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Title: Little Novels
Author: Collins, Wilkie
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "Little Novels" ***


LITTLE NOVELS

By Wilkie Collins



MRS. ZANT AND THE GHOST.

I.

THE course of this narrative describes the return of a disembodied
spirit to earth, and leads the reader on new and strange ground.

Not in the obscurity of midnight, but in the searching light of day, did
the supernatural influence assert itself. Neither revealed by a vision,
nor announced by a voice, it reached mortal knowledge through the sense
which is least easily self-deceived: the sense that feels.

The record of this event will of necessity produce conflicting
impressions. It will raise, in some minds, the doubt which reason
asserts; it will invigorate, in other minds, the hope which faith
justifies; and it will leave the terrible question of the destinies of
man, where centuries of vain investigation have left it--in the dark.

Having only undertaken in the present narrative to lead the way along a
succession of events, the writer declines to follow modern examples by
thrusting himself and his opinions on the public view. He returns to
the shadow from which he has emerged, and leaves the opposing forces of
incredulity and belief to fight the old battle over again, on the old
ground.

II.

THE events happened soon after the first thirty years of the present
century had come to an end.

On a fine morning, early in the month of April, a gentleman of middle
age (named Rayburn) took his little daughter Lucy out for a walk in the
woodland pleasure-ground of Western London, called Kensington Gardens.

The few friends whom he possessed reported of Mr. Rayburn (not unkindly)
that he was a reserved and solitary man. He might have been more
accurately described as a widower devoted to his only surviving child.
Although he was not more than forty years of age, the one pleasure which
made life enjoyable to Lucy’s father was offered by Lucy herself.

Playing with her ball, the child ran on to the southern limit of the
Gardens, at that part of it which still remains nearest to the old
Palace of Kensington. Observing close at hand one of those spacious
covered seats, called in England “alcoves,” Mr. Rayburn was reminded
that he had the morning’s newspaper in his pocket, and that he might do
well to rest and read. At that early hour the place was a solitude.

“Go on playing, my dear,” he said; “but take care to keep where I can
see you.”

Lucy tossed up her ball; and Lucy’s father opened his newspaper. He
had not been reading for more than ten minutes, when he felt a familiar
little hand laid on his knee.

“Tired of playing?” he inquired--with his eyes still on the newspaper.

“I’m frightened, papa.”

He looked up directly. The child’s pale face startled him. He took her
on his knee and kissed her.

“You oughtn’t to be frightened, Lucy, when I am with you,” he said,
gently. “What is it?” He looked out of the alcove as he spoke, and saw a
little dog among the trees. “Is it the dog?” he asked.

Lucy answered:

“It’s not the dog--it’s the lady.”

The lady was not visible from the alcove.

“Has she said anything to you?” Mr. Rayburn inquired.

“No.”

“What has she done to frighten you?”

The child put her arms round her father’s neck.

“Whisper, papa,” she said; “I’m afraid of her hearing us. I think she’s
mad.”

“Why do you think so, Lucy?”

“She came near to me. I thought she was going to say something. She
seemed to be ill.”

“Well? And what then?”

“She looked at me.”

There, Lucy found herself at a loss how to express what she had to say
next--and took refuge in silence.

“Nothing very wonderful, so far,” her father suggested.

“Yes, papa--but she didn’t seem to see me when she looked.”

“Well, and what happened then?”

“The lady was frightened--and that frightened me. I think,” the child
repeated positively, “she’s mad.”

It occurred to Mr. Rayburn that the lady might be blind. He rose at once
to set the doubt at rest.

“Wait here,” he said, “and I’ll come back to you.”

But Lucy clung to him with both hands; Lucy declared that she was afraid
to be by herself. They left the alcove together.

The new point of view at once revealed the stranger, leaning against the
trunk of a tree. She was dressed in the deep mourning of a widow. The
pallor of her face, the glassy stare in her eyes, more than accounted
for the child’s terror--it excused the alarming conclusion at which she
had arrived.

“Go nearer to her,” Lucy whispered.

They advanced a few steps. It was now easy to see that the lady was
young, and wasted by illness--but (arriving at a doubtful conclusion
perhaps under the present circumstances) apparently possessed of
rare personal attractions in happier days. As the father and daughter
advanced a little, she discovered them. After some hesitation, she left
the tree; approached with an evident intention of speaking; and suddenly
paused. A change to astonishment and fear animated her vacant eyes. If
it had not been plain before, it was now beyond all doubt that she was
not a poor blind creature, deserted and helpless. At the same time, the
expression of her face was not easy to understand. She could hardly
have looked more amazed and bewildered, if the two strangers who were
observing her had suddenly vanished from the place in which they stood.

Mr. Rayburn spoke to her with the utmost kindness of voice and manner.

“I am afraid you are not well,” he said. “Is there anything that I can
do--”

The next words were suspended on his lips. It was impossible to realize
such a state of things; but the strange impression that she had already
produced on him was now confirmed. If he could believe his senses, her
face did certainly tell him that he was invisible and inaudible to the
woman whom he had just addressed! She moved slowly away with a heavy
sigh, like a person disappointed and distressed. Following her with his
eyes, he saw the dog once more--a little smooth-coated terrier of the
ordinary English breed. The dog showed none of the restless activity of
his race. With his head down and his tail depressed, he crouched like
a creature paralyzed by fear. His mistress roused him by a call. He
followed her listlessly as she turned away.

After walking a few paces only, she suddenly stood still.

Mr. Rayburn heard her talking to herself.

“Did I feel it again?” she said, as if perplexed by some doubt that awed
or grieved her. After a while her arms rose slowly, and opened with a
gentle caressing action--an embrace strangely offered to the empty air!
“No,” she said to herself, sadly, after waiting a moment. “More perhaps
when to-morrow comes--no more to-day.” She looked up at the clear blue
sky. “The beautiful sunlight! the merciful sunlight!” she murmured. “I
should have died if it had happened in the dark.”

Once more she called to the dog; and once more she walked slowly away.

“Is she going home, papa?’ the child asked.

“We will try and find out,” the father answered.

He was by this time convinced that the poor creature was in no condition
to be permitted to go out without some one to take care of her.
From motives of humanity, he was resolved on making the attempt to
communicate with her friends.

III.

THE lady left the Gardens by the nearest gate; stopping to lower
her veil before she turned into the busy thoroughfare which leads to
Kensington. Advancing a little way along the High Street, she entered a
house of respectable appearance, with a card in one of the windows which
announced that apartments were to let.

Mr. Rayburn waited a minute--then knocked at the door, and asked if he
could see the mistress of the house. The servant showed him into a room
on the ground floor, neatly but scantily furnished. One little white
object varied the grim brown monotony of the empty table. It was a
visiting-card.

With a child’s unceremonious curiosity Lucy pounced on the card, and
spelled the name, letter by letter: “Z, A, N, T,” she repeated. “What
does that mean?”

Her father looked at the card, as he took it away from her, and put it
back on the table. The name was printed, and the address was added in
pencil: “Mr. John Zant, Purley’s Hotel.”

The mistress made her appearance. Mr. Rayburn heartily wished himself
out of the house again, the moment he saw her. The ways in which it
is possible to cultivate the social virtues are more numerous and
more varied than is generally supposed. This lady’s way had apparently
accustomed her to meet her fellow-creatures on the hard ground of
justice without mercy. Something in her eyes, when she looked at Lucy,
said: “I wonder whether that child gets punished when she deserves it?”

“Do you wish to see the rooms which I have to let?” she began.

Mr. Rayburn at once stated the object of his visit--as clearly, as
civilly, and as concisely as a man could do it. He was conscious (he
added) that he had been guilty perhaps of an act of intrusion.

The manner of the mistress of the house showed that she entirely agreed
with him. He suggested, however, that his motive might excuse him. The
mistress’s manner changed, and asserted a difference of opinion.

“I only know the lady whom you mention,” she said, “as a person of the
highest respectability, in delicate health. She has taken my first-floor
apartments, with excellent references; and she gives remarkably little
trouble. I have no claim to interfere with her proceedings, and no
reason to doubt that she is capable of taking care of herself.”

Mr. Rayburn unwisely attempted to say a word in his own defense.

“Allow me to remind you--” he began.

“Of what, sir?”

“Of what I observed, when I happened to see the lady in Kensington
Gardens.”

“I am not responsible for what you observed in Kensington Gardens. If
your time is of any value, pray don’t let me detain you.”

Dismissed in those terms, Mr. Rayburn took Lucy’s hand and withdrew. He
had just reached the door, when it was opened from the outer side. The
Lady of Kensington Gardens stood before him. In the position which he
and his daughter now occupied, their backs were toward the window. Would
she remember having seen them for a moment in the Gardens?

“Excuse me for intruding on you,” she said to the landlady. “Your
servant tells me my brother-in-law called while I was out. He sometimes
leaves a message on his card.”

She looked for the message, and appeared to be disappointed: there was
no writing on the card.

Mr. Rayburn lingered a little in the doorway on the chance of hearing
something more. The landlady’s vigilant eyes discovered him.

“Do you know this gentleman?” she said maliciously to her lodger.

“Not that I remember.”

Replying in those words, the lady looked at Mr. Rayburn for the first
time; and suddenly drew back from him.

“Yes,” she said, correcting herself; “I think we met--”

Her embarrassment overpowered her; she could say no more.

Mr. Rayburn compassionately finished the sentence for her.

“We met accidentally in Kensington Gardens,” he said.

She seemed to be incapable of appreciating the kindness of his motive.
After hesitating a little she addressed a proposal to him, which seemed
to show distrust of the landlady.

“Will you let me speak to you upstairs in my own rooms?” she asked.

Without waiting for a reply, she led the way to the stairs. Mr. Rayburn
and Lucy followed. They were just beginning the ascent to the first
floor, when the spiteful landlady left the lower room, and called to her
lodger over their heads: “Take care what you say to this man, Mrs. Zant!
He thinks you’re mad.”

Mrs. Zant turned round on the landing, and looked at him. Not a word
fell from her lips. She suffered, she feared, in silence. Something in
the sad submission of her face touched the springs of innocent pity in
Lucy’s heart. The child burst out crying.

That artless expression of sympathy drew Mrs. Zant down the few stairs
which separated her from Lucy.

“May I kiss your dear little girl?” she said to Mr. Rayburn. The
landlady, standing on the mat below, expressed her opinion of the value
of caresses, as compared with a sounder method of treating young persons
in tears: “If that child was mine,” she remarked, “I would give her
something to cry for.”

In the meantime, Mrs. Zant led the way to her rooms.

The first words she spoke showed that the landlady had succeeded but too
well in prejudicing her against Mr. Rayburn.

“Will you let me ask your child,” she said to him, “why you think me
mad?”

He met this strange request with a firm answer.

“You don’t know yet what I really do think. Will you give me a minute’s
attention?”

“No,” she said positively. “The child pities me, I want to speak to the
child. What did you see me do in the Gardens, my dear, that surprised
you?” Lucy turned uneasily to her father; Mrs. Zant persisted. “I first
saw you by yourself, and then I saw you with your father,” she went on.
“When I came nearer to you, did I look very oddly--as if I didn’t see
you at all?”

Lucy hesitated again; and Mr. Rayburn interfered.

“You are confusing my little girl,” he said. “Allow me to answer your
questions--or excuse me if I leave you.”

There was something in his look, or in his tone, that mastered her. She
put her hand to her head.

“I don’t think I’m fit for it,” she answered vacantly. “My courage has
been sorely tried already. If I can get a little rest and sleep, you may
find me a different person. I am left a great deal by myself; and I have
reasons for trying to compose my mind. Can I see you tomorrow? Or write
to you? Where do you live?”

Mr. Rayburn laid his card on the table in silence. She had strongly
excited his interest. He honestly desired to be of some service to
this forlorn creature--abandoned so cruelly, as it seemed, to her own
guidance. But he had no authority to exercise, no sort of claim to
direct her actions, even if she consented to accept his advice. As a
last resource he ventured on an allusion to the relative of whom she had
spoken downstairs.

“When do you expect to see your brother-in-law again?” he said.

“I don’t know,” she answered. “I should like to see him--he is so kind
to me.”

She turned aside to take leave of Lucy.

“Good-by, my little friend. If you live to grow up, I hope you will
never be such a miserable woman as I am.” She suddenly looked round at
Mr. Rayburn. “Have you got a wife at home?” she asked.

“My wife is dead.”

“And _you_ have a child to comfort you! Please leave me; you harden my
heart. Oh, sir, don’t you understand? You make me envy you!”

Mr. Rayburn was silent when he and his daughter were out in the street
again. Lucy, as became a dutiful child, was silent, too. But there are
limits to human endurance--and Lucy’s capacity for self-control gave way
at last.

“Are you thinking of the lady, papa?” she said.

He only answered by nodding his head. His daughter had interrupted him
at that critical moment in a man’s reflections, when he is on the point
of making up his mind. Before they were at home again Mr. Rayburn had
arrived at a decision. Mrs. Zant’s brother-in-law was evidently ignorant
of any serious necessity for his interference--or he would have made
arrangements for immediately repeating his visit. In this state of
things, if any evil happened to Mrs. Zant, silence on Mr. Rayburn’s part
might be indirectly to blame for a serious misfortune. Arriving at that
conclusion, he decided upon running the risk of being rudely received,
for the second time, by another stranger.

Leaving Lucy under the care of her governess, he went at once to
the address that had been written on the visiting-card left at the
lodging-house, and sent in his name. A courteous message was returned.
Mr. John Zant was at home, and would be happy to see him.

IV.

MR. RAYBURN was shown into one of the private sitting-rooms of the
hotel.

He observed that the customary position of the furniture in a room
had been, in some respects, altered. An armchair, a side-table, and
a footstool had all been removed to one of the windows, and had been
placed as close as possible to the light. On the table lay a large open
roll of morocco leather, containing rows of elegant little instruments
in steel and ivory. Waiting by the table, stood Mr. John Zant. He said
“Good-morning” in a bass voice, so profound and so melodious that those
two commonplace words assumed a new importance, coming from his lips.
His personal appearance was in harmony with his magnificent voice--he
was a tall, finely-made man of dark complexion; with big brilliant black
eyes, and a noble curling beard, which hid the whole lower part of his
face. Having bowed with a happy mingling of dignity and politeness, the
conventional side of this gentleman’s character suddenly vanished; and
a crazy side, to all appearance, took its place. He dropped on his knees
in front of the footstool. Had he forgotten to say his prayers that
morning, and was he in such a hurry to remedy the fault that he had no
time to spare for consulting appearances? The doubt had hardly suggested
itself, before it was set at rest in a most unexpected manner. Mr. Zant
looked at his visitor with a bland smile, and said:

“Please let me see your feet.”

For the moment, Mr. Rayburn lost his presence of mind. He looked at the
instruments on the side-table.

“Are you a corn-cutter?” was all he could say.

“Excuse me, sir,” returned the polite operator, “the term you use is
quite obsolete in our profession.” He rose from his knees, and added
modestly: “I am a Chiropodist.”

“I beg your pardon.”

“Don’t mention it! You are not, I imagine, in want of my professional
services. To what motive may I attribute the honor of your visit?”

By this time Mr. Rayburn had recovered himself.

“I have come here,” he answered, “under circumstances which require
apology as well as explanation.”

Mr. Zant’s highly polished manner betrayed signs of alarm; his
suspicions pointed to a formidable conclusion--a conclusion that shook
him to the innermost recesses of the pocket in which he kept his money.

“The numerous demands on me--” he began.

Mr. Rayburn smiled.

“Make your mind easy,” he replied. “I don’t want money. My object is to
speak with you on the subject of a lady who is a relation of yours.”

“My sister-in-law!” Mr. Zant exclaimed. “Pray take a seat.”

Doubting if he had chosen a convenient time for his visit, Mr. Rayburn
hesitated.

“Am I likely to be in the way of persons who wish to consult you?” he
asked.

“Certainly not. My morning hours of attendance on my clients are from
eleven to one.” The clock on the mantelpiece struck the quarter-past
one as he spoke. “I hope you don’t bring me bad news?” he said, very
earnestly. “When I called on Mrs. Zant this morning, I heard that
she had gone out for a walk. Is it indiscreet to ask how you became
acquainted with her?”

Mr. Rayburn at once mentioned what he had seen and heard in Kensington
Gardens; not forgetting to add a few words, which described his
interview afterward with Mrs. Zant.

The lady’s brother-in-law listened with an interest and sympathy, which
offered the strongest possible contrast to the unprovoked rudeness of
the mistress of the lodging-house. He declared that he could only do
justice to his sense of obligation by following Mr. Rayburn’s example,
and expressing himself as frankly as if he had been speaking to an old
friend.

“The sad story of my sister-in-law’s life,” he said, “will, I think,
explain certain things which must have naturally perplexed you. My
brother was introduced to her at the house of an Australian gentleman,
on a visit to England. She was then employed as governess to his
daughters. So sincere was the regard felt for her by the family that the
parents had, at the entreaty of their children, asked her to accompany
them when they returned to the Colony. The governess thankfully accepted
the proposal.”

“Had she no relations in England?” Mr. Rayburn asked.

“She was literally alone in the world, sir. When I tell you that she had
been brought up in the Foundling Hospital, you will understand what I
mean. Oh, there is no romance in my sister-in-law’s story! She never has
known, or will know, who her parents were or why they deserted her. The
happiest moment in her life was the moment when she and my brother first
met. It was an instance, on both sides, of love at first sight. Though
not a rich man, my brother had earned a sufficient income in mercantile
pursuits. His character spoke for itself. In a word, he altered all the
poor girl’s prospects, as we then hoped and believed, for the better.
Her employers deferred their return to Australia, so that she might be
married from their house. After a happy life of a few weeks only--”

His voice failed him; he paused, and turned his face from the light.

“Pardon me,” he said; “I am not able, even yet, to speak composedly
of my brother’s death. Let me only say that the poor young wife was a
widow, before the happy days of the honeymoon were over. That dreadful
calamity struck her down. Before my brother had been committed to the
grave, her life was in danger from brain-fever.”

Those words placed in a new light Mr. Rayburn’s first fear that her
intellect might be deranged. Looking at him attentively, Mr. Zant seemed
to understand what was passing in the mind of his guest.

“No!” he said. “If the opinions of the medical men are to be trusted,
the result of the illness is injury to her physical strength--not injury
to her mind. I have observed in her, no doubt, a certain waywardness of
temper since her illness; but that is a trifle. As an example of what
I mean, I may tell you that I invited her, on her recovery, to pay me
a visit. My house is not in London--the air doesn’t agree with me--my
place of residence is at St. Sallins-on-Sea. I am not myself a married
man; but my excellent housekeeper would have received Mrs. Zant with the
utmost kindness. She was resolved--obstinately resolved, poor thing--to
remain in London. It is needless to say that, in her melancholy
position, I am attentive to her slightest wishes. I took a lodging
for her; and, at her special request, I chose a house which was near
Kensington Gardens.

“Is there any association with the Gardens which led Mrs. Zant to make
that request?”

“Some association, I believe, with the memory of her husband. By the
way, I wish to be sure of finding her at home, when I call to-morrow.
Did you say (in the course of your interesting statement) that she
intended--as you supposed--to return to Kensington Gardens to-morrow? Or
has my memory deceived me?”

“Your memory is perfectly accurate.”

“Thank you. I confess I am not only distressed by what you have told me
of Mrs. Zant--I am at a loss to know how to act for the best. My only
idea, at present, is to try change of air and scene. What do you think
yourself?”

“I think you are right.”

Mr. Zant still hesitated.

“It would not be easy for me, just now,” he said, “to leave my patients
and take her abroad.”

The obvious reply to this occurred to Mr. Rayburn. A man of larger
worldly experience might have felt certain suspicions, and might have
remained silent. Mr. Rayburn spoke.

“Why not renew your invitation and take her to your house at the
seaside?” he said.

In the perplexed state of Mr. Zant’s mind, this plain course of action
had apparently failed to present itself. His gloomy face brightened
directly.

“The very thing!” he said. “I will certainly take your advice. If the
air of St. Sallins does nothing else, it will improve her health and
help her to recover her good looks. Did she strike you as having been
(in happier days) a pretty woman?”

This was a strangely familiar question to ask--almost an indelicate
question, under the circumstances A certain furtive expression in
Mr. Zant’s fine dark eyes seemed to imply that it had been put with a
purpose. Was it possible that he suspected Mr. Rayburn’s interest in
his sister-in-law to be inspired by any motive which was not perfectly
unselfish and perfectly pure? To arrive at such a conclusion as this
might be to judge hastily and cruelly of a man who was perhaps only
guilty of a want of delicacy of feeling. Mr. Rayburn honestly did his
best to assume the charitable point of view. At the same time, it is not
to be denied that his words, when he answered, were carefully guarded,
and that he rose to take his leave.

Mr. John Zant hospitably protested.

“Why are you in such a hurry? Must you really go? I shall have the honor
of returning your visit to-morrow, when I have made arrangements to
profit by that excellent suggestion of yours. Good-by. God bless you.”

He held out his hand: a hand with a smooth surface and a tawny color,
that fervently squeezed the fingers of a departing friend. “Is that man
a scoundrel?” was Mr. Rayburn’s first thought, after he had left the
hotel. His moral sense set all hesitation at rest--and answered: “You’re
a fool if you doubt it.”

V.

DISTURBED by presentiments, Mr. Rayburn returned to his house on foot,
by way of trying what exercise would do toward composing his mind.

The experiment failed. He went upstairs and played with Lucy; he drank
an extra glass of wine at dinner; he took the child and her governess
to a circus in the evening; he ate a little supper, fortified by another
glass of wine, before he went to bed--and still those vague forebodings
of evil persisted in torturing him. Looking back through his past life,
he asked himself if any woman (his late wife of course excepted!) had
ever taken the predominant place in his thoughts which Mrs. Zant had
assumed--without any discernible reason to account for it? If he had
ventured to answer his own question, the reply would have been: Never!

All the next day he waited at home, in expectation of Mr. John Zant’s
promised visit, and waited in vain.

Toward evening the parlor-maid appeared at the family tea-table, and
presented to her master an unusually large envelope sealed with black
wax, and addressed in a strange handwriting. The absence of stamp and
postmark showed that it had been left at the house by a messenger.

“Who brought this?” Mr. Rayburn asked.

“A lady, sir--in deep mourning.”

“Did she leave any message?”

“No, sir.”

Having drawn the inevitable conclusion, Mr. Rayburn shut himself up in
his library. He was afraid of Lucy’s curiosity and Lucy’s questions, if
he read Mrs. Zant’s letter in his daughter’s presence.

Looking at the open envelope after he had taken out the leaves of
writing which it contained, he noticed these lines traced inside the
cover:



“My one excuse for troubling you, when I might have consulted my
brother-in-law, will be found in the pages which I inclose. To speak
plainly, you have been led to fear that I am not in my right senses. For
this very reason, I now appeal to you. Your dreadful doubt of me, sir,
is my doubt too. Read what I have written about myself--and then tell
me, I entreat you, which I am: A person who has been the object of a
supernatural revelation? or an unfortunate creature who is only fit for
imprisonment in a mad-house?”



Mr. Rayburn opened the manuscript. With steady attention, which soon
quickened to breathless interest, he read what follows:

VI.

THE LADY’S MANUSCRIPT.

YESTERDAY morning the sun shone in a clear blue sky--after a succession
of cloudy days, counting from the first of the month.

The radiant light had its animating effect on my poor spirits. I had
passed the night more peacefully than usual; undisturbed by the dream,
so cruelly familiar to me, that my lost husband is still living--the
dream from which I always wake in tears. Never, since the dark days of
my sorrow, have I been so little troubled by the self-tormenting fancies
and fears which beset miserable women, as when I left the house, and
turned my steps toward Kensington Gardens--for the first time since my
husband’s death.

Attended by my only companion, the little dog who had been his favorite
as well as mine, I went to the quiet corner of the Gardens which is
nearest to Kensington.

On that soft grass, under the shade of those grand trees, we had
loitered together in the days of our betrothal. It was his favorite
walk; and he had taken me to see it in the early days of our
acquaintance. There, he had first asked me to be his wife. There, we had
felt the rapture of our first kiss. It was surely natural that I should
wish to see once more a place sacred to such memories as these? I am
only twenty-three years old; I have no child to comfort me, no
companion of my own age, nothing to love but the dumb creature who is so
faithfully fond of me.

I went to the tree under which we stood, when my dear one’s eyes told
his love before he could utter it in words. The sun of that vanished day
shone on me again; it was the same noontide hour; the same solitude
was around me. I had feared the first effect of the dreadful contrast
between past and present. No! I was quiet and resigned. My thoughts,
rising higher than earth, dwelt on the better life beyond the grave.
Some tears came into my eyes. But I was not unhappy. My memory of all
that happened may be trusted, even in trifles which relate only to
myself--I was not unhappy.

The first object that I saw, when my eyes were clear again, was the dog.
He crouched a few paces away from me, trembling pitiably, but uttering
no cry. What had caused the fear that overpowered him?

I was soon to know.

I called to the dog; he remained immovable--conscious of some mysterious
coming thing that held him spellbound. I tried to go to the poor
creature, and fondle and comfort him.

At the first step forward that I took, something stopped me.

It was not to be seen, and not to be heard. It stopped me.

The still figure of the dog disappeared from my view: the lonely scene
round me disappeared--excepting the light from heaven, the tree that
sheltered me, and the grass in front of me. A sense of unutterable
expectation kept my eyes riveted on the grass. Suddenly, I saw its
myriad blades rise erect and shivering. The fear came to me of something
passing over them with the invisible swiftness of the wind. The
shivering advanced. It was all round me. It crept into the leaves of
the tree over my head; they shuddered, without a sound to tell of their
agitation; their pleasant natural rustling was struck dumb. The song of
the birds had ceased. The cries of the water-fowl on the pond were heard
no more. There was a dreadful silence.

But the lovely sunshine poured down on me, as brightly as ever.

In that dazzling light, in that fearful silence, I felt an Invisible
Presence near me. It touched me gently.

At the touch, my heart throbbed with an overwhelming joy. Exquisite
pleasure thrilled through every nerve in my body. I knew him! From the
unseen world--himself unseen--he had returned to me. Oh, I knew him!

And yet, my helpless mortality longed for a sign that might give me
assurance of the truth. The yearning in me shaped itself into words.
I tried to utter the words. I would have said, if I could have spoken:
“Oh, my angel, give me a token that it is You!” But I was like a person
struck dumb--I could only think it.

The Invisible Presence read my thought. I felt my lips touched, as my
husband’s lips used to touch them when he kissed me. And that was my
answer. A thought came to me again. I would have said, if I could have
spoken: “Are you here to take me to the better world?”

