coat--and with that long hair of his, he had altogether
the air of a painter or a poet."

"And you never painted him?"

"Never. I have sketched his head many a time from memory, for my own
amusement, both before and after his disappearance; but he never sat to
me. I might have made money by giving the police one of my sketches,
when they were trying to hunt Georges down as a suspected murderer:
but I am not a Judas, to betray the friend at whose table I have
eaten," said the painter, whose Scriptural knowledge was derived solely
from the Old Masters, and who regarded the disciple's crime from a
purely social point of view.

Heathcote was careful to show the least possible curiosity about the
vanished Georges. He listened with the air of a man who is charmed by a
delightful conversationalist, who admires the _raconteur_, but who has
no personal interest in the subject of the discourse. And Eugène Tillet
was accustomed so to talk and so to be heard. He was an egotist of the
first water, and was not a close observer of other people.

Heathcote was now assured of the one fact which he wanted to know. The
painter had made numerous sketches of his friend, and no doubt had
some of those sketches still in his possession, as they could have
had little value for the dealers. The question now was to get at his
sketch-books as quickly as possible.

"The mention of your sketches recalls the object of my visit, which
your very delightful conversation had made me almost forget," said
Heathcote.

Eugène acknowledged the compliment with a smile.

"I am very anxious to become the possessor of a few of your sketches in
black and white, colour, pencil, what you will. There is no kind of art
that I love better than those first airy fancies of the painter's mind,
those jottings of inspiration. I am the possessor of a few very nice
things in that way"--this was strictly true--"sketches by Mulready,
Leslie, Maclise, and many other of our English artists. I should much
like to add yours to my collection."

Eugène Tillet's sallow cheeks flushed faintly at the compliment. It was
very long since any one had offered to buy the work of his brush or his
pencil. It was very long since he had touched money of his own earning.
And here was an English milord, an enthusiastic simpleton, ready to
give him gold and silver for the sweepings of his studio. His pale
cheeks flushed, his faded eyes kindled at the thought. His hands were
tremulous as he unlocked a cupboard, and drew forth three or four dusty
sketch-books from the place where they had lain for the last ten years,
neglected, forgotten, counted as mere lumber.

His hand had long lost its cunning, and, in that slough of despond into
which he had gone down, he had lost even the love of his art. It has
been said that an artist may lose in a twelvemonth the manipulative
power, which it has cost him many years to acquire; and it is a
certainty that Eugène Tillet's hand could not, for the offer of
thousands, have produced anything as good as the worst of the drawings
in those half-forgotten sketch-books.

"If we can find anything in these books that you would care to
possess," he said, laying the dusty volumes in front of Heathcote. "You
had better wait till I get them dusted for you."

But Heathcote was too eager to endure delay. He wiped off some of the
dust with his cambric handkerchief, and opened the uppermost volume.

The sketches were full of talent, intensely interesting to any
lover of art. They were sketches over which Edward Heathcote would
have lingered long, under other circumstances. As it was, he had
considerable difficulty in concealing his impatience, and appearing
interested in the book on artistic grounds. He remembered himself so
far as to select two pencil sketches of girlish faces before he closed
the first volume, which contained no drawing that bore upon the object
of his search.

The second was also a blank; but from this Heathcote chose three or
four clever caricatures, which the painter cut out at his request.

"You must kindly put down your own price for these things," he said, as
he opened the third volume.

On the second page he saw the face he had been looking for, the face
he had expected to see. But, although this thing did not come upon
him as a surprise; although that pencilled likeness, the last link of
the chain, served only to confirm the settled conviction which had
gradually taken possession of his mind, the shock was sharp enough
to drive the blood from his face, to set his heart beating like a
sledgehammer.

It was so, then. It was as he had thought, ever since his conversation
with Barbe Leroux. This was the man. This was Marie Prévol's lover, and
her murderer. This was the cold-blooded assassin of Léonie Lemarque.

He sat silent, breathless, staring blankly at the face before him: a
vigorous pencil-drawing of strongly marked features, eager eyes under
drooping hair, a sensitive face, a face alive with passionate feeling.
The eyes looked straight at the spectator; the lips seemed as if, in
the next instant, they would move in speech. The attitude was careless,
hands clasped on the back of a chair, chin resting on the clasped
hands, the whole bust full of power and intention. Yes, just so might
an ardent thinker, an eloquent speaker have looked at one of those
midnight gatherings of wits and romancers. The sketch was evidently an
immediate reminiscence, and must have been made when the subject was a
vivid image in the artist's mind.

Happily for Heathcote's secret, his agitation entirely escaped Eugène
Tillet's notice. The painter was dreamily contemplating the sketches
he had just cut out of his book, and thinking what a great man he had
been when he had made them.

"I should like to have this one," said Heathcote, when he had recovered
himself, "and this, and this, and this," he added, turning the leaves
hastily, and choosing at random, so as to make that first choice less
particular.

Monsieur Tillet cut out all that were indicated to him.

"That is the man I was talking to you about," he said, as he laid the
portrait of Georges with the rest of the sketches. "It is a wonderful
likeness, too, an extraordinary likeness, dashed off at a white heat
one morning, after I had been particularly impressed by the charm of
his society. He was a man in a thousand, poor devil. A pity that he
should have got himself into such a disagreeable scrape later. But he
was a fool for running away. He ought to have given himself up and
stood his trial."

"Why?"

"Because he would have inevitably been acquitted. You may murder
anybody you like in France, if you can show a sentimental motive for
the crime; and this business of poor Georges was entirely a sentimental
murder. He would have had the press and the public with him. The
verdict would have been 'Not Guilty.' The populace would have cheered
him as he left the _Palais de Justice_, the press would have raved
about him, and he would have been the rage in Parisian society for a
month afterwards."

"But you who knew both the victims; you who had received kindnesses
from Maxime de Maucroix--surely you cannot judge that double murder
with so much leniency," expostulated Heathcote.

The painter shrugged his shoulders with infinite expression.

"Maxime de Maucroix was a most estimable young man," he said, "but what
the devil was he doing in that galley?"

"And now if you will kindly tell me the sum-total of my small
purchases, I shall have great pleasure in giving you notes for the
amount," said Heathcote, shocked at the Frenchman's cynicism.

Monsieur Tillet handed him his hastily jotted account. The prices he
had put upon his sketches were extremely modest, considering the man's
egotism.

The amount came in all to less than a thousand francs, but Heathcote
insisted upon making the payment fifteen hundred, an insistence which
was infinitely gratifying to fallen genius.

"I shall remember, Monsieur, on my death-bed, that there was an
Englishman who appreciated my work when my countrymen had forgotten
me," he said, with mingled pathos and dignity. "Allow me to put up the
sketches for you. I do not think you will ever regret having bought
them."

While Eugène Tillet was searching among the litter of papers,
wood-blocks, and Bristol-board upon his son's table, in the hope
of finding two stray pieces of cardboard within which to guard his
sketches, the door was quickly opened, and two girls came into the room.

The first was Mathilde Tillet, the second was Heathcote's sister.

"Hilda!" he exclaimed.

Hilda stood before him in silence, with drooping head, pale with
surprise and embarrassment.

"Somebody told you I was here," she faltered at last.

"Nobody told me," he answered, smiling at her confusion. "I have not
even been looking for you, or making inquiries as to your whereabouts.
Your letter was so very self-assertive, you seemed so completely
mistress of the situation, that I felt it would be folly to interfere
with you. As I opposed you when you wanted to marry Bothwell Grahame,
it would be very inconsistent of me to oppose your renunciation of him."

Hilda gave a faint sigh. This speech of her brother's was reassuring,
but it implied discredit to Bothwell. She would fain have stood up for
her true knight, would fain have praised him whom she had forsaken; but
she felt it was safer to hold her peace. By and by, when her sacrifice
was completed, and when Bothwell Grahame was Lady Valeria's husband,
she could afford to defend his character.

"No, my dear child, our meeting is quite accidental. I came here to see
Monsieur Tillet's drawings."

"Our young friend is known to you, Monsieur?" inquired Eugène Tillet,
who had looked on with some appearance of interest at a conversation of
which he did not understand a word.

This Mr. Heathcote was evidently Hilda's brother, of whom Mdlle. Duprez
had spoken before she introduced her _protégée_ to the family circle.

"Your young friend is my sister, Monsieur," answered Heathcote; "and
since she was determined to run away from home, I am glad she fell into
such good hands."

"And now you have found her you are going to carry her off, I suppose,"
said Tillet. "It will be a pity, for I hear that her talents have
made a strong impression upon one of the cleverest professors at the
Conservatoire, and that she may do great things with her voice if she
pursue her studies there. My young people will be in despair at losing
her."

"They shall not lose her quite immediately," replied Heathcote, "though
if she is bent upon studying at the Conservatoire, I think it would be
better for her to have her old governess to look after her in Paris."

"Fräulein Meyerstein!" exclaimed Hilda. "She would worry me out of
my life. She would talk about--about--the past." She could not bring
herself to mention Bothwell's name just yet. "My only chance of ever
being happy again is to forget my old life. There is some possibility
of that here, among new faces and new surroundings. And they are all so
kind to me here--Madame Tillet is like a mother."

All this was said hurriedly in English, while Monsieur Tillet
discreetly occupied himself putting away his sketch-books. Mathilde had
withdrawn, and was telling her mother about the unpleasant surprise
that had greeted her return.

"How did you come to know these people?" asked Heathcote.

"Mdlle. Duprez brought me here. She has known the Tillets all her life.
She will answer to you for their respectability."

"Well, we will think about it. Let me look at you, Hilda. You are not
very blooming, my poor child. It does not seem to me that Paris agrees
with you over well."

"Paris agrees with me quite as well as any other place," she answered
quietly.

He took her hand and led her to the window, and looked thoughtfully
into the sad, pale face, with its expression of settled pain. Yes, he
knew what that look meant; he had experienced that dull, slow agony
of an aching heart. She had surrendered all that was dearest in life,
and she must live through the aching sense of loss, live on to days of
dull contentment with a sunless lot. He who himself had never learned
the lesson of forgetfulness was not inclined to think lightly of his
sister's trouble.

"You look very unhappy, Hilda," he said. "I begin to question the
wisdom of your conduct. Do you believe that Bothwell really cared more
for this audacious widow than for you?"

"He had been devoted to her for years," answered Hilda. "I saw his
letters; I saw the evidence of his love under his own hand. He wrote to
her as he never wrote to me."

"He was younger in those days," argued Heathcote. "Youngsters are fond
of big words."

"Ah, but that first love must be the truest. I never cared for any one
till I saw Bothwell; and I know that my first love will be my last."

"I hope not," said Heathcote. "I hope you have acted wisely in your
prompt renunciation. There were reasons why I did not care for the
match."

"You surely have left off suspecting him," said Hilda, with an
indignant look. "You are not mad enough to think that he was concerned
in that girl's death!"

"No, Hilda, that suspicion is a thing of the past. And now let us talk
seriously. You have set your heart upon pursuing your studies at the
Conservatoire?"

"It is my only object in life."

"And you would like to remain in this family?"

"Very much. They are the cleverest, nicest people I ever knew--with the
exception of my nearest and dearest, you and Dora--and Bothwell. They
are all as kind to me as if I were a daughter of the house. The life
suits me exactly. I should like to stay here for a twelvemonth."

"That is a categorical answer," said Heathcote, "and leaves me no
alternative. I will make a few inquiries about Monsieur Tillet and his
surroundings, and if the replies are satisfactory you shall stay here.
But I shall send Glossop over to look after you and your frocks. It is
not right that my sister should be without a personal attendant of some
kind."

"I don't want Glossop. If she comes here, she will write to her friends
in Cornwall and tell them where I am."

"No, she won't. She will have my instructions before she leaves The
Spaniards. She shall send all her Cornish letters through me. And now
good-bye. It is just possible that I may not see you again before I
leave Paris."

"You are going to leave Paris soon?"

"Very soon."

"Then I suppose you have found out all you want to know about that poor
girl who was murdered?"

"Yes, I have found out all I want to know."

"Thank God! It was so terrible to think there were people living who
could suspect Bothwell."

"It is horrible to think there was any man base enough to murder
that helpless girl--a man so steeped in hypocrisy that he could defy
suspicion."

"You know who committed the murder?" inquired Hilda.

"I can answer no more questions. You will learn all in time. The
difficulty will be to forget the hideous story when you have once heard
it. Good-bye."

They were alone in the Tillet _salon_, Monsieur Tillet having retired
while they were talking. He reappeared on the landing outside to hand
Mr. Heathcote the parcel of sketches, and to make his respectful adieux
to that discerning amateur.

"Monsieur your brother is the most accomplished Englishman I ever met,"
said the painter to Hilda, when his visitor had disappeared in the
obscurity of the staircase.

He patted his waistcoat-pocket as he spoke. The sensation of having
bank-notes there was altogether new. He had been fed upon the fat of
the land by his devoted wife; he had been provided with petty cash by
his dutiful children; but to touch a lump sum, the price of his own
work, seemed the renewal of youth.

"Do you remember the curious name of that picture of Landseer's, _ma
chatte_?" he said, chucking his wife under the chin when she came
bustling in from her housewifely errands. "'Zair is lif in ze all dogue
yet.' Zair is lif in ze all dogue, _que voici_. See here, I have been
earning money while you have been _flânochant_."