I waited. Nothing that I could feel touched me.

I was conscious of thinking once more. I would have said, if I could
have spoken: “Are you here to protect me?”

I felt myself held in a gentle embrace, as my husband’s arms used to
hold me when he pressed me to his breast. And that was my answer.

The touch that was like the touch of his lips, lingered and was lost;
the clasp that was like the clasp of his arms, pressed me and fell away.
The garden-scene resumed its natural aspect. I saw a human creature
near, a lovely little girl looking at me.

At that moment, when I was my own lonely self again, the sight of the
child soothed and attracted me. I advanced, intending to speak to her.
To my horror I suddenly ceased to see her. She disappeared as if I had
been stricken blind.

And yet I could see the landscape round me; I could see the heaven
above me. A time passed--only a few minutes, as I thought--and the child
became visible to me again; walking hand-in-hand with her father. I
approached them; I was close enough to see that they were looking at
me with pity and surprise. My impulse was to ask if they saw anything
strange in my face or my manner. Before I could speak, the horrible
wonder happened again. They vanished from my view.

Was the Invisible Presence still near? Was it passing between me and
my fellow-mortals; forbidding communication, in that place and at that
time?

It must have been so. When I turned away in my ignorance, with a heavy
heart, the dreadful blankness which had twice shut out from me the
beings of my own race, was not between me and my dog. The poor little
creature filled me with pity; I called him to me. He moved at the sound
of my voice, and followed me languidly; not quite awakened yet from the
trance of terror that had possessed him.

Before I had retired by more than a few steps, I thought I was conscious
of the Presence again. I held out my longing arms to it. I waited in the
hope of a touch to tell me that I might return. Perhaps I was answered
by indirect means? I only know that a resolution to return to the same
place, at the same hour, came to me, and quieted my mind.

The morning of the next day was dull and cloudy; but the rain held off.
I set forth again to the Gardens.

My dog ran on before me into the street--and stopped: waiting to see in
which direction I might lead the way. When I turned toward the Gardens,
he dropped behind me. In a little while I looked back. He was following
me no longer; he stood irresolute. I called to him. He advanced a few
steps--hesitated--and ran back to the house.

I went on by myself. Shall I confess my superstition? I thought the
dog’s desertion of me a bad omen.

Arrived at the tree, I placed myself under it. The minutes followed each
other uneventfully. The cloudy sky darkened. The dull surface of the
grass showed no shuddering consciousness of an unearthly creature
passing over it.

I still waited, with an obstinacy which was fast becoming the obstinacy
of despair. How long an interval elapsed, while I kept watch on the
ground before me, I am not able to say. I only know that a change came.

Under the dull gray light I saw the grass move--but not as it had moved,
on the day before. It shriveled as if a flame had scorched it. No flame
appeared. The brown underlying earth showed itself winding onward in
a thin strip--which might have been a footpath traced in fire. It
frightened me. I longed for the protection of the Invisible Presence. I
prayed for a warning of it, if danger was near.

A touch answered me. It was as if a hand unseen had taken my hand--had
raised it, little by little--had left it, pointing to the thin brown
path that wound toward me under the shriveled blades of grass.

I looked to the far end of the path.

The unseen hand closed on my hand with a warning pressure: the
revelation of the coming danger was near me--I waited for it. I saw it.

The figure of a man appeared, advancing toward me along the thin brown
path. I looked in his face as he came nearer. It showed me dimly the
face of my husband’s brother--John Zant.

The consciousness of myself as a living creature left me. I knew
nothing; I felt nothing. I was dead.

When the torture of revival made me open my eyes, I found myself on the
grass. Gentle hands raised my head, at the moment when I recovered my
senses. Who had brought me to life again? Who was taking care of me?

I looked upward, and saw--bending over me--John Zant.

VII.

THERE, the manuscript ended.

Some lines had been added on the last page; but they had been so
carefully erased as to be illegible. These words of explanation appeared
below the canceled sentences:

“I had begun to write the little that remains to be told, when it struck
me that I might, unintentionally, be exercising an unfair influence on
your opinion. Let me only remind you that I believe absolutely in the
supernatural revelation which I have endeavored to describe. Remember
this--and decide for me what I dare not decide for myself.”

There was no serious obstacle in the way of compliance with this
request.

Judged from the point of view of the materialist, Mrs. Zant might no
doubt be the victim of illusions (produced by a diseased state of the
nervous system), which have been known to exist--as in the celebrated
case of the book-seller, Nicolai, of Berlin--without being accompanied
by derangement of the intellectual powers. But Mr. Rayburn was not
asked to solve any such intricate problem as this. He had been merely
instructed to read the manuscript, and to say what impression it had
left on him of the mental condition of the writer; whose doubt of
herself had been, in all probability, first suggested by remembrance of
the illness from which she had suffered--brain-fever.

Under these circumstances, there could be little difficulty in forming
an opinion. The memory which had recalled, and the judgment which had
arranged, the succession of events related in the narrative, revealed a
mind in full possession of its resources.

Having satisfied himself so far, Mr. Rayburn abstained from considering
the more serious question suggested by what he had read.

At any time his habits of life and his ways of thinking would have
rendered him unfit to weigh the arguments, which assert or deny
supernatural revelation among the creatures of earth. But his mind was
now so disturbed by the startling record of experience which he had just
read, that he was only conscious of feeling certain impressions--without
possessing the capacity to reflect on them. That his anxiety on Mrs.
Zant’s account had been increased, and that his doubts of Mr. John Zant
had been encouraged, were the only practical results of the confidence
placed in him of which he was thus far aware. In the ordinary exigencies
of life a man of hesitating disposition, his interest in Mrs. Zant’s
welfare, and his desire to discover what had passed between her
brother-in-law and herself, after their meeting in the Gardens, urged
him into instant action. In half an hour more, he had arrived at her
lodgings. He was at once admitted.

VIII.

MRS. ZANT was alone, in an imperfectly lighted room.

“I hope you will excuse the bad light,” she said; “my head has been
burning as if the fever had come back again. Oh, don’t go away! After
what I have suffered, you don’t know how dreadful it is to be alone.”

The tone of her voice told him that she had been crying. He at once
tried the best means of setting the poor lady at ease, by telling her
of the conclusion at which he had arrived, after reading her manuscript.
The happy result showed itself instantly: her face brightened, her
manner changed; she was eager to hear more.

“Have I produced any other impression on you?” she asked.

He understood the allusion. Expressing sincere respect for her own
convictions, he told her honestly that he was not prepared to enter
on the obscure and terrible question of supernatural interposition.
Grateful for the tone in which he had answered her, she wisely and
delicately changed the subject.

“I must speak to you of my brother-in-law,” she said. “He has told me of
your visit; and I am anxious to know what you think of him. Do you like
Mr. John Zant?”

Mr. Rayburn hesitated.

The careworn look appeared again in her face. “If you had felt as kindly
toward him as he feels toward you,” she said, “I might have gone to St.
Sallins with a lighter heart.”

Mr. Rayburn thought of the supernatural appearances, described at the
close of her narrative. “You believe in that terrible warning,” he
remonstrated; “and yet, you go to your brother-in-law’s house!”

“I believe,” she answered, “in the spirit of the man who loved me in the
days of his earthly bondage. I am under _his_ protection. What have I
to do but to cast away my fears, and to wait in faith and hope? It might
have helped my resolution if a friend had been near to encourage me.”
 She paused and smiled sadly. “I must remember,” she resumed, “that your
way of understanding my position is not my way. I ought to have told you
that Mr. John Zant feels needless anxiety about my health. He declares
that he will not lose sight of me until his mind is at ease. It
is useless to attempt to alter his opinion. He says my nerves are
shattered--and who that sees me can doubt it? He tells me that my only
chance of getting better is to try change of air and perfect repose--how
can I contradict him? He reminds me that I have no relation but himself,
and no house open to me but his own--and God knows he is right!”

She said those last words in accents of melancholy resignation, which
grieved the good man whose one merciful purpose was to serve and console
her. He spoke impulsively with the freedom of an old friend,

“I want to know more of you and Mr. John Zant than I know now,” he said.
“My motive is a better one than mere curiosity. Do you believe that I
feel a sincere interest in you?”

“With my whole heart.”

That reply encouraged him to proceed with what he had to say. “When
you recovered from your fainting-fit,” he began, “Mr. John Zant asked
questions, of course?”

“He asked what could possibly have happened, in such a quiet place as
Kensington Gardens, to make me faint.”

“And how did you answer?”

“Answer? I couldn’t even look at him!”

“You said nothing?”

“Nothing. I don’t know what he thought of me; he might have been
surprised, or he might have been offended.”

“Is he easily offended?” Mr. Rayburn asked.

“Not in my experience of him.”

“Do you mean your experience of him before your illness?”

“Yes. Since my recovery, his engagements with country patients have kept
him away from London. I have not seen him since he took these lodgings
for me. But he is always considerate. He has written more than once to
beg that I will not think him neglectful, and to tell me (what I knew
already through my poor husband) that he has no money of his own, and
must live by his profession.”

“In your husband’s lifetime, were the two brothers on good terms?”

“Always. The one complaint I ever heard my husband make of John Zant was
that he didn’t come to see us often enough, after our marriage. Is there
some wickedness in him which we have never suspected? It may be--but
_how_ can it be? I have every reason to be grateful to the man against
whom I have been supernaturally warned! His conduct to me has been
always perfect. I can’t tell you what I owe to his influence in quieting
my mind, when a dreadful doubt arose about my husband’s death.”

“Do you mean doubt if he died a natural death?”

“Oh, no! no! He was dying of rapid consumption--but his sudden death
took the doctors by surprise. One of them thought that he might have
taken an overdose of his sleeping drops, by mistake. The other disputed
this conclusion, or there might have been an inquest in the house. Oh,
don’t speak of it any more! Let us talk of something else. Tell me when
I shall see you again.”

“I hardly know. When do you and your brother-in-law leave London?”

“To-morrow.” She looked at Mr. Rayburn with a piteous entreaty in her
eyes; she said, timidly: “Do you ever go to the seaside, and take your
dear little girl with you?”

The request, at which she had only dared to hint, touched on the idea
which was at that moment in Mr. Rayburn’s mind.

Interpreted by his strong prejudice against John Zant, what she had said
of her brother-in-law filled him with forebodings of peril to herself;
all the more powerful in their influence, for this reason--that he
shrank from distinctly realizing them. If another person had been
present at the interview, and had said to him afterward: “That man’s
reluctance to visit his sister-in-law, while her husband was living, is
associated with a secret sense of guilt which her innocence cannot
even imagine: he, and he alone, knows the cause of her husband’s sudden
death: his feigned anxiety about her health is adopted as the safest
means of enticing her into his house,”--if those formidable conclusions
had been urged on Mr. Rayburn, he would have felt it his duty to reject
them, as unjustifiable aspersions on an absent man. And yet, when he
took leave that evening of Mrs. Zant, he had pledged himself to give
Lucy a holiday at the seaside: and he had said, without blushing, that
the child really deserved it, as a reward for general good conduct and
attention to her lessons!

IX.

THREE days later, the father and daughter arrived toward evening at St.
Sallins-on-Sea. They found Mrs. Zant at the station.

The poor woman’s joy, on seeing them, expressed itself like the joy of a
child. “Oh, I am so glad! so glad!” was all she could say when they met.
Lucy was half-smothered with kisses, and was made supremely happy by a
present of the finest doll she had ever possessed. Mrs. Zant accompanied
her friends to the rooms which had been secured at the hotel. She was
able to speak confidentially to Mr. Rayburn, while Lucy was in the
balcony hugging her doll, and looking at the sea.

The one event that had happened during Mrs. Zant’s short residence at
St. Sallins was the departure of her brother-in-law that morning, for
London. He had been called away to operate on the feet of a wealthy
patient who knew the value of his time: his housekeeper expected that he
would return to dinner.

As to his conduct toward Mrs. Zant, he was not only as attentive as
ever--he was almost oppressively affectionate in his language and
manner. There was no service that a man could render which he had
not eagerly offered to her. He declared that he already perceived an
improvement in her health; he congratulated her on having decided to
stay in his house; and (as a proof, perhaps, of his sincerity) he had
repeatedly pressed her hand. “Have you any idea what all this means?”
 she said, simply.

Mr. Rayburn kept his idea to himself. He professed ignorance; and asked
next what sort of person the housekeeper was.

Mrs. Zant shook her head ominously.

“Such a strange creature,” she said, “and in the habit of taking such
liberties that I begin to be afraid she is a little crazy.”

“Is she an old woman?”

“No--only middle-aged.” This morning, after her master had left the
house, she actually asked me what I thought of my brother-in-law! I told
her, as coldly as possible, that I thought he was very kind. She was
quite insensible to the tone in which I had spoken; she went on from bad
to worse. “Do you call him the sort of man who would take the fancy of a
young woman?” was her next question. She actually looked at me (I might
have been wrong; and I hope I was) as if the “young woman” she had in
her mind was myself! I said: “I don’t think of such things, and I don’t
talk about them.” Still, she was not in the least discouraged; she made
a personal remark next: “Excuse me--but you do look wretchedly pale.”
 I thought she seemed to enjoy the defect in my complexion; I really
believe it raised me in her estimation. “We shall get on better in
time,” she said; “I am beginning to like you.” She walked out humming a
tune. Don’t you agree with me? Don’t you think she’s crazy?”

“I can hardly give an opinion until I have seen her. Does she look as if
she might have been a pretty woman at one time of her life?”

“Not the sort of pretty woman whom I admire!”

Mr. Rayburn smiled. “I was thinking,” he resumed, “that this person’s
odd conduct may perhaps be accounted for. She is probably jealous of any
young lady who is invited to her master’s house--and (till she noticed
your complexion) she began by being jealous of you.”

Innocently at a loss to understand how _she_ could become an object
of the housekeeper’s jealousy, Mrs. Zant looked at Mr. Rayburn in
astonishment. Before she could give expression to her feeling of
surprise, there was an interruption--a welcome interruption. A waiter
entered the room, and announced a visitor; described as “a gentleman.”

Mrs. Zant at once rose to retire.

“Who is the gentleman?” Mr. Rayburn asked--detaining Mrs. Zant as he
spoke.

A voice which they both recognized answered gayly, from the outer side
of the door:

“A friend from London.”

X.

“WELCOME to St. Sallins!” cried Mr. John Zant. “I knew that you were
expected, my dear sir, and I took my chance at finding you at the
hotel.” He turned to his sister-in-law, and kissed her hand with an
elaborate gallantry worthy of Sir Charles Grandison himself. “When I
reached home, my dear, and heard that you had gone out, I guessed that
your object was to receive our excellent friend. You have not felt
lonely while I have been away? That’s right! that’s right!” he looked
toward the balcony, and discovered Lucy at the open window, staring
at the magnificent stranger. “Your little daughter, Mr. Rayburn? Dear
child! Come and kiss me.”

Lucy answered in one positive word: “No.”

Mr. John Zant was not easily discouraged.

“Show me your doll, darling,” he said. “Sit on my knee.”

Lucy answered in two positive words--“I won’t.”

Her father approached the window to administer the necessary reproof.
Mr. John Zant interfered in the cause of mercy with his best grace. He
held up his hands in cordial entreaty. “Dear Mr. Rayburn! The fairies
are sometimes shy; and _this_ little fairy doesn’t take to strangers at
first sight. Dear child! All in good time. And what stay do you make
at St. Sallins? May we hope that our poor attractions will tempt you to
prolong your visit?”

He put his flattering little question with an ease of manner which
was rather too plainly assumed; and he looked at Mr. Rayburn with a
watchfulness which appeared to attach undue importance to the reply.
When he said: “What stay do you make at St. Sallins?” did he really
mean: “How soon do you leave us?” Inclining to adopt this conclusion,
Mr. Rayburn answered cautiously that his stay at the seaside would
depend on circumstances. Mr. John Zant looked at his sister-in-law,
sitting silent in a corner with Lucy on her lap. “Exert your
attractions,” he said; “make the circumstances agreeable to our good
friend. Will you dine with us to-day, my dear sir, and bring your little
fairy with you?”

Lucy was far from receiving this complimentary allusion in the spirit
in which it had been offered. “I’m not a fairy,” she declared. “I’m a
child.”

“And a naughty child,” her father added, with all the severity that he
could assume.

“I can’t help it, papa; the man with the big beard puts me out.”

The man with the big beard was amused--amiably, paternally amused--by
Lucy’s plain speaking. He repeated his invitation to dinner; and he
did his best to look disappointed when Mr. Rayburn made the necessary
excuses.

“Another day,” he said (without, however, fixing the day). “I think
you will find my house comfortable. My housekeeper may perhaps be
eccentric--but in all essentials a woman in a thousand. Do you feel the
change from London already? Our air at St. Sallins is really worthy of
its reputation. Invalids who come here are cured as if by magic. What do
you think of Mrs. Zant? How does she look?”

Mr. Rayburn was evidently expected to say that she looked better. He
said it. Mr. John Zant seemed to have anticipated a stronger expression
of opinion.

“Surprisingly better!” he pronounced. “Infinitely better! We ought both
to be grateful. Pray believe that we _are_ grateful.”

“If you mean grateful to me,” Mr. Rayburn remarked, “I don’t quite
understand--”

“You don’t quite understand? Is it possible that you have forgotten our
conversation when I first had the honor of receiving you? Look at Mrs.
Zant again.”

Mr. Rayburn looked; and Mrs. Zant’s brother-in-law explained himself.

“You notice the return of her color, the healthy brightness of her eyes.
(No, my dear, I am not paying you idle compliments; I am stating plain
facts.) For that happy result, Mr. Rayburn, we are indebted to you.”

“Surely not?”

“Surely yes! It was at your valuable suggestion that I thought of
inviting my sister-in-law to visit me at St. Sallins. Ah, you remember
it now. Forgive me if I look at my watch; the dinner hour is on my mind.
Not, as your dear little daughter there seems to think, because I am
greedy, but because I am always punctual, in justice to the cook. Shall
we see you to-morrow? Call early, and you will find us at home.”

He gave Mrs. Zant his arm, and bowed and smiled, and kissed his hand
to Lucy, and left the room. Recalling their interview at the hotel in
London, Mr. Rayburn now understood John Zant’s object (on that occasion)
in assuming the character of a helpless man in need of a sensible
suggestion. If Mrs. Zant’s residence under his roof became associated
with evil consequences, he could declare that she would never have
entered the house but for Mr. Rayburn’s advice.

With the next day came the hateful necessity of returning this man’s
visit.

Mr. Rayburn was placed between two alternatives. In Mrs. Zant’s
interests he must remain, no matter at what sacrifice of his own
inclinations, on good terms with her brother-in-law--or he must return
to London, and leave the poor woman to her fate. His choice, it is
needless to say, was never a matter of doubt. He called at the house,
and did his innocent best--without in the least deceiving Mr. John
Zant--to make himself agreeable during the short duration of his visit.
Descending the stairs on his way out, accompanied by Mrs. Zant, he was
surprised to see a middle-aged woman in the hall, who looked as if she
was waiting there expressly to attract notice.

“The housekeeper,” Mrs. Zant whispered. “She is impudent enough to try
to make acquaintance with you.”

This was exactly what the housekeeper was waiting in the hall to do.

“I hope you like our watering-place, sir,” she began. “If I can be of
service to you, pray command me. Any friend of this lady’s has a claim
on me--and you are an old friend, no doubt. I am only the housekeeper;
but I presume to take a sincere interest in Mrs. Zant; and I am indeed
glad to see you here. We none of us know--do we?--how soon we may want a
friend. No offense, I hope? Thank you, sir. Good-morning.”

There was nothing in the woman’s eyes which indicated an unsettled
mind; nothing in the appearance of her lips which suggested habits of
intoxication. That her strange outburst of familiarity proceeded from
some strong motive seemed to be more than probable. Putting together
what Mrs. Zant had already told him, and what he had himself
observed, Mr. Rayburn suspected that the motive might be found in the
housekeeper’s jealousy of her master.

XI.

REFLECTING in the solitude of his own room, Mr. Rayburn felt that the
one prudent course to take would be to persuade Mrs. Zant to leave St.
Sallins. He tried to prepare her for this strong proceeding, when she
came the next day to take Lucy out for a walk.

“If you still regret having forced yourself to accept your
brother-in-law’s invitation,” was all he ventured to say, “don’t forget
that you are perfect mistress of your own actions. You have only to
come to me at the hotel, and I will take you back to London by the next
train.”

She positively refused to entertain the idea.

“I should be a thankless creature, indeed,” she said, “if I accepted
your proposal. Do you think I am ungrateful enough to involve you in a
personal quarrel with John Zant? No! If I find myself forced to leave
the house, I will go away alone.”

There was no moving her from this resolution. When she and Lucy had
gone out together, Mr. Rayburn remained at the hotel, with a mind ill at
ease. A man of readier mental resources might have felt at a loss how to
act for the best, in the emergency that now confronted him. While he was
still as far as ever from arriving at a decision, some person knocked at
the door.

Had Mrs. Zant returned? He looked up as the door was opened, and saw to
his astonishment--Mr. John Zant’s housekeeper.

“Don’t let me alarm you, sir,” the woman said. “Mrs. Zant has been taken
a little faint, at the door of our house. My master is attending to
her.”

“Where is the child?” Mr. Rayburn asked.

“I was bringing her back to you, sir, when we met a lady and her little
girl at the door of the hotel. They were on their way to the beach--and
Miss Lucy begged hard to be allowed to go with them. The lady said the
two children were playfellows, and she was sure you would not object.”

“The lady is quite right. Mrs. Zant’s illness is not serious, I hope?”

“I think not, sir. But I should like to say something in her interests.
May I? Thank you.” She advanced a step nearer to him, and spoke her next
words in a whisper. “Take Mrs. Zant away from this place, and lose no
time in doing it.”

Mr. Rayburn was on his guard. He merely asked: “Why?”

The housekeeper answered in a curiously indirect manner--partly in jest,
as it seemed, and partly in earnest.

“When a man has lost his wife,” she said, “there’s some difference of
opinion in Parliament, as I hear, whether he does right or wrong, if
he marries his wife’s sister. Wait a bit! I’m coming to the point. My
master is one who has a long head on his shoulders; he sees consequences
which escape the notice of people like me. In his way of thinking,
if one man may marry his wife’s sister, and no harm done, where’s the
objection if another man pays a compliment to the family, and marries
his brother’s widow? My master, if you please, is that other man. Take
the widow away before she marries him.”

This was beyond endurance.

“You insult Mrs. Zant,” Mr. Rayburn answered, “if you suppose that such
a thing is possible!”

“Oh! I insult her, do I? Listen to me. One of three things will
happen. She will be entrapped into consenting to it--or frightened into
consenting to it--or drugged into consenting to it--”

Mr. Rayburn was too indignant to let her go on.

“You are talking nonsense,” he said. “There can be no marriage; the law
forbids it.”

“Are you one of the people who see no further than their noses?” she
asked insolently. “Won’t the law take his money? Is he obliged to
mention that he is related to her by marriage, when he buys the
license?” She paused; her humor changed; she stamped furiously on the
floor. The true motive that animated her showed itself in her next
words, and warned Mr. Rayburn to grant a more favorable hearing than he
had accorded to her yet. “If you won’t stop it,” she burst out, “I will!
If he marries anybody, he is bound to marry ME. Will you take her away?
I ask you, for the last time--_will_ you take her away?”

The tone in which she made that final appeal to him had its effect.

“I will go back with you to John Zant’s house,” he said, “and judge for
myself.”

She laid her hand on his arm:

“I must go first--or you may not be let in. Follow me in five minutes;
and don’t knock at the street door.”

On the point of leaving him, she abruptly returned.

“We have forgotten something,” she said. “Suppose my master refuses to
see you. His temper might get the better of him; he might make it so
unpleasant for you that you would be obliged to go.”

“_My_ temper might get the better of _me_,” Mr. Rayburn replied;
“and--if I thought it was in Mrs. Zant’s interests--I might refuse to
leave the house unless she accompanied me.”

“That will never do, sir.”

“Why not?”

“Because I should be the person to suffer.”

“In what way?”

“In this way. If you picked a quarrel with my master, I should be blamed
for it because I showed you upstairs. Besides, think of the lady. You
might frighten her out of her senses, if it came to a struggle between
you two men.”

The language was exaggerated; but there was a force in this last
objection which Mr. Rayburn was obliged to acknowledge.

“And, after all,” the housekeeper continued, “he has more right over her
than you have. He is related to her, and you are only her friend.”

Mr. Rayburn declined to let himself be influenced by this consideration,
“Mr. John Zant is only related to her by marriage,” he said. “If she
prefers trusting in me--come what may of it, I will be worthy of her
confidence.”

The housekeeper shook her head.

“That only means another quarrel,” she answered. “The wise way, with
a man like my master, is the peaceable way. We must manage to deceive
him.”

“I don’t like deceit.”

“In that case, sir, I’ll wish you good-by. We will leave Mrs. Zant to do
the best she can for herself.”

Mr. Rayburn was unreasonable. He positively refused to adopt this
alternative.

“Will you hear what I have got to say?” the housekeeper asked.

“There can be no harm in that,” he admitted. “Go on.”

She took him at his word.

“When you called at our house,” she began, “did you notice the doors in
the passage, on the first floor? Very well. One of them is the door
of the drawing-room, and the other is the door of the library. Do you
remember the drawing-room, sir?”

“I thought it a large well-lighted room,” Mr. Rayburn answered. “And I
noticed a doorway in the wall, with a handsome curtain hanging over it.”

“That’s enough for our purpose,” the housekeeper resumed. “On the other
side of the curtain, if you had looked in, you would have found the
library. Suppose my master is as polite as usual, and begs to be excused
for not receiving you, because it is an inconvenient time. And suppose
you are polite on your side and take yourself off by the drawing-room
door. You will find me waiting downstairs, on the first landing. Do you
see it now?”

“I can’t say I do.”

“You surprise me, sir. What is to prevent us from getting back softly
into the library, by the door in the passage? And why shouldn’t we use
that second way into the library as a means of discovering what may be
going on in the drawing-room? Safe behind the curtain, you will see him
if he behaves uncivilly to Mrs. Zant, or you will hear her if she calls
for help. In either case, you may be as rough and ready with my master
as you find needful; it will be he who has frightened her, and not you.
And who can blame the poor housekeeper because Mr. Rayburn did his
duty, and protected a helpless woman? There is my plan, sir. Is it worth
trying?”

He answered, sharply enough: “I don’t like it.”

The housekeeper opened the door again, and wished him good-by.

If Mr. Rayburn had felt no more than an ordinary interest in Mrs. Zant,
he would have let the woman go. As it was, he stopped her; and, after
some further protest (which proved to be useless), he ended in giving
way.

“You promise to follow my directions?” she stipulated.

He gave the promise. She smiled, nodded, and left him. True to his
instructions, Mr. Rayburn reckoned five minutes by his watch, before he
followed her.

XII.

THE housekeeper was waiting for him, with the street-door ajar.

“They are both in the drawing-room,” she whispered, leading the way
upstairs. “Step softly, and take him by surprise.”

A table of oblong shape stood midway between the drawing-room walls. At
the end of it which was nearest to the window, Mrs. Zant was pacing
to and fro across the breadth of the room. At the opposite end of the
table, John Zant was seated. Taken completely by surprise, he showed
himself in his true character. He started to his feet, and protested
with an oath against the intrusion which had been committed on him.

Heedless of his action and his language, Mr. Rayburn could look at
nothing, could think of nothing, but Mrs. Zant. She was still walking
slowly to and fro, unconscious of the words of sympathy which he
addressed to her, insensible even as it seemed to the presence of other
persons in the room.

John Zant’s voice broke the silence. His temper was under control
again: he had his reasons for still remaining on friendly terms with Mr.
Rayburn.

“I am sorry I forgot myself just now,” he said.

Mr. Rayburn’s interest was concentrated on Mrs. Zant; he took no notice
of the apology.

“When did this happen?” he asked.

“About a quarter of an hour ago. I was fortunately at home. Without
speaking to me, without noticing me, she walked upstairs like a person
in a dream.”

Mr. Rayburn suddenly pointed to Mrs. Zant.

“Look at her!” he said. “There’s a change!”

All restlessness in her movements had come to an end. She was standing
at the further end of the table, which was nearest to the window, in
the full flow of sunlight pouring at that moment over her face. Her eyes
looked out straight before her--void of all expression. Her lips were
a little parted: her head drooped slightly toward her shoulder, in
an attitude which suggested listening for something or waiting for
something. In the warm brilliant light, she stood before the two men,
a living creature self-isolated in a stillness like the stillness of
death.

John Zant was ready with the expression of his opinion.

“A nervous seizure,” he said. “Something resembling catalepsy, as you
see.”

“Have you sent for a doctor?”

“A doctor is not wanted.”

“I beg your pardon. It seems to me that medical help is absolutely
necessary.”

“Be so good as to remember,” Mr. John Zant answered, “that the decision
rests with me, as the lady’s relative. I am sensible of the honor
which your visit confers on me. But the time has been unhappily chosen.
Forgive me if I suggest that you will do well to retire.”

Mr. Rayburn had not forgotten the housekeeper’s advice, or the promise
which she had exacted from him. But the expression in John Zant’s face
was a serious trial to his self-control. He hesitated, and looked back
at Mrs. Zant.

If he provoked a quarrel by remaining in the room, the one alternative
would be the removal of her by force. Fear of the consequences to
herself, if she was suddenly and roughly roused from her trance, was the
one consideration which reconciled him to submission. He withdrew.

The housekeeper was waiting for him below, on the first landing. When
the door of the drawing-room had been closed again, she signed to him
to follow her, and returned up the stairs. After another struggle with
himself, he obeyed. They entered the library from the corridor--and
placed themselves behind the closed curtain which hung over the doorway.
It was easy so to arrange the edge of the drapery as to observe, without
exciting suspicion, whatever was going on in the next room.

Mrs. Zant’s brother-in-law was approaching her at the time when Mr.
Rayburn saw him again.

In the instant afterward, she moved--before he had completely passed
over the space between them. Her still figure began to tremble. She
lifted her drooping head. For a moment there was a shrinking in her--as
if she had been touched by something. She seemed to recognize the touch:
she was still again.

John Zant watched the change. It suggested to him that she was beginning
to recover her senses. He tried the experiment of speaking to her.

“My love, my sweet angel, come to the heart that adores you!”

He advanced again; he passed into the flood of sunlight pouring over
her.

“Rouse yourself!” he said.

She still remained in the same position; apparently at his mercy,
neither hearing him nor seeing him.

“Rouse yourself!” he repeated. “My darling, come to me!”

At the instant when he attempted to embrace her--at the instant when Mr.
Rayburn rushed into the room--John Zant’s arms, suddenly turning rigid,
remained outstretched. With a shriek of horror, he struggled to draw
them back--struggled, in the empty brightness of the sunshine, as if
some invisible grip had seized him.

“What has got me?” the wretch screamed. “Who is holding my hands? Oh,
the cold of it! the cold of it!”

His features became convulsed; his eyes turned upward until only the
white eyeballs were visible. He fell prostrate with a crash that shook
the room.

The housekeeper ran in. She knelt by her master’s body. With one hand
she loosened his cravat. With the other she pointed to the end of the
table.

Mrs. Zant still kept her place; but there was another change. Little by
little, her eyes recovered their natural living expression--then slowly
closed. She tottered backward from the table, and lifted her hands
wildly, as if to grasp at something which might support her. Mr. Rayburn
hurried to her before she fell--lifted her in his arms--and carried her
out of the room.

One of the servants met them in the hall. He sent her for a carriage.
In a quarter of an hour more, Mrs. Zant was safe under his care at the
hotel.

XIII.

THAT night a note, written by the housekeeper, was delivered to Mrs.
Zant.

“The doctors give little hope. The paralytic stroke is spreading upward
to his face. If death spares him, he will live a helpless man. I shall
take care of him to the last. As for you--forget him.”

Mrs. Zant gave the note to Mr. Rayburn.

“Read it, and destroy it,” she said. “It is written in ignorance of the
terrible truth.”

He obeyed--and looked at her in silence, waiting to hear more. She hid
her face. The few words she had addressed to him, after a struggle with
herself, fell slowly and reluctantly from her lips.

She said: “No mortal hand held the hands of John Zant. The guardian
spirit was with me. The promised protection was with me. I know it. I
wish to know no more.”

Having spoken, she rose to retire. He opened the door for her, seeing
that she needed rest in her own room.

Left by himself, he began to consider the prospect that was before him
in the future. How was he to regard the woman who had just left him?
As a poor creature weakened by disease, the victim of her own
nervous delusion? or as the chosen object of a supernatural
revelation--unparalleled by any similar revelation that he had heard of,
or had found recorded in books? His first discovery of the place that
she really held in his estimation dawned on his mind, when he felt
himself recoiling from the conclusion which presented her to his pity,
and yielding to the nobler conviction which felt with her faith, and
raised her to a place apart among other women.

XIV.

THEY left St. Sallins the next day.

Arrived at the end of the journey, Lucy held fast by Mrs. Zant’s hand.
Tears were rising in the child’s eyes.

“Are we to bid her good-by?” she said sadly to her father.

He seemed to be unwilling to trust himself to speak; he only said:

“My dear, ask her yourself.”

But the result justified him. Lucy was happy again.



MISS MORRIS AND THE STRANGER.

I.

WHEN I first saw him, he was lost in one of the Dead Cities of
England--situated on the South Coast, and called Sandwich.

Shall I describe Sandwich? I think not. Let us own the truth;
descriptions of places, however nicely they may be written, are always
more or less dull. Being a woman, I naturally hate dullness. Perhaps
some description of Sandwich may drop out, as it were, from my report of
our conversation when we first met as strangers in the street.

He began irritably. “I’ve lost myself,” he said.

“People who don’t know the town often do that,” I remarked.

He went on: “Which is my way to the Fleur de Lys Inn?”

His way was, in the first place, to retrace his steps. Then to turn to
the left. Then to go on until he found two streets meeting. Then to take
the street on the right. Then to look out for the second turning on the
left. Then to follow the turning until he smelled stables--and there
was the inn. I put it in the clearest manner, and never stumbled over a
word.

“How the devil am I to remember all that?” he said.

This was rude. We are naturally and properly indignant with any man
who is rude to us. But whether we turn our backs on him in contempt,
or whether we are merciful and give him a lesson in politeness,
depends entirely on the man. He may be a bear, but he may also have
his redeeming qualities. This man had redeeming qualities. I cannot
positively say that he was either handsome or ugly, young or old,
well or ill dressed. But I can speak with certainty to the personal
attractions which recommended him to notice. For instance, the tone of
his voice was persuasive. (Did you ever read a story, written by one of
_us_, in which we failed to dwell on our hero’s voice?) Then, again,
his hair was reasonably long. (Are you acquainted with any woman who can
endure a man with a cropped head?) Moreover, he was of a good height.
(It must be a very tall woman who can feel favorably inclined toward
a short man.) Lastly, although his eyes were not more than fairly
presentable in form and color, the wretch had in some unaccountable
manner become possessed of beautiful eyelashes. They were even better
eyelashes than mine. I write quite seriously. There is one woman who is
above the common weakness of vanity--and she holds the present pen.

So I gave my lost stranger a lesson in politeness. The lesson took the
form of a trap. I asked him if he would like me to show him the way to
the inn. He was still annoyed at losing himself. As I had anticipated,
he bluntly answered: “Yes.”

“When you were a boy, and you wanted something,” I said, “did your
mother teach you to say ‘Please’?”

He positively blushed. “She did,” he admitted; “and she taught me to say
‘Beg your pardon’ when I was rude. I’ll say it now: ‘Beg your pardon.’”

This curious apology increased my belief in his redeeming qualities. I
led the way to the inn. He followed me in silence. No woman who respects
herself can endure silence when she is in the company of a man. I made
him talk.

“Do you come to us from Ramsgate?” I began. He only nodded his head.
“We don’t think much of Ramsgate here,” I went on. “There is not an old
building in the place. And their first Mayor was only elected the other
day!”

This point of view seemed to be new to him. He made no attempt to
dispute it; he only looked around him, and said: “Sandwich is a
melancholy place, miss.” He was so rapidly improving in politeness, that
I encouraged him by a smile. As a citizen of Sandwich, I may say that we
take it as a compliment when we are told that our town is a melancholy
place. And why not? Melancholy is connected with dignity. And dignity
is associated with age. And _we_ are old. I teach my pupils logic, among
other things--there is a specimen. Whatever may be said to the contrary,
women can reason. They can also wander; and I must admit that _I_ am
wandering. Did I mention, at starting, that I was a governess? If not,
that allusion to “pupils” must have come in rather abruptly. Let me make
my excuses, and return to my lost stranger.

“Is there any such thing as a straight street in all Sandwich?” he
asked.

“Not one straight street in the whole town.”

“Any trade, miss?”

“As little as possible--and _that_ is expiring.”

“A decayed place, in short?”

“Thoroughly decayed.”

My tone seemed to astonish him. “You speak as if you were proud of its
being a decayed place,” he said.

I quite respected him; this was such an intelligent remark to make. We
do enjoy our decay: it is our chief distinction. Progress and prosperity
everywhere else; decay and dissolution here. As a necessary consequence,
we produce our own impression, and we like to be original. The sea
deserted us long ago: it once washed our walls, it is now two miles away
from us--we don’t regret the sea. We had sometimes ninety-five ships in
our harbor, Heaven only knows how many centuries ago; we now have one
or two small coasting vessels, half their time aground in a muddy little
river--we don’t regret our harbor. But one house in the town is daring
enough to anticipate the arrival of resident visitors, and announces
furnished apartments to let. What a becoming contrast to our modern
neighbor, Ramsgate! Our noble market-place exhibits the laws made by the
corporation; and every week there are fewer and fewer people to obey the
laws. How convenient! Look at our one warehouse by the river side--with
the crane generally idle, and the windows mostly boarded up; and perhaps
one man at the door, looking out for the job which his better sense
tells him cannot possibly come. What a wholesome protest against the
devastating hurry and over-work elsewhere, which has shattered the
nerves of the nation! “Far from me and from my friends” (to borrow the
eloquent language of Doctor Johnson) “be such frigid enthusiasm as shall
conduct us indifferent and unmoved” over the bridge by which you enter
Sandwich, and pay a toll if you do it in a carriage. “That man is
little to be envied (Doctor Johnson again) who can lose himself in
our labyrinthine streets, and not feel that he has reached the welcome
limits of progress, and found a haven of rest in an age of hurry.”

I am wandering again. Bear with the unpremeditated enthusiasm of a
citizen who only attained years of discretion at her last birthday. We
shall soon have done with Sandwich; we are close to the door of the inn.

“You can’t mistake it now, sir,” I said. “Good-morning.”

He looked down at me from under his beautiful eyelashes (have I
mentioned that I am a little woman?), and he asked in his persuasive
tones: “Must we say good-by?”

I made him a bow.

“Would you allow me to see you safe home?” he suggested.

Any other man would have offended me. This man blushed like a boy, and
looked at the pavement instead of looking at me. By this time I had made
up my mind about him. He was not only a gentleman beyond all doubt, but
a shy gentleman as well. His bluntness and his odd remarks were, as I
thought, partly efforts to disguise his shyness, and partly refuges in
which he tried to forget his own sense of it. I answered his audacious
proposal amiably and pleasantly. “You would only lose your way again,”
 I said, “and I should have to take you back to the inn for the second
time.”

Wasted words! My obstinate stranger only made another proposal.

“I have ordered lunch here,” he said, “and I am quite alone.” He stopped
in confusion, and looked as if he rather expected me to box his ears. “I
shall be forty next birthday,” he went on; “I am old enough to be your
father.” I all but burst out laughing, and stepped across the street, on
my way home. He followed me. “We might invite the landlady to join
us,” he said, looking the picture of a headlong man, dismayed by the
consciousness of his own imprudence. “Couldn’t you honor me by lunching
with me if we had the landlady?” he asked.

This was a little too much. “Quite out of the question, sir--and you
ought to know it,” I said with severity. He half put out his hand.
“Won’t you even shake hands with me?” he inquired piteously. When
we have most properly administered a reproof to a man, what is the
perversity which makes us weakly pity him the minute afterward? I was
fool enough to shake hands with this perfect stranger. And, having done
it, I completed the total loss of my dignity by running away. Our dear
crooked little streets hid me from him directly.

As I rang at the door-bell of my employer’s house, a thought occurred to
me which might have been alarming to a better regulated mind than mine.

“Suppose he should come back to Sandwich?”

II.

BEFORE many more days passed I had troubles of my own to contend with,
which put the eccentric stranger out of my head for the time.

Unfortunately, my troubles are part of my story; and my early life mixes
itself up with them. In consideration of what is to follow, may I say
two words relating to the period before I was a governess?

I am the orphan daughter of a shopkeeper of Sandwich. My father died,
leaving to his widow and child an honest name and a little income of L80
a year. We kept on the shop--neither gaining nor losing by it. The truth
is nobody would buy our poor little business. I was thirteen years old
at the time; and I was able to help my mother, whose health was then
beginning to fail. Never shall I forget a certain bright summer’s day,
when I saw a new customer enter our shop. He was an elderly gentleman;
and he seemed surprised to find so young a girl as myself in charge
of the business, and, what is more, competent to support the charge. I
answered his questions in a manner which seemed to please him. He soon
discovered that my education (excepting my knowledge of the business)
had been sadly neglected; and he inquired if he could see my mother. She
was resting on the sofa in the back parlor--and she received him there.
When he came out, he patted me on the cheek. “I have taken a fancy to
you,” he said, “and perhaps I shall come back again.” He did come back
again. My mother had referred him to the rector for our characters in
the town, and he had heard what our clergyman could say for us. Our only
relations had emigrated to Australia, and were not doing well there.
My mother’s death would leave me, so far as relatives were concerned,
literally alone in the world. “Give this girl a first-rate education,”
 said our elderly customer, sitting at our tea-table in the back parlor,
“and she will do. If you will send her to school, ma’am, I’ll pay for
her education.” My poor mother began to cry at the prospect of parting
with me. The old gentleman said: “Think of it,” and got up to go.
He gave me his card as I opened the shop-door for him. “If you find
yourself in trouble,” he whispered, so that my mother could not hear
him, “be a wise child, and write and tell me of it.” I looked at the
card. Our kind-hearted customer was no less a person than Sir Gervase
Damian, of Garrum Park, Sussex--with landed property in our county as
well! He had made himself (through the rector, no doubt) far better
acquainted than I was with the true state of my mother’s health. In four
months from the memorable day when the great man had taken tea with us,
my time had come to be alone in the world. I have no courage to dwell
on it; my spirits sink, even at this distance of time, when I think of
myself in those days. The good rector helped me with his advice--I wrote
to Sir Gervase Damian.

A change had come over his life as well as mine in the interval since we
had met.

Sir Gervase had married for the second time--and, what was more foolish
still, perhaps, at his age, had married a young woman. She was said
to be consumptive, and of a jealous temper as well. Her husband’s only
child by his first wife, a son and heir, was so angry at his father’s
second marriage that he left the house. The landed property being
entailed, Sir Gervase could only express his sense of his son’s conduct
by making a new will, which left all his property in money to his young
wife.

These particulars I gathered from the steward, who was expressly sent to
visit me at Sandwich.

“Sir Gervase never makes a promise without keeping it,” this gentleman
informed me. “I am directed to take you to a first-rate ladies’
school in the neighborhood of London, and to make all the necessary
arrangements for your remaining there until you are eighteen years
of age. Any written communications in the future are to pass, if you
please, through the hands of the rector of Sandwich. The delicate health
of the new Lady Damian makes it only too likely that the lives of her
husband and herself will be passed, for the most part, in a milder
climate than the climate of England. I am instructed to say this, and to
convey to you Sir Gervase’s best wishes.”

By the rector’s advice, I accepted the position offered to me in this
unpleasantly formal manner--concluding (quite correctly, as I afterward
discovered) that I was indebted to Lady Damian for the arrangement which
personally separated me from my benefactor. Her husband’s kindness and
my gratitude, meeting on the neutral ground of Garrum Park, were
objects of conjugal distrust to this lady. Shocking! shocking! I left a
sincerely grateful letter to be forwarded to Sir Gervase; and, escorted
by the steward, I went to school--being then just fourteen years old.

I know I am a fool. Never mind. There is some pride in me, though I am
only a small shopkeeper’s daughter. My new life had its trials--my pride
held me up.

For the four years during which I remained at the school, my poor
welfare might be a subject of inquiry to the rector, and sometimes even
the steward--never to Sir Gervase himself. His winters were no doubt
passed abroad; but in the summer time he and Lady Damian were at home
again. Not even for a day or two in the holiday time was there pity
enough felt for my lonely position to ask me to be the guest of the
housekeeper (I expected nothing more) at Garrum Park. But for my pride,
I might have felt it bitterly. My pride said to me, “Do justice to
yourself.” I worked so hard, I behaved so well, that the mistress of the
school wrote to Sir Gervase to tell him how thoroughly I had deserved
the kindness that he had shown to me. No answer was received. (Oh, Lady
Damian!) No change varied the monotony of my life--except when one of
my schoolgirl friends sometimes took me home with her for a few days at
vacation time. Never mind. My pride held me up.

As the last half-year of my time at school approached, I began to
consider the serious question of my future life.

Of course, I could have lived on my eighty pounds a year; but what a
lonely, barren existence it promised to be!--unless somebody married me;
and where, if you please, was I to find him? My education had thoroughly
fitted me to be a governess. Why not try my fortune, and see a little
of the world in that way? Even if I fell among ill-conditioned people, I
could be independent of them, and retire on my income.

The rector, visiting London, came to see me. He not only approved of
my idea--he offered me a means of carrying it out. A worthy family,
recently settled at Sandwich, were in want of a governess. The head of
the household was partner in a business (the exact nature of which it
is needless to mention) having “branches” out of London. He had become
superintendent of a new “branch”--tried as a commercial experiment,
under special circumstances, at Sandwich. The idea of returning to my
native place pleased me--dull as the place was to others. I accepted the
situation.

When the steward’s usual half-yearly letter arrived soon afterward,
inquiring what plans I had formed on leaving school, and what he could
do to help them, acting on behalf of Sir Gervase, a delicious tingling
filled me from head to foot when I thought of my own independence. It
was not ingratitude toward my benefactor; it was only my little private
triumph over Lady Damian. Oh, my sisters of the sex, can you not
understand and forgive me?

So to Sandwich I returned; and there, for three years, I remained with
the kindest people who ever breathed the breath of life. Under their
roof I was still living when I met with my lost gentleman in the street.

Ah, me! the end of that quiet, pleasant life was near. When I lightly
spoke to the odd stranger of the expiring trade of the town, I never
expected that my employer’s trade was expiring too. The speculation had
turned out to be a losing one; and all his savings had been embarked
in it. He could no longer remain at Sandwich, or afford to keep a
governess. His wife broke the sad news to me. I was so fond of the
children, I proposed to her to give up my salary. Her husband refused
even to consider the proposal. It was the old story of poor humanity
over again. We cried, we kissed, we parted.

What was I to do next?--Write to Sir Gervase?

I had already written, soon after my return to Sandwich; breaking
through the regulations by directly addressing Sir Gervase. I expressed
my grateful sense of his generosity to a poor girl who had no family
claim on him; and I promised to make the one return in my power by
trying to be worthy of the interest he had taken in me. The letter was
written without any alloy of mental reserve. My new life as a governess
was such a happy one that I had forgotten my paltry bitterness of
feeling against Lady Damian.

It was a relief to think of this change for the better, when the
secretary at Garrum Park informed me that he had forwarded my letter
to Sir Gervase, then at Madeira with his sick wife. She was slowly and
steadily wasting away in a decline. Before another year had passed, Sir
Gervase was left a widower for the second time, with no child to console
him under his loss. No answer came to my grateful letter. I should
have been unreasonable indeed if I had expected the bereaved husband to
remember me in his grief and loneliness. Could I write to him again, in
my own trumpery little interests, under these circumstances? I thought
(and still think) that the commonest feeling of delicacy forbade it. The
only other alternative was to appeal to the ever-ready friends of the
obscure and helpless public. I advertised in the newspapers.

The tone of one of the answers which I received impressed me so
favorably, that I forwarded my references. The next post brought my
written engagement, and the offer of a salary which doubled my income.

The story of the past is told; and now we may travel on again, with no
more stoppages by the way.

III.

THE residence of my present employer was in the north of England. Having
to pass through London, I arranged to stay in town for a few days to
make some necessary additions to my wardrobe. An old servant of the
rector, who kept a lodging-house in the suburbs, received me kindly, and
guided my choice in the serious matter of a dressmaker. On the second
morning after my arrival an event happened. The post brought me a
letter forwarded from the rectory. Imagine my astonishment when my
correspondent proved to be Sir Gervase Damian himself!

The letter was dated from his house in London. It briefly invited me to
call and see him, for a reason which I should hear from his own lips. He
naturally supposed that I was still at Sandwich, and requested me, in a
postscript, to consider my journey as made at his expense.

I went to the house the same day. While I was giving my name, a
gentleman came out into the hall. He spoke to me without ceremony.

“Sir Gervase,” he said, “believes he is going to die. Don’t encourage
him in that idea. He may live for another year or more, if his friends
will only persuade him to be hopeful about himself.”

With that, the gentleman left me; the servant said it was the doctor.

The change in my benefactor, since I had seen him last, startled and
distressed me. He lay back in a large arm-chair, wearing a grim black
dressing-gown, and looking pitiably thin and pinched and worn. I do
not think I should have known him again, if we had met by accident. He
signed to me to be seated on a little chair by his side.

“I wanted to see you,” he said quietly, “before I die. You must have
thought me neglectful and unkind, with good reason. My child, you have
not been forgotten. If years have passed without a meeting between us,
it has not been altogether my fault--”

He stopped. A pained expression passed over his poor worn face; he
was evidently thinking of the young wife whom he had lost. I
repeated--fervently and sincerely repeated--what I had already said
to him in writing. “I owe everything, sir, to your fatherly kindness.”
 Saying this, I ventured a little further. I took his wan white hand,
hanging over the arm of the chair, and respectfully put it to my lips.

He gently drew his hand away from me, and sighed as he did it. Perhaps
_she_ had sometimes kissed his hand.

“Now tell me about yourself,” he said.

I told him of my new situation, and how I had got it. He listened with
evident interest.

“I was not self-deceived,” he said, “when I first took a fancy to you
in the shop. I admire your independent feeling; it’s the right kind of
courage in a girl like you. But you must let me do something more for
you--some little service to remember me by when the end has come. What
shall it be?”

“Try to get better, sir; and let me write to you now and then,” I
answered. “Indeed, indeed, I want nothing more.”

“You will accept a little present, at least?” With those words he took
from the breast-pocket of his dressing-gown an enameled cross attached
to a gold chain. “Think of me sometimes,” he said, as he put the chain
round my neck. He drew me to him gently, and kissed my forehead. It
was too much for me. “Don’t cry, my dear,” he said; “don’t remind me of
another sad young face--”

Once more he stopped; once more he was thinking of the lost wife. I
pulled down my veil, and ran out of the room.

IV.

THE next day I was on my way to the north. My narrative brightens
again--but let us not forget Sir Gervase Damian.

I ask permission to introduce some persons of distinction:--Mrs.
Fosdyke, of Carsham Hall, widow of General Fosdyke; also Master
Frederick, Miss Ellen, and Miss Eva, the pupils of the new governess;
also two ladies and three gentlemen, guests staying in the house.

Discreet and dignified; handsome and well-bred--such was my impression
of Mrs. Fosdyke, while she harangued me on the subject of her children,
and communicated her views on education. Having heard the views before
from others, I assumed a listening position, and privately formed my
opinion of the schoolroom. It was large, lofty, perfectly furnished
for the purpose; it had a big window and a balcony looking out over
the garden terrace and the park beyond--a wonderful schoolroom, in my
limited experience. One of the two doors which it possessed was left
open, and showed me a sweet little bedroom, with amber draperies and
maplewood furniture, devoted to myself. Here were wealth and liberality,
in the harmonious combination so seldom discovered by the spectator of
small means. I controlled my first feeling of bewilderment just in time
to answer Mrs. Fosdyke on the subject of reading and recitation--viewed
as minor accomplishments which a good governess might be expected to
teach.

“While the organs are young and pliable,” the lady remarked, “I regard
it as of great importance to practice children in the art of reading
aloud, with an agreeable variety of tone and correctness of emphasis.
Trained in this way, they will produce a favorable impression on others,
even in ordinary conversation, when they grow up. Poetry, committed to
memory and recited, is a valuable means toward this end. May I hope that
your studies have enabled you to carry out my views?”

Formal enough in language, but courteous and kind in manner. I relieved
Mrs. Fosdyke from anxiety by informing her that we had a professor of
elocution at school. And then I was left to improve my acquaintance with
my three pupils.

They were fairly intelligent children; the boy, as usual, being slower
than the girls. I did my best--with many a sad remembrance of the far
dearer pupils whom I had left--to make them like me and trust me; and
I succeeded in winning their confidence. In a week from the time of my
arrival at Carsham Hall, we began to understand each other.