He showed her the corner of the little sheaf of notes, coquettishly.
She held out her hand, expecting to be intrusted with the treasure; but
he shook his head gently, smiling a tender smile.

"No, _mon enfant_, we will not trifle with this windfall," he said. "We
will treat it seriously; it shall be the nucleus of our future fortune,
_j'achèterai des rentes_."

The tears welled up to the wife's honest eyes, tears not of gratitude,
but of mortification. She knew this husband of hers well enough to be
very sure that every _sous_ in those bank-notes would have dribbled out
of the painter's pockets in a few weeks; and that no one, least of all
the squanderer himself, would know how it had been spent, or in what
respect he was the better for its expenditure.



CHAPTER IX.


WAITING FOR HIS DOOM.


Life for Dora Wyllard was more than ever melancholy after Hilda's
disappearance. The girl's companionship had been her only ray of
sunshine during this time of sorrow and anxiety. In her sympathy with
Hilda's joys and hopes she had been able to withdraw herself now and
then from the contemplation of her own misery. Now this distraction was
gone, and she was alone with her grief.

Julian Wyllard had shown much greater anger at Hilda's conduct than his
wife had anticipated. He had taken the lovers under his protection, he
had been curiously eager for their marriage, had talked of it, and had
hurried it on with an almost feverish impatience. And now he would not
hear of any excuse for Hilda's conduct.

"She has acted like a madwoman," he said. "When everything had been
arranged to secure her future happiness with Bothwell, her devoted
slave, she allows herself to be driven away by the audacity of a
brazen-faced coquette. I have no patience with her. But if Bothwell has
any brains, he ought to be able to find her in a week, and bring her to
her senses."

"Perhaps Bothwell may not care about running after her," speculated
Dora.

"O, a man who is over head and ears in love will endure any outrage. He
is a slavish creature, and the more he is trampled upon the better he
loves his tyrant. It remains to be seen which of the two women Bothwell
would rather marry--Hilda, with her rustic simplicity, or the widow,
with her slightly damaged reputation and very handsome income."

"He does not waver for a moment between them."

"Ah, that is all you know; but if he does not give chase to Hilda, you
may be sure it is because in his heart of hearts he hankers after the
widow."

Bothwell had gone back to Trevena, intending to pay the builders for
the work they had done, and suspend the carrying out of the contract
indefinitely.

He would have to give them some compensation, no doubt, for delay; but
they were good, honest, rustic fellows, and he was not afraid of being
severely mulcted.

Julian Wyllard spoke of Bothwell and his love affairs with the
irritability of a chronic sufferer, and Dora listened and sympathised,
and soothed the sufferer as best she might. Her burden was very heavy
in these days. To see her beloved suffer and to be unable to lessen
his pain, that was indeed bitter. And in his case the palliating
drugs which deadened his agony seemed almost a worse evil than the
pain itself. The constant use of morphia and chloral was working its
pernicious effect, and there were times, when the sufferer's mind
wandered. There were dreams which seemed more agonising than wakeful
hours of pain. Dora sat beside her husband's couch and watched him
as he slept under the influence of morphia. She listened to his dull
mutterings, in French for the most part. He rarely spoke any other
language in that troubled state of the brain between dreaming and
delirium. It was evident to her that his mind, in these intervals of
wandering, habitually harked back to the days of his residence in
Paris, ten years ago. And his hallucinations at this time seemed always
of a ghastly character. The scenes he looked upon were steeped in
blood, doubtless a reminiscence of those hideous days of the Commune,
when Paris was given over to fire and carnage. She shuddered as she saw
the look of horror in his widely-opened yet sightless eyes--sightless
for reality, but seeing strange visions--shapes of dread. She shuddered
at the wild cry which broke from those white lips, the infinite pain in
the lines of the forehead, damp with the cold dews of anguish.

In his waking hours, when free from the influence of chloral, the
sufferer's brain was as clear as ever; but the irritation of his nerves
was intense. A sound, the slightest, agitated him. A footstep in the
corridor, a ring at the hall-door, startled him as if it had been a
thunder-clap. His senses seemed always on the alert. There was no
middle state between that intense activity of brain and the coma or
semi-delirium which resulted from opiates.

Sir William Spencer had been down to Penmorval twice since the
invalid's return, but his opinion had not been hopeful on either
occasion. On the second time of his coming he had seen a marked
change for the worse. The malady had made terrible progress in a
short interval. And now, on this dull gray autumn afternoon, within
twenty-four hours of Heathcote's visit to the Rue du Bac, the famous
physician came to Penmorval for the third time, and again could only
bear witness to the progress of evil.

Wyllard insisted upon being alone with his physician.

"Sir William, I want you to tell me the truth about my case: the
unsophisticated truth. There will be no end gained by your withholding
it; for I have read up the history of this disease of mine, and I know
pretty well what I have to expect. A gradual extinction, disfigurement
and distortion of every limb and every feature, beginning with this
withered, claw-shaped hand, and creeping on and on, till I lie like an
idiot, sightless, speechless, tasteless, with lolling tongue dribbling
upon my pillow. And throughout this dissolution of the body I may
yet, if specially privileged, retain the faculties of my mind. I may
be to the last conscious of all that I have been and all that I am.
There is the redeeming feature. I shall perish molecule by molecule,
feeling my own death, able to appreciate every change, every stage
in the inevitable progress of corruption. That lingering process of
annihilation which other men suffer unconsciously underground I shall
suffer consciously above ground. That is the history of my case, I take
it, Sir William."

"There have been such cases."

"Yes, and mine is one of them."

"I do not say that. The fatal cases are certainly in the majority; but
there have been cures. Whatever medicine can do--"

"Will be done for me. Yes, I know that. But the utmost you have been
able to do so far has been to deaden pain, and that at the cost of some
of the most diabolical dreams that ever man dreamed."

"Let us hope for the best, Mr. Wyllard," replied the great physician,
with that grave and kindly tone which had brought comfort to so many
doomed sufferers, the indescribable comfort which a sympathetic nature
can always impart. "As your adviser, it is my duty to tell you that it
would be well your house were set in order."

"All has been done. I made my will after my marriage. It gives all
to my wife. She will deal with my fortune as the incarnate spirit of
justice and benevolence. I have supreme confidence in her wisdom and in
her goodness."

"That is well. Then there is no more to be said."

Ten minutes later the physician was being driven back to the station,
and Julian Wyllard was alone.

"'And Swift expires a driveller and a show,'" he repeated, in a tone of
suppressed agony. "Yes, that is the horror. To become a spectacle--a
loathsome object from which even love would shrink away with averted
eyes. That is the sting. Facial anæsthesia--every muscle paralysed,
every feature distorted. O, for the doomsman to make a shorter end
of it all! The face has been spared so far--speech has hardly begun
to falter. But it is coming--it is coming. I found myself forgetting
common words this morning when I was talking to Dora. I caught myself
babbling like a child that is just beginning to speak."

He took up a hand-mirror which he had asked his wife to leave near him,
and contemplated himself thoughtfully for some moments.

"No, there is no change yet in the face, except a livid hue, like a
corpse alive. The features are still in their right places, the mouth
not yet drawn to one side; the eyelids still firm. But each stage of
decay will follow in its course. And to know all the time that there is
an easier way out of it, if one could but take it, just at the right
moment, without being too much of a craven."

He glanced at the table by his sofa, a capacious table, holding his
books, his reading-lamp, and his dressing-case with its elaborate
appliances.

"If I did not want to know the issue of Heathcote's inquiries! If--O,
for some blow from the sledgehammer of Destiny, that would put an end
to all irresolution, take my fate out of my own hands! A blow that
would annihilate me, and yet spare her--if that could be."

A loud ringing at the hall-door sounded like an answer to an
invocation. Julian Wyllard lifted his head a little way from the
silken-covered pillows, and turned his haggard eyes towards the door
leading into the corridor.

After an interval of some moments there came the sounds of footsteps,
the door was opened, and the servant announced,

"Mr. Heathcote."

Heathcote stood near the threshold, hat in hand, deadly pale, grave to
solemnity, mute as death itself.

"You have come back, Heathcote?" asked the invalid, with an off-hand
air. "Then I conclude you have accomplished your mission, or reconciled
yourself to failure."

"I have succeeded in my mission beyond my hopes," answered Heathcote.
"But my success is as terrible to myself as it must needs be to
others."

"Indeed! Does that mean that you have solved the mystery of the French
girl's death?"

"It means as much, and more than that. It means, Julian Wyllard, that I
have solved the mystery of _your life_--that double life which showed
to the world the character of a hard-headed financier, passionless,
mechanical, while the real nature of the man, passionate, jealous,
vindictive, the lover and the slave of a beautiful woman, was known
to but a few chosen friends. It means that slowly, patiently, link by
link, detail after detail, I have put together the history of your
life in Paris--the secret door by which the financier left his lonely
office at nightfall, to drink the cup of pleasure with his mistress--or
his wife--and his boon companions. By the inevitable sequence of small
facts, by the agreement of dates, by a pencil sketch of the murderer's
face, made from memory, yet vivid as flesh and blood, I have been
able to identify you, Julian Wyllard, with the man who called himself
Georges, who was known to a few privileged Bohemians as the lover of
Marie Prévol, and who disappeared from Paris immediately after the
murder, so completely as to baffle the police. The murderer vanished
utterly, before the crime was twelve hours old; yet he was known to
have visited the grave of his victim up to March '74--the exact period
at which you, Julian Wyllard, left Paris for ever. It means that in
you, the man who came between me and the happiness of my life, who
stole my betrothed--in you, the successful speculator, the honoured of
all men, I have found the murderer of Léonie Lemarque and of her aunt
Marie Prévol, and of her aunt's admirer, Maxime de Maucroix. A man
must have a mind and heart of iron who could carry the consciousness
of three such murders with a calm front; who could clasp his innocent
wife to his breast, accept her caresses, her devotion, her revering
love--knowing himself the relentless devil that he is! Julian Wyllard,
thou art the man!"

"I am!" answered the white lips resolutely, while the haggard eyes
flashed defiance. "I am that man. I have obeyed my destiny, which was
to love with a desperate love, and hate with a desperate hate. I have
gratified my love and my hatred. I have lived, Heathcote; lived as men
of your stamp know not how to live; lived with every drop of blood in
my veins, with every beat of my heart: and now I am content to rot in a
dishonoured grave, the abhorred of pettier sinners!"

"Julian!"

A wail--a cry of agony from a despairing woman--sounded in the
utterance of that name.



CHAPTER X.


"ALIKE IS HELL, OR PARADISE, OR HEAVEN."


It was the despairing cry of a woman's breaking heart that came with
that low wailing sound from the curtained doorway. Dora had been
told of Heathcote's arrival, and had hurried from her dressing-room
on the further side of the bedchamber. She had reached the threshold
of the morning-room in time to hear Heathcote pronounce the dreadful
word "Murder," and she had heard all that followed. She had heard her
husband's proclaim himself triply an assassin.

"It is my wife's voice," said Wyllard quietly. "You knew that she was
there, perhaps. You wanted her to hear."

"I did not know she was there; but it would have been my duty to tell
her all I have discovered. She has lived under a delusion; she has
lived under the spell of your consummate hypocrisy. It is only right
that she should know the truth. Thank God, she has heard it from your
own lips."

"You have not forgotten the day when we were rivals for her love," said
Wyllard, with a diabolical sneer. "I won the race, heavily handicapped;
and now your turn has come. You have your revenge."

Heathcote was silent. His eyes were fixed upon the figure which
appeared against the glowing darkness of the plush curtain, and
came slowly, totteringly forward to Wyllard's couch, and sank in a
heap beside it. The white, set face, with its look of agony, the
widely-opened eyes, pale with horror, haunted him for long after that
awful hour. It was he who had brought this agony upon her, he who had
unearthed the buried skeleton, he who, going forth from that house to
do her bidding, her true knight, her champion, her servant, had come
back as the messenger of doom. Was he to blame that Fate had imposed
this hateful task upon him? He told himself that he was blameless; but
that she would never forgive.

"I congratulate you upon your perseverance and your success," said
Wyllard, after a pause. "You have succeeded where all the police of
Paris had failed. Was it love for my wife, or hatred for me, that stood
in the place of training and experience?"

"It was neither. It was the hand of Fate, the mysterious guiding of
Providence, which took me from stage to stage of that horrible story."

"And it was my wife--my redeeming angel--who sent you forth upon your
mission, who appealed to your love of the past as a claim on your
devotion in the present. There is the irony of Fate in that part of the
business," said Wyllard mockingly.

He had always hated Edward Heathcote; he had hated him even in the hour
of his own triumph as Dora's accepted lover; hated him because he had
once possessed Dora's love, but most of all because he had been worthy
of it.

Julian Wyllard's head leaned forward upon his folded arms, and for some
minutes there was silence in the room, save for the sound of suppressed
sobbing from that kneeling figure by the sick man's couch. The face of
the husband and the face of the wife were alike hidden. Dora's head
had fallen across her husband's knees, her hands were clasped above the
dark coils of her hair, in the self-abandonment of her agony.

Heathcote stood a little way off, feeling as if he were in the presence
of the dead. The mystery of those two hidden faces oppressed him. He
almost hated himself for this thing which he had done. He felt like
an executioner--a man from whom the stern necessity of his craft had
exacted a revolting service.

"Julian, is this true?" murmured Dora, after a long silence. "Is all or
any part of this dreadful story true?"

Her husband looked up suddenly, as if vivified by the sound of her
voice.

"What would you think of me if it were all or any of it true?" he asked
hoarsely. "Look up, Dora. Let me see your eyes as you answer me. I want
to know how I am to stand henceforth in the sight of the woman who once
loved me."

She lifted her head, and turned her deathlike face towards him,
tearless, but with a look of anguish deeper than he had ever seen
before on any human countenance.

That other look, that last look of Léonie Lemarque's, which had haunted
him waking or sleeping ever since the 5th of July, had been a look of
horrified surprise. But here there was the quiet anguish of a broken
heart.

"Who once loved you," she echoed. "Do you think such love as mine can
be thrown off like an old gown? Tell me the truth, Julian--it can make
no difference to my love."

Wyllard remained for some moments gazing dreamily at the low wood fire
opposite his couch, silent, as if looking into the pages of the past.

"Yes, your story is put together very cleverly," he said, "and it is
for the most part true. Yes, I am the murderer of Marie Prévol. I am
that jealous devil, who in an access of fury destroyed the life that
was dearer than his own. It was not that I believed her guilty. No, it
was the agonising knowledge that her love had gone from me, in spite of
herself--had gone to that younger, brighter, more fascinating lover.
I saw the gradual working of the change--saw coldness, dislike even,
creeping over her who had once tenderly rewarded my love--saw that
my coming was unwelcome, my departure a relief. She, who of old had
followed me to the threshold, had hung upon me with sweetest caresses
at the moment of parting, now could scarcely conceal her indifference,
her growing aversion. I saw all this, and Satan took hold of me. Again
and again I was on the verge of unpremeditated murder. My eyes grew
dim, veiled by a cloud of blood; but I held my hand before the deed
was done. I have had my grip upon her throat--that milk-white throat,
which was purer of tint and lovelier of form than that of the Louvre
Venus. I have seen the pleading eyes looking into mine, asking me for
mercy, and I have fallen at her feet and sobbed like a child. But
there came a time when this sullen devil of jealousy and hatred took
a firmer hold of me, and then I swore to myself that they should both
die. There was no help, no other cure. If she lived, she would leave
me for Maucroix. She, the wife I had honoured, would sink into the
mistress of a fop and a fribble, to be cast off when his fancy staled.
I knew that was inevitable, so I made up my mind, all of a sudden,
when I got wind of her intended jaunt to Saint-Germain, from the spy I
had employed to watch her. I put my revolver in my pocket, and followed
her to the station, disguised by a pair of dark spectacles and a style
of dress in which she had never seen me. I stood by the doorway of the
waiting-room, and saw her sitting side by side with her favoured lover,
they two as happy and as absorbed in each other as children at play in
a garden. You know all the rest. Yes, it was I who watched in front of
the Henri Quatre, saw those two laughing together in the candle-light:
it was I who sprang out of the thicket in the forest and shot them
down, one after the other, left them lying there side by side, dead.
I had a strange wild feeling of happiness as I rushed away into the
depths of the wood--a sense of triumph. I had won my love from her new
lover. She had been mine only; and she would be mine now until the end.
I had saved her from her own weakness--saved, her from the dishonour
which her folly must have made inevitable."

He paused for a few moments, but neither Dora nor Heathcote spoke, and
after the briefest silence he went on with his confession.

"I never meant to survive my victims, except just so long as would be
necessary to put my affairs in order, and to transfer my securities
to England, where those of my own flesh and blood might profit by my
fortune. In order to do this I got quietly back to Paris, and began to
take up the threads of my business life with a view to closing the book
for ever. You know enough of my character and my history to understand
that I have always had perfect command over my emotions, and you will
therefore believe that I was able to go about my daily business, to mix
with my fellow-men, with as serene a manner and countenance as if not
a ripple of passion had crossed the stagnant surface of my plodding
nature. I had so trained myself that the man of passion and emotions
was one being, and the man of business another, a creature totally
apart. And now, for a while at least, the man of feeling was dead and
buried, and only the money-making automaton remained.

"It happened at that time that a cloud of disaster swept over the Paris
Bourse. Had I wound up my affairs at that period, I should have been
a heavy loser; and I, to whom the science of finance was a passion,
could not submit to losses which I knew how to avoid. So I delayed the
settlement of my affairs, and even allowed myself to be tempted into
fresh enterprises. Yet scarcely a night passed on which I did not look
at my pistols before I lay down to rest, and long for the time when I
should feel myself free to end my miserable life."

"And in those days you went frequently to the cemetery, to place your
tribute of roses on your victim's grave," said Heathcote.

"It was the only mark of affection I could show to the woman my love
had killed," answered Wyllard; "the only token of respect for my wife."

"Your wife?" exclaimed the other. "Then Barbe Girot was right in her
supposition. You loved Marie Prévol well enough to marry her."

"I loved her too well to degrade her," answered Wyllard. "It was
in the flood-tide of my financial success, when I was almost drunk
with fortune, and had not one thought above money-making, that Marie
Prévol's face awakened me to a new life. That lovely face--so like
yours, Dora--yes, it was the likeness to my good angel of the past
that drew me to you, my good angel of the present, my comforter, my
better-self. O, but for that second unpremeditated crime, the evil work
of a moment's savage passion, I might have gone down to the grave in
peace, believing that I had expiated that first murder, atoned for that
double bloodshed by the agonies that had gone before and after it. But
that last crime wrecked me. It revealed the blackness of my diabolical
nature--a nature in which the evil is inherent, the good only the
effect of education and surroundings.

"Yes, she was my wife, and I gave her all honour and reverence due
to a wife: though it was my caprice, my false pride perhaps, to keep
my relations with her a profound secret. I had won my reputation in
Paris as the stolid, unemotional Englishman; a man of iron, a creature
without passions or human weaknesses, a calculating machine. It was
this reputation which had helped most of all to bring me wealth. To be
known all at once as the lover and the husband of a beautiful actress
would have been social, and might have been financial, ruin. The men
who had trusted me with their money to stake on the speculator's wheel
of fortune would have withdrawn their confidence. I should have been
left to fight single-handed on my own capital, and my own capital,
large as it was by this time, was not large enough for my schemes.
The Crédit Mauresque was then in the front rank of public favour,
and it was generally considered that I was the Crédit Mauresque. Any
weakness on my part and the bubble would have burst. So I planned
for myself a dual existence. By day I was the cool-headed financier;
but when the stars were high and the lamps lighted I was Georges,
the American-Parisian, the Eccentric and Bohemian--the friend and
entertainer of a little band of choice spirits, journalists, musicians,
painters--the lover, husband, slave of Marie Prévol. Ah, Dora, for the
first two years of that midnight life there was compensation in it for
all the restraints of the day, for the anxiety, the fever, the fret of
a speculator's hazardous career.

"Yes, she was my wife. I married her in a village church in the Lake
country; a quiet little church half hidden among the hills which
encircle Derwentwater--a sweet spot. Do you remember once asking me
to take you to the English Lakes, Dora? I had to invent an excuse for
refusing. I could not revisit those scenes, even with you."

Again there was silence, broken only by the sound of Dora's weeping.
She was still on her knees beside her husband's couch; her hand still
clasped his. Not all the horror that had been revealed to her could
change her love to hate or scorn. Deepest pity filled her breast.
She, to whose nature deeds of violence were altogether alien, could
yet enter into and sympathise with the feelings of this sinner, whose
fatal passions had sunk him in an abyss of crime. She pitied him, and
clung to him, ready with words of comfort whenever such words might
be spoken. Even in her silence the very touch of her hand told of
consolation and of pity.

"I married my love in that quiet village church--married her under my
assumed name of Gustave Georges; but the marriage was sound enough in
law, and for me it meant a life-long bond. I had found Marie Prévol
pure and innocent in the tainted atmosphere of a Parisian theatre,
a creature incapable of guile. I honoured her for that innate purity
which was independent of surroundings and circumstances, which had
passed unscathed through the fiery-furnace of Bohemian Paris. The
first years of our wedded life were full of happiness, steeped in a
love which knew no change or diminution. My darling seemed to me, day
by day, more adorable, and it may be that the secrecy of my double
life, the long hours of severance, the narrow circle in which Marie
and I lived when we were together--it may be that these circumstances,
and the strangeness of our relations, intensified my passion, lending
to our wedded bliss all the charm of mystery and romance. Ah, how
sweet were our brief holidays at Biarritz or Pau, our wanderings in
picturesque old Spain, far away from the beaten tracks, choosing mostly
those places to which the world did not go! So far as it went, that
life of ours was a perfect life; and I was fool enough to think that it
would last for ever."

He sighed, and sank for some moments into a dreamy silence, his eyes
fixed in a vision of that past existence.

"My wife had an intense delight in the theatre, and her successes
there. She was never a famous actress; but her beauty had made her the
rage. She had a birdlike soprano voice, and a bewitching manner. She
was one of those adorable actresses who enchant their audience without
ever losing their own individuality. She was always Marie Prévol;
but the public wanted her to be nothing else. As I kept her entirely
secluded from society for my own reasons, I could not deny her the
pleasure of pursuing her profession. It pleased her to earn a handsome
salary, to know that she was not entirely dependent on me, to be able
to help her mother, who was a harpy, continually taking money from me.
So she remained on the stage, to my destruction; for it was there that
Maucroix saw her; and it was because she was an actress that he dared
to pursue her with attentions which she at first repulsed, but which
she afterwards encouraged.

"No, Dora, I will not dwell upon that hideous time, those days and
nights of madness and despair. I saw her love going from me. I saw
the subtle change from affection to indifference, from indifference
to fear, from fear to disgust, and then to horror. She was kind to me
still, from a sense of duty, meek, obedient, a gentle yielding wife.
But I saw her shiver at my approach; I felt her hand grow cold in mine;
I found repulsion instead of warm confiding love. Nor was I allowed
long to remain in ignorance as to the cause of the change. A kind
friend of mine was also an acquaintance of Maucroix. He informed me of
the young man's passion for Marie, of his having sworn to win her at
any cost--yes, even at the cost of the coronet which he had the power
to bestow upon her. He was independent, rich, able to do as he liked
with his life. He was one of the handsomest young men in Paris, and
was said to be the most fascinating. And I was a hard-headed man of
business, anxious, brain-weary, long past the flush of hopeful youth.
Could I wonder that Marie turned from me to her young adorer? I gave
her all credit for having struggled against her infatuation, for having
been true to her duty as a wife even to the last; but she had ceased
to love me, and the day was at hand when the barriers would be broken,
when that impassioned woman's heart of hers, that fond impulsive
nature, whose every pulse I knew, would yield at a breath, and she whom
I worshipped would fall to blackest depths of sin.

"Then, like Othello, I called this deed which I had to do, a sacrifice,
and not a murder.

"You have heard the story of my crime from the lips of your friend
here. He has unravelled the tangled skein with a wonderful ingenuity.
Yes, it was I who laid those roses on my victim's grave. I stayed in
Paris long enough to save appearances, the man Georges being supposed
to have fled to the utmost ends of the earth. I went about among my
fellow-men on the Bourse and in the clubs, and heard them discuss
the murder of Marie Prévol. Once I was told, by a man who had met me
as Georges, of my likeness to the supposed murderer; but those few
chosen friends who had known me as Georges were not men to be met on
the Bourse or in financial circles, and I had always eschewed mixed
society. My identity with the murderer was never suspected. I saved my
fortune, wound up my affairs, and left Paris, as I thought for ever,
went forth from that accursed city as I would have gone out of hell.
I came back to England with the brand of Cain, not upon my brow, but
upon my heart. I wandered in a purposeless fashion from place to place,
possessed of a restless devil. I had my office in London, where I tried
to find a distraction in the excitement of speculation, the financial
strategy which had once been my delight. Vain the effort. I was no
happier in London than I had been in Paris, within a few minutes walk
of the house that had sheltered my wife, the secret home in which I had
been so happy.

"Haunted always by the same dark thoughts, seeing only one image
amidst every change of surroundings, I came at last to this fag-end
of England. The rugged scenery, the wild coast-line, the sparsely
populated moors and fells pleased me better than anything I had
seen on this side of the Channel. The landscape harmonised with my
melancholy thoughts, and exercised a soothing influence upon my mind.
I became more reconciled to my life. Conscience, as you, Dora, or you,
Heathcote, may accept the word, had troubled me but little. I had
exercised what I held to be my right--my right to slay the woman who
had broken my heart, the man who had spoiled my life. I was oppressed
by no particular horror at the thought of blood-guiltiness. The agony
from which I suffered was the loss of Marie's love, the loss of the
woman who had once filled my life with happiness.

"I took kindly to your native soil, Dora. It might be a foreshadowing
of the love which was to gladden my latter days. My mind grew clearer,
the burden seemed to be lifted from me. And then in a happy hour I met
_you_.

"Do you remember that first meeting, Dora?"

"Yes, I remember," she said softly, her head drooping upon her
husband's pillow, her face hidden, an attitude of mourning, like a
marble figure bending over a funeral urn.

"It was in the picture-gallery at Tregony Manor. I had been taken there
as a stranger by the Rector of the parish, to see a famous Wouvermans.
Your mother received me in the friendliest spirit; and while we were
talking about her pictures you appeared at the other end of the
gallery, a girlish figure in a white gown, carrying your garden-hat in
your hand, surprised at seeing a stranger."