The first day in the week was one of our days for reciting poetry, in
obedience to the instructions with which I had been favored by Mrs.
Fosdyke. I had done with the girls, and had just opened (perhaps I ought
to say profaned) Shakespeare’s “Julius Caesar,” in the elocutionary
interests of Master Freddy. Half of Mark Antony’s first glorious speech
over Caesar’s dead body he had learned by heart; and it was now my duty
to teach him, to the best of my small ability, how to speak it. The
morning was warm. We had our big window open; the delicious perfume of
flowers in the garden beneath filled the room.

I recited the first eight lines, and stopped there feeling that I must
not exact too much from the boy at first. “Now, Freddy,” I said, “try if
you can speak the poetry as I have spoken it.”

“Don’t do anything of the kind, Freddy,” said a voice from the garden;
“it’s all spoken wrong.”

Who was this insolent person? A man unquestionably--and, strange to
say, there was something not entirely unfamiliar to me in his voice.
The girls began to giggle. Their brother was more explicit. “Oh,” says
Freddy, “it’s only Mr. Sax.”

The one becoming course to pursue was to take no notice of the
interruption. “Go on,” I said. Freddy recited the lines, like a dear
good boy, with as near an imitation of my style of elocution as could be
expected from him.

“Poor devil!” cried the voice from the garden, insolently pitying my
attentive pupil.

I imposed silence on the girls by a look--and then, without stirring
from my chair, expressed my sense of the insolence of Mr. Sax in clear
and commanding tones. “I shall be obliged to close the window if this is
repeated.” Having spoken to that effect, I waited in expectation of an
apology. Silence was the only apology. It was enough for me that I had
produced the right impression. I went on with my recitation.

           “Here, under leave of Brutus, and the rest
           (For Brutus is an honorable man;
           So are they all, all honorable men),
           Come I to speak in Caesar’s funeral.
           He was my friend, faithful and just to me--”

“Oh, good heavens, I can’t stand _that!_ Why don’t you speak the last
line properly? Listen to me.”

Dignity is a valuable quality, especially in a governess. But there
are limits to the most highly trained endurance. I bounced out into
the balcony--and there, on the terrace, smoking a cigar, was my lost
stranger in the streets of Sandwich!

He recognized me, on his side, the instant I appeared. “Oh, Lord!” he
cried in tones of horror, and ran round the corner of the terrace as if
my eyes had been mad bulls in close pursuit of him. By this time it
is, I fear, useless for me to set myself up as a discreet person in
emergencies. Another woman might have controlled herself. I burst into
fits of laughter. Freddy and the girls joined me. For the time, it
was plainly useless to pursue the business of education. I shut up
Shakespeare, and allowed--no, let me tell the truth, encouraged--the
children to talk about Mr. Sax.

They only seemed to know what Mr. Sax himself had told them. His father
and mother and brothers and sisters had all died in course of time.
He was the sixth and last of the children, and he had been christened
“Sextus” in consequence, which is Latin (here Freddy interposed) for
sixth. Also christened “Cyril” (here the girls recovered the lead) by
his mother’s request; “Sextus” being such a hideous name. And which
of his Christian names does he use? You wouldn’t ask if you knew him!
“Sextus,” of course, because it is the ugliest. Sextus Sax? Not the
romantic sort of name that one likes, when one is a woman. But I have
no right to be particular. My own name (is it possible that I have not
mentioned it in these pages yet?) is only Nancy Morris. Do not despise
me--and let us return to Mr. Sax.

Is he married? The eldest girl thought not. She had heard mamma say to a
lady, “An old German family, my dear, and, in spite of his oddities, an
excellent man; but so poor--barely enough to live on--and blurts out the
truth, if people ask his opinion, as if he had twenty thousand a year!”
 “Your mamma knows him well, of course?” “I should think so, and so do
we. He often comes here. They say he’s not good company among grown-up
people. _We_ think him jolly. He understands dolls, and he’s the best
back at leap-frog in the whole of England.” Thus far we had advanced in
the praise of Sextus Sax, when one of the maids came in with a note
for me. She smiled mysteriously, and said, “I’m to wait for an answer,
miss.”

I opened the note, and read these lines:--

“I am so ashamed of myself, I daren’t attempt to make my apologies
personally. Will you accept my written excuses? Upon my honor, nobody
told me when I got here yesterday that you were in the house. I heard
the recitation, and--can you excuse my stupidity?--I thought it was
a stage-struck housemaid amusing herself with the children. May I
accompany you when you go out with the young ones for your daily walk?
One word will do. Yes or no. Penitently yours--S. S.”

In my position, there was but one possible answer to this. Governesses
must not make appointments with strange gentlemen--even when the
children are present in the capacity of witnesses. I said, No. Am I
claiming too much for my readiness to forgive injuries, when I add that
I should have preferred saying Yes?

We had our early dinner, and then got ready to go out walking as usual.
These pages contain a true confession. Let me own that I hoped Mr. Sax
would understand my refusal, and ask Mrs. Fosdyke’s leave to accompany
us. Lingering a little as we went downstairs, I heard him in the
hall--actually speaking to Mrs. Fosdyke! What was he saying? That
darling boy, Freddy, got into a difficulty with one of his boot-laces
exactly at the right moment. I could help him, and listen--and be sadly
disappointed by the result. Mr. Sax was offended with me.

“You needn’t introduce me to the new governess,” I heard him say. “We
have met on a former occasion, and I produced a disagreeable impression
on her. I beg you will not speak of me to Miss Morris.”

Before Mrs. Fosdyke could say a word in reply, Master Freddy changed
suddenly from a darling boy to a detestable imp. “I say, Mr. Sax!” he
called out, “Miss Morris doesn’t mind you a bit--she only laughs at
you.”

The answer to this was the sudden closing of a door. Mr. Sax had taken
refuge from me in one of the ground-floor rooms. I was so mortified, I
could almost have cried.

Getting down into the hall, we found Mrs. Fosdyke with her garden
hat on, and one of the two ladies who were staying in the house (the
unmarried one) whispering to her at the door of the morning-room. The
lady--Miss Melbury--looked at me with a certain appearance of curiosity
which I was quite at a loss to understand, and suddenly turned away
toward the further end of the hall.

“I will walk with you and the children,” Mrs. Fosdyke said to me.
“Freddy, you can ride your tricycle if you like.” She turned to
the girls. “My dears, it’s cool under the trees. You may take your
skipping-ropes.”

She had evidently something special to say to me; and she had adopted
the necessary measures for keeping the children in front of us, well out
of hearing. Freddy led the way on his horse on three wheels; the girls
followed, skipping merrily. Mrs. Fosdyke opened the business by the
most embarrassing remark that she could possibly have made under the
circumstances.

“I find that you are acquainted with Mr. Sax,” she began; “and I am
surprised to hear that you dislike him.”

She smiled pleasantly, as if my supposed dislike of Mr. Sax rather
amused her. What “the ruling passion” may be among men, I cannot presume
to consider. My own sex, however, I may claim to understand. The
ruling passion among women is Conceit. My ridiculous notion of my
own consequence was wounded in some way. I assumed a position of the
loftiest indifference.

“Really, ma’am,” I said, “I can’t undertake to answer for any impression
that Mr. Sax may have formed. We met by the merest accident. I know
nothing about him.”

Mrs. Fosdyke eyed me slyly, and appeared to be more amused than ever.

“He is a very odd man,” she admitted, “but I can tell you there is a
fine nature under that strange surface of his. However,” she went on,
“I am forgetting that he forbids me to talk about him in your presence.
When the opportunity offers, I shall take my own way of teaching you two
to understand each other: you will both be grateful to me when I have
succeeded. In the meantime, there is a third person who will be sadly
disappointed to hear that you know nothing about Mr. Sax.”

“May I ask, ma’am, who the person is?”

“Can you keep a secret, Miss Morris? Of course you can! The person is
Miss Melbury.”

(Miss Melbury was a dark woman. It cannot be because I am a fair woman
myself--I hope I am above such narrow prejudices as that--but it is
certainly true that I don’t admire dark women.)

“She heard Mr. Sax telling me that you particularly disliked him,” Mrs.
Fosdyke proceeded. “And just as you appeared in the hall, she was asking
me to find out what your reason was. My own opinion of Mr. Sax, I ought
to tell you, doesn’t satisfy her; I am his old friend, and I present him
of course from my own favorable point of view. Miss Melbury is anxious
to be made acquainted with his faults--and she expected you to be a
valuable witness against him.”

Thus far we had been walking on. We now stopped, as if by common
consent, and looked at one another.

In my previous experience of Mrs. Fosdyke, I had only seen the more
constrained and formal side of her character. Without being aware of my
own success, I had won the mother’s heart in winning the goodwill of her
children. Constraint now seized its first opportunity of melting away;
the latent sense of humor in the great lady showed itself, while I
was inwardly wondering what the nature of Miss Melbury’s extraordinary
interest in Mr. Sax might be. Easily penetrating my thoughts, she
satisfied my curiosity without committing herself to a reply in words.
Her large gray eyes sparkled as they rested on my face, and she hummed
the tune of the old French song, _“C’est l’amour, l’amour, l’amour!”_
There is no disguising it--something in this disclosure made me
excessively angry. Was I angry with Miss Melbury? or with Mr. Sax? or
with myself? I think it must have been with myself.

Finding that I had nothing to say on my side, Mrs. Fosdyke looked at her
watch, and remembered her domestic duties. To my relief, our interview
came to an end.

“I have a dinner-party to-day,” she said, “and I have not seen the
housekeeper yet. Make yourself beautiful, Miss Morris, and join us in
the drawing-room after dinner.”

V.

I WORE my best dress; and, in all my life before, I never took such
pains with my hair. Nobody will be foolish enough, I hope, to suppose
that I did this on Mr. Sax’s account. How could I possibly care about
a man who was little better than a stranger to me? No! the person I
dressed at was Miss Melbury.

She gave me a look, as I modestly placed myself in a corner, which amply
rewarded me for the time spent on my toilet. The gentlemen came in.
I looked at Mr. Sax (mere curiosity) under shelter of my fan. His
appearance was greatly improved by evening dress. He discovered me in
my corner, and seemed doubtful whether to approach me or not. I was
reminded of our first odd meeting; and I could not help smiling as I
called it to mind. Did he presume to think that I was encouraging him?
Before I could decide that question, he took the vacant place on the
sofa. In any other man--after what had passed in the morning--this would
have been an audacious proceeding. _He_ looked so painfully embarrassed,
that it became a species of Christian duty to pity him.

“Won’t you shake hands?” he said, just as he had said it at Sandwich.

I peeped round the corner of my fan at Miss Melbury. She was looking at
us. I shook hands with Mr. Sax.

“What sort of sensation is it,” he asked, “when you shake hands with a
man whom you hate?”

“I really can’t tell you,” I answered innocently; “I have never done
such a thing.”

“You would not lunch with me at Sandwich,” he protested; “and, after the
humblest apology on my part, you won’t forgive me for what I did this
morning. Do you expect me to believe that I am not the special object of
your antipathy? I wish I had never met with you! At my age, a man gets
angry when he is treated cruelly and doesn’t deserve it. You don’t
understand that, I dare say.”

“Oh, yes, I do. I heard what you said about me to Mrs. Fosdyke, and I
heard you bang the door when you got out of my way.”

He received this reply with every appearance of satisfaction. “So you
listened, did you? I’m glad to hear that.”

“Why?”

“It shows you take some interest in me, after all.”

Throughout this frivolous talk (I only venture to report it because it
shows that I bore no malice on my side) Miss Melbury was looking at us
like the basilisk of the ancients. She owned to being on the wrong side
of thirty; and she had a little money--but these were surely no reasons
why she should glare at a poor governess. Had some secret understanding
of the tender sort been already established between Mr. Sax and herself?
She provoked me into trying to find out--especially as the last words he
had said offered me the opportunity.

“I can prove that I feel a sincere interest in you,” I resumed. “I can
resign you to a lady who has a far better claim to your attention than
mine. You are neglecting her shamefully.”

He stared at me with an appearance of bewilderment, which seemed to
imply that the attachment was on the lady’s side, so far. It was of
course impossible to mention names; I merely turned my eyes in the right
direction. He looked where I looked--and his shyness revealed itself,
in spite of his resolution to conceal it. His face flushed; he looked
mortified and surprised. Miss Melbury could endure it no longer. She
rose, took a song from the music-stand, and approached us.

“I am going to sing,” she said, handing the music to him. “Please turn
over for me, Mr. Sax.”

I think he hesitated--but I cannot feel sure that I observed him
correctly. It matters little. With or without hesitation, he followed
her to the piano.

Miss Melbury sang--with perfect self-possession, and an immense compass
of voice. A gentleman near me said she ought to be on the stage. I
thought so too. Big as it was, our drawing-room was not large enough for
her. The gentleman sang next. No voice at all--but so sweet, such true
feeling! I turned over the leaves for him. A dear old lady, sitting near
the piano, entered into conversation with me. She spoke of the great
singers at the beginning of the present century. Mr. Sax hovered about,
with Miss Melbury’s eye on him. I was so entranced by the anecdotes of
my venerable friend, that I could take no notice of Mr. Sax. Later, when
the dinner-party was over, and we were retiring for the night, he still
hovered about, and ended in offering me a bedroom candle. I immediately
handed it to Miss Melbury. Really a most enjoyable evening!

VI.

THE next morning we were startled by an extraordinary proceeding on the
part of one of the guests. Mr. Sax had left Carsham Hall by the first
train--nobody knew why.

Nature has laid--so, at least, philosophers say--some heavy burdens
upon women. Do those learned persons include in their list the burden
of hysterics? If so, I cordially agree with them. It is hardly worth
speaking of in my case--a constitutional outbreak in the solitude of
my own room, treated with eau-de-cologne and water, and quite forgotten
afterward in the absorbing employment of education. My favorite pupil,
Freddy, had been up earlier than the rest of us--breathing the morning
air in the fruit-garden. He had seen Mr. Sax and had asked him when he
was coming back again. And Mr. Sax had said, “I shall be back again next
month.” (Dear little Freddy!)

In the meanwhile we, in the schoolroom, had the prospect before us of a
dull time in an empty house. The remaining guests were to go away at the
end of the week, their hostess being engaged to pay a visit to some old
friends in Scotland.

During the next three or four days, though I was often alone with Mrs.
Fosdyke, she never said one word on the subject of Mr. Sax. Once or
twice I caught her looking at me with that unendurably significant smile
of hers. Miss Melbury was equally unpleasant in another way. When
we accidentally met on the stairs, her black eyes shot at me passing
glances of hatred and scorn. Did these two ladies presume to think--?

No; I abstained from completing that inquiry at the time, and I abstain
from completing it here.

The end of the week came, and I and the children were left alone at
Carsham Hall.

I took advantage of the leisure hours at my disposal to write to Sir
Gervase; respectfully inquiring after his health, and informing him
that I had been again most fortunate in my engagement as a governess. By
return of post an answer arrived. I eagerly opened it. The first lines
informed me of Sir Gervase Damian’s death.

The letter dropped from my hand. I looked at my little enameled cross.
It is not for me to say what I felt. Think of all that I owed to him;
and remember how lonely my lot was in the world. I gave the children a
holiday; it was only the truth to tell them that I was not well.

How long an interval passed before I could call to mind that I had only
read the first lines of the letter, I am not able to say. When I did
take it up I was surprised to see that the writing covered two pages.
Beginning again where I had left off, my head, in a moment more, began
to swim. A horrid fear overpowered me that I might not be in my right
mind, after I had read the first three sentences. Here they are, to
answer for me that I exaggerate nothing:--

“The will of our deceased client is not yet proved. But, with the
sanction of the executors, I inform you confidentially that you are the
person chiefly interested in it. Sir Gervase Damian bequeaths to you,
absolutely, the whole of his personal property, amounting to the sum of
seventy thousand pounds.”

If the letter had ended there, I really cannot imagine what
extravagances I might not have committed. But the writer (head partner
in the firm of Sir Gervase’s lawyers) had something more to say on his
own behalf. The manner in which he said it strung up my nerves in an
instant. I can not, and will not, copy the words here. It is quite
revolting enough to give the substance of them.

The man’s object was evidently to let me perceive that he disapproved of
the will. So far I do not complain of him--he had, no doubt, good
reason for the view he took. But, in expressing his surprise “at this
extraordinary proof of the testator’s interest in a perfect stranger
to the family,” he hinted his suspicion of an influence, on my part,
exercised over Sir Gervase, so utterly shameful, that I cannot dwell on
the subject. The language, I should add, was cunningly guarded. Even
I could see that it would bear more than one interpretation, and would
thus put me in the wrong if I openly resented it. But the meaning
was plain; and part at least of the motive came out in the following
sentences:

“The present Sir Gervase, as you are doubtless aware, is not seriously
affected by his father’s will. He is already more liberally provided
for, as heir under the entail to the whole of the landed property. But,
to say nothing of old friends who are forgotten, there is a surviving
relative of the late Sir Gervase passed over, who is nearly akin to him
by blood. In the event of this person disputing the will, you will of
course hear from us again, and refer us to your legal adviser.”

The letter ended with an apology for delay in writing to me, caused by
difficulty in discovering my address.

And what did I do?--Write to the rector, or to Mrs. Fosdyke, for
advice? Not I!

At first I was too indignant to be able to think of what I ought to
do. Our post-time was late, and my head ached as if it would burst into
pieces. I had plenty of leisure to rest and compose myself. When I got
cool again, I felt able to take my own part, without asking any one to
help me.

Even if I had been treated kindly, I should certainly not have taken the
money when there was a relative living with a claim to it. What did _I_
want with a large fortune! To buy a husband with it, perhaps? No, no!
from all that I have heard, the great Lord Chancellor was quite right
when he said that a woman with money at her own disposal was “either
kissed out of it or kicked out of it, six weeks after her marriage.” The
one difficulty before me was not to give up my legacy, but to express my
reply with sufficient severity, and at the same time with due regard to
my own self-respect. Here is what I wrote:

“SIR--I will not trouble you by attempting to express my sorrow on
hearing of Sir Gervase Damian’s death. You would probably form your own
opinion on that subject also; and I have no wish to be judged by your
unenviable experience of humanity for the second time.

“With regard to the legacy, feeling the sincerest gratitude to my
generous benefactor, I nevertheless refuse to receive the money.

“Be pleased to send me the necessary document to sign, for transferring
my fortune to that relative of Sir Gervase mentioned in your letter. The
one condition on which I insist is, that no expression of thanks shall
be addressed to me by the person in whose favor I resign the money. I
do not desire (even supposing that justice is done to my motives on this
occasion) to be made the object of expressions of gratitude for only
doing my duty.”

So it ended. I may be wrong, but I call that strong writing.

In due course of post a formal acknowledgment arrived. I was requested
to wait for the document until the will had been proved, and was
informed that my name should be kept strictly secret in the interval. On
this occasion the executors were almost as insolent as the lawyer. They
felt it their duty to give me time to reconsider a decision which had
been evidently formed on impulse. Ah, how hard men are--at least, some
of them! I locked up the acknowledgment in disgust, resolved to think
no more of it until the time came for getting rid of my legacy. I kissed
poor Sir Gervase’s little keepsake. While I was still looking at it,
the good children came in, of their own accord, to ask how I was. I was
obliged to draw down the blind in my room, or they would have seen the
tears in my eyes. For the first time since my mother’s death, I felt the
heartache. Perhaps the children made me think of the happier time when I
was a child myself.

VII.

THE will had been proved, and I was informed that the document was
in course of preparation when Mrs. Fosdyke returned from her visit to
Scotland.

She thought me looking pale and worn.

“The time seems to me to have come,” she said, “when I had better make
you and Mr. Sax understand each other. Have you been thinking penitently
of your own bad behavior?”

I felt myself blushing. I _had_ been thinking of my conduct to Mr.
Sax--and I was heartily ashamed of it, too.

Mrs. Fosdyke went on, half in jest, half in earnest. “Consult your own
sense of propriety!” she said. “Was the poor man to blame for not being
rude enough to say No, when a lady asked him to turn over her music?
Could _he_ help it, if the same lady persisted in flirting with him? He
ran away from her the next morning. Did you deserve to be told why he
left us? Certainly not--after the vixenish manner in which you handed
the bedroom candle to Miss Melbury. You foolish girl! Do you think I
couldn’t see that you were in love with him? Thank Heaven, he’s too poor
to marry you, and take you away from my children, for some time to come.
There will be a long marriage engagement, even if he is magnanimous
enough to forgive you. Shall I ask Miss Melbury to come back with him?”

She took pity on me at last, and sat down to write to Mr. Sax. His
reply, dated from a country house some twenty miles distant, announced
that he would be at Carsham Hall in three days’ time.

On that third day the legal paper that I was to sign arrived by post. It
was Sunday morning; I was alone in the schoolroom.

In writing to me, the lawyer had only alluded to “a surviving relative
of Sir Gervase, nearly akin to him by blood.” The document was more
explicit. It described the relative as being a nephew of Sir Gervase,
the son of his sister. The name followed.

It was Sextus Cyril Sax.

I have tried on three different sheets of paper to describe the effect
which this discovery produced on me--and I have torn them up one after
another. When I only think of it, my mind seems to fall back into the
helpless surprise and confusion of that time. After all that had passed
between us--the man himself being then on his way to the house! what
would he think of me when he saw my name at the bottom of the document?
what, in Heaven’s name, was I to do?

How long I sat petrified, with the document on my lap, I never knew.
Somebody knocked at the schoolroom door, and looked in and said
something, and went out again. Then there was an interval. Then the
door was opened again. A hand was laid kindly on my shoulder. I looked
up--and there was Mrs. Fosdyke, asking, in the greatest alarm, what was
the matter with me.

The tone of her voice roused me into speaking. I could think of nothing
but Mr. Sax; I could only say, “Has he come?”

“Yes--and waiting to see you.”

Answering in those terms, she glanced at the paper in my lap. In the
extremity of my helplessness, I acted like a sensible creature at last.
I told Mrs. Fosdyke all that I have told here.

She neither moved nor spoke until I had done. Her first proceeding,
after that, was to take me in her arms and give me a kiss. Having so far
encouraged me, she next spoke of poor Sir Gervase.

“We all acted like fools,” she announced, “in needlessly offending him
by protesting against his second marriage. I don’t mean you--I mean his
son, his nephew, and myself. If his second marriage made him happy, what
business had we with the disparity of years between husband and wife?
I can tell you this, Sextus was the first of us to regret what he
had done. But for his stupid fear of being suspected of an interested
motive, Sir Gervase might have known there was that much good in his
sister’s son.”

She snatched up a copy of the will, which I had not even noticed thus
far.

“See what the kind old man says of you,” she went on, pointing to the
words. I could not see them; she was obliged to read them for me. “I
leave my money to the one person living who has been more than worthy of
the little I have done for her, and whose simple unselfish nature I know
that I can trust.”

I pressed Mrs. Fosdyke’s hand; I was not able to speak. She took up the
legal paper next.

“Do justice to yourself, and be above contemptible scruples,” she said.
“Sextus is fond enough of you to be almost worthy of the sacrifice that
you are making. Sign--and I will sign next as the witness.”

I hesitated.

“What will he think of me?” I said.

“Sign!” she repeated, “and we will see to that.”

I obeyed. She asked for the lawyer’s letter. I gave it to her, with the
lines which contained the man’s vile insinuation folded down, so that
only the words above were visible, which proved that I had renounced my
legacy, not even knowing whether the person to be benefited was a man or
a woman. She took this, with the rough draft of my own letter, and the
signed renunciation--and opened the door.

“Pray come back, and tell me about it!” I pleaded.

She smiled, nodded, and went out.

Oh, what a long time passed before I heard the long-expected knock at
the door! “Come in,” I cried impatiently.

Mrs. Fosdyke had deceived me. Mr. Sax had returned in her place. He
closed the door. We two were alone.

He was deadly pale; his eyes, as they rested on me, had a wild startled
look. With icy cold fingers he took my hand, and lifted it in silence to
his lips. The sight of his agitation encouraged me--I don’t to this day
know why, unless it appealed in some way to my compassion. I was bold
enough to look at him. Still silent, he placed the letters on the
table--and then he laid the signed paper beside them. When I saw that, I
was bolder still. I spoke first.

“Surely you don’t refuse me?” I said.

He answered, “I thank you with my whole heart; I admire you more than
words can say. But I can’t take it.”

“Why not?”

“The fortune is yours,” he said gently. “Remember how poor I am, and
feel for me if I say no more.”

His head sank on his breast. He stretched out one hand, silently
imploring me to understand him. I could endure it no longer. I forgot
every consideration which a woman, in my position, ought to have
remembered. Out came the desperate words, before I could stop them.

“You won’t take my gift by itself?” I said.

“No.”

“Will you take Me with it?”


That evening, Mrs. Fosdyke indulged her sly sense of humor in a new way.
She handed me an almanac.

“After all, my dear,” she remarked, “you needn’t be ashamed of having
spoken first. You have only used the ancient privilege of the sex. This
is Leap Year.”



MR. COSWAY AND THE LANDLADY.

I.

THE guests would have enjoyed their visit to Sir Peter’s country
house--but for Mr. Cosway. And to make matters worse, it was not Mr.
Cosway but the guests who were to blame. They repeated the old story of
Adam and Eve, on a larger scale. The women were the first sinners; and
the men were demoralized by the women.

Mr. Cosway’s bitterest enemy could not have denied that he was a
handsome, well-bred, unassuming man. No mystery of any sort attached
to him. He had adopted the Navy as a profession--had grown weary of it
after a few years’ service--and now lived on the moderate income left
to him, after the death of his parents. Out of this unpromising material
the lively imaginations of the women built up a romance. The men only
noticed that Mr. Cosway was rather silent and thoughtful; that he was
not ready with his laugh; and that he had a fancy for taking long walks
by himself. Harmless peculiarities, surely? And yet, they excited the
curiosity of the women as signs of a mystery in Mr. Cosway’s past life,
in which some beloved object unknown must have played a chief part.

As a matter of course, the influence of the sex was tried, under every
indirect and delicate form of approach, to induce Mr. Cosway to open
his heart, and tell the tale of his sorrows. With perfect courtesy, he
baffled curiosity, and kept his supposed secret to himself. The most
beautiful girl in the house was ready to offer herself and her fortune
as consolations, if this impenetrable bachelor would only have taken her
into his confidence. He smiled sadly, and changed the subject.

Defeated so far, the women accepted the next alternative.

One of the guests staying in the house was Mr. Cosway’s intimate
friend--formerly his brother-officer on board ship. This gentleman was
now subjected to the delicately directed system of investigation which
had failed with his friend. With unruffled composure he referred the
ladies, one after another, to Mr. Cosway. His name was Stone. The ladies
decided that his nature was worthy of his name.