"I remember how you started, how oddly you looked at me," murmured his
wife.

"I was looking at a face out of the grave--the face of Marie Prévol;
younger, fresher, but not more innocent in its stainless beauty than
Marie's face when I first knew her. The likeness is but a vague one,
perhaps--a look, an air; but to me at that moment it struck home. My
heart went out to you at once. If my murdered wife had come back to me
in some angelic form, had offered me peace, and pardon, and the renewal
of love, I could not have surrendered myself more completely to that
superhuman bliss than I surrendered myself to you. I loved you from the
first, and swore to myself that you should be mine. I do not think I
used any dishonourable arts in order to win you."

"You knew that she was the betrothed of another man, knew that your
hands were stained with blood," said Heathcote, with suppressed
indignation. "Was there no dishonour in tempting a pure-minded girl
with your love? You, whose heart must be as a charnel-house!"

"I had put every thought of that dark past behind me before I entered
Tregony Manor. Was I a different man, do you think, because in one
dark hour of my life I had sinned against the law of civilised
society, and revenged my own wrongs according to the universal law
of unsophisticated mankind? I loved my new love not the less dearly
because of that crime. I loved her as women are not often loved. Dora,
speak to me; tell me if I have ever failed in any duty which a husband
owes to an idolised wife. Have I ever been false to the promises of our
betrothal?"

"Never; never, my beloved," murmured the low mournful voice.

"We might have lived happily to the end, perhaps, had Fate been kinder.
I had my dark dreams now and again, acted over my past crime, my old
agonies, in the helplessness of slumber; but this was only a transient
evil. My darling's influence could always soothe and restore me, even
in the darkest hour. All went well with me--better, perhaps, than life
goes with many a better man--until the fatal hour when I received a
letter from Marie Prévol's mother, written on her death-bed, asking me
to find a home in England for her orphan granddaughter, the child I had
heard of in the Rue Lafitte, and who had occasionally stayed there as
Marie's pet and plaything, but whom I had avoided at all times.

"I answered the letter promptly, in my character of a friend of
the missing Georges. It was in this character that I had contrived
from time to time to send money for the relief of Madame Lemarque's
necessities. I sent money to bring the girl to London, and arranged to
meet her at the railway-station. That was when I went ostensibly to buy
the famous Raffaelle, Dora. I was somewhat uncertain as to my plans for
the girl's future; but I meant kindly by her; I had no thought but of
being kind to her. If she should prove an amiable girl, with pleasing
manners, my idea was to bring her to this neighbourhood, to get her
placed as a nursery governess somewhere within my ken, to introduce her
to you, and to secure your kindness and protection for her. I had paid
for her education at a convent in Brittany; and I had been assured that
she left the convent with an excellent character. She was the only link
remaining with the terrible past, the only witness of my crime; but I
had been told that after her illness all memory of that crime had left
her. I had been assured that I should run no risk in having her about
me."

"Poor child," said Dora, with a stifled sob, recalling that summer
evening when Julian Wyllard came out of the station, a little paler
than usual, but self-possessed and calm, telling her in measured tones
of the calamity upon the line--the strange death of a nameless girl.

"I met her at Charing Cross in the early summer morning," he continued
quietly. "She was flurried and frightened--so frightened by the strange
faces and the strange language round about her, that she forgot to tell
me of the bag she had deposited in the waiting-room. But I succeeded in
putting her at her ease; and while she was taking breakfast with me in
a private room at the hotel, she told me all about her grandmother's
death, and her own education in the convent; what she could do in the
way of teaching. She was frank and gentle, and seemed a good girl, and
I had no thought but to do the utmost for her advantage. I could have
pensioned her and made her independent of all service; but I considered
that for a friendless girl there could be no better discipline than
the necessity of earning a living under reputable circumstances, and
protected by powerful friends.

"We drove together to Paddington--as your cabman informed you,"
continued Wyllard, addressing himself for an instant to Heathcote, whom
he for the most part ignored. "At Paddington I took a second-class
ticket for Plymouth, not quite resolved as to whether I should take
the girl on at once to Bodmin, or leave her in the care of the wife
of my frame-maker at Plymouth, an honest creature, who would, I knew,
be faithful to any trust I reposed in her. I put my _protégée_ in a
second-class carriage, in the care of some friendly people, and I rode
alone in a first-class compartment. I wanted to be free to think out
the situation, to decide on my line of conduct. I knew that she had
a packet of my letters--my early letters to Marie Prévol, written
without reserve, out of the fulness of my heart--letters identifying me
with the man Georges. It was vital that I should get these letters from
her before she left the railway-carriage. Yet, with a curious weakness,
I delayed making the attempt till we came to Plymouth. There would be
fewer people in the carriages then, I thought. It would be easier for
me to be alone with Léonie. I had by this time decided upon taking her
on to Bodmin, and finding her a temporary home in my steward's family.

"At Plymouth I left my own compartment, intending to go straight to
the second-class carriage in which I had placed Léonie: but on the
platform I was met by people I knew, who detained me in conversation
till the train was within two minutes of starting. While I was talking
to these people I saw Léonie wandering up and down the platform in an
aimless way, perhaps looking for me. I had told her that I would let
her know when she had come to the end of her journey, and now she was
mystified by the delay, and feared that I had forgotten her. About one
minute before the starting of the train I escaped from my troublesome
friends, and got into an empty second-class, into which I beckoned
Léonie as she came along the platform.

"We crossed the bridge and came into Cornwall; and now there was but
the shortest time for me to explain my views as to the girl's future,
and to get from her those fatal letters, which told the history of my
love for Marie Prévol, my double life as her husband, and which, by the
evidence of my own handwriting, identified me with her murderer. I was
determined that Léonie should not leave the train with that packet in
her possession, but I anticipated no difficulty in getting it from her.

"I told her my views, promised her that I would be to her as a guardian
and friend, so long as she should deserve my protection, assured her
that the happiness and prosperity of her future life were contingent
only on her good conduct. And then I asked her for the packet which
Madame Lemarque had told her to deliver to me. But to my astonishment
she refused to give it to me. Her grandmother had told her that she
was never to part with those letters. She was to keep the packet
unopened so long as I was kind to her, so long as she was protected by
my care; but if at any time I withdrew my help from her, and she was
in difficulty or want, she was then to open the packet and read the
letters. Her own good sense would tell her how to act when she had read
them. In a word, the letters were to remain in this girl's possession
as a sword to hang over my head.

"I tried to make the girl understand the infamy of such a line of
conduct--tried to make her see that her grandmother had schooled her in
the vilest form of _chantage_. 'You see me willing to help you freely,
generously, for the sake of an old friend,' I said; 'and surely you
would not use these letters as a lever to extort money from me.' All my
arguments were useless. The discipline of the convent had taught the
girl blind and implicit obedience to priests and parents. She would not
consider anything except the fact that certain instructions had been
given to her by her dying grandmother, and that her duty was to obey
those instructions.

"I was patient at the beginning; but the unhappy creature's dogged
resistance made my blood boil. Passion got the better of me. I caught
her by the shoulder with one hand, while I snatched the packet from
her feeble grasp with the other. I was beside myself with rage. While
I bent over her, holding her as in a vice, she gave a sudden shriek, a
shriek of horrified surprise.

"'The face in the wood,' she cried, 'the murderer! the murderer!'

"My hand relaxed its grip; she broke from me, and dashed open the
door of the carriage. 'I will tell people what you are!' she gasped,
breathless with fury. 'You shall not escape. Yes, I remember your face
now--the face I saw in my dreams--the savage face in the wood.'

"She was on the footboard, clinging to the iron by the window,
muttering to herself like a mad thing. God alone knows what she
meant to do. She wanted to make my crime known, to bring the train
to a standstill, to have me arrested then and there. While she stood
wavering on that narrow ledge, her life hanging by a thread, the train
rounded the curve and passed on to the viaduct. The stony gorge was
below, deep and narrow, like an open grave--tempting me--tempting me
as Satan tempts his own. One sudden movement of my arm, and all was
over. I had held her, for the first few moments. I had tried to save
her. Had she been reasonable, I would have saved her. But there was
no middle course. Ruin, unutterable ruin for me, or death for her.
One motion of my arm, and she was gone. Light as a feather, the frail
little figure fluttered down the gorge. Another minute, and the train
stopped. I had my railway-key ready before the stoppage, and did not
lose an instant in getting along the off-side of the line back to the
compartment I had left. Every head without exception was turned towards
the side on which the girl had fallen. The only witness of my crime
had been destroyed, and my letters were safe in my own keeping, to be
burned at the earliest opportunity."

"You burned them that night," said Dora. "I remember. And that tress of
hair which you were looking at when I went into the library--"

"Was cut from Marie's head after death. The mother had placed it
amongst those fatal letters. That night, after an interval of years, I
touched the soft bright hair on which my hand had so often lingered in
adoring love--that lovely hair which my hand had stained with blood."

There was no more to be told. An awful silence followed, a silence in
which even Dora's sobs no longer sounded. There was a tearless agony
which was deeper than that passion of tears.

She rose from her knees and turned towards Heathcote, white to the
lips, icy cold, looking at him as if he had been a stranger, and as if
she expected no more mercy from him than from a stranger.

"What are you going to do?" she asked. "You have come here alone; but
perhaps there are people waiting outside--policemen, to take my husband
to prison. He cannot run away from them; your victim is quite helpless."

"My victim? O Dora, how cruel that sounds from you!"

"Yes, I know," she said hurriedly. "I asked you to find out the mystery
of that murder, and you have obeyed me. My husband--my husband an
assassin!" she cried, flinging her clasped hands above her head in an
access of despair; "my husband, whom I believed in as the noblest and
best of men. He was tempted to blackest sin--tempted by the madness
of jealousy, wrought upon afterwards by a sudden panic. He was not a
despicable sinner--not like the man who poisons his friend, or who
kills the helpless for the sake of money. It was an ungovernable
passion which wrecked him--it was a fatal love which led him to crime.
Heathcote," falling at his feet with a wild cry of appeal, "have mercy
on him; for my sake, have mercy. Think of his helplessness. Remember
how low he has been brought already--how heavily God's hand has been
laid upon him. Have mercy."

Heathcote lifted her from her knees, as he had done once before in his
life, when she pleaded to him for pardon for her own falsehood.

"I would not hurt a snake if you loved it, Dora," he said. "Neither you
nor your husband have anything to fear from me. Parisian juries are
very merciful; but I will not submit Mr. Wyllard to the inconvenience
of a trial. As for the episode upon the railway--we will try to
think _that_ an accident, an unlucky impulse, unpremeditated, falling
considerably short of murder. No, Dora, I do not intend to deliver
up your husband to the law. The one person who has the highest right
to cry for vengeance has learnt the sublimity of submission to the
Divine Will. I have seen the widowed mother of Maxime de Maucroix; and
from her lips I have heard the reproof of my own revengeful feelings.
But although I am content to be silent, it would be well for Julian
Wyllard, when he shall feel the hand of death upon him, to write
the admission of his guilt; since that alone can thoroughly clear
your cousin Bothwell before his fellow-men. So dark a suspicion once
engendered may hang over a man for a lifetime."

"I will bear in mind your thoughtful suggestion," said Wyllard. "I
thank you, Heathcote, for your mercy to a fallen foe. A wretch so
abject, so smitten by the hand of Fate, would be too mean a creature
for your revenge. You are not like the noble Achilles, and would hardly
care to drag a corpse at your chariot-wheel, and wreak your rage upon
impotence. The play is played out, the lights are down. Let the curtain
fall in decency and silence. For _her_ sake be merciful."

"Make your peace with your offended God, if you can," answered
Heathcote. "You have nothing to fear from me."

He moved slowly towards the door, and at the last turned and held out
his hand to Dora. She hesitated for an instant, looking at her husband.

"Give him your hand, Dora," said Wyllard. "I can bear to see you
clasp hands with the man who has read the riddle of Léonie Lemarque's
death. I have come to a stage at which life and death make but little
difference to me, and even shame is dead. Give him your hand. You may
need his friendship and protection some day when I am under ground,
and when people look at you with a morbid interest, as the murderer's
widow. It will be wise to shuffle off my tainted name as soon as you
decently can. Change it for a better name, Dora."

"Julian, how can you be so cruel?"

She was by his side again, with her hand in his, forgetful of all
things except her love for him, her pity for his pain. All her natural
horror at his guilt was not strong enough to extinguish her love,
or to lessen her compassion. As she had pitied him for his physical
infirmity, so she now pitied him for his mental infirmity--a mind
swayed to crime by undisciplined passions.

Heathcote left the room without another word. He had come there as the
messenger of Fate. He had no further business in that house.

He had heard from the butler that Sir William Spencer and the local
physician had been in consultation together that afternoon, and that
the man had gathered from their talk as they left the house that Mr.
Wyllard's illness was likely to end fatally, sooner than Sir William
had at first supposed.

"Give me my sleeping draught, and then go, Dora," said Wyllard, when he
and his wife were alone.