The last resource left to our fair friends was to rouse the dormant
interest of the men, and to trust to the confidential intercourse of the
smoking-room for the enlightenment which they had failed to obtain by
other means.

In the accomplishment of this purpose, the degree of success which
rewarded their efforts was due to a favoring state of affairs in the
house. The shooting was not good for much; the billiard-table was under
repair; and there were but two really skilled whist-players among the
guests. In the atmosphere of dullness thus engendered, the men not only
caught the infection of the women’s curiosity, but were even ready to
listen to the gossip of the servants’ hall, repeated to their mistresses
by the ladies’ maids. The result of such an essentially debased state
of feeling as this was not slow in declaring itself. But for a lucky
accident, Mr. Cosway would have discovered to what extremities of
ill-bred curiosity idleness and folly can lead persons holding the
position of ladies and gentlemen, when he joined the company at
breakfast on the next morning.

The newspapers came in before the guests had risen from the table. Sir
Peter handed one of them to the lady who sat on his right hand.

She first looked, it is needless to say, at the list of births, deaths,
and marriages; and then she turned to the general news--the fires,
accidents, fashionable departures, and so on. In a few minutes, she
indignantly dropped the newspaper in her lap.

“Here is another unfortunate man,” she exclaimed, “sacrificed to the
stupidity of women! If I had been in his place, I would have used my
knowledge of swimming to save myself, and would have left the women to
go to the bottom of the river as they deserved!”

“A boat accident, I suppose?” said Sir Peter.

“Oh yes--the old story. A gentleman takes two ladies out in a boat.
After a while they get fidgety, and feel an idiotic impulse to change
places. The boat upsets as usual; the poor dear man tries to save
them--and is drowned along with them for his pains. Shameful! shameful!”

“Are the names mentioned?”

“Yes. They are all strangers to me; I speak on principle.” Asserting
herself in those words, the indignant lady handed the newspaper to Mr.
Cosway, who happened to sit next to her. “When you were in the navy,”
 she continued, “I dare say _your_ life was put in jeopardy by taking
women in boats. Read it yourself, and let it be a warning to you for the
future.”

Mr. Cosway looked at the narrative of the accident--and revealed the
romantic mystery of his life by a burst of devout exclamation, expressed
in the words:

“Thank God, my wife’s drowned!”

II.

To declare that Sir Peter and his guests were all struck speechless,
by discovering in this way that Mr. Cosway was a married man, is to say
very little. The general impression appeared to be that he was mad. His
neighbors at the table all drew back from him, with the one exception of
his friend. Mr. Stone looked at the newspaper: pressed Mr. Cosway’s hand
in silent sympathy--and addressed himself to his host.

“Permit me to make my friend’s apologies,” he said, “until he is composed
enough to act for himself. The circumstances are so extraordinary that
I venture to think they excuse him. Will you allow us to speak to you
privately?”

Sir Peter, with more apologies addressed to his visitors, opened the
door which communicated with his study. Mr. Stone took Mr. Cosway’s
arm, and led him out of the room. He noticed no one, spoke to no one--he
moved mechanically, like a man walking in his sleep.

After an unendurable interval of nearly an hour’s duration, Sir Peter
returned alone to the breakfast-room. Mr. Cosway and Mr. Stone had
already taken their departure for London, with their host’s entire
approval.

“It is left to my discretion,” Sir Peter proceeded, “to repeat to you
what I have heard in my study. I will do so, on one condition--that you
all consider yourselves bound in honor not to mention the true names and
the real places, when you tell the story to others.”

Subject to this wise reservation, the narrative is here repeated by
one of the company. Considering how he may perform his task to the best
advantage, he finds that the events which preceded and followed Mr.
Cosway’s disastrous marriage resolve themselves into certain well-marked
divisions. Adopting this arrangement, he proceeds to relate:

_The First Epoch in Mr. Cosway’s Life._

The sailing of her Majesty’s ship _Albicore_ was deferred by the severe
illness of the captain. A gentleman not possessed of political
influence might, after the doctor’s unpromising report of him, have been
superseded by another commanding officer. In the present case, the
Lords of the Admiralty showed themselves to be models of patience and
sympathy. They kept the vessel in port, waiting the captain’s recovery.

Among the unimportant junior officers, not wanted on board under these
circumstances, and favored accordingly by obtaining leave to wait for
orders on shore, were two young men, aged respectively twenty-two and
twenty-three years, and known by the names of Cosway and Stone. The
scene which now introduces them opens at a famous seaport on the south
coast of England, and discloses the two young gentlemen at dinner in a
private room at their inn.

“I think that last bottle of champagne was corked,” Cosway remarked.
“Let’s try another. You’re nearest the bell, Stone. Ring.”

Stone rang, under protest. He was the elder of the two by a year, and he
set an example of discretion.

“I am afraid we are running up a terrible bill,” he said. “We have been
here more than three weeks--”

“And we have denied ourselves nothing,” Cosway added. “We have
lived like princes. Another bottle of champagne, waiter. We have our
riding-horses, and our carriage, and the best box at the theater, and
such cigars as London itself could not produce. I call that making the
most of life. Try the new bottle. Glorious drink, isn’t it? Why doesn’t
my father have champagne at the family dinner-table?”

“Is your father a rich man, Cosway?”

“I should say not. He didn’t give me anything like the money I expected,
when I said good-by--and I rather think he warned me solemnly, at
parting, to take the greatest care of it.’ There’s not a farthing more
for you,’ he said, ‘till your ship returns from her South American
station.’ _Your_ father is a clergyman, Stone.”

“Well, and what of that?”

“And some clergymen are rich.”

“My father is not one of them, Cosway.”

“Then let us say no more about him. Help yourself, and pass the bottle.”

Instead of adopting this suggestion, Stone rose with a very grave face,
and once more rang the bell. “Ask the landlady to step up,” he said,
when the waiter appeared.

“What do you want with the landlady?” Cosway inquired.

“I want the bill.”

The landlady--otherwise Mrs. Pounce--entered the room. She was short,
and old, and fat, and painted, and a widow. Students of character, as
revealed in the face, would have discovered malice and cunning in her
bright black eyes, and a bitter vindictive temper in the lines about her
thin red lips. Incapable of such subtleties of analysis as these, the
two young officers differed widely, nevertheless, in their opinions of
Mrs. Pounce. Cosway’s reckless sense of humor delighted in pretending
to be in love with her. Stone took a dislike to her from the first. When
his friend asked for the reason, he made a strangely obscure answer.
“Do you remember that morning in the wood when you killed the snake?” he
said. “I took a dislike to the snake.” Cosway made no further inquiries.

“Well, my young heroes,” said Mrs. Pounce (always loud, always cheerful,
and always familiar with her guests), “what do you want with me now?”

“Take a glass of champagne, my darling,” said Cosway; “and let me try if
I can get my arm round your waist. That’s all _I_ want with you.”

The landlady passed this over without notice. Though she had spoken to
both of them, her cunning little eyes rested on Stone from the moment
when she appeared in the room. She knew by instinct the man who disliked
her--and she waited deliberately for Stone to reply.

“We have been here some time,” he said, “and we shall be obliged, ma’am,
if you will let us have our bill.”

Mrs. Pounce lifted her eyebrows with an expression of innocent surprise.

“Has the captain got well, and must you go on board to-night?” she
asked.

“Nothing of the sort!” Cosway interposed. “We have no news of the
captain, and we are going to the theater to-night.”

“But,” persisted Stone, “we want, if you please, to have the bill.”

“Certainly, sir,” said Mrs. Pounce, with a sudden assumption of respect.
“But we are very busy downstairs, and we hope you will not press us for
it to-night?”

“Of course not!” cried Cosway.

Mrs. Pounce instantly left the room, without waiting for any further
remark from Cosway’s friend.

“I wish we had gone to some other house,” said Stone. “You mark my
words--that woman means to cheat us.”

Cosway expressed his dissent from this opinion in the most amiable
manner. He filled his friend’s glass, and begged him not to say
ill-natured things of Mrs. Pounce.

But Stone’s usually smooth temper seemed to be ruffled; he insisted on
his own view. “She’s impudent and inquisitive, if she is not downright
dishonest,” he said. “What right had she to ask you where we lived when
we were at home; and what our Christian names were; and which of us was
oldest, you or I? Oh, yes--it’s all very well to say she only showed a
flattering interest in us! I suppose she showed a flattering interest in
my affairs, when I awoke a little earlier than usual, and caught her in
my bedroom with my pocketbook in her hand. Do you believe she was going
to lock it up for safety’s sake? She knows how much money we have got
as well as we know it ourselves. Every half-penny we have will be in her
pocket tomorrow. And a good thing, too--we shall be obliged to leave the
house.”

Even this cogent reasoning failed in provoking Cosway to reply. He took
Stone’s hat, and handed it with the utmost politeness to his foreboding
friend. “There’s only one remedy for such a state of mind as yours,” he
said. “Come to the theater.”


At ten o’clock the next morning Cosway found himself alone at the
breakfast-table. He was informed that Mr. Stone had gone out for a
little walk, and would be back directly. Seating himself at the table,
he perceived an envelope on his plate, which evidently inclosed the
bill. He took up the envelope, considered a little, and put it back
again unopened. At the same moment Stone burst into the room in a high
state of excitement.

“News that will astonish you!” he cried. “The captain arrived yesterday
evening. His doctors say that the sea-voyage will complete his recovery.
The ship sails to-day--and we are ordered to report ourselves on board
in an hour’s time. Where’s the bill?”

Cosway pointed to it. Stone took it out of the envelope.

It covered two sides of a prodigiously long sheet of paper. The sum
total was brightly decorated with lines in red ink. Stone looked at the
total, and passed it in silence to Cosway. For once, even Cosway was
prostrated. In dreadful stillness the two young men produced their
pocketbooks; added up their joint stores of money, and compared the
result with the bill. Their united resources amounted to a little more
than one-third of their debt to the landlady of the inn.

The only alternative that presented itself was to send for Mrs. Pounce;
to state the circumstances plainly; and to propose a compromise on the
grand commercial basis of credit.

Mrs. Pounce presented herself superbly dressed in walking costume. Was
she going out; or had she just returned to the inn? Not a word escaped
her; she waited gravely to hear what the gentlemen wanted. Cosway,
presuming on his position as favorite, produced the contents of the two
pocketbooks and revealed the melancholy truth.

“There is all the money we have,” he concluded. “We hope you will not
object to receive the balance in a bill at three months.”

Mrs. Pounce answered with a stern composure of voice and manner entirely
new in the experience of Cosway and Stone.

“I have paid ready money, gentlemen, for the hire of your horses and
carriages,” she said; “here are the receipts from the livery stables
to vouch for me; I never accept bills unless I am quite sure beforehand
that they will be honored. I defy you to find an overcharge in the
account now rendered; and I expect you to pay it before you leave my
house.”

Stone looked at his watch.

“In three-quarters of an hour,” he said, “we must be on board.”

Mrs. Pounce entirely agreed with him. “And if you are not on board,” she
remarked “you will be tried by court-martial, and dismissed the service
with your characters ruined for life.”

“My dear creature, we haven’t time to send home, and we know nobody in
the town,” pleaded Cosway. “For God’s sake take our watches and jewelry,
and our luggage--and let us go.”

“I am not a pawnbroker,” said the inflexible lady. “You must either pay
your lawful debt to me in honest money, or--”

She paused and looked at Cosway. Her fat face brightened--she smiled
graciously for the first time.

Cosway stared at her in unconcealed perplexity. He helplessly repeated
her last words. “We must either pay the bill,” he said, “or what?”

“Or,” answered Mrs. Pounce, “one of you must marry ME.”

Was she joking? Was she intoxicated? Was she out of her senses? Neither
of the three; she was in perfect possession of herself; her explanation
was a model of lucid and convincing arrangement of facts.

“My position here has its drawbacks,” she began. “I am a lone widow;
I am known to have an excellent business, and to have saved money. The
result is that I am pestered to death by a set of needy vagabonds
who want to marry me. In this position, I am exposed to slanders and
insults. Even if I didn’t know that the men were after my money, there
is not one of them whom I would venture to marry. He might turn out a
tyrant and beat me; or a drunkard, and disgrace me; or a betting man,
and ruin me. What I want, you see, for my own peace and protection, is
to be able to declare myself married, and to produce the proof in the
shape of a certificate. A born gentleman, with a character to lose, and
so much younger in years than myself that he wouldn’t think of
living with me--there is the sort of husband who suits my book! I’m a
reasonable woman, gentlemen. I would undertake to part with my husband
at the church door--never to attempt to see him or write to him
afterward--and only to show my certificate when necessary, without
giving any explanations. Your secret would be quite safe in my keeping.
I don’t care a straw for either of you, so long as you answer my
purpose. What do you say to paying my bill (one or the other of you) in
this way? I am ready dressed for the altar; and the clergyman has notice
at the church. My preference is for Mr. Cosway,” proceeded this terrible
woman with the cruelest irony, “because he has been so particular in
his attentions toward me. The license (which I provided on the chance
a fortnight since) is made out in his name. Such is my weakness for Mr.
Cosway. But that don’t matter if Mr. Stone would like to take his place.
He can hail by his friend’s name. Oh, yes, he can! I have consulted my
lawyer. So long as the bride and bridegroom agree to it, they may be
married in any name they like, and it stands good. Look at your watch
again, Mr. Stone. The church is in the next street. By my calculation,
you have just got five minutes to decide. I’m a punctual woman, my
little dears; and I will be back to the moment.”

She opened the door, paused, and returned to the room.

“I ought to have mentioned,” she resumed, “that I shall make you a
present of the bill, receipted, on the conclusion of the ceremony. You
will be taken to the ship in my own boat, with all your money in your
pockets, and a hamper of good things for the mess. After that I wash my
hands of you. You may go to the devil your own way.”

With this parting benediction, she left them.

Caught in the landlady’s trap, the two victims looked at each other in
expressive silence. Without time enough to take legal advice; without
friends on shore; without any claim on officers of their own standing in
the ship, the prospect before them was literally limited to Marriage or
Ruin. Stone made a proposal worthy of a hero.

“One of us must marry her,” he said; “I’m ready to toss up for it.”

Cosway matched him in generosity. “No,” he answered. “It was I who
brought you here; and I who led you into these infernal expenses. I
ought to pay the penalty--and I will.”

Before Stone could remonstrate, the five minutes expired. Punctual Mrs.
Pounce appeared again in the doorway.

“Well?” she inquired, “which is it to be--Cosway, or Stone?”

Cosway advanced as reckless as ever, and offered his arm.

“Now then, Fatsides,” he said, “come and be married!”

In five-and-twenty minutes more, Mrs. Pounce had become Mrs. Cosway; and
the two officers were on their way to the ship.


_The Second Epoch in Mr. Cosway’s Life._

Four years elapsed before the _Albicore_ returned to the port from which
she had sailed.

In that interval, the death of Cosway’s parents had taken place. The
lawyer who had managed his affairs, during his absence from England,
wrote to inform him that his inheritance from his late father’s “estate”
 was eight hundred a year. His mother only possessed a life interest in
her fortune; she had left her jewels to her son, and that was all.

Cosway’s experience of the life of a naval officer on foreign stations
(without political influence to hasten his promotion) had thoroughly
disappointed him. He decided on retiring from the service when the ship
was “paid off.” In the meantime, to the astonishment of his comrades, he
seemed to be in no hurry to make use of the leave granted him to go on
shore. The faithful Stone was the only man on board who knew that he was
afraid of meeting his “wife.” This good friend volunteered to go to the
inn, and make the necessary investigation with all needful prudence.
“Four years is a long time, at _her_ age,” he said. “Many things may
happen in four years.”

An hour later, Stone returned to the ship, and sent a written message on
board, addressed to his brother-officer, in these words: “Pack up your
things at once, and join me on shore.”

“What news?” asked the anxious husband.

Stone looked significantly at the idlers on the landing-place. “Wait,”
 he said, “till we are by ourselves.”

“Where are we going?”

“To the railway station.”

They got into an empty carriage; and Stone at once relieved his friend
of all further suspense.

“Nobody is acquainted with the secret of your marriage, but our two
selves,” he began quietly. “I don’t think, Cosway, you need go into
mourning.”

“You don’t mean to say she’s dead!”

“I have seen a letter (written by her own lawyer) which announces her
death,” Stone replied. “It was so short that I believe I can repeat it
word for word: ‘Dear Sir--I have received information of the death of
my client. Please address your next and last payment, on account of
the lease and goodwill of the inn, to the executors of the late Mrs.
Cosway.’ There, that is the letter. ‘Dear Sir’ means the present
proprietor of the inn. He told me your wife’s previous history in two
words. After carrying on the business with her customary intelligence
for more than three years, her health failed, and she went to London
to consult a physician. There she remained under the doctor’s care.
The next event was the appearance of an agent, instructed to sell the
business in consequence of the landlady’s declining health. Add the
death at a later time--and there is the beginning and the end of the
story. Fortune owed you a good turn, Cosway--and Fortune has paid the
debt. Accept my best congratulations.”

Arrived in London, Stone went on at once to his relations in the North.
Cosway proceeded to the office of the family lawyer (Mr. Atherton),
who had taken care of his interests in his absence. His father and Mr.
Atherton had been schoolfellows and old friends. He was affectionately
received, and was invited to pay a visit the next day to the lawyer’s
villa at Richmond.

“You will be near enough to London to attend to your business at the
Admiralty,” said Mr. Atherton, “and you will meet a visitor at my house,
who is one of the most charming girls in England--the only daughter of
the great Mr. Restall. Good heavens! have you never heard of him?
My dear sir, he’s one of the partners in the famous firm of Benshaw,
Restall, and Benshaw.”

Cosway was wise enough to accept this last piece of information as quite
conclusive. The next day, Mrs. Atherton presented him to the charming
Miss Restall; and Mrs. Atherton’s young married daughter (who had been
his playfellow when they were children) whispered to him, half in jest,
half in earnest: “Make the best use of your time; she isn’t engaged
yet.”

Cosway shuddered inwardly at the bare idea of a second marriage. Was
Miss Restall the sort of woman to restore his confidence?

She was small and slim and dark--a graceful, well-bred, brightly
intelligent person, with a voice exquisitely sweet and winning in
tone. Her ears, hands, and feet were objects to worship; and she had an
attraction, irresistibly rare among the women of the present time--the
attraction of a perfectly natural smile. Before Cosway had been an hour
in the house, she discovered that his long term of service on foreign
stations had furnished him with subjects of conversation which favorably
contrasted with the commonplace gossip addressed to her by other men.
Cosway at once became a favorite, as Othello became a favorite in his
day.

The ladies of the household all rejoiced in the young officer’s success,
with the exception of Miss Restall’s companion (supposed to hold the
place of her lost mother, at a large salary), one Mrs. Margery.

Too cautious to commit herself in words, this lady expressed doubt and
disapprobation by her looks. She had white hair, iron-gray eyebrows, and
protuberant eyes; her looks were unusually expressive. One evening, she
caught poor Mr. Atherton alone, and consulted him confidentially on the
subject of Mr. Cosway’s income. This was the first warning which opened
the eyes of the good lawyer to the nature of the “friendship” already
established between his two guests. He knew Miss Restall’s illustrious
father well, and he feared that it might soon be his disagreeable duty
to bring Cosway’s visit to an end.

On a certain Saturday afternoon, while Mr. Atherton was still
considering how he could most kindly and delicately suggest to Cosway
that it was time to say good-by, an empty carriage arrived at the villa.
A note from Mr. Restall was delivered to Mrs. Atherton, thanking
her with perfect politeness for her kindness to his daughter.
“Circumstances,” he added, “rendered it necessary that Miss Restall
should return home that afternoon.”

The “circumstances” were supposed to refer to a garden-party to be given
by Mr. Restall in the ensuing week. But why was his daughter wanted at
home before the day of the party?

The ladies of the family, still devoted to Cosway’s interests,
entertained no doubt that Mrs. Margery had privately communicated with
Mr. Restall, and that the appearance of the carriage was the natural
result. Mrs. Atherton’s married daughter did all that could be done: she
got rid of Mrs. Margery for one minute, and so arranged it that Cosway
and Miss Restall took leave of each other in her own sitting-room.

When the young lady appeared in the hall she had drawn her veil down.
Cosway escaped to the road and saw the last of the carriage as it drove
away. In a little more than a fortnight his horror of a second marriage
had become one of the dead and buried emotions of his nature. He stayed
at the villa until Monday morning, as an act of gratitude to his good
friends, and then accompanied Mr. Atherton to London. Business at the
Admiralty was the excuse. It imposed on nobody. He was evidently on his
way to Miss Restall.

“Leave your business in my hands,” said the lawyer, on the journey to
town, “and go and amuse yourself on the Continent. I can’t blame you for
falling in love with Miss Restall; I ought to have foreseen the danger,
and waited till she had left us before I invited you to my house. But I
may at least warn you to carry the matter no further. If you had eight
thousand instead of eight hundred a year, Mr. Restall would think it an
act of presumption on your part to aspire to his daughter’s hand, unless
you had a title to throw into the bargain. Look at it in the true
light, my dear boy; and one of these days you will thank me for speaking
plainly.”

Cosway promised to “look at it in the true light.”

The result, from his point of view, led him into a change of residence.
He left his hotel and took a lodging in the nearest bystreet to Mr.
Restall’s palace at Kensington.

On the same evening he applied (with the confidence due to a previous
arrangement) for a letter at the neighboring post-office, addressed to
E. C.--the initials of Edwin Cosway. “Pray be careful,” Miss Restall
wrote; “I have tried to get you a card for our garden party. But that
hateful creature, Margery, has evidently spoken to my father; I am not
trusted with any invitation cards. Bear it patiently, dear, as I do, and
let me hear if you have succeeded in finding a lodging near us.”

Not submitting to this first disappointment very patiently, Cosway sent
his reply to the post-office, addressed to A. R.--the initials of Adela
Restall. The next day the impatient lover applied for another letter. It
was waiting for him, but it was not directed in Adela’s handwriting.
Had their correspondence been discovered? He opened the letter in the
street; and read, with amazement, these lines:

“Dear Mr. Cosway, my heart sympathizes with two faithful lovers, in
spite of my age and my duty. I inclose an invitation to the party
tomorrow. Pray don’t betray me, and don’t pay too marked attention to
Adela. Discretion is easy. There will be twelve hundred guests. Your
friend, in spite of appearances, Louisa Margery.”

How infamously they had all misjudged this excellent woman! Cosway went
to the party a grateful, as well as a happy man. The first persons
known to him, whom he discovered among the crowd of strangers, were
the Athertons. They looked, as well they might, astonished to see him.
Fidelity to Mrs. Margery forbade him to enter into any explanations.
Where was that best and truest friend? With some difficulty he succeeded
in finding her. Was there any impropriety in seizing her hand and
cordially pressing it? The result of this expression of gratitude was,
to say the least of it, perplexing.

Mrs. Margery behaved like the Athertons! She looked astonished to see
him and she put precisely the same question: “How did you get here?”
 Cosway could only conclude that she was joking. “Who should know that,
dear lady, better than yourself?” he rejoined. “I don’t understand you,”
 Mrs. Margery answered, sharply. After a moment’s reflection, Cosway hit
on another solution of the mystery. Visitors were near them; and Mrs.
Margery had made her own private use of one of Mr. Restall’s invitation
cards. She might have serious reasons for pushing caution to its last
extreme. Cosway looked at her significantly. “The least I can do is not
to be indiscreet,” he whispered--and left her.

He turned into a side walk; and there he met Adela at last!

It seemed like a fatality. _She_ looked astonished; and _she_ said: “How
did you get here?” No intrusive visitors were within hearing, this time.
“My dear!” Cosway remonstrated, “Mrs. Margery must have told you, when
she sent me my invitation.” Adela turned pale. “Mrs. Margery?” she
repeated. “Mrs. Margery has said nothing to me; Mrs. Margery detests
you. We must have this cleared up. No; not now--I must attend to our
guests. Expect a letter; and, for heaven’s sake, Edwin, keep out of my
father’s way. One of our visitors whom he particularly wished to see has
sent an excuse--and he is dreadfully angry about it.”

She left him before Cosway could explain that he and Mr. Restall had
thus far never seen each other.

He wandered away toward the extremity of the grounds, troubled by vague
suspicions; hurt at Adela’s cold reception of him. Entering a shrubbery,
which seemed intended to screen the grounds, at this point, from a lane
outside, he suddenly discovered a pretty little summer-house among the
trees. A stout gentleman, of mature years, was seated alone in this
retreat. He looked up with a frown. Cosway apologized for disturbing
him, and entered into conversation as an act of politeness.

“A brilliant assembly to-day, sir.”

The stout gentleman replied by an inarticulate sound--something between
a grunt and a cough.

“And a splendid house and grounds,” Cosway continued.

The stout gentleman repeated the inarticulate sound.

Cosway began to feel amused. Was this curious old man deaf and dumb?

“Excuse my entering into conversation,” he persisted. “I feel like a
stranger here. There are so many people whom I don’t know.”

The stout gentleman suddenly burst into speech. Cosway had touched a
sympathetic fiber at last.

“There are a good many people here whom _I_ don’t know,” he said,
gruffly. “You are one of them. What’s your name?”

“My name is Cosway, sir. What’s yours?”

The stout gentleman rose with fury in his looks. He burst out with an
oath; and added the in tolerable question, already three times repeated
by others: “How did you get here?” The tone was even more offensive than
the oath. “Your age protects you, sir,” said Cosway, with the loftiest
composure. “I’m sorry I gave my name to so rude a person.”

“Rude?” shouted the old gentleman. “You want my name in return, I
suppose? You young puppy, you shall have it! My name is Restall.”

He turned his back and walked off. Cosway took the only course now open
to him. He returned to his lodgings.

The next day no letter reached him from Adela. He went to the
postoffice. No letter was there. The day wore on to evening--and, with
the evening, there appeared a woman who was a stranger to him. She
looked like a servant; and she was the bearer of a mysterious message.

“Please be at the garden-door that opens on the lane, at ten o’clock
to-morrow morning. Knock three times at the door--and then say ‘Adela.’
Some one who wishes you well will be alone in the shrubbery, and will
let you in. No, sir! I am not to take anything; and I am not to say a
word more.” She spoke--and vanished.

Cosway was punctual to his appointment. He knocked three times; he
pronounced Miss Restall’s Christian name. Nothing happened. He waited a
while, and tried again. This time Adela’s voice answered strangely from
the shrubbery in tones of surprise: “Edwin, is it really you?”

“Did you expect any one else?” Cosway asked. “My darling, your message
said ten o’clock--and here I am.”

The door was suddenly unlocked.