She prepared to obey him. The nurse was taking her rest at this hour,
and it was the wife's privilege to attend upon her husband. The morphia
sleeping draughts had been administered with rigid care, Dora herself
watching the allotment of every bottle, lest the unhappy sufferer
should be tempted to take an overdose and end the tragedy of pain.
Once, when she had betrayed her anxiety by a word spoken unawares,
she had seen a curious smile upon her husband's pale lips, a smile
that told her he had read her thoughts; and now she felt the peril of
suicide was a much nearer dread. What had he to live for now--he who
stood confessed a murderer, before the wife who had revered him?

The sleeping draughts had been sent in from the local doctor, half a
dozen at a time, the patient taking two and sometimes three in the
course of the day and night. Dora kept them under lock and key in
the cabinet, where she kept her drawing materials, an old tulip-wood
cabinet of Dutch inlaid work that stood in a corner of the room, at
some distance from the sick man's sofa.

On the table by his side stood his dressing-case, with its glittering
array of silver-gilt-topped bottles--eau de cologne, toilet vinegar,
sal volatile. His medicine glass was on the same table.

And now, while Dora stood with her face towards the cabinet, Wyllard's
crippled hands were busied with one of those bottles in the
dressing-case. With a wonderful swiftness and dexterity, taking into
account the condition of his hands, he drew out one of the smallest
bottles in the case, and unscrewed the stopper. The bottle contained
about half an ounce of a clear white liquid.

Wyllard poured this liquid into a glass, which he held ready for Dora
when she brought him the sleeping draught. The colourless liquid would
have hardly showed in the bottom of the glass under any circumstances,
but Wyllard was careful to screen it with his hand.

Dora poured out the sleeping draught, looking at him all the while in
saddest silence. What could she say to him from whose familiar face the
mask had fallen? The husband she had loved and honoured was lost to
her for ever. The helpless wretch lying there was a stranger to her; a
sinner so begrimed with sin that only the infinite compassion of woman
could behold him without loathing.

"I drink this to your future happiness, Dora," he said solemnly, "and
remember that at my last hour I blessed you for your goodness to a
great sinner."

There was that in his tone which warned her of his purpose. She flung
out her arms, trying to seize the hand that held the glass, before he
could drink. But the table was between them, and the glass was at his
lips when he finished speaking. He drained it to the last drop, gave
one long sigh, and fell back upon his pillow--dead.

       *       *       *       *       *

"Hydrocyanic acid," said the local practitioner when he came to look
at the corpse, "and a happy release into the bargain. I should like to
have given him an overdose of morphia myself, if the law of the land
would have allowed me; or to have operated on the base of his brain
and killed him tenderly in the interests of science, just to find out
whether Cruveilhier or Virchow was right in his theorising as to the
seat of the malady. I go for Virchow, backed by Gull."



CHAPTER XI.


"SWEET IS DEATH FOR EVERMORE."


Dismal hours, dreary days of monotonous melancholy, a hopeless
lassitude of mind and body, followed for Julian Wyllard's widow after
that awful sudden death. Every one was very kind; every one was
considerate; even the law was more than usually indulgent. The horror
of an inquest was spared to that desolate mourner. Things were made
very easy by Sir William Spencer's recent visit, by the fact that he
had been heard by the servants to pronounce Mr. Wyllard's condition
hopeless. Mr. Nicholls, the local practitioner, registered the cause
of death as muscular atrophy, and considered himself justified in so
doing, as to his mind suicide had been only a symptom of the malady,
a paroxysm of despair following quickly upon Sir William Spencer's
admission that the end was inevitable.

"If ever a man had a right to take his own life, that man had," said
Mr. Nicholls, when he argued the matter with his own conscience.

An inquest would have done good to nobody; but Mr. Nicholls was very
anxious for a post-mortem. He wanted to see if the muscles were much
wasted, if the medulla itself showed traces of disease--whether
Cruveilhier or Virchow had the best of the argument. But he was not
allowed this privilege.

Those early stages of bereavement, while the house was darkened--that
sunless autumn day on which the funeral train wound slowly over the
moor to the distant burial-ground, the reading of the will, the coming
and going of friends and legal advisers, were as an evil dream to
Dora Wyllard. She took no part in anything. She affected no interest
in anything. Just at the last she was asked if she would not like to
lay her offering upon the coffin--one of those costly wreaths, those
snow-white crosses of fairest exotics, which had been sent in profusion
to the wealthy dead--and she had shrunk from the questioner with a
shudder.

"Flowers upon _that_ coffin? No, no, no!"

Yet at the last moment, when the dismal procession was leaving the
hall, she appeared suddenly in the midst of the mourners, pale as
the dead, and broke through the crowd, and placed her tribute on the
coffin-lid, a handful of wild violets gathered with her own hands in
the melancholy autumn shrubberies. She bent down and laid her face upon
the coffin. "I loved you once!" she moaned, "I loved you once!" And
then kind hands drew her away, half-fainting, and led her back to her
room.

The blow had quite unsettled poor Mrs. Wyllard's mind, people said
afterwards, recounting this episode, at second, third, or fourth hand.
No one was surprised when she left Penmorval within a week of the
funeral, and went on the Continent with her two old servants, Priscilla
and Stodden.

Heathcote and Bothwell had planned everything for her, both being
agreed that she must be taken away from the scene of her sorrow
as speedily as the thing could be done; and she had obeyed them
implicitly, unquestioningly, like a little child.

What could it matter where she went, or what became of her? That was
the thought in her own mind when she assented so meekly to every
arrangement that was being made for her welfare. What grief that
ever widowed heart had to bear could be equal to her agony? It was
not the loss of a husband she had adored--that loss for this life
which might have been balanced by gain in a better life. It was the
extinction of a beloved image for ever. It was the knowledge that this
man, to whom she had given the worship of her warm young heart, the
enthusiastic regard of inexperienced girlhood, had never been worthy
of her love; that he had come to her weary from the disappointment of
a more passionate love than life could ever again offer to woman--the
first deep love of a strong nature--a love that burns itself into heart
and mind as aquafortis into steel. He had come to her stained with
blood-guiltiness--an unconfessed assassin--holding his head high among
his fellow-men, playing the good citizen, the generous landlord, the
patron, the benefactor--he who had slain the widow's only son. He had
lived a double life, hiding his pleasures, lest his gains should be
lessened by men's knowledge of his lighter hours. He, who had seemed to
her the very spirit of truth and honour, had been steeped to the lips
in falsehood--a creature of masks and semblances. This it was which
bowed her to the dust; this it was which weighed upon her spirits as no
common loss could have done.

With her own hands she explored her husband's desk and
despatch-boxes--the receptacles for all his more important papers--in
search of any written confession which should attest the dead man's
guilt, and for ever establish Bothwell's innocence. It would have been
unutterable agony to her to have made such a confession public--to have
let the curious eyes of the world peer in upon that story of guilt and
shame; yet had any such document existed, she would have deemed it her
duty to make it public--her duty to her kinsman, who had been made the
scapegoat of another man's crimes. Happily for her peace there was no
such paper to be found--not a line, not a word which hinted at the
dead man's secret; and happily for Bothwell the cloud that had hung
over him had by this time dispersed. The steadiness with which he had
held his ground in the neighbourhood, the fact of his engagement to
Miss Heathcote, had weighed with his Bodmin traducers; and those who
had been the first to hint their suspicions were now the readiest to
protest against the infamy of such an idea. Had Bothwell emigrated
immediately after the inquest at the Vital Spark, these same people
would have gone down to the grave convinced that he was the murderer.

But before the end of that year there occurred an event which was
considered an all-sufficient proof of Bothwell's innocence, and an easy
solution of the mystery of the unknown girl's death. A miner entered
a solitary farmhouse between Bodmin and Lostwithiel, in the dim gray
of a winter evening, and killed two harmless women-folk--an old woman
and a young one--for the sake of a very small booty. He was caught
red-handed, tried, convicted, and hanged in Bodmin Gaol: but although
he confessed nothing, and died a hardened impenitent miner, it was
believed by every one in the place that his was the pitiless hand which
had sent the French girl to her doom.

"She had a little bit o'money about her, maybe, poor lass, and he took
it from her, and when she screamed he pushed her out of the train.
Such a man would think no more of doing it than of wringing the neck
of a chicken," said an honest, townsman of Bodmin.

Thus having identified somebody as the murderer, Bodmin was content;
and Bothwell Grahame was more popular than he had ever been in the
neighbourhood. He gave the county town but little of his society,
notwithstanding this restoration to local favour. He rarely played
billiards at the inn, or loitered to gossip in the High Street. He
could not forget that people had once looked coldly upon him, that he
had suffered the shame of unjust suspicion. At Trevena he was happy,
for there no one had ever so wronged him; there he was a favourite with
everybody, from the rector to the humblest fisherman. At Trevalga, too,
and at Boscastle he had friends. He could afford to turn his back upon
the people who had been so ready to think evil of him.

One of Heathcote's first cares after the Penmorval funeral had been
to write to the Baronne de Maucroix. His letter was to the following
effect:

      "It is my grave duty to inform you, Madame, that the
      murderer of your son has confessed his crime, and also
      that he has escaped from all earthly tribunals to answer
      for his sins before the Judge of all men. A painful
      malady, from which he had been for some time a sufferer,
      ended fatally on the evening of the 19th inst., within
      the hour in which he confessed his guilt. His case had
      been pronounced hopeless by a distinguished physician;
      but it is just possible the shock caused by the
      unexpected revelation of his crime may have hastened his
      end.

      "Accept, Madame, my respectful homage, and permit me
      also to express my admiration of that truly Christian
      spirit which you evinced at our late interview. EDWARD
      HEATHCOTE."

By return of post Heathcote received an answer to his letter; but the
answer was not in the handwriting of the Baronne de Maucroix. That hand
was at rest for ever. The letter was from the Baronne's friend and
confessor, the curé of the village adjacent to her château.

      "Monsieur,--Under the sad circumstances prevailing at
      the château, I have taken it upon myself, with the
      permission of the late Baronne's legal representative,
      to reply to your polite communication, which was never
      seen by the eyes of my lamented friend and benefactress,
      Madame de Maucroix. Upon that very evening which you
      name in your letter as the date of the murderer's death,
      I called at the château, soon after vespers, according
      to my daily custom; being permitted at that period of
      the day's decline to enjoy an hour's quiet conversation
      with that saintly woman who has now been taken from us.
      I was ushered as usual into the _salon_, where I quietly
      awaited Madame de Maucroix's appearance, having been told
      that she was in her son's room, that apartment which she
      used as her oratory.

      "I knew that it was her custom to spend hours in that
      chamber of her beloved dead, absorbed in spiritual
      meditations; so I waited with patience, and without
      surprise, for more than an hour, musing by the fire.
      Then, wondering at this unusual forgetfulness in one
      always so considerate, I ventured to lift the _portière_
      and to pass through the intervening _salon_, which was in
      darkness, to the bedchamber, where, through the half-open
      door, I saw a lamp burning.

      "I pushed the door a little further open, and went
      in. The Baronne was on her knees beside the bed, her
      clasped hands stretched out straight before her upon the
      satin coverlet, her face leaning forward. I should have
      withdrawn in respectful silence, but there was something
      stark and rigid in the dear lady's attitude which filled
      me with fear. I wondered that she had not been disturbed
      by the sound of my footsteps, for my heavy shoes had
      creaked as I walked across the floor. I drew nearer to
      her. Not a breath, not a movement.

      "I bent over her and touched the clasped hands. They were
      still for ever in death. It was a peaceful, a blessed
      ending: such an end as they who best loved that noble
      creature would have chosen for her.

      "Accept, Monsieur, the assurance of my high
      consideration. PIERRE DUPLESSI."



CHAPTER XII.


"WHO KNOWS NOT CIRCE?"


The Cornish tors, those wild brown hills upon whose dark foreheads time
writes no wrinkles, were just one year older since Julian Wyllard's
death, and Bothwell Grahame was established in his house at Trevena as
an instructor of the embryo Engineer. Already two lads had gone forth
from Bothwell's house, after six months' training, and had done well at
Woolwich. Other lads were coming to him--sons of men he had known in
Bengal. He was on the high road to reputation.

After that first passionate disgust with all things, during which he
had stopped the builders, and prepared to quash that contract which he
had signed with such delight, there had come a more tranquil spirit;
and Bothwell Grahame had faced his last unexpected trouble with a
resolute mind.

A conversation which he had with Edward Heathcote soon after Julian
Wyllard's death had given him his first gleam of light. Heathcote spoke
to him hopefully of the future, and urged him to wait quietly.

"Your marriage will be so much the wiser, so much the more likely to
result in lasting happiness, for this delay," he said. "If you are as
loyal and staunch as I believe you to be; if it is really my sister you
would like to many, and not this fascinating widow, who woos you with
fortune in one hand and social status in the other; if you are really
bent upon sacrificing these good things for Hilda's sake, be sure she
will ultimately accept your sacrifice. In the mean time be patient, and
pursue your independent course. A woman always respects a man who can
live without her."

"But I cannot," answered Bothwell. "Life will be less than life to me
till Hilda and I are one."

"Don't let her know that, if you mean to be master of your fate in the
future," said Heathcote. "Time can be the only test of your truth. If
when a year is past you have not married Lady Valeria Harborough, the
chances are that my sister will begin to have faith in you. I know
that she loves you."

"Tell me where she is, that I may go to her--that I may convince her."

"I have promised to respect her secret," answered Heathcote firmly.

Bothwell accepted this friendly counsel with a good grace, went back to
his old lodgings at Trevena, set the builders at work again, spent his
days in the open air and his nights in hard study, ate little, slept
less, and looked like the ghost of his former self.

He saw no more of Lady Valeria; but a society paper informed him early
in November that she had taken a villa at Monaco. He could guess from
what fount of consolation she was obtaining oblivion of her griefs. Her
grace, her charm of manner, were dwelt upon fondly by the paragraphist.
She was leading a life of absolute seclusion on account of her recent
bereavement; but she was the admired and observed of all wherever she
appeared.

The succeeding paragraph told of Sir George Varney's residence at one
of the chief hotels. He was a distinguished figure at the tables, had
broken the bank on more than one occasion.

Bothwell smiled a cynical smile at the juxtaposition of those two names.

"I suppose the gentleman has forgotten his beating," he said to himself.

It was an infinite relief to him to know that Lady Valeria was on the
other side of the Channel, that her pale face could not rise before him
ghostlike amidst the home which she had ruined. He worked on with all
the better will at that embryo home of his for the knowledge that this
dreaded siren was far away--worked with such energy that the builders
were whipped out of their customary jog-trot, and laid bricks as bricks
were never laid before. Bothwell watched every brick, with a three-foot
rule in his hand, and pointed out every flaw in the setting. He paid
his builder promptly, as the work progressed, and gave him every
encouragement to be speedy.

The alterations and improvements in the old cottage were all completed
by the end of November, and the builders had finished the brickwork
of the new rooms. The old rooms were thoroughly dry and ready for
occupation before Christmas; and Bothwell spent his Christmas in his
own house, the first Christmas he had so spent, and a very dismal one.
But he had his dog, a devoted collie, the gift of Dora Wyllard; he had
his pipe and his books; and he made the best of his solitude. He had a
couple of lads--his first pupils--coming to him early in January, and
he wanted to air the house in his own person. He was a little proud of
this first house of his own, even in the midst of his sadness, as every
man is proud of the thing that he has created. He walked about the
rooms, opening and shutting doors and window-sashes, to see how they
worked. Needless to say that some of them did not work at all, and that
he had various interviews with foremen and carpenters, by whom a good
deal of tinkering had to be done before everything was ship-shape. That
was Bothwell's favourite expression. He wanted things ship-shape. "He
ought to call his house Ship-shape Hall," said the foreman.

Bothwell's chief delight was derived from his own little inventions
and contrivances, his shelves in odd corners, his pegs and books,
and ingenious little cupboards. These he gazed upon and examined
daily in silent rapture. When his two boys came to him--long-legged
brawny youths, with open countenances, grinning perpetually for
very shyness--he took them to see all the shelves and books, and
expounded his theories in relation to those conveniences. There was
not to be a slovenly corner in the house; every article was to have
its peg or book, or shelf or cupboard. Tennis-balls, rackets, foils,
single-sticks, skates, whips, guns, boots, caps, and gloves. Everything
was to be classified, departmented. Organisation was to be the leading
note.

Before a week was over, the boys had begun to adore Bothwell. They were
sporting, and could afford to keep horses; and Bothwell and they hunted
with fox-hounds and harriers all through that long winter, far into
the gladness of spring. The boys were always with their tutor. He had
no leisure in which to abandon himself to sadness; except when he shut
himself up in his study to write to his cousin Dora, who was living
in Florence, attended by the faithful Priscilla, who hated Italy as
the stronghold of the Scarlet Lady, and by Stodden, the old Penmorval
butler. Julian Wyllard's widow was living in absolute retirement,
broken-hearted, seeing no one, seen by no one. The society papers had
nothing to say about _her_.

From Bothwell, Heathcote sometimes heard of her, heard of her with an
aching heart. No message of friendship, no line of recognition had
there ever been for him in any of those letters to Bothwell, of which
he was generally told, some of which had been read to him.

Hilda had been quietly pursuing her studies at the Conservatoire
all this time, seeing a good deal of Parisian life in a very modest
way--that inner life of struggling artists and men of letters, and
their homely industrious families, a life in which she found much that
was intellectual, blended with a pleasant simplicity, an absence of all
pretence. She liked the Tillet girls, and she liked her surroundings;
while music, which had always been a passion with her, now became the
sole object of her existence.

"I suppose you will come back to The Spaniards some day, and take care
of the twins and me," her brother said to her when they met for an hour
in the August after Wyllard's death.

He had stopped in Paris to see Hilda, on his way to Switzerland.

"Yes, I shall go back to the old home--when Bothwell is married."

"That is rather hard lines for me, seeing that I don't believe Bothwell
has any idea of getting married to any one except you."

Hilda blushed, and then shook her head despondingly.

"Who can tell what he means to do?" she said. "General Harborough died
less than a year ago. Lady Valeria could scarcely marry within the
year."

"But if Bothwell meant to marry Lady Valeria, he would scarcely be
grinding lads at Trevena," answered Heathcote. "He has behaved so well
that I feel it my duty to plead for him."

Hilda put her arms round her brother's neck and kissed him, by way of
answer.

"Let me finish my studies at the Conservatoire; and then, at the
beginning of next winter, I will go back to The Spaniards, if you
still want me there. But perhaps you will have found another mistress
for the old house before that time."

"I know what you mean, Hilda," he answered gravely. "No, there is no
hope of that."

"Not yet, perhaps. It is too soon. Dora is too loyal and true to forget
easily. But the day will come when her heart will turn to her first
love. You have never ceased to care for her, have you, Edward?"

"No, dear; such a love as mine means once, and once only. My wife was
all goodness, and I was grateful to her, and fond of her--but that
affection was not like the old love, and it never extinguished the old
love."

"Be sure your reward will come in due time."

"I can afford to wait."

He went on to Switzerland, and from Switzerland strayed into Italy,
the St. Gotha route inviting him. He spent a month at Florence, and he
saw Dora Wyllard several times during that period, for half an hour at
a time. She had taken up her abode for the summer at an hotel--near
the Abbey of the Gray Monks, in the forest of Vallombrosa, a truly
romantic spot amidst wooded hills. Hither Edward Heathcote made
his pilgrimage, deeming himself richly rewarded by half an hour's
interview; but there was little in those interviews to stimulate hope.
The widow was bowed down by the burden of her sorrow. Her only feeling
in relation to Edward Heathcote was that he alone upon earth knew the
story of her husband's life, and that he alone could fully sympathise
with her in her hopeless misery.

       *       *       *       *       *

There are widows and widows. While Dora Wyllard was living alone among
the pines and chestnuts of the Apennines, seeing no one but monks and
occasional tourists, and religiously, avoiding the latter, Lady Valeria
Harborough was living up the Thames, in a neighbourhood which has of
late become so fashionable that it now ranks rather as an annexe to
West-End-London than as the country.

General Harborough's widow had hired one of the prettiest villas at
Marlow, a dainty bungalow, built by an artist, who soon tired of
his toy, and exchanged the villa for a house-boat, which was less
commodious and a good deal more unhealthy, but which possessed the
charm of not being rooted in the soil. The house had seemed perfect
when Lady Valeria took it, but she had sent down a West End upholsterer
with a keen eye for the beautiful to make all possible improvements;
and the result was a nest which might have satisfied a modern
Cleopatra. But it did not quite satisfy Lady Valeria, who found fault
with a good many things, and informed the upholsterer that although
his taste was fairly good, and his colouring well chosen, there was an
absence of originality in his work.

"I have seen other houses almost as pretty," she said, "and I have seen
drawing-rooms just like this, which is worse. I hate to live in rooms
like other people's."

The upholsterer murmured something about a royal princess and a royal
duchess, both of whom had condescended to express themselves pleased
at his decoration of their houses; but Lady Valeria froze him with her
look of scorn.

"I hope you don't compare me with royal princesses," she said
contemptuously. "They are accustomed to let other people think
for them, poor creatures, and they take anything they can get. No
one expects originality in a palace. I don't wish to grumble, Mr.
Sherrendale, but I am just a little disappointed in your work. It has
no _cachet_."

The upholsterer accepted his rebuke meekly, but with an air of being
wounded to the quick; and he took care to debit his wounded feelings
against Lady Valeria when he made out his bill.

That villa up the river in the lovely June and July weather seemed to
be in the midst of the world's fair. It was gayer than Park Lane--a
more concentrated gaiety. Pleasure wore her zone a little looser here
than in London. There was just a touch of Bohemianism. People dressed
as they liked, said what they liked, did as they liked. There were few
stately entertainments, few formal dinners, or smart dances; but every
one kept open house; there was a perpetual dropping in, or going and
coming, which kept carriages and horses at work all day between houses
and stations. The river was like a high-road, and half the population
lived in white flannel, and smart tennis frocks, and eccentric hats.
It was a world apart--a bright glad summer world in which there was no
such thing as thought or care; a world of shining blue water and green
meadows, dipping willows, rushy eyots, and hanging woods; a world in
which there were hardly any regular meals, only a perpetual picnic, the
popping of champagne corks heard in every creek and backwater, while
humbler revellers rested on their oars to drink deep of shandygaff; a
world musical every evening with glees, and songs, and serenades, to an
accompaniment of feathering oars.

In such a world as this Lady Valeria Harborough lived over again the
same kind of life she had lived at Simla--but not quite the same; for
at Simla she had maintained her dignity as General Harborough's wife;
she had received the worship of her admirers as a queen in the old
days of chivalry might receive the homage of true knights. Now she had
a different air; and the homage that was offered was of a different
quality. That winter of widowhood at Monaco, with her staunch ally
Sir George Varney in constant attendance upon her, had made a curious
change in Lady Valeria. It had vulgarised her with that gratuitous
vulgarity which has become of late years one of the leading notes in
English society--the affectation of clipped words and slang phrases,
the choice of vulgar ideas, the studious cultivation of vulgar manners.
Naturally this acquired vulgarity of Mayfair is not quite the same
as that of Brixton or Highbury. There is not the genuine ring about
it. The accent is the accent of Patricia, but the words are the words
of Plebeia. It is, however, all the more offensive, because of that
blending of aristocratic insolence--that Pall Mall swagger which gives
_ton_ to the idioms of Hoxton and Holloway.

Lady Valeria had fallen into the fashionable slang and the current
drivel. She had left off reading, and had taken to cigarettes. Her
court was less of a court than of old, and more of a smoke-room. People
came and went, and did and said what they liked in her presence.
Sometimes in the dreamy noontide, when the closed Venetians and the
shadowy rooms recalled the atmosphere of Simla, Lady Valeria reclined
in her lounging chair, fanning herself languidly, and half stupefied
with chloral, a state which she described as being "a little low."
Sometimes in the evening she was all fire and sparkle, a vivacity which
her enemies attributed to dry champagne. There was a great deal of
champagne consumed at that ideal villa, but with a perpetual dropping
in of visitors--a household conducted upon the laxest principles--who
could tell what became of the wine? The empty bottles were the only
difficulty, since there seems to be no use yet invented for empty
champagne bottles; the very outcasts, the rag and bone collectors,
reject them.

Lady Valeria was going to the bad. That was the general opinion among
her nearest and dearest--the people who ate her dinners and drank her
wine, and smoked her cigarettes, and used her luxurious rooms as if the
villa had been a club. She had taken a horror of solitude, must have a
crowd about her always, be amused, cost what it might; and as she hated
her own family she would have none of them at any price. Hence the
somewhat rowdy following which made the house by the river notorious;
known by those lighted windows which shone late into the small hours,
when all other casements were dark; known by the sound of strident
laughter and the rattle of dice.

Lady Valeria had been ruined by a winter at Monaco. That was what some
people said. Others ascribed her deterioration to the fact of having
escaped all control, and having too much money at her disposal. Others
shook their heads, and asked what could be expected of any woman whose
guide, philosopher, and friend was George Varney.

"And he means to be her husband," added one shrewd observer.

"My dear Aubrey, she detests him," urged another.

"That makes no difference. He means to marry her. A woman who takes
chloral will marry any man who makes up his mind to have her."



CHAPTER XIII.


"HOW LIKE A WINTER HATH THY ABSENCE BEEN."


Perhaps, among all Valeria's friends and admirers, Sir George Varney
was the only man who had any inkling of the truth, who was keen enough
to discover the real cause of that moral decay which in its results was
obvious to every one. He had enjoyed more of Lady Valeria's confidence
than anybody else, and he had watched her closely, both before and
after her husband's death. She had tried to keep him at a distance when
they first met at Monaco; she had let him see that her resentment was
as strong as ever; but at a race-meeting in the neighbourhood he had
contrived to make his peace with her. The gambler's common instinct
drew them together. She was alone in a strange land--or in other words,
she knew no one except Sir George Varney whose counsel upon turf
questions was worth sixpence; and she humiliated herself, and forgot
that burning wrong of the past, tried to forget that for her sake her
dead husband had beaten this man. She allowed Sir George to call upon
her one February afternoon, and tell her all about his book for the
Craven and the First Spring, across the dainty Moorish tea-tray, with
its little brazen tea-pot, and eggshell cups and saucers. After that
they became staunch allies, if not staunch friends. Valeria had now the
command of ample funds, and could bet as much as she liked. When she
took Sir George's advice she was generally a winner. She invariably
lost when she followed her own inclinations. He initiated her as to
the mysteries of the tables at Monte Carlo, expounded the whole theory
of martingales, and showed her how she might beguile the tedium of her
days with the occult science of chance, as exemplified by pricking rows
of figures on a card.