“I sent no message,” said Adela, as they confronted each other on the
threshold.

In the silence of utter bewilderment they went together into the
summer-house. At Adela’s request, Cosway repeated the message that
he had received, and described the woman who had delivered it. The
description applied to no person known to Miss Restall. “Mrs. Margery
never sent you the invitation; and I repeat, I never sent you the
message. This meeting has been arranged by some one who knows that I
always walk in the shrubbery after breakfast. There is some underhand
work going on--”

Still mentally in search of the enemy who had betrayed them, she checked
herself, and considered a little. “Is it possible--?” she began, and
paused again. Her eyes filled with tears. “My mind is so completely
upset,” she said, “that I can’t think clearly of anything. Oh, Edwin, we
have had a happy dream, and it has come to an end. My father knows more
than we think for. Some friends of ours are going abroad tomorrow--and
I am to go with them. Nothing I can say has the least effect upon my
father. He means to part us forever--and this is his cruel way of doing
it!”

She put her arm round Cosway’s neck and lovingly laid her head on his
shoulder. With tenderest kisses they reiterated their vows of eternal
fidelity until their voices faltered and failed them. Cosway filled up
the pause by the only useful suggestion which it was now in his power to
make--he proposed an elopement.

Adela received this bold solution of the difficulty in which they were
placed exactly as thousands of other young ladies have received similar
proposals before her time, and after.

She first said positively No. Cosway persisted. She began to cry, and
asked if he had no respect for her. Cosway declared that his respect was
equal to any sacrifice except the sacrifice of parting with her forever.
He could, and would, if she preferred it, die for her, but while he was
alive he must refuse to give her up. Upon this she shifted her ground.
Did he expect her to go away with him alone? Certainly not. Her maid
could go with her, or, if her maid was not to be trusted, he would apply
to his landlady, and engage “a respectable elderly person” to attend on
her until the day of their marriage. Would she have some mercy on him,
and just consider it? No: she was afraid to consider it. Did she prefer
misery for the rest of her life? Never mind _his_ happiness: it
was _her_ happiness only that he had in his mind. Traveling with
unsympathetic people; absent from England, no one could say for
how long; married, when she did return, to some rich man whom she
hated--would she, could she, contemplate that prospect? She contemplated
it through tears; she contemplated it to an accompaniment of sighs,
kisses, and protestations--she trembled, hesitated, gave way. At an
appointed hour of the coming night, when her father would be in the
smoking-room, and Mrs. Margery would be in bed, Cosway was to knock at
the door in the lane once more; leaving time to make all the necessary
arrangements in the interval.

The one pressing necessity, under these circumstances, was to guard
against the possibility of betrayal and surprise. Cosway discreetly
alluded to the unsolved mysteries of the invitation and the message.
“Have you taken anybody into our confidence?” he asked.

Adela answered with some embarrassment. “Only one person,” She
said--“dear Miss Benshaw.”

“Who is Miss Benshaw?”

“Don’t you really know, Edwin? She is richer even than papa--she has
inherited from her late brother one half-share in the great business in
the City. Miss Benshaw is the lady who disappointed papa by not coming
to the garden-party. You remember, dear, how happy we were when we were
together at Mr. Atherton’s? I was very miserable when they took me
away. Miss Benshaw happened to call the next day and she noticed it. ‘My
dear,’ she said (Miss Benshaw is quite an elderly lady now), ‘I am an
old maid, who has missed the happiness of her life, through not having
had a friend to guide and advise her when she was young. Are you
suffering as I once suffered?’ She spoke so nicely--and I was so
wretched--that I really couldn’t help it. I opened my heart to her.”

Cosway looked grave. “Are you sure she is to be trusted?” he asked.

“Perfectly sure.”

“Perhaps, my love, she has spoken about us (not meaning any harm)
to some friend of hers? Old ladies are so fond of gossip. It’s just
possible--don’t you think so?”

Adela hung her head.

“I have thought it just possible myself,” she admitted. “There is plenty
of time to call on her to-day. I will set our doubts at rest before Miss
Benshaw goes out for her afternoon drive.”

On that understanding they parted.

Toward evening Cosway’s arrangements for the elopement were completed.
He was eating his solitary dinner when a note was brought to him. It
had been left at the door by a messenger. The man had gone away without
waiting for an answer. The note ran thus:

“Miss Benshaw presents her compliments to Mr. Cosway, and will be
obliged if he can call on her at nine o’clock this evening, on business
which concerns himself.”

This invitation was evidently the result of Adela’s visit earlier in the
day. Cosway presented himself at the house, troubled by natural emotions
of anxiety and suspense. His reception was not of a nature to compose
him. He was shown into a darkened room. The one lamp on the table was
turned down low, and the little light thus given was still further
obscured by a shade. The corners of the room were in almost absolute
darkness.

A voice out of one of the corners addressed him in a whisper:

“I must beg you to excuse the darkened room. I am suffering from a
severe cold. My eyes are inflamed, and my throat is so bad that I can
only speak in a whisper. Sit down, sir. I have got news for you.”

“Not bad news, I hope, ma’am?” Cosway ventured to inquire.

“The worst possible news,” said the whispering voice. “You have an enemy
striking at you in the dark.”

Cosway asked who it was, and received no answer. He varied the form of
inquiry, and asked why the unnamed person struck at him in the dark. The
experiment succeeded; he obtained a reply.

“It is reported to me,” said Miss Benshaw, “that the person thinks it
necessary to give you a lesson, and takes a spiteful pleasure in doing
it as mischievously as possible. The person, as I happen to know, sent
you your invitation to the party, and made the appointment which took
you to the door in the lane. Wait a little, sir; I have not done yet.
The person has put it into Mr. Restall’s head to send his daughter
abroad tomorrow.”

Cosway attempted to make her speak more plainly.

“Is this wretch a man or a woman?” he said.

Miss Benshaw proceeded without noticing the interruption.

“You needn’t be afraid, Mr. Cosway; Miss Restall will not leave England.
Your enemy is all-powerful. Your enemy’s object could only be to provoke
you into planning an elopement--and, your arrangements once completed,
to inform Mr. Restall, and to part you and Miss Adela quite as
effectually as if you were at opposite ends of the world. Oh, you will
undoubtedly be parted! Spiteful, isn’t it? And, what is worse, the
mischief is as good as done already.”

Cosway rose from his chair.

“Do you wish for any further explanation?” asked Miss Benshaw.

“One thing more,” he replied. “Does Adela know of this?”

“No,” said Miss Benshaw; “it is left to you to tell her.”

There was a moment of silence. Cosway looked at the lamp. Once roused,
as usual with men of his character, his temper was not to be trifled
with.

“Miss Benshaw,” he said, “I dare say you think me a fool; but I can draw
my own conclusion, for all that. _You_ are my enemy.”

The only reply was a chuckling laugh. All voices can be more or less
effectually disguised by a whisper but a laugh carries the revelation of
its own identity with it. Cosway suddenly threw off the shade over the
lamp and turned up the wick.

The light flooded the room, and showed him--His Wife.


_The Third Epoch in Mr. Cosway’s Life._

Three days had passed. Cosway sat alone in his lodging--pale and worn:
the shadow already of his former self.

He had not seen Adela since the discovery. There was but one way in
which he could venture to make the inevitable disclosure--he wrote to
her; and Mr. Atherton’s daughter took care that the letter should be
received. Inquiries made afterward, by help of the same good friend,
informed him that Miss Restall was suffering from illness.

The mistress of the house came in.

“Cheer up, sir,” said the good woman. “There is better news of Miss
Restall to-day.”

He raised his head.

“Don’t trifle with me!” he answered fretfully; “tell me exactly what the
servant said.”

The mistress repeated the words. Miss Restall had passed a quieter
night, and had been able for a few hours to leave her room. He asked
next if any reply to his letter had arrived. No reply had been received.

If Adela definitely abstained from writing to him, the conclusion would
be too plain to be mistaken. She had given him up--and who could blame
her?

There was a knock at the street-door. The mistress looked out.

“Here’s Mr. Stone come back, sir!” she exclaimed joyfully--and hurried
away to let him in.

Cosway never looked up when his friend appeared.

“I knew I should succeed,” said Stone. “I have seen your wife.”

“Don’t speak of her,” cried Cosway. “I should have murdered her when I
saw her face, if I had not instantly left the house. I may be the death
of the wretch yet, if you presist in speaking of her!”

Stone put his hand kindly on his friend’s shoulder.

“Must I remind you that you owe something to your old comrade?” he
asked. “I left my father and mother, the morning I got your letter--and
my one thought has been to serve you. Reward me. Be a man, and hear what
is your right and duty to know. After that, if you like, we will never
refer to the woman again.”

Cosway took his hand, in silent acknowledgment that he was right. They
sat down together. Stone began.

“She is so entirely shameless,” he said, “that I had no difficulty in
getting her to speak. And she so cordially hates you that she glories in
her own falsehood and treachery.”

“Of course, she lies,” Cosway said bitterly, “when she calls herself
Miss Benshaw?”

“No; she is really the daughter of the man who founded the great house
in the City. With every advantage that wealth and position could give
her the perverse creature married one of her father’s clerks, who had
been deservedly dismissed from his situation. From that moment her
family discarded her. With the money procured by the sale of her
jewels, her husband took the inn which we have such bitter cause to
remember--and she managed the house after his death. So much for the
past. Carry your mind on now to the time when our ship brought us back
to England. At that date, the last surviving member of your wife’s
family--her elder brother--lay at the point of death. He had taken his
father’s place in the business, besides inheriting his father’s fortune.
After a happy married life he was left a widower, without children;
and it became necessary that he should alter his will. He deferred
performing his duty. It was only at the time of his last illness that he
had dictated instructions for a new will, leaving his wealth (excepting
certain legacies to old friends) to the hospitals of Great Britain and
Ireland. His lawyer lost no time in carrying out the instructions. The
new will was ready for signature (the old will having been destroyed by
his own hand), when the doctors sent a message to say that their patient
was insensible, and might die in that condition.”

“Did the doctors prove to be right?”

“Perfectly right. Our wretched landlady, as next of kin, succeeded, not
only to the fortune, but (under the deed of partnership) to her late
brother’s place in the firm: on the one easy condition of resuming the
family name. She calls herself “Miss Benshaw.” But as a matter of legal
necessity she is set down in the deed as “Mrs. Cosway Benshaw.” Her
partners only now know that her husband is living, and that you are
the Cosway whom she privately married. Will you take a little breathing
time? or shall I go on, and get done with it?”

Cosway signed to him to go on.

“She doesn’t in the least care,” Stone proceeded, “for the exposure.
‘I am the head partner,’ she says ‘and the rich one of the firm;
they daren’t turn their backs on Me.’ You remember the information I
received--in perfect good faith on his part--from the man who keeps
the inn? The visit to the London doctor, and the assertion of failing
health, were adopted as the best means of plausibly severing the lady’s
connection (the great lady now!) with a calling so unworthy of her as
the keeping of an inn. Her neighbors at the seaport were all deceived
by the stratagem, with two exceptions. They were both men--vagabonds who
had pertinaciously tried to delude her into marrying them in the days
when she was a widow. They refused to believe in the doctor and the
declining health; they had their own suspicion of the motives which had
led to the sale of the inn, under very unfavorable circumstances; and
they decided on going to London, inspired by the same base hope of
making discoveries which might be turned into a means of extorting
money.”

“She escaped them, of course,” said Cosway. “How?”

“By the help of her lawyer, who was not above accepting a handsome
private fee. He wrote to the new landlord of the inn, falsely announcing
his client’s death, in the letter which I repeated to you in the railway
carriage on our journey to London. Other precautions were taken to
keep up the deception, on which it is needless to dwell. Your natural
conclusion that you were free to pay your addresses to Miss Restall, and
the poor young lady’s innocent confidence in ‘Miss Benshaw’s’ sympathy,
gave this unscrupulous woman the means of playing the heartless trick
on you which is now exposed. Malice and jealousy--I have it, mind, from
herself!--were not her only motives. ‘But for that Cosway,’ she said (I
spare you the epithet which she put before your name), ‘with my money
and position, I might have married a needy lord, and sunned myself in
my old age in the full blaze of the peerage.’ Do you understand how she
hated you, now? Enough of the subject! The moral of it, my dear Cosway,
is to leave this place, and try what change of scene will do for you. I
have time to spare; and I will go abroad with you. When shall it be?”

“Let me wait a day or two more,” Cosway pleaded.

Stone shook his head. “Still hoping, my poor friend, for a line from
Miss Restall? You distress me.”

“I am sorry to distress you, Stone. If I can get one pitying word from
_her_, I can submit to the miserable life that lies before me.”

“Are you not expecting too much?”

“You wouldn’t say so, if you were as fond of her as I am.”

They were silent. The evening slowly darkened; and the mistress came in
as usual with the candles. She brought with her a letter for Cosway.

He tore it open; read it in an instant; and devoured it with kisses.
His highly wrought feelings found their vent in a little allowable
exaggeration. “She has saved my life!” he said, as he handed the letter
to Stone.

It only contained these lines:

“My love is yours, my promise is yours. Through all trouble, through all
profanation, through the hopeless separation that may be before us in
this world, I live yours--and die yours. My Edwin, God bless and comfort
you.”


_The Fourth Epoch in Mr. Cosway’s Life._

The separation had lasted for nearly two years, when Cosway and Stone
paid that visit to the country house which is recorded at the outset of
the present narrative. In the interval nothing had been heard of Miss
Restall, except through Mr. Atherton. He reported that Adela was leading
a very quiet life. The one remarkable event had been an interview
between “Miss Benshaw” and herself. No other person had been present;
but the little that was reported placed Miss Restall’s character above
all praise. She had forgiven the woman who had so cruelly injured her!

The two friends, it may be remembered, had traveled to London,
immediately after completing the fullest explanation of Cosway’s
startling behavior at the breakfast-table. Stone was not by nature a
sanguine man. “I don’t believe in our luck,” he said. “Let us be quite
sure that we are not the victims of another deception.”

The accident had happened on the Thames; and the newspaper narrative
proved to be accurate in every respect. Stone personally attended
the inquest. From a natural feeling of delicacy toward Adela, Cosway
hesitated to write to her on the subject. The ever-helpful Stone wrote
in his place.

After some delay, the answer was received. It inclosed a brief statement
(communicated officially by legal authority) of the last act of malice
on the part of the late head-partner in the house of Benshaw and
Company. She had not died intestate, like her brother. The first clause
of her will contained the testator’s grateful recognition of Adela
Restall’s Christian act of forgiveness. The second clause (after stating
that there were neither relatives nor children to be benefited by the
will) left Adela Restall mistress of Mrs. Cosway Benshaw’s fortune--on
the one merciless condition that she did _not_ marry Edwin Cosway. The
third clause--if Adela Restall violated the condition--handed over the
whole of the money to the firm in the City, “for the extension of the
business, and the benefit of the surviving partners.”

Some months later, Adela came of age. To the indignation of Mr. Restall,
and the astonishment of the “Company,” the money actually went to the
firm. The fourth epoch in Mr. Cosway’s life witnessed his marriage to a
woman who cheerfully paid half a million of money for the happiness of
passing her life, on eight hundred a year, with the man whom she loved.

But Cosway felt bound in gratitude to make a rich woman of his wife, if
work and resolution could do it. When Stone last heard of him, he was
reading for the bar; and Mr. Atherton was ready to give him his first
brief.

NOTE.--That “most improbable” part of the present narrative, which
is contained in the division called The First Epoch, is founded on an
adventure which actually occurred to no less a person than a cousin of
Sir Walter Scott. In Lockhart’s delightful “Life,” the anecdote will be
found as told by Sir Walter to Captain Basil Hall. The remainder of the
present story is entirely imaginary. The writer wondered what such a
woman as the landlady would do under certain given circumstances, after
her marriage to the young midshipman--and here is the result.



MR. MEDHURST AND THE PRINCESS.

I.

THE day before I left London, to occupy the post of second secretary of
legation at a small German Court, I took leave of my excellent French
singing-master, Monsieur Bonnefoy, and of his young and pretty daughter
named Jeanne.

Our farewell interview was saddened by Monsieur Bonnefoy’s family
anxieties. His elder brother, known in the household as Uncle David,
had been secretly summoned to Paris by order of a republican society.
Anxious relations in London (whether reasonably or not, I am unable to
say) were in some fear of the political consequences that might follow.

At parting, I made Mademoiselle Jeanne a present, in the shape of
a plain gold brooch. For some time past, I had taken my lessons at
Monsieur Bonnefoy’s house; his daughter and I often sang together under
his direction. Seeing much of Jeanne, under these circumstances, the
little gift that I had offered to her was only the natural expression of
a true interest in her welfare. Idle rumor asserted--quite falsely--that
I was in love with her. I was sincerely the young lady’s friend: no
more, no less.

Having alluded to my lessons in singing, it may not be out of place
to mention the circumstances under which I became Monsieur Bonnefoy’s
pupil, and to allude to the change in my life that followed in due
course of time.

Our family property--excepting the sum of five thousand pounds left to
me by my mother--is landed property strictly entailed. The estates were
inherited by my only brother, Lord Medhurst; the kindest, the best, and,
I grieve to say it, the unhappiest of men. He lived separated from a
bad wife; he had no children to console him; and he only enjoyed at rare
intervals the blessing of good health. Having myself nothing to live on
but the interest of my mother’s little fortune, I had to make my own way
in the world. Poor younger sons, not possessed of the commanding ability
which achieves distinction, find the roads that lead to prosperity
closed to them, with one exception. They can always apply themselves to
the social arts which make a man agreeable in society. I had naturally
a good voice, and I cultivated it. I was ready to sing, without being
subject to the wretched vanity which makes objections and excuses--I
pleased the ladies--the ladies spoke favorably of me to their
husbands--and some of their husbands were persons of rank and influence.
After no very long lapse of time, the result of this combination of
circumstances declared itself. Monsieur Bonnefoy’s lessons became the
indirect means of starting me on a diplomatic career--and the diplomatic
career made poor Ernest Medhurst, to his own unutterable astonishment,
the hero of a love story!

The story being true, I must beg to be excused, if I abstain from
mentioning names, places, and dates, when I enter on German ground. Let
it be enough to say that I am writing of a bygone year in the present
century, when no such thing as a German Empire existed, and when the
revolutionary spirit of France was still an object of well-founded
suspicion to tyrants by right divine on the continent of Europe.

II.

ON joining the legation, I was not particularly attracted by my chief,
the Minister. His manners were oppressively polite; and his sense of his
own importance was not sufficiently influenced by diplomatic reserve. I
venture to describe him (mentally speaking) as an empty man, carefully
trained to look full on public occasions.

My colleague, the first secretary, was a far more interesting person.
Bright, unaffected, and agreeable, he at once interested me when we were
introduced to each other. I pay myself a compliment, as I consider, when
I add that he became my firm and true friend.

We took a walk together in the palace gardens on the evening of my
arrival. Reaching a remote part of the grounds, we were passed by a
lean, sallow, sour-looking old man, drawn by a servant in a chair on
wheels. My companion stopped, whispered to me, “Here is the Prince,”
 and bowed bareheaded. I followed his example as a matter of course. The
Prince feebly returned our salutation. “Is he ill?” I asked, when we had
put our hats on again.

“Shakespeare,” the secretary replied, “tells us that ‘one man in
his time plays many parts.’ Under what various aspects the Prince’s
character may have presented itself, in his younger days, I am not able
to tell you. Since I have been here, he has played the part of a martyr
to illness, misunderstood by his doctors.”

“And his daughter, the Princess--what do you say of her?”

“Ah, she is not so easily described! I can only appeal to your memory of
other women like her, whom you must often have seen--women who are tall
and fair, and fragile and elegant; who have delicate aquiline noses
and melting blue eyes--women who have often charmed you by their tender
smiles and their supple graces of movement. As for the character of this
popular young lady, I must not influence you either way; study it for
yourself.”

“Without a hint to guide me?”

“With a suggestion,” he replied, “which may be worth considering. If you
wish to please the Princess, begin by endeavoring to win the good graces
of the Baroness.”

“Who is the Baroness?”

“One of the ladies in waiting--bosom friend of her Highness, and chosen
repository of all her secrets. Personally, not likely to attract you;
short and fat, and ill-tempered and ugly. Just at this time, I happen
myself to get on with her better than usual. We have discovered that
we possess one sympathy in common--we are the only people at Court who
don’t believe in the Prince’s new doctor.”

“Is the new doctor a quack?”

The secretary looked round, before he answered, to see that nobody was
near us.

“It strikes me,” he said, “that the Doctor is a spy. Mind! I have no
right to speak of him in that way; it is only my impression--and I ought
to add that appearances are all in his favor. He is in the service of
our nearest royal neighbor, the Grand Duke; and he has been sent here
expressly to relieve the sufferings of the Duke’s good friend and
brother, our invalid Prince. This is an honorable mission no doubt. And
the man himself is handsome, well-bred, and (I don’t quite know whether
this is an additional recommendation) a countryman of ours. Nevertheless
I doubt him, and the Baroness doubts him. You are an independent
witness; I shall be anxious to hear if your opinion agrees with ours.”

I was presented at Court, toward the end of the week; and, in the course
of the next two or three days, I more than once saw the Doctor. The
impression that he produced on me surprised my colleague. It was my
opinion that he and the Baroness had mistaken the character of a worthy
and capable man.

The secretary obstinately adhered to his own view.

“Wait a little,” he answered, “and we shall see.”

He was quite right. We did see.

III.

BUT the Princess--the gentle, gracious, beautiful Princess--what can I
say of her Highness?

I can only say that she enchanted me.

I had been a little discouraged by the reception that I met with from
her father. Strictly confining himself within the limits of politeness,
he bade me welcome to his Court in the fewest possible words, and then
passed me by without further notice. He afterward informed the English
Minister that I had been so unfortunate as to try his temper: “Your new
secretary irritates me, sir--he is a person in an offensively perfect
state of health.” The Prince’s charming daughter was not of her father’s
way of thinking; it is impossible to say how graciously, how sweetly I
was received. She honored me by speaking to me in my own language,
of which she showed herself to be a perfect mistress. I was not only
permitted, but encouraged, to talk of my family, and to dwell on my own
tastes, amusements, and pursuits. Even when her Highness’s attention was
claimed by other persons waiting to be presented, I was not forgotten.
The Baroness was instructed to invite me for the next evening to the
Princess’s tea-table; and it was hinted that I should be especially
welcome if I brought my music with me, and sang.

My friend the secretary, standing near us at the time, looked at me with
a mysterious smile. He had suggested that I should make advances to the
Baroness--and here was the Baroness (under royal instructions) making
advances to Me!

“We know what _that_ means,” he whispered.

In justice to myself, I must declare that I entirely failed to
understand him.

On the occasion of my second reception by the Princess, at her little
evening party, I detected the Baroness, more than once, in the act of
watching her Highness and myself, with an appearance of disapproval in
her manner, which puzzled me. When I had taken my leave, she followed me
out of the room.

“I have a word of advice to give you,” she said. “The best thing you can
do, sir, is to make an excuse to your Minister, and go back to England.”

I declare again, that I entirely failed to understand the Baroness.

IV.

BEFORE the season came to an end, the Court removed to the Prince’s
country-seat, in the interests of his Highness’s health. Entertainments
were given (at the Doctor’s suggestion), with a view of raising the
patient’s depressed spirits. The members of the English legation were
among the guests invited. To me it was a delightful visit. I had again
every reason to feel gratefully sensible of the Princess’s condescending
kindness. Meeting the secretary one day in the library, I said that I
thought her a perfect creature. Was this an absurd remark to make? I
could see nothing absurd in it--and yet my friend burst out laughing.

“My good fellow, nobody is a perfect creature,” he said. “The Princess
has her faults and failings, like the rest of us.”

I denied it positively.

“Use your eyes,” he went on; “and you will see, for example, that she is
shallow and frivolous. Yesterday was a day of rain. We were all obliged
to employ ourselves somehow indoors. Didn’t you notice that she had no
resources in herself? She can’t even read.”

“There you are wrong at any rate,” I declared. “I saw her reading the
newspaper.”

“You saw her with the newspaper in her hand. If you had not been deaf
and blind to her defects, you would have noticed that she couldn’t fix
her attention on it. She was always ready to join in the chatter of the
ladies about her. When even their stores of gossip were exhausted, she
let the newspaper drop on her lap, and sat in vacant idleness smiling at
nothing.”

I reminded him that she might have met with a dull number of the
newspaper. He took no notice of this unanswerable reply.

“You were talking the other day of her warmth of feeling,” he proceeded.
“She has plenty of sentiment (German sentiment), I grant you, but no
true feeling. What happened only this morning, when the Prince was in
the breakfast-room, and when the Princess and her ladies were dressed
to go out riding? Even she noticed the wretchedly depressed state of
her father’s spirits. A man of that hypochondriacal temperament suffers
acutely, though he may only fancy himself to be ill. The Princess
overflowed with sympathy, but she never proposed to stay at home, and
try to cheer the old man. Her filial duty was performed to her own
entire satisfaction when she had kissed her hand to the Prince. The
moment after, she was out of the room--eager to enjoy her ride. We all
heard her laughing gayly among the ladies in the hall.”

I could have answered this also, if our discussion had not been
interrupted at the moment. The Doctor came into the library in search of
a book. When he had left us, my colleague’s strong prejudice against him
instantly declared itself.

“Be on your guard with that man,” he said.

“Why?” I asked.

“Haven’t you noticed,” he replied, “that when the Princess is talking to
you, the Doctor always happens to be in that part of the room?”

“What does it matter where the Doctor is?”

My friend looked at me with an oddly mingled expression of doubt and
surprise. “Do you really not understand me?” he said.

“I don’t indeed.”

“My dear Ernest, you are a rare and admirable example to the rest of
us--you are a truly modest man.”

What did he mean?

V.

EVENTS followed, on the next day, which (as will presently be seen) I
have a personal interest in relating.

The Baroness left us suddenly, on leave of absence. The Prince wearied
of his residence in the country; and the Court returned to the capital.
The charming Princess was reported to be “indisposed,” and retired to
the seclusion of her own apartments.

A week later, I received a note f rom the Baroness, marked “private
and confidential.” It informed me that she had resumed her duties
as lady-in-waiting, and that she wished to see me at my earliest
convenience. I obeyed at once; and naturally asked if there were better
accounts of her Highness’s health.

The Baroness’s reply a little surprised me. She said, “The Princess is
perfectly well.”

“Recovered already!” I exclaimed.

“She has never been ill,” the Baroness answered. “Her indisposition was
a sham; forced on her by me, in her own interests. Her reputation is in
peril; and you--you hateful Englishman--are the cause of it.”