They were a great deal together as the season wore on, and, as a
natural consequence, they were talked about a great deal by that
section of society whose chief conversation is of the follies and sins
of its own particular set.

Sir George felt that he was getting on; but in his heart of hearts
he knew perfectly well that Valeria did not care a straw for him,
and that she was never likely to care for him. He knew that she
had passionately loved Bothwell Grahame, and that despair at his
abandonment was the mainspring of all her conduct. She was reckless of
herself and of her good name--spent her money like water--ruined her
health--indulged every caprice of the moment--gave way to every fit
of ill-temper--simply because, having lost Bothwell Grahame, she had
nothing in life worth living for, except such things as could give her
feverish excitement, and with that excitement forgetfulness.

Knowing all this, knowing that the woman's heart was like an empty
sepulchre, George Varney was not the less determined to win her for his
wife.

"We suit each other so well," he said modestly, when his friends
congratulated him, considerably in advance, after their manner. "No,
we are not engaged. I only wish we were; but I daresay, if I am good,
it may run to that by and by. She is a very fine woman, and has a
remarkable head for the turf--remarkable, by Jove! She's always wrong;
but the mind is there, don't you know, a very remarkable mind. And
she's a very fair judge of a horse, too, or would be if she would only
look at his legs, which she never does."

"And she has plenty of lucre, eh, George? I think that's the main point
in your case, isn't it?"

"Very sorry for myself, but can't do without the filthy lucre. Couldn't
afford to elope with Mrs. Menelaus, if she was a pauper," answered Sir
George, with cheery frankness.

"Some idiot told me that her husband knocked you down at the last party
they ever gave at Fox Hill," said his friend, with a half grin; "that
was a lie, of course."

"No, there is some truth--we had a little passage at fisticuffs: and
that's why I mean to marry his widow," answered Sir George savagely.
"I meant to have the law of him; but as he bilked the beak by dying
before the hearing of the summons, I mean to have his money by way of
consolation. It will be a pleasanter remedy."

"And the lady thrown in by way of make-weight," grinned his friend.

The time came when Sir George thought he might venture to advance his
claim, in a purely business-like manner. Lady Valeria and he had made a
splendid book for the Derby, and the lady had won something over five
thousand pounds, graphically described by her coadjutor as a pot of
money. The money was of very little consequence to her nowadays, for
she had not yet succeeded in living beyond her income; but she was as
eager to win as she had been in the old time at Simla when losing meant
difficulty, and might mean ruin. She loved the sensation of success,
the knowledge that her horse had struggled to the front and kept there
at the crucial moment.

Emboldened by this brilliant _coup_, Sir George reminded Valeria of
his patience and devotion, and asked her to accept him as her second
husband.

"I don't expect you to marry me just yet," he said. "It's only six
months since the General died--and I know women are sticklers for
etiquette in these matters, though they are leaving off widow's caps,
and a good deal of humbug. But I should like to have your word for the
future. I don't want another fellow to cut in and win the cup after
I've made all the running."

Lady Valeria looked at him in a leisurely way with that contemptuous
smile of hers, a smile that had crushed so many a gallant admirer.

"I thought we understood each other too well for this kind of thing to
happen," she said, with perfect good temper and placidity. "We have
been getting on remarkably well together--and I have even taught myself
to forget your impertinence that night at Fox Hill. As to marriage, you
may be almost sure of one thing, and quite sure of another--first, that
I shall never marry at all; secondly, that I shall never marry you."

Sir George bowed, and said not another word. The partnership on the
turf and at baccarat was too profitable to be imperilled. But he meant
the alliance to become closer and more binding, before he and Lady
Valeria had done with each other.

And now in this lovely July weather, when the river and the woods were
at their fairest, Sir George Varney felt himself several furlongs
nearer the winning-post than he had been at Monaco. Lady Valeria had
become a more sensitive creature of late. The strings of the lyre were
played upon more easily. In other words, Valeria had taken to chloral.
Sir George was on excellent terms with her maid, and had received
information of a character which he himself called "the straight tip"
from that astute damsel. Lady Valeria had her good days and her bad
days; and on the bad days she was sunk in an abyss of despair, from
which not even some great success in her racing speculations could
rouse her. It was in one of these fits of despondency that Sir George
Varney made his second proposal of marriage. But this time he did not
sue as her slave, nor did he adopt the calm and _débonnaire_ tone of
a business man advocating an advantageous alliance. He approached her
with a brutal energy, a coarse plainness of speech, which shocked the
shattered nerves, and frightened her into submission.

He told her the scandals that were rife about her--told her how, if she
did not rehabilitate her character by becoming his wife, she would find
herself cut by society as his mistress--laughed at her half-indignant,
half-hysterical protest--told her that the world was much too wicked
to believe in any innocent alliance between a beautiful woman and a
man of forty, whose past life had not been stainless; talked to her as
no man had ever dared to talk to her until that hour--talked till she
sat trembling before him, vanquished, subjugated by the strangeness of
sheer brutality, she who a year ago had been sheltered and defended
from slander and insult by the protecting love of a noble heart.

She sat cowering before him. Was the world so vile as to suspect
her--and of caring for this man, whom she loathed? She covered her face
with her hands and sobbed aloud.

"There is no one upon earth who would stir a foot to protect me against
their vile slanders; not one of my own kin who would stand up for me,"
she sobbed.

"How could you expect it," asked Sir George, "when you have kept all
your people at arm's length? You may lay long odds not one of _that_
lot will take our part. I would give some of your traducers a sound
horsewhipping to-morrow, but that would do you more harm than good,
unless you mean to marry me."

"Horsewhip them, and I _will_ marry you," cried Valeria, rising and
rushing from the room, tremulous with rage.

Upon this hint Sir George promptly acted. He took an early opportunity
of leading on a harmless youth to say something uncivil of Lady
Valeria, and thereupon chastised him in his flannels before a select
audience. The scapegoat writhed under the strong gut riding-whip, could
not understand why he was so castigated, vowed vengeance, and sent a
friend to Sir George that evening, proposing an early meeting on the
sands near Ostend; at which message Sir George openly laughed.

"When boys are rude they must be punished," he said, "but I don't shoot
boys. Tell your young friend I am sorry I lost my temper; and that if
he will write a nice little letter, apologising to my future wife for
his rashness of speech, I shall consider we are quits."

It was known next day along both banks of the river that Lady Valeria
was to marry Sir George Varney immediately on the expiry of her
mourning. The _Daily Telegraph_ possessed itself of the fact before the
_Morning Post_, and it was recorded in all the society papers of the
following week. Bothwell Grahame read of it a week later in the _United
Service Gazette_, read and was thankful; for now this restless spirit,
which had wrought him so much evil, would be exorcised and bound for
ever in the thrall of matrimony.

"I am sorry she is to marry a scoundrel," he said to himself;
"otherwise my feeling would be unalloyed gladness."

And now Bothwell dared to hope that the wandering bird Hilda might be
lured home to her nest--now that doubting heart might have faith once
more.

If he could but write to her, tell her of Valeria's engagement, ask
her if he had not proved himself faithful, if she could not trust him
henceforward with perfect trustfulness! She had believed in him when
his fellow-men pointed at him as a suspected murderer; she had fled
from him because an audacious woman claimed him for her lover. Strange
inconsistency of a woman's heart, so strong and yet so weak!

Heathcote was in Italy, and Heathcote was the only channel of
communication between Bothwell and his lost love. He saddled Glencoe
and rode over to The Spaniards, where he hoped to hear of Heathcote's
speedy return; but the Fräulein was quite in the dark as to her
employer's movements. He wrote very seldom; he left everything in her
hands. She had received a little note from Florence nearly a fortnight
ago. He had written not one word as to the probable time of his return.

Bothwell talked about Hilda, and insidiously questioned the Fräulein,
who might perchance know the girl's whereabouts. But Miss Meyerstein
was quite as dark upon the subject as Greek society in general was
about the adventures of Ariadne. All Miss Meyerstein could tell
Bothwell was that Hilda had Glossop with her, which preference of
Glossop the mild Fräulein evidently regarded as something in the way of
a slight to herself.

"If Glossop can be trusted to know where Hilda, is, I think I might
have been trusted," she said.

"I wonder a frivolous person like Glossop has not told the secret to
half Bodmin before now," said Bothwell.

He wrote to Hilda that night, enclosing his letter to Heathcote at
Florence. It seemed a wearily roundabout way of reaching Hilda, who
might be in Scotland or in Scandinavia for all he knew; but it was his
only way, and it was just possible that she might be with her brother,
and receive his letter sooner than he dared hope. He wrote a few lines
to Heathcote with the enclosure, telling him about Lady Valeria's
engagement. "I suppose when they two are married our banns may be put
up in Bodmin Church," he wrote; "unless Hilda has any other objection
to me."

He counted the days, the hours almost, while he waited for a reply
to his letter. He followed the letter in its journey, now over sea,
and then over land--halted with it at Calais, went southward with
it, skirted the Mediterranean, pierced the Alps, and then it was all
darkness. Who could tell where the letter might have to go after it
reached Florence?

"She may be hiding herself somewhere in England, and that wretched
letter may have to travel all the way back again," he told himself
ruefully.

He waited, and waited, and waited; bearing himself with a brave front
before his pupils all the while, teaching them, botanising with them,
boating, riding; shooting with them, and never once losing temper with
them on account of his own trouble. But he was suffering an agony of
impatience and suspense all the same, and one of the more thoughtful of
his lads saw that he was paler than usual, and worn and haggard.

"You mustn't work with us if you are ill, Mr. Grahame," said the boy;
"we'll get on with our work by ourselves for a bit."

"No, my dear boy, I'm not ill; I have not been sleeping very well
lately--that's all. 'Sleep that knits up the ravelled sleave of care.'"

"Yes, we can't get on without that beggar," answered the boy. "I
know what it is to be awake all night with the toothache. I've often
wondered that the nights should be so jolly short when one's asleep,
and so jolly long when one's awake."

At breakfast a few days later one of the lads, the son of a brother
officer of Bothwell's, looked up from the _Evening Standard_ with an
exclamation of surprise.

"Here's the widow of one of your old friends gone and got married, Mr.
Grahame," he said. "'At Galbraith Church, N.B., Sir George Varney,
Bart., of the Hop Poles, Maidstone, to Lady Valeria Harborough, of
Galbraith Castle, Perthshire, and Fox Hill, Plymouth.' You saved the
old General's life up at the hills, didn't you?" asked the boy. "I've
heard my father talk about it."

"It wasn't worth talking about, Hector," answered Bothwell. "The
General was a good friend to me, and I honour his memory."

"More than Lady Valeria does, or she wouldn't marry such a cad as
Varney. I've heard my father say he is a cad."

"It is safer not to repeat opinions of that kind," said Bothwell.

He tried to play the schoolmaster while his heart was beating
furiously for very joy. She was married, that viper who had so
well-nigh spoiled his life; she was married to a scoundrel who would
make her life miserable, and he, Bothwell, was his own man again. Hilda
could have no further justification for distrust. He had held himself
aloof from the siren, he had demonstrated by his conduct that he had
no hankering after her or her fortune; and now that she was safely
disposed of in second wedlock, Hilda could have no excuse for delaying
his happiness.

All things had gone well with him, except this one thing. He had built
and furnished his house, and laid out his garden; people were full
of praises for his taste and cleverness. He had been lucky with his
pupils, and he liked his work. He was able to save money, and before
the year was out he had laid aside the first hundred pounds towards the
extinction of his debt to his cousin. But Dora did not want the debt
extinguished, and had written him an indignant letter when he offered
to pay the money into her banking account.

"How dare you pinch and scrape in order to pay me off?" she wrote. "How
do I know that you are not half-starving those poor lads, in your
desire to get out of my debt? It is your paltry pride which rebels at
an obligation even to your adopted sister."

To atone for the harshness of her letter she sent him an old Florentine
cabinet of ebony and ivory, a gem which glorified his drawing-room,
already enriched by her gifts; for she had sent him bronzes from one
place, and pottery from another, and glass from a third. She had made
up her mind that when the time came for Bothwell to lead his young wife
home, the home should be in some wise worthy of the wife.

And now there was an end of all uncertainties about that first unhappy
entanglement of Bothwell's; and nothing but caprice need keep him and
Hilda apart any longer.

A fortnight had gone since he had written to Hilda, and there had been
no sign. It was the fifth day after the announcement of Lady Valeria's
marriage in the London papers, and Bothwell started once more upon
that long ride by moorland and lane, across country from Trevena to
Bodmin, and thence to The Spaniards. He expected the smallest comfort
at the end of his journey; only a little talk with the Fräulein, who
might have had a recent letter from Heathcote, and might be able to
tell him something, were it ever so little. She was always friendly
and compassionate; and she was always ready to talk to him about
Hilda, and that was much. On one occasion she had gone so far as to
take him into Hilda's private sitting-room, and let him gloat over
the rows of prettily-bound books--Tennyson and Browning, and Dickens
and Thackeray--and the little tables, and manifold nicknacks, the
mantelpiece border which those dear hands had worked. There stood his
own photograph, framed and curtained with plush, as if it were too
sacred for the common eye. He had given her a smaller copy of the same
photograph, and he hoped that she had taken that with her, that she
looked at it sometimes, among strange faces.