Not feeling disposed to put up with such language as this, even when
it was used by a lady, I requested that she would explain herself. She
complied without hesitation. In another minute my eyes were opened to
the truth. I knew--no; that is too positive--let me say I had reason to
believe that the Princess loved me!

It is simply impossible to convey to the minds of others any idea of the
emotions that overwhelmed me at that critical moment of my life. I
was in a state of confusion at the time; and, when my memory tries to
realize it, I am in a state of confusion now. The one thing I can do
is to repeat what the Baroness said to me when I had in some degree
recovered my composure.

“I suppose you are aware,” she began, “of the disgrace to which the
Princess’s infatuation exposes her, if it is discovered? On my own
responsibility I repeat what I said to you a short time since. Do you
refuse to leave this place immediately?”

Does the man live, honored as I was, who would have hesitated to refuse?
Find him if you can!

“Very well,” she resumed. “As the friend of the Princess, I have no
choice now but to take things as they are, and to make the best of them.
Let us realize your position to begin with. If you were (like your elder
brother) a nobleman possessed of vast estates, my royal mistress might
be excused. As it is, whatever you may be in the future, you are nothing
now but an obscure young man, without fortune or title. Do you see your
duty to the Princess? or must I explain it to you?”

I saw my duty as plainly as she did. “Her Highness’s secret is a sacred
secret,” I said. “I am bound to shrink from no sacrifice which may
preserve it.”

The Baroness smiled maliciously. “I may have occasion,” she answered,
“to remind you of what you have just said. In the meanwhile the
Princess’s secret is in danger of discovery.”

“By her father?”

“No. By the Doctor.”

At first, I doubted whether she was in jest or in earnest. The next
instant, I remembered that the secretary had expressly cautioned me
against that man.

“It is evidently one of your virtues,” the Baroness proceeded, “to
be slow to suspect. Prepare yourself for a disagreeable surprise. The
Doctor has been watching the Princess, on every occasion when she speaks
to you, with some object of his own in view. During my absence,
young sir, I have been engaged in discovering what that object is. My
excellent mother lives at the Court of the Grand Duke, and enjoys
the confidence of his Ministers. He is still a bachelor; and, in the
interests of the succession to the throne, the time has arrived when
he must marry. With my mother’s assistance, I have found out that the
Doctor’s medical errand here is a pretense. Influenced by the Princess’s
beauty the Grand Duke has thought of her first as his future duchess.
Whether he has heard slanderous stories, or whether he is only a
cautious man, I can’t tell you. But this I know: he has instructed his
physician--if he had employed a professed diplomatist his motive
might have been suspected--to observe her Highness privately, and to
communicate the result. The object of the report is to satisfy the Duke
that the Princess’s reputation is above the reach of scandal; that she
is free from entanglements of a certain kind; and that she is in
every respect a person to whom he can with propriety offer his hand
in marriage. The Doctor, Mr. Ernest, is not disposed to allow you
to prevent him from sending in a favorable report. He has drawn his
conclusions from the Princess’s extraordinary kindness to the second
secretary of the English legation; and he is only waiting for a little
plainer evidence to communicate his suspicions to the Prince. It rests
with you to save the Princess.”

“Only tell me how I am to do it!” I said.

“There is but one way of doing it,” she answered; “and that way has
(comically enough) been suggested to me by the Doctor himself.”

Her tone and manner tried my patience.

“Come to the point!” I said.

She seemed to enjoy provoking me.

“No hurry, Mr. Ernest--no hurry! You shall be fully enlightened, if you
will only wait a little. The Prince, I must tell you, believes in his
daughter’s indisposition. When he visited her this morning, he was
attended by his medical adviser. I was present at the interview. To do
him justice, the Doctor is worthy of the trust reposed in him--he boldly
attempted to verify his suspicions of the daughter in the father’s
presence.”

“How?”

“Oh, in the well-known way that has been tried over and over again,
under similar circumstances! He merely invented a report that you were
engaged in a love-affair with some charming person in the town. Don’t be
angry; there’s no harm done.”

“But there _is_ harm done,” I insisted. “What must the Princess think of
me?”

“Do you suppose she is weak enough to believe the Doctor? Her Highness
beat him at his own weapons; not the slightest sign of agitation on her
part rewarded his ingenuity. All that you have to do is to help her
to mislead this medical spy. It’s as easy as lying: and easier. The
Doctor’s slander declares that you have a love-affair in the town. Take
the hint--and astonish the Doctor by proving that he has hit on the
truth.”

It was a hot day; the Baroness was beginning to get excited. She paused
and fanned herself.

“Do I startle you?” she asked.

“You disgust me.”

She laughed.

“What a thick-headed man this is!” she said, pleasantly. “Must I put
it more plainly still? Engage in what your English prudery calls a
‘flirtation,’ with some woman here--the lower in degree the better, or
the Princess might be jealous--and let the affair be seen and known by
everybody about the Court. Sly as he is, the Doctor is not prepared
for that! At your age, and with your personal advantages, he will take
appearances for granted; he will conclude that he has wronged you, and
misinterpreted the motives of the Princess. The secret of her Highness’s
weakness will be preserved--thanks to that sacrifice, Mr. Ernest, which
you are so willing and so eager to make.”

It was useless to remonstrate with such a woman as this. I simply stated
my own objection to her artfully devised scheme.

“I don’t wish to appear vain,” I said; “but the woman to whom I am to
pay these attentions may believe that I really admire her--and it is
just possible that she may honestly return the feeling which I am only
assuming.”

“Well--and what then?”

“It’s hard on the woman, surely?”

The Baroness was shocked, unaffectedly shocked.

“Good heavens!” she exclaimed, “how can anything that you do for the
Princess be hard on a woman of the lower orders? There must be an end of
this nonsense, sir! You have heard what I propose, and you know what the
circumstances are. My mistress is waiting for your answer. What am I to
say?”

“Let me see her Highness, and speak for myself,” I said.

“Quite impossible to-day, without running too great a risk. Your reply
must be made through me.”

There was to be a Court concert at the end of the week. On that occasion
I should be able to make my own reply. In the meanwhile I only told the
Baroness I wanted time to consider.

“What time?” she asked.

“Until to-morrow. Do you object?”

“On the contrary, I cordially agree. Your base hesitation may lead to
results which I have not hitherto dared to anticipate.”

“What do you mean?”

“Between this and to-morrow,” the horrid woman replied, “the
Princess may end in seeing you with my eyes. In that hope I wish you
good-morning.”

VI.

MY enemies say that I am a weak man, unduly influenced by persons of
rank--because of their rank. If this we re true, I should have found
little difficulty in consenting to adopt the Baroness’s suggestion.
As it was, the longer I reflected on the scheme the less I liked it. I
tried to think of some alternative that might be acceptably proposed.
The time passed, and nothing occurred to me. In this embarrassing
position my mind became seriously disturbed; I felt the necessity of
obtaining some relief, which might turn my thoughts for a while into a
new channel. The secretary called on me, while I was still in doubt what
to do. He reminded me that a new prima donna was advertised to appear on
that night; and he suggested that we should go to the opera. Feeling as
I did at the time, I readily agreed.

We found the theater already filled, before the performance began. Two
French gentlemen were seated in the row of stalls behind us. They were
talking of the new singer.

“She is advertised as ‘Mademoiselle Fontenay,’” one of them said. “That
sounds like an assumed name.”

“It _is_ an assumed name,” the other replied. “She is the daughter of a
French singing-master, named Bonnefoy.”

To my friend’s astonishment I started to my feet, and left him without a
word of apology. In another minute I was at the stage-door, and had sent
in my card to “Mademoiselle Fontenay.” While I was waiting, I had time
to think. Was it possible that Jeanne had gone on the stage? Or were
there two singing-masters in existence named Bonnefoy? My doubts were
soon decided. The French woman-servant whom I remembered when I was
Monsieur Bonnefoy’s pupil, made her appearance, and conducted me to her
young mistress’s dressing-room. Dear good Jeanne, how glad she was to
see me!

I found her standing before the glass, having just completed her
preparations for appearing on the stage. Dressed in her picturesque
costume, she was so charming that I expressed my admiration heartily,
as became her old friend. “Do you really like me?” she said, with the
innocent familiarity which I recollected so well. “See how I look in
the glass--that is the great test.” It was not easy to apply the test.
Instead of looking at her image in the glass, it was far more agreeable
to look at herself. We were interrupted--too soon interrupted--by the
call-boy. He knocked at the door, and announced that the overture had
begun.

“I have a thousand things to ask you,” I told her. “What has made this
wonderful change in your life? How is it that I don’t see your father--”

Her face instantly saddened; her hand trembled as she laid it on my arm
to silence me.

“Don’t speak of him now,” she said, “or you will unnerve me. Come to me
to-morrow when the stage will not be waiting; Annette will give you my
address.” She opened the door to go out, and returned. “Will you
think me very unreasonable if I ask you not to make one of my audience
to-night? You have reminded me of the dear old days that can never come
again. If I feel that I am singing to _you_--” She left me to understand
the rest, and turned away again to the door. As I followed her out, to
say good-by, she drew from her bosom the little brooch which had been my
parting gift, and held it out to me. “On the stage, or off,” she said,
“I always wear it. Good-night, Ernest.”

I was prepared to hear sad news when we met the next morning.

My good old friend and master had died suddenly. To add to the
bitterness of that affliction, he had died in debt to a dear and
intimate friend. For his daughter’s sake he had endeavored to add to his
little savings by speculating with borrowed money on the Stock Exchange.
He had failed, and the loan advanced had not been repaid, when a fit of
apoplexy struck him down. Offered the opportunity of trying her fortune
on the operatic stage, Jeanne made the attempt, and was now nobly
employed in earning the money to pay her father’s debt.

“It was the only way in which I could do justice to his memory,” she
said, simply. “I hope you don’t object to my going on the stage?”

I took her hand, poor child--and let that simple action answer for me. I
was too deeply affected to be able to speak.

“It is not in me to be a great actress,” she resumed; “but you know what
an admirable musician my father was. He has taught me to sing, so that
I can satisfy the critics, as well as please the public. There was what
they call a great success last night. It has earned me an engagement
for another year to come, and an increase of salary. I have already sent
some money to our good old friend at home, and I shall soon send more.
It is my one consolation--I feel almost happy again when I am paying my
poor father’s debt. No more now of my sad story! I want to hear all that
you can tell me of yourself.” She moved to the window, and looked out.
“Oh, the beautiful blue sky! We used sometimes to take a walk, when we
were in London, on fine days like this. Is there a park here?”

I took her to the palace gardens, famous for their beauty in that part
of Germany.

Arm in arm we loitered along the pleasant walks. The lovely flowers,
the bright sun, the fresh fragrant breeze, all helped her to recover her
spirits. She began to be like the happy Jeanne of my past experience,
as easily pleased as a child. When we sat down to rest, the lap of her
dress was full of daisies. “Do you remember,” she said, “when you first
taught me to make a daisy-chain? Are you too great a man to help me
again now?”

We were still engaged with our chain, seated close together, when the
smell of tobacco-smoke was wafted to us on the air.

I looked up and saw the Doctor passing us, enjoying his cigar. He bowed;
eyed my pretty companion with a malicious smile; and passed on.

“Who is that man?” she asked.

“The Prince’s physician,” I replied.

“I don’t like him,” she said; “why did he smile when he looked at me?”

“Perhaps,” I suggested, “he thought we were lovers.”

She blushed. “Don’t let him think that! tell him we are only old
friends.”

We were not destined to finish our flower chain on that day.

Another person interrupted us, whom I recognized as the elder brother of
Monsieur Bonnefoy--already mentioned in these pages, under the name
of Uncle David. Having left France for political reasons, the old
republican had taken care of his niece after her father’s death, and had
accepted the position of Jeanne’s business manager in her relations with
the stage. Uncle David’s object, when he joined us in the garden, was
to remind her that she was wanted at rehearsal, and must at once return
with him to the theater. We parted, having arranged that I was to see
the performance on that night.

Later in the day, the Baroness sent for me again.

“Let me apologize for having misunderstood you yesterday,” she said:
“and let me offer you my best congratulations. You have done wonders
already in the way of misleading the Doctor. There is only one objection
to that girl at the theater--I hear she is so pretty that she may
possibly displease the Princess. In other respects, she is just in the
public position which will make your attentions to her look like the
beginning of a serious intrigue. Bravo, Mr. Ernest--bravo!”

I was too indignant to place any restraint on the language in which I
answered her.

“Understand, if you please,” I said, “that I am renewing an old
friendship with Mademoiselle Jeanne--begun under the sanction of her
father. Respect that young lady, madam, as I respect her.”

The detestable Baroness clapped her hands, as if she had been at the
theater.

“If you only say that to the Princess,” she remarked, “as well as you
have said it to me, there will be no danger of arousing her Highness’s
jealousy. I have a message for you. At the concert, on Saturday, you are
to retire to the conservatory, and you may hope for an interview when
the singers begin the second part of the programme. Don’t let me detain
you any longer. Go back to your young lady, Mr. Ernest--pray go back!”

VII.

ON the second night of the opera the applications for places were too
numerous to be received. Among the crowded audience, I recognized many
of my friends. They persisted in believing an absurd report (first
circulated, as I imagine, by the Doctor), which asserted that my
interest in the new singer was something more than the interest of an
old friend. When I went behind the scenes to congratulate Jeanne on
her success, I was annoyed in another way--and by the Doctor again. He
followed me to Jeanne’s room, to offer _his_ congratulations; and he
begged that I would introduce him to the charming prima donna. Having
expressed his admiration, he looked at me with his insolently suggestive
smile, and said he could not think of prolonging his intrusion. On
leaving the room, he noticed Uncle David, waiting as usual to take
care of Jeanne on her return from the theater--looked at him
attentively--bowed, and went out.

The next morning, I received a note from the Baroness, expressed in
these terms:

“More news! My rooms look out on the wing of the palace in which the
Doctor is lodged. Half an hour since, I discovered him at his window,
giving a letter to a person who is a stranger to me. The man left the
palace immediately afterward. My maid followed him, by my directions.
Instead of putting the letter in the post, he took a ticket at the
railway-station--for what place the servant was unable to discover.
Here, you will observe, is a letter important enough to be dispatched
by special messenger, and written at a time when we have succeeded in
freeing ourselves from the Doctor’s suspicions. It is at least possible
that he has decided on sending a favorable report of the Princess to the
Grand Duke. If this is the case, please consider whether you will
not act wisely (in her Highness’s interests) by keeping away from the
concert.”

Viewing this suggestion as another act of impertinence on the part of
the Baroness, I persisted in my intention of going to the concert. It
was for the Princess to decide what course of conduct I was bound to
follow. What did I care for the Doctor’s report to the Duke! Shall I own
my folly? I do really believe I was jealous of the Duke.

VIII.

ENTERING the Concert Room, I found the Princess alone on the dais,
receiving the company. “Nervous prostration” had made it impossible for
the Prince to be present. He was confined to his bed-chamber; and the
Doctor was in attendance on him.

I bowed to the Baroness, but she was too seriously offended with me for
declining to take her advice to notice my salutation. Passing into
the conservatory, it occurred to me that I might be seen, and possibly
suspected, in the interval between the first and second parts of the
programme, when the music no longer absorbed the attention of the
audience. I went on, and waited outside on the steps that led to the
garden; keeping the glass door open, so as to hear when the music of the
second part of the concert began.

After an interval which seemed to be endless, I saw the Princess
approaching me.

She had made the heat in the Concert Room an excuse for retiring for
a while; and she had the Baroness in attendance on her to save
appearances. Instead of leaving us to ourselves, the malicious creature
persisted in paying the most respectful attentions to her mistress. It
was impossible to make her understand that she was not wanted any longer
until the Princess said sharply, “Go back to the music!” Even then,
the detestable woman made a low curtsey, and answered: “I will return,
Madam, in five minutes.”

I ventured to present myself in the conservatory.

The Princess was dressed with exquisite simplicity, entirely in white.
Her only ornaments were white roses in her hair and in her bosom. To say
that she looked lovely is to say nothing. She seemed to be the ethereal
creature of some higher sphere; too exquisitely delicate and pure to be
approached by a mere mortal man like myself. I was awed; I was silent.
Her Highness’s sweet smile encouraged me to venture a little nearer. She
pointed to a footstool which the Baroness had placed for her. “Are you
afraid of me, Ernest?” she asked softly.

Her divinely beautiful eyes rested on me with a look of encouragement.
I dropped on my knees at her feet. She had asked if I was afraid of
her. This, if I may use such an expression, roused my manhood. My own
boldness astonished me. I answered: “Madam, I adore you.”

She laid her fair hand on my head, and looked at me thoughtfully.
“Forget my rank,” she whispered--“have I not set you the example?
Suppose that I am nothing but an English Miss. What would you say to
Miss?”

“I should say, I love you.”

“Say it to Me.”

My lips said it on her hand. She bent forward. My heart beats fast at
the bare remembrance of it. Oh, heavens, her Highness kissed me!

“There is your reward,” she murmured, “for all you have sacrificed for
my sake. What an effort it must have been to offer the pretense of
love to an obscure stranger! The Baroness tells me this actress--this
singer--what is she?--is pretty. Is it true?”

The Baroness was quite mischievous enough to have also mentioned the
false impression, prevalent about the Court, that I was in love with
Jeanne. I attempted to explain. The gracious Princess refused to hear
me.

“Do you think I doubt you?” she said. “Distinguished by me, could you
waste a look on a person in _that_ rank of life?” She laughed softly, as
if the mere idea of such a thing amused her. It was only for a moment:
her thoughts took a new direction--they contemplated the uncertain
future. “How is this to end?” she asked. “Dear Ernest, we are not in
Paradise; we are in a hard cruel world which insists on distinctions in
rank. To what unhappy destiny does the fascination which you exercise
over me condemn us both?”

She paused--took one of the white roses out of her bosom--touched it
with her lips--and gave it to me.

“I wonder whether you feel the burden of life as I feel it?” she
resumed. “It is immaterial to me, whether we are united in this world or
in the next. Accept my rose, Ernest, as an assurance that I speak with
perfect sincerity. I see but two alternatives before us. One of them
(beset with dangers) is elopement. And the other,” she added, with truly
majestic composure, “is suicide.”

Would Englishmen in general have rightly understood such fearless
confidence in them as this language implied? I am afraid they might have
attributed it to what my friend the secretary called “German sentiment.”
 Perhaps they might even have suspected the Princess of quoting from
some old-fashioned German play. Under the irresistible influence of that
glorious creature, I contemplated with such equal serenity the perils of
elopement and the martyrdom of love, that I was for the moment at a loss
how to reply. In that moment, the evil genius of my life appeared in
the conservatory. With haste in her steps, with alarm in her face, the
Baroness rushed up to her royal mistress, and said, “For God’s sake,
Madam, come away! The Prince desires to speak with you instantly.”

Her Highness rose, calmly superior to the vulgar excitement of her lady
in waiting. “Think of it to-night,” she said to me, “and let me hear
from you to-morrow.”

She pressed my hand; she gave me a farewell look. I sank into the
chair that she had just left. Did I think of elopement? Did I think of
suicide? The elevating influence of the Princess no longer sustained me;
my nature became degraded. Horrid doubts rose in my mind. Did her father
suspect us?

IX.

NEED I say that I passed a sleepless night?

The morning found me with my pen in my hand, confronting the serious
responsibility of writing to the Princess, and not knowing what to say.
I had already torn up two letters, when Uncle David presented himself
with a message from his niece. Jeanne was in trouble, and wanted to ask
my advice.

My state of mind, on hearing this, became simply inexplicable. Here was
an interruption which ought to have annoyed me. It did nothing of the
kind--it inspired me with a feeling of relief!

I naturally expected that the old Frenchman would return with me to his
niece, and tell me what had happened. To my surprise, he begged that
I would excuse him, and left me without a word of explanation. I found
Jeanne walking up and down her little sitting-room, flushed and angry.
Fragments of torn paper and heaps of flowers littered the floor; and
three unopen jewel-cases appeared to have been thrown into the empty
fireplace. She caught me excitedly by the hand the moment I entered the
room.

“You are my true friend,” she said; “you were present the other night
when I sang. Was there anything in my behavior on the stage which could
justify men who call themselves gentlemen in insulting me?”

“My dear, how can you ask the question?”

“I must ask it. Some of them send flowers, and some of them send
jewels; and every one of them writes letters--infamous, abominable
letters--saying they are in love with me, and asking for appointments as
if I was--”

She could say no more. Poor dear Jeanne--her head dropped on
my shoulder; she burst out crying. Who could see her so cruelly
humiliated--the faithful loving daughter, whose one motive for appearing
on the stage had been to preserve her father’s good name--and not feel
for her as I did? I forgot all considerations of prudence; I thought of
nothing but consoling her; I took her in my arms; I dried her tears; I
kissed her; I said, “Tell me the name of any one of the wretches who has
written to you, and I will make him an example to the rest!” She shook
her head, and pointed to the morsels of paper on the floor. “Oh, Ernest,
do you think I asked you to come here for any such purpose as that?
Those jewels, those hateful jewels, tell me how I can send them back!
spare me the sight of them!”

So far it was easy to console her. I sent the jewels at once to the
manager of the theater--with a written notice to be posted at the stage
door, stating that they were waiting to be returned to the persons who
could describe them.

“Try, my dear, to forget what has happened,” I said. “Try to find
consolation and encouragement in your art.”

“I have lost all interest in my success on the stage,” she answered,
“now I know the penalty I must pay for it. When my father’s memory
is clear of reproach, I shall leave the theater never to return to it
again.”

“Take time to consider, Jeanne.”

“I will do anything you ask of me.”

For a while we were silent. Without any influence to lead to it that I
could trace, I found myself recalling the language that the Princess had
used in alluding to Jeanne. When I thought of them now, the words and
the tone in which they had been spoken jarred on me. There is surely
something mean in an assertion of superiority which depends on nothing
better than the accident of birth. I don’t know why I took Jeanne’s
hand; I don’t know why I said, “What a good girl you are! how glad I
am to have been of some little use to you!” Is my friend the secretary
right, when he reproaches me with acting on impulse, like a woman? I
don’t like to think so; and yet, this I must own--it was well for me
that I was obliged to leave her, before I had perhaps said other words
which might have been alike unworthy of Jeanne, of the Princess, and of
myself. I was called away to speak to my servant. He brought with him
the secretary’s card, having a line written on it: “I am waiting at your
rooms, on business which permits of no delay.”

As we shook hands, Jeanne asked me if I knew where her uncle was. I
could only tell her that he had left me at my own door. She made no
remark; but she seemed to be uneasy on receiving that reply.

X.

WHEN I arrived at my rooms, my colleague hurried to meet me the moment I
opened the door.

“I am going to surprise you,” he said; “and there is no time to prepare
you for it. Our chief, the Minister, has seen the Prince this morning,
and has been officially informed of an event of importance in the life
of the Princess. She is engaged to be married to the Grand Duke.”

Engaged to the Duke--and not a word from her to warn me of it!
Engaged--after what she had said to me no longer ago than the past
night! Had I been made a plaything to amuse a great lady? Oh, what
degradation! I was furious; I snatched up my hat to go to the palace--to
force my way to her--to overwhelm her with reproaches. My friend stopped
me. He put an official document into my hand.

“There is your leave of absence from the legation,” he said; “beginning
from to-day. I have informed the Minister, in strict confidence, of the
critical position in which you are placed. He agrees with me that the
Princess’s inexcusable folly is alone to blame. Leave us, Ernest, by
the next train. There is some intrigue going on, and I fear you may be
involved in it. You know that the rulers of these little German States
can exercise despotic authority when they choose?”

“Yes! yes!”

“Whether the Prince has acted of his own free will--or whether he has
been influenced by some person about him--I am not able to tell you.
He has issued an order to arrest an old Frenchman, known to be a
republican, and suspected of associating with one of the secret
societies in this part of Germany. The conspirator has taken to flight;
having friends, as we suppose, who warned him in time. But this, Ernest,
is not the worst of it. That charming singer, that modest, pretty
girl--”

“You don’t mean Jeanne?”

“I am sorry to say I do. Advantage has been taken of her relationship to
the old man, to include that innocent creature in political suspicions
which it is simply absurd to suppose that she has deserved. She is
ordered to leave the Prince’s domains immediately.--Are you going to
her?”

“Instantly!” I replied.

Could I feel a moment’s hesitation, after the infamous manner in which
the Princess had sacrificed me to the Grand Duke? Could I think of
the poor girl, friendless, helpless--with nobody near her but a stupid
woman-servant, unable to speak the language of the country--and fail
to devote myself to the protection of Jeanne? Thank God, I reached her
lodgings in time to tell her what had happened, and to take it on myself
to receive the police.

XI.

IN three days more, Jeanne was safe in London; having traveled under my
escort. I was fortunate enough to find a home for her, in the house of a
lady who had been my mother’s oldest and dearest friend.

We were separated, a few days afterward, by the distressing news which
reached me of the state of my brother’s health. I went at once to his
house in the country. His medical attendants had lost all hope of saving
him: they told me plainly that his release from a life of suffering was
near at hand.

While I was still in attendance at his bedside, I heard from
the secretary. He inclosed a letter, directed to me in a strange
handwriting. I opened the envelope and looked for the signature. My
friend had been entrapped into sending me an anonymous letter.

Besides addressing me in French (a language seldom used in my experience
at the legation), the writer disguised the identity of the persons
mentioned by the use of classical names. In spite of these precautions,
I felt no difficulty in arriving at a conclusion. My correspondent’s
special knowledge of Court secrets, and her malicious way of
communicating them, betrayed the Baroness.

I translate the letter; restoring to the persons who figure in it the
names under which they are already known. The writer began in these
satirically familiar terms:


“When you left the Prince’s dominions, my dear sir, you no doubt
believed yourself to be a free agent. Quite a mistake! You were a mere
puppet; and the strings that moved you were pulled by the Doctor.

“Let me tell you how.

“On a certain night, which you well remember, the Princess was
unexpectedly summoned to the presence of her father. His physician’s
skill had succeeded in relieving the illustrious Prince, prostrate under
nervous miseries. He was able to attend to a state affair of importance,
revealed to him by the Doctor--who then for the first time acknowledged
that he had presented himself at Court in a diplomatic, as well as in a
medical capacity.

“This state affair related to a proposal for the hand of the Princess,
received from the Grand Duke through the authorized medium of the
Doctor. Her Highness, being consulted, refused to consider the proposal.
The Prince asked for her reason. She answered: ‘I have no wish to be
married.’ Naturally irritated by such a ridiculous excuse, her father
declared positively that the marriage should take place.

“The impression produced on the Grand Duke’s favorite and emissary was
of a different kind.