Miss Meyerstein expatiated on Hilda's abrupt departure, and the little
luggage with which she had provided herself.

"Only her dressing-bag and a small portmanteau," said the Fräulein.
"She left all her pretty frocks hanging in the wardrobe; all her laces
and ribbons, and gloves and ornaments in her drawers. She must have had
to buy everything new. And there is her wedding-gown, just as it came
from the dressmaker's the day after she left home."

And then, at Bothwell's urgent, reiterated entreaty, Miss Meyerstein
went into the adjoining room, and came back, after a rattling of keys,
bringing with her a white object which looked like the sheeted dead
being carried away from a plague-stricken house.

It was only Hilda's wedding-gown, wrapped in voluminous coverings of
white linen.

Miss Meyerstein flung off the coverings, and shook out the white
satin gown, satin of so rich a fabric that it took all manner of
pearly and opal hues in the autumn light--a smart little frock, with
a round skirt, and just one big puff at the back of the waist, like a
carelessly-tied sash.

"Short, for dancing," said Miss Meyerstein, as she held out the frock
at arm's length, dangling in the air.

"But she didn't expect to dance upon her wedding-day!" ejaculated
Bothwell stupidly.

"No, but afterwards. She would go to dances, and she would be expected
to appear as a bride."

"Of course," muttered Bothwell, wondering how many dances--save the
dances of pixies in a moonlit glen--might be expected to occur within
easy reach of Trevena.

He knelt and kissed the hem of the white satin frock, and then turned
away with a sigh that was almost a sob.

"Not a grain of dust has got to it," said Miss Meyerstein. "It will be
ready when it is wanted."

"Yes," answered Bothwell. "The gown will be ready when it is wanted;
but who can tell who the bridegroom will be?"

"He will be nobody if he is not you," said Miss Meyerstein. "That poor
child positively adores you."

"How do you know? It is nearly a year since you saw her."

"Such love as that does not wear itself out in a year."

To-day Bothwell felt that he wanted even such poor comfort as might be
had from feminine twaddle of this kind. He felt that even a romp with
the twins would do him good. They were of her race, and she had loved
them, and they could prattle to him about her.

It was a rainy afternoon late in October, a dreary day for that long
ride over the hills. The Atlantic yonder had a look of unspeakable
melancholy; a great gray sea into which gray earth and sky melted.
It would be dark before Bothwell could get back to Trevena, and the
ride was not the pleasantest after nightfall; but a man who had ridden
through Afghan passes in his time was not to be scared by dark hills
and narrow lanes. Bothwell was in a mood to ride somewhere, were it
only in the hope of riding away from his own impatient thoughts. He
had delayed starting till after luncheon, having waited to give his
boys the full benefit of a long morning's work. It was between five
and six when he came to the iron gates of The Spaniards, and the sun
was setting behind the hills yonder above Penmorval, poor deserted
Penmorval, where the pictured faces looked out upon empty floors, and
where the housekeeper sighed as she went from room to room, attending
to fires that warmed desolate hearths.

The Spaniards looked a little more cheerful than when Bothwell had seen
it last, for there were lights in many of the lower windows, and those
lamp-lit casements glowed brightly across the rainy dusk. He would be
able to get a good cup of tea from the Fräulein, and to put up his
horse for an hour or two before he turned homewards again.

An empty carriage passed him in the drive, and turned towards an
opening in the shrubbery that led to the stable-yard. There were
visitors at The Spaniards, upon that wet evening! Bothwell wondered who
the guest, or guests, could be, in the absence of the master.

Or was it the master himself who had come back? His heart beat faster
at the thought. He dismounted and rang the bell. The door was opened
directly. There were a couple of servants in the hall and some luggage.
Yes, the master of the house had returned.

"Take my horse to the stables, like a good fellow," said Bothwell to
the man who had opened the door. "Your master has come home, I see."

"Yes, sir, ten minutes ago."

Bothwell waited to ask no further questions, did not wait to be
announced even, but walked straight to the library, Heathcote's usual
sitting-room, opened the door, and went in.

There was no lamp. The room was lighted only by the fire-glow, which
gleamed on bookshelves and old oak panelling, and on the massive
timbers of the ceiling. There was a tea-table in front of the wide old
fireplace--one of those vagabond tea-tables which can make themselves
at home anywhere--and the tea was being poured out by a girl who wore a
neat little black velvet toque and dark cloth jacket, a girl who looked
as if she had just come off a journey, while Heathcote reposed in his
armchair on the other side of the hearth.

No one but Hilda could have been so much at her ease in that room,
which was in some wise a sacred chamber, especially reserved for the
master of the house. No one but Hilda had such pretty hair, or such a
graceful bend of the head. The girl in the velvet toque was sitting
with her back to Bothwell; but he had not a moment's doubt as to her
identity.

He went over to the hearth, gave his hand to Heathcote silently, and
then seated himself by Hilda's side, she looking up at him dumbly the
while, half in fear.

"What have you to say to me, Hilda, after having used me so ill?" he
asked, taking her hand in his.

"Only that it was for your own sake I went away on the eve of our
marriage," she answered seriously. "I did not want to stand between you
and happiness."

"Would it not have been wiser, and fairer to me, if you had taken my
views upon the matter before you ran away?"

"You would have been too generous to tell me the truth; you would have
sacrificed yourself to your sense of honour. How could I tell you did
not love Lady Valeria better than me?"

"If you had read _Tom Jones_ you would have had a very easy way of
solving that question. You would have had only to look in the glass,
and there you would have seen, as Sophia Western saw, the reason for a
lover's devotion. You would have seen purity and innocence, and fresh
young beauty; and you would have known that your lover could not falter
in his truth to you."

"I don't think Tom's conduct was altogether blameless, in spite of the
looking-glass, eh, Bothwell?" said Heathcote, laughing at him. It is
so hard to have to make love before a third person. "You have to thank
me for bringing home your sweetheart. I read the advertisement of Lady
Valeria's marriage at Genoa three days ago, as I was on my way home; so
I stopped in Paris, and brought this young lady away from her musical
studies at an hour's notice. I suppose she was getting tired of the
Conservatoire, for she seemed uncommonly glad to come."

"And you were in Paris?" cried Bothwell. "So near! If I had only known!"

"There would have been nothing gained by following her," said
Heathcote. "I never met with a more resolute young woman than this
sister of mine. When she was determined to have you, there was not
the least use in opposing her, and when she had made up her mind not
to have you, she was just as inflexible. But now that Lady Valeria has
taken to herself a second husband, and that you seem to bear the blow
pretty cheerfully, perhaps Hilda may be inclined to change her mind for
the second time."

"Her wedding-gown is hanging in her wardrobe ready for her," said
Bothwell, drawing a little closer to his truant sweetheart, in the
sheltering dusk, that delicious hour for true and loving hearts,
blind-man's holiday, betwixt dog and wolf.

"How did you know that?" asked Heathcote.

"The Fräulein told me. She has been taking care of your wedding-gown,
Hilda. She knew that it would be wanted. You had better wear it as soon
as possible, dearest. It is a year old already; and it is going more
and more out of fashion every day."

"She shall wear it before we are a month older," said Heathcote. "I
have had too much trouble about this marriage already; and I'll stand
no more shilly-shallying. We'll put up the banns next Sunday; and in
less than a month from to-day you two foolish people shall be one."

Edward Heathcote kept his word, and the smart white satin frock was
worn one bright morning in November, worn by the prettiest bride
that had been seen in Bodmin Church for many a year, the townspeople
said--those townspeople who had now only praises and friendliest
greetings for Bothwell Grahame, albeit a year ago he had seemed to them
as a possible murderer.

A telegram had informed Dora Wyllard of the wedding-day, so soon as
ever the date had been fixed, but she had not responded, as Hilda
and her brother had hoped she would respond, to the invitation to be
present at the wedding. She could not bear to see the Cornish hills yet
awhile, she told Hilda, in her letter of congratulation. Years must
pass, in all probability, before she could endure to look upon that
familiar landscape again, or to see that roof-tree which had sheltered
her when she was Julian Wyllard's happy wife.

"I am rejoiced to know that you and Bothwell have come to a safe haven
at last," she wrote. "I shall always be interested in hearing of your
welfare, cheered and comforted by the thought of your bright home.
I cannot blame you for having made Bothwell wait for his happiness,
Hilda; for I feel that you have acted wisely in making sure of his free
choice. There can now be no after-thought, no lurking suspicion to come
between you and your wedded love.

"For my own part I am at peace here, and that is much. I read a great
deal, paint a little every day; and my picture, however bad it may be,
is a kind of companion to me, a thing that seems to live as it grows
under my hand. My models interest me, and through them I have become
acquainted with several humble households in Florence, and find a great
deal to interest me in this warmhearted, hot-headed race. Best of all,
I am away from old scenes, old associations; and sometimes, sitting
dreaming in my sunny balcony, with the blue waters of the Arno gliding
past under my feet, I almost believe that I am some new creature
without a history, and not that Dora Wyllard who was once mistress of
Penmorval.

"I wish you and Bothwell would take your honeymoon holiday in the
South, and spend a week or two here with me. There is plenty of
accommodation for you in these grand old apartments of mine--a
first-floor of a dozen rooms, all large and lofty. My old servants keep
everything in exquisite order, and are devoted in their attention to me.

"It was a pleasure to me to see your brother when he was staying in
Florence. Tell him that I left Vallombrosa only a week ago, and was
very sorry to come away from wood and mountain even then."

Hilda and her husband accepted this friendly invitation, and spent
half their honeymoon on the road to Florence, and the other half in
that picturesque city. They found Dora the shadow of her former self.
She had a gentle air of resignation, a pensive placidity which was
inexpressibly touching. She never mentioned her dead husband. She was
full of thoughtfulness for others, and had made herself the adored
benefactress of a little colony of poor Florentines. She had furnished
her rooms and established herself in a manner which indicated the
intention to make a permanent home in the city; and here Bothwell and
his wife left her, with deep regret.

"Will you never come back to Cornwall, Dora?" Hilda asked piteously, in
the last farewell moments at the railway-station.

"Never is a long word, dearest. I suppose I shall see the old places
again some day; but I must be a good deal older than I am now--a good
deal further away from my old sorrows."

Dora spoke without reckoning upon that Providence which shapes our ends
in spite of us; and happily for the cause of true love, Providence
found a way of bringing Dora Wyllard back to Cornwall much sooner than
she had intended to return.

A little more than a year after Bothwell and his wife left Florence,
the happy home at Trevena was darkened by the shadow of an awful fear.
A son had been born to Bothwell Grahame; and before the boy was a week
old the young mother was in imminent danger of death. Edward Heathcote
was in Italy, spending his autumn holiday, going over much of the same
ground that he had visited before, and loitering longer and later than
the previous year. A telegram from Bothwell told him of his sister's
peril; and another telegram reached Mrs. Wyllard from the same source.
Moved by the same impulse, Dora and Heathcote met at the station, each
on the same errand, bent on starting by the first train for Paris. They
travelled together in sad and silent companionship, each oppressed by
the fear of a great calamity.

Heathcote had telegraphed before he started, asking for a telegram to
meet him at the Paris station, and here the message brought a ray of
comfort.

"A little better. The doctors are more hopeful."

Anxious days and nights followed Dora's arrival at Trevena. Poor
Bothwell suffered a suppressed agony of grief, which seemed to have
aged him at least ten years by the time the crisis was past, and the
young mother was able to smile upon her firstborn. Happily these
markings of care are soon erased from youthful faces; and before
Christmas Bothwell was himself again, and ready to receive a new batch
of pupils, the old lot having been disposed of triumphantly in the
summer before his son's birth.

Dora stayed in Cornwall during that winter of '83 and '84, and she is
in Cornwall still, but not at Penmorval. She has established herself
at her birth-place, Tregony Manor, near the Land's End; and here old
friends and neighbours flock round her, the people who knew her mother,
the friends of her childish days, of her happy girlhood. They bring
back sweet memories of the old time, and help to wean her from her
gloomy thoughts.

One of her old companions, a spinster of thirty summers, is very often
with her in the familiar home. They seem almost like the girl-friends
of the past, painting together, playing, singing, working. All the old
occupations have been resumed; as if the ten years intervening had
hardly made any break in the two lives.

"Sometimes I fancy it is all a dream, and that you have never been away
from Tregony," says Miss Beauchamp, one morning when they are sitting
at work. "If we had but your dear good mother over there in her
favourite, chair by the fireplace, I should quite believe the last ten
years to be only a dream. But she is gone, dear soul, and that makes
a sad difference. Do you know, yesterday, when I looked out of the
window, and saw you and Mr. Heathcote walking on the terrace, I rubbed
my eyes to make sure that I was awake. You both looked exactly as you
used to look ten years ago, when you were engaged."

Dora went on with her work in placid silence.

"Dora, he is so good, so loyal, so devoted to you," cried Miss
Beauchamp, in her affectionate impulsive way. "You cannot be so cruel
as to spoil his life for ever. Surely you will reward him some day."

"Some day," sang Dora softly, with her face bent low over her work: and
her story ends thus with the refrain of a popular ballad.

       *       *       *       *       *

THE END.




*** End of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Wyllard's Weird: A Novel" ***

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