“Certain suspicions of the Princess and yourself, which you had
successfully contrived to dissipate, revived in the Doctor’s mind when
he heard the lady’s reason for refusing to marry his royal master. It
was now too late to regret that he had suffered himself to be misled by
cleverly managed appearances. He could not recall the favorable report
which he had addressed to the Duke--or withdraw the proposal of marriage
which he had been commanded to make.

“In this emergency, the one safe course open to him was to get rid of
You--and, at the same time, so to handle circumstances as to excite
against you the pride and anger of the Princess. In the pursuit of this
latter object he was assisted by one of the ladies in waiting, sincerely
interested in the welfare of her gracious mistress, and therefore
ardently desirous of seeing her Highness married to the Duke.

“A wretched old French conspirator was made the convenient pivot on
which the intrigue turned.

“An order for the arrest of this foreign republican having been first
obtained, the Prince was prevailed on to extend his distrust of the
Frenchman to the Frenchman’s niece. You know this already; but you
don’t know why it was done. Having believed from the first that you were
really in love with the young lady, the Doctor reckoned confidently on
your devoting yourself to the protection of a friendless girl, cruelly
exiled at an hour’s notice.

“The one chance against us was that tender considerations, associated
with her Highness, might induce you to hesitate. The lady in waiting
easily moved this obstacle out of the way. She abstained from delivering
a letter addressed to you, intrusted to her by the Princess. When the
great lady asked why she had not received your reply, she was informed
(quite truly) that you and the charming opera singer had taken your
departure together. You may imagine what her Highness thought of you,
and said of you, when I mention in conclusion that she consented, the
same day, to marry the Duke.

“So, Mr. Ernest, these clever people tricked you into serving their
interests, blindfold. In relating how it was done, I hope I may have
assisted you in forming a correct estimate of the state of your own
intelligence. You have made a serious mistake in adopting your present
profession. Give up diplomacy--and get a farmer to employ you in keeping
his sheep.”

                                 * * * * *

Do I sometimes think regretfully of the Princess?

Permit me to mention a circumstance, and to leave my answer to be
inferred. Jeanne is Lady Medhurst.



MR. LISMORE AND THE WIDOW.

I.

LATE in the autumn, not many years since, a public meeting was held at
the Mansion House, London, under the direction of the Lord Mayor.

The list of gentlemen invited to address the audience had been chosen
with two objects in view. Speakers of celebrity, who would rouse public
enthusiasm, were supported by speakers connected with commerce, who
would be practically useful in explaining the purpose for which the
meeting was convened. Money wisely spent in advertising had produced the
customary result--every seat was occupied before the proceedings began.

Among the late arrivals, who had no choice but to stand or to leave the
hall, were two ladies. One of them at once decided on leaving the hall.
“I shall go back to the carriage,” she said, “and wait for you at the
door.” Her friend answered, “I shan’t keep you long. He is advertised to
support the second Resolution; I want to see him--and that is all.”

An elderly gentleman, seated at the end of a bench, rose and offered his
place to the lady who remained. She hesitated to take advantage of his
kindness, until he reminded her that he had heard what she said to her
friend. Before the third Resolution was proposed, his seat would be at
his own disposal again. She thanked him, and without further ceremony
took his place He was provided with an opera-glass, which he more than
once offered to her, when famous orators appeared on the platform;
she made no use of it until a speaker--known in the City as a
ship-owner--stepped forward to support the second Resolution.

His name (announced in the advertisements) was Ernest Lismore.

The moment he rose, the lady asked for the opera-glass. She kept it to
her eyes for such a length of time, and with such evident interest in
Mr. Lismore, that the curiosity of her neighbors was aroused. Had
he anything to say in which a lady (evidently a stranger to him)
was personally interested? There was nothing in the address that he
delivered which appealed to the enthusiasm of women. He was undoubtedly
a handsome man, whose appearance proclaimed him to be in the prime of
life--midway perhaps between thirty and forty years of age. But why a
lady should persist in keeping an opera-glass fixed on him all through
his speech, was a question which found the general ingenuity at a loss
for a reply.

Having returned the glass with an apology, the lady ventured on putting
a question next. “Did it strike you, sir, that Mr. Lismore seemed to be
out of spirits?” she asked.

“I can’t say it did, ma’am.”

“Perhaps you noticed that he left the platform the moment he had done?”

This betrayal of interest in the speaker did not escape the notice of
a lady, seated on the bench in front. Before the old gentleman could
answer, she volunteered an explanation.

“I am afraid Mr. Lismore is troubled by anxieties connected with his
business,” she said. “My husband heard it reported in the City yesterday
that he was seriously embarrassed by the failure--”

A loud burst of applause made the end of the sentence inaudible. A
famous member of Parliament had risen to propose the third Resolution.
The polite old man took his seat, and the lady left the hall to join her
friend.

“Well, Mrs. Callender, has Mr. Lismore disappointed you?”

“Far from it! But I have heard a report about him which has alarmed me:
he is said to be seriously troubled about money matters. How can I find
out his address in the City?”

“We can stop at the first stationer’s shop we pass, and ask to look at
the Directory. Are you going to pay Mr. Lismore a visit?”

“I am going to think about it.”

II.

THE next day a clerk entered Mr. Lismore’s private room at the office,
and presented a visiting-card. Mrs. Callender had reflected, and
had arrived at a decision. Underneath her name she had written these
explanatory words: “On important business.”

“Does she look as if she wanted money?” Mr. Lismore inquired.

“Oh dear, no! She comes in her carriage.”

“Is she young or old?”

“Old, sir.”

To Mr. Lismore--conscious of the disastrous influence occasionally
exercised over busy men by youth and beauty--this was a recommendation
in itself. He said: “Show her in.”

Observing the lady, as she approached him, with the momentary curiosity
of a stranger, he noticed that she still preserved the remains of
beauty. She had also escaped the misfortune, common to persons at her
time of life, of becoming too fat. Even to a man’s eye, her dressmaker
appeared to have made the most of that favorable circumstance. Her
figure had its defects concealed, and its remaining merits set off to
advantage. At the same time she evidently held herself above the common
deceptions by which some women seek to conceal their age. She wore her
own gray hair; and her complexion bore the test of daylight. On entering
the room, she made her apologies with some embarrassment. Being the
embarrassment of a stranger (and not of a youthful stranger), it failed
to impress Mr. Lismore favorably.

“I am afraid I have chosen an inconvenient time for my visit,” she
began.

“I am at your service,” he answered a little stiffly; “especially if you
will be so kind as to mention your business with me in few words.”

She was a woman of some spirit, and that reply roused her.

“I will mention it in one word,” she said smartly. “My business
is--gratitude.”

He was completely at a loss to understand what she meant, and he said so
plainly. Instead of explaining herself, she put a question.

“Do you remember the night of the eleventh of March, between five and
six years since?”

He considered for a moment.

“No,” he said, “I don’t remember it. Excuse me, Mrs. Callender, I have
affairs of my own to attend to which cause me some anxiety--”

“Let me assist your memory, Mr. Lismore; and I will leave you to your
affairs. On the date that I have referred to, you were on your way to
the railway-station at Bexmore, to catch the night express from the
North to London.”

As a hint that his time was valuable the ship-owner had hitherto
remained standing. He now took his customary seat, and began to listen
with some interest. Mrs. Callender had produced her effect on him
already.

“It was absolutely necessary,” she proceeded, “that you should be on
board your ship in the London Docks at nine o’clock the next morning. If
you had lost the express, the vessel would have sailed without you.”

The expression of his face began to change to surprise. “Who told you
that?” he asked.

“You shall hear directly. On your way into the town, your carriage was
stopped by an obstruction on the highroad. The people of Bexmore were
looking at a house on fire.”

He started to his feet.

“Good heavens! are you the lady?”

She held up her hand in satirical protest.

“Gently, sir! You suspected me just now of wasting your valuable time.
Don’t rashly conclude that I am the lady, until you find that I am
acquainted with the circumstances.”

“Is there no excuse for my failing to recognize you?” Mr. Lismore asked.
“We were on the dark side of the burning house; you were fainting, and
I--”

“And you,” she interposed, “after saving me at the risk of your own
life, turned a deaf ear to my poor husband’s entreaties, when he asked
you to wait till I had recovered my senses.”

“Your poor husband? Surely, Mrs. Callender, he received no serious
injury from the fire?”

“The firemen rescued him under circumstances of peril,” she answered,
“and at his great age he sank under the shock. I have lost the kindest
and best of men. Do you remember how you parted from him--burned and
bruised in saving me? He liked to talk of it in his last illness. ‘At
least’ (he said to you), ‘tell me the name of the man who has preserved
my wife from a dreadful death.’ You threw your card to him out of the
carriage window, and away you went at a gallop to catch your train! In
all the years that have passed I have kept that card, and have vainly
inquired for my brave sea-captain. Yesterday I saw your name on the
list of speakers at the Mansion House. Need I say that I attended
the meeting? Need I tell you now why I come here and interrupt you in
business hours?”

She held out her hand. Mr. Lismore took it in silence, and pressed it
warmly.

“You have not done with me yet,” she resumed with a smile. “Do you
remember what I said of my errand, when I first came in?”

“You said it was an errand of gratitude.”

“Something more than the gratitude which only says ‘Thank you,’” she
added. “Before I explain myself, however, I want to know what you have
been doing, and how it was that my inquiries failed to trace you after
that terrible night.”

The appearance of depression which Mrs. Callender had noticed at the
public meeting showed itself again in Mr. Lismore’s face. He sighed as
he answered her.

“My story has one merit,” he said; “it is soon told. I cannot wonder
that you failed to discover me. In the first place, I was not captain of
my ship at that time; I was only mate. In the second place, I inherited
some money, and ceased to lead a sailor’s life, in less than a year from
the night of the fire. You will now understand what obstacles were
in the way of your tracing me. With my little capital I started
successfully in business as a ship-owner. At the time, I naturally
congratulated myself on my own good fortune. We little know, Mrs.
Callender, what the future has in store for us.”

He stopped. His handsome features hardened--as if he was suffering (and
concealing) pain. Before it was possible to speak to him, there was a
knock at the door. Another visitor, without an appointment, had called;
the clerk appeared again, with a card and a message.

“The gentleman begs you will see him, sir. He has something to tell you
which is too important to be delayed.”

Hearing the message, Mrs. Callender rose immediately.

“It is enough for to-day that we understand each other,” she said. “Have
you any engagement to-morrow, after the hours of business?”

“None.”

She pointed to her card on the writing-table. “Will you come to me
to-morrow evening at that address? I am like the gentleman who has just
called; I, too, have my reason for wishing to see you.”

He gladly accepted the invitation. Mrs. Callender stopped him as he
opened the door for her.

“Shall I offend you,” she said, “if I ask a strange question before I
go? I have a better motive, mind, than mere curiosity. Are you married?”

“No.”

“Forgive me again,” she resumed. “At my age, you cannot possibly
misunderstand me; and yet--”

She hesitated. Mr. Lismore tried to give her confidence. “Pray don’t
stand on ceremony, Mrs. Callender. Nothing that _you_ can ask me need be
prefaced by an apology.”

Thus encouraged, she ventured to proceed.

“You may be engaged to be married?” she suggested. “Or you may be in
love?”

He found it impossible to conceal his surprise. But he answered without
hesitation.

“There is no such bright prospect in _my_ life,” he said. “I am not even
in love.”

She left him with a little sigh. It sounded like a sigh of relief.

Ernest Lismore was thoroughly puzzled. What could be the old lady’s
object in ascertaining that he was still free from a matrimonial
engagement? If the idea had occurred to him in time, he might have
alluded to her domestic life, and might have asked if she had children?
With a little tact he might have discovered more than this. She had
described her feeling toward him as passing the ordinary limits of
gratitude; and she was evidently rich enough to be above the imputation
of a mercenary motive. Did she propose to brighten those dreary
prospects to which he had alluded in speaking of his own life? When he
presented himself at her house the next evening, would she introduce him
to a charming daughter?

He smiled as the idea occurred to him. “An appropriate time to be
thinking of my chances of marriage!” he said to himself. “In another
month I may be a ruined man.”

III.

THE gentleman who had so urgently requested an interview was a devoted
friend--who had obtained a means of helping Ernest at a serious crisis
in his affairs.

It had been truly reported that he was in a position of pecuniary
embarrassment, owing to the failure of a mercantile house with which he
had been intimately connected. Whispers affecting his own solvency had
followed on the bankruptcy of the firm. He had already endeavored to
obtain advances of money on the usual conditions, and had been met
by excuses for delay. His friend had now arrived with a letter of
introduction to a capitalist, well known in commercial circles for his
daring speculations and for his great wealth.

Looking at the letter, Ernest observed that the envelope was sealed.
In spite of that ominous innovation on established usage, in cases of
personal introduction, he presented the letter. On this occasion, he was
not put off with excuses. The capitalist flatly declined to discount Mr.
Lismore’s bills, unless they were backed by responsible names.

Ernest made a last effort.

He applied for help to two mercantile men whom he had assisted
in _their_ difficulties, and whose names would have satisfied the
money-lender. They were most sincerely sorry--but they, too, refused.

The one security that he could offer was open, it must be owned, to
serious objections on the score of risk. He wanted an advance of twenty
thousand pounds, secured on a homeward-bound ship and cargo. But the
vessel was not insured; and, at that stormy season, she was already more
than a month overdue. Could grateful colleagues be blamed if they forgot
their obligations when they were asked to offer pecuniary help to a
merchant in this situation? Ernest returned to his office, without money
and without credit.

A man threatened by ruin is in no state of mind to keep an engagement at
a lady’s tea-table. Ernest sent a letter of apology to Mrs. Call ender,
alleging extreme pressure of business as the excuse for breaking his
engagement.

“Am I to wait for an answer, sir?” the messenger asked.

“No; you are merely to leave the letter.”

IV.

IN an hour’s time--to Ernest’s astonishment--the messenger returned with
a reply.

“The lady was just going out, sir, when I rang at the door,” he
explained, “and she took the letter from me herself. She didn’t appear
to know your handwriting, and she asked me who I came from. When I
mentioned your name, I was ordered to wait.”

Ernest opened the letter.


“DEAR MR. LISMORE--One of us must speak out, and your letter of apology
forces me to be that one. If you are really so proud and so distrustfull
as you seem to be, I shall offend you. If not, I shall prove myself to
be your friend.

“Your excuse is ‘pressure of business.’ The truth (as I have good reason
to believe) is ‘want of money.’ I heard a stranger, at that public
meeting, say that you were seriously embarrassed by some failure in the
City.

“Let me tell you what my own pecuniary position is in two words. I am
the childless widow of a rich man--”


Ernest paused. His anticipated discovery of Mrs. Callender’s “charming
daughter” was in his mind for the moment. “That little romance must
return to the world of dreams,” he thought--and went on with the letter.


“After what I owe to you, I don’t regard it as repaying an obligation--I
consider myself as merely performing a duty when I offer to assist you
by a loan of money.

“Wait a little before you throw my letter into the wastepaper basket.

“Circumstances (which it is impossible for me to mention before we meet)
put it out of my power to help you--unless I attach to my most sincere
offer of service a very unusual and very embarrassing condition. If you
are on the brink of ruin, that misfortune will plead my excuse--and your
excuse, too, if you accept the loan on my terms. In any case, I rely on
the sympathy and forbearance of the man to whom I owe my life.

“After what I have now written, there is only one thing to add. I beg to
decline accepting your excuses; and I shall expect to see you tomorrow
evening, as we arranged. I am an obstinate old woman--but I am also your
faithful friend and servant,

“MARY CALLENDER.”


Ernest looked up from the letter. “What can this possibly mean?” he
wondered.

But he was too sensible a man to be content with wondering--he decided
on keeping his engagement.

V.

WHAT Doctor Johnson called “the insolence of wealth” appears far more
frequently in the houses of the rich than in the manners of the rich.
The reason is plain enough. Personal ostentation is, in the very nature
of it, ridiculous. But the ostentation which exhibits magnificent
pictures, priceless china, and splendid furniture, can purchase good
taste to guide it, and can assert itself without affording the smallest
opening for a word of depreciation, or a look of contempt. If I am worth
a million of money, and if I am dying to show it, I don’t ask you to
look at me--I ask you to look at my house.

Keeping his engagement with Mrs. Callender, Ernest discovered that
riches might be lavishly and yet modestly used.

In crossing the hall and ascending the stairs, look where he might,
his notice was insensibly won by proofs of the taste which is not to
be purchased, and the wealth which uses but never exhibits its purse.
Conducted by a man-servant to the landing on the first floor, he found a
maid at the door of the boudoir waiting to announce him. Mrs. Callender
advanced to welcome her guest, in a simple evening dress perfectly
suited to her age. All that had looked worn and faded in her fine face,
by daylight, was now softly obscured by shaded lamps. Objects of beauty
surrounded her, which glowed with subdued radiance from their background
of sober color. The influence of appearances is the strongest of all
outward influences, while it lasts. For the moment, the scene produced
its impression on Ernest, in spite of the terrible anxieties which
consumed him. Mrs. Callender, in his office, was a woman who had stepped
out of her appropriate sphere. Mrs. Callender, in her own house, was a
woman who had risen to a new place in his estimation.

“I am afraid you don’t thank me for forcing you to keep your
engagement,” she said, with her friendly tones and her pleasant smile.

“Indeed I do thank you,” he replied. “Your beautiful house and your
gracious welcome have persuaded me into forgetting my troubles--for a
while.”

The smile passed away from her face. “Then it is true,” she said
gravely.

“Only too true.”

She led him to a seat beside her, and waited to speak again until her
maid had brought in the tea.

“Have you read my letter in the same friendly spirit in which I wrote
it?” she asked, when they were alone again.

“I have read your letter gratefully, but--”

“But you don’t know yet what I have to say. Let us understand each other
before we make any objections on either side. Will you tell me what your
present position is--at its worst? I can and will speak plainly when
my turn comes, if you will honor me with your confidence. Not if it
distresses you,” she added, observing him attentively.

He was ashamed of his hesitation--and he made amends for it.

“Do you thoroughly understand me?” he asked, when the whole truth had
been laid before her without reserve.

She summed up the result in her own words.

“If your overdue ship returns safely, within a month from this time, you
can borrow the money you want, without difficulty. If the ship is lost,
you have no alternative (when the end of the month comes) but to accept
a loan from me or to suspend payment. Is that the hard truth?”

“It is.”

“And the sum you require is--twenty thousand pounds?”

“Yes.”

“I have twenty times as much money as that, Mr. Lismore, at my sole
disposal--on one condition.”

“The condition alluded to in your letter?”

“Yes.”

“Does the fulfillment of the condition depend in some way on any
decision of mine?”

“It depends entirely on you.”

That answer closed his lips.

With a composed manner and a steady hand she poured herself out a cup of
tea.

“I conceal it from you,” she said; “but I want confidence. Here” (she
pointed to the cup) “is the friend of women, rich or poor, when they
are in trouble. What I have now to say obliges me to speak in praise of
myself. I don’t like it--let me get it over as soon as I can. My
husband was very fond of me: he had the most absolute confidence in
my discretion, and in my sense of duty to him and to myself. His
last words, before he died, were words that thanked me for making the
happiness of his life. As soon as I had in some degree recovered, after
the affliction that had fallen on me, his lawyer and executor produced a
copy of his will, and said there were two clauses in it which my husband
had expressed a wish that I should read. It is needless to say that I
obeyed.”

She still controlled her agitation--but she was now unable to conceal
it. Ernest made an attempt to spare her.

“Am I concerned in this?” he asked.

“Yes. Before I tell you why, I want to know what you would do--in a
certain case which I am unwilling even to suppose. I have heard of men,
unable to pay the demands made on them, who began business again, and
succeeded, and in course of time paid their creditors.”

“And you want to know if there is any likelihood of my following their
example?” he said. “Have you also heard of men who have made that second
effort--who have failed again--and who have doubled the debts they owed
to their brethren in business who trusted them? I knew one of those men
myself. He committed suicide.”

She laid her hand for a moment on his.

“I understand you,” she said. “If ruin comes--”

“If ruin comes,” he interposed, “a man without money and without credit
can make but one last atonement. Don’t speak of it now.”

She looked at him with horror.

“I didn’t mean _that!_” she said.

“Shall we go back to what you read in the will?” he suggested.

“Yes--if you will give me a minute to compose myself.”

VI.

IN less than the minute she had asked for, Mrs. Callender was calm
enough to go on.

“I now possess what is called a life-interest in my husband’s fortune,”
 she said. “The money is to be divided, at my death, among charitable
institutions; excepting a certain event--”

“Which is provided for in the will?” Ernest added, helping her to go on.

“Yes. I am to be absolute mistress of the whole of the four hundred
thousand pounds--” her voice dropped, and her eyes looked away from
him as she spoke the next words--“on this one condition, that I marry
again.”

He looked at her in amazement.

“Surely I have mistaken you,” he said. “You mean on this one condition,
that you do _not_ marry again?”

“No, Mr. Lismore; I mean exactly what I have said. You now know that
the recovery of your credit and your peace of mind rests entirely with
yourself.”

After a moment of reflection he took her hand and raised it respectfully
to his lips. “You are a noble woman!” he said.

She made no reply. With drooping head and downcast eyes she waited for
his decision. He accepted his responsibility.

“I must not, and dare not, think of the hardship of my own position,” he
said; “I owe it to you to speak without reference to the future that
may be in store for me. No man can be worthy of the sacrifice which your
generous forgetfulness of yourself is willing to make. I respect you; I
admire you; I thank you with my whole heart. Leave me to my fate, Mrs.
Callender--and let me go.”

He rose. She stopped him by a gesture.

“A _young_ woman,” she answered, “would shrink from saying--what I, as
an old woman, mean to say now. I refuse to leave you to your fate. I
ask you to prove that you respect me, admire me, and thank me with your
whole heart. Take one day to think--and let me hear the result. You
promise me this?”

He promised. “Now go,” she said.

VII.

NEXT morning Ernest received a letter from Mrs. Callender. She wrote to
him as follows:


“There are some considerations which I ought to have mentioned yesterday
evening, before you left my house.

“I ought to have reminded you--if you consent to reconsider your
decision--that the circumstances do not require you to pledge yourself
to me absolutely.

“At my age, I can with perfect propriety assure you that I regard our
marriage simply and solely as a formality which we must fulfill, if I am
to carry out my intention of standing between you and ruin.

“Therefore--if the missing ship appears in time, the only reason for the
marriage is at an end. We shall be as good friends as ever; without the
encumbrance of a formal tie to bind us.

“In the other event, I should ask you to submit to certain restrictions
which, remembering my position, you will understand and excuse.

“We are to live together, it is unnecessary to say, as mother and son.
The marriage ceremony is to be strictly private; and you are so to
arrange your affairs that, immediately afterward, we leave England for
any foreign place which you prefer. Some of my friends, and (perhaps)
some of your friends, will certainly misinterpret our motives--if we
stay in our own country--in a manner which would be unendurable to a
woman like me.

“As to our future lives, I have the most perfect confidence in you, and
I should leave you in the same position of independence which you occupy
now. When you wish for my company you will always be welcome. At other
times, you are your own master. I live on my side of the house, and you
live on yours--and I am to be allowed my hours of solitude every day, in
the pursuit of musical occupations, which have been happily associated
with all my past life and which I trust confidently to your indulgence.

“A last word, to remind you of what you may be too kind to think of
yourself.

“At my age, you cannot, in the course of Nature, be troubled by the
society of a grateful old woman for many years. You are young enough to
look forward to another marriage, which shall be something more than
a mere form. Even if you meet with the happy woman in my lifetime,
honestly tell me of it--and I promise to tell her that she has only to
wait.

“In the meantime, don’t think, because I write composedly, that I write
heartlessly. You pleased and interested me, when I first saw you, at the
public meeting. I don’t think I could have proposed, what you call this
sacrifice of myself, to a man who had personally repelled me--though I
might have felt my debt of gratitude as sincerely as ever. Whether your
ship is saved, or whether your ship is lost, old Mary Callender likes
you--and owns it without false shame.

“Let me have your answer this evening, either personally or by
letter--whichever you like best.”

VIII.

MRS. CALLENDER received a written answer long before the evening. It
said much in few words:

“A man impenetrable to kindness might be able to resist your letter. I
am not that man. Your great heart has conquered me.”


The few formalities which precede marriage by special license were
observed by Ernest. While the destiny of their future lives was still
in suspense, an unacknowledged feeling of embarrassment, on either side,
kept Ernest and Mrs. Callender apart. Every day brought the lady her
report of the state of affairs in the City, written always in the same
words: “No news of the ship.”

IX.

ON the day before the ship-owner’s liabilities became due, the terms of
the report from the City remained unchanged--and the special license
was put to its contemplated use. Mrs. Callender’s lawyer and Mrs.
Callender’s maid were the only persons trusted with the secret. Leaving
the chief clerk in charge of the business, with every pecuniary demand
on his employer satisfied in full, the strangely married pair quitted
England.

They arranged to wait for a few days in Paris, to receive any letters of
importance which might have been addressed to Ernest in the interval.
On the evening of their arrival, a telegram from London was waiting
at their hotel. It announced that the missing ship had passed up
Channel--undiscovered in a fog, until she reached the Downs--on the day
before Ernest’s liabilities fell due.

“Do you regret it?” Mrs. Lismore said to her husband.

“Not for a moment!” he answered.

They decided on pursuing their journey as far as Munich.

Mrs. Lismore’s taste for music was matched by Ernest’s taste for
painting. In his leisure hours he cultivated the art, and delighted in
it. The picture-galleries of Munich were almost the only galleries in
Europe which he had not seen. True to the engagements to which she had
pledged herself, his wife was willing to go wherever it might please
him to take her. The one suggestion she made was, that they should hire
furnished apartments. If they lived at an hotel, friends of the husband
or the wife (visitors like themselves to the famous city) might see
their names in the book, or might meet them at the door.

They were soon established in a house large enough to provide them with
every accommodation which they required.

Ernest’s days were passed in the galleries; Mrs. Lismore remaining at
home, devoted to her music, until it was time to go out with her husband
for a drive. Living together in perfect amity and concord, they were
nevertheless not living happily. Without any visible reason for the
change, Mrs. Lismore’s spirits were depressed. On the one occasion when
Ernest noticed it she made an effort to be cheerful, which it distressed
him to see. He allowed her to think that she had relieved him of any
further anxiety. Whatever doubts he might feel were doubts delicately
concealed from that time forth.

But when two people are living together in a state of artificial
tranquillity, it seems to be a law of Nature that the element of
disturbance gathers unseen, and that the outburst comes inevitably with
the lapse of time.

In ten days from the date of their arrival at Munich, the crisis came.
Ernest returned later than usual from the picture-gallery, and--for the
first time in his wife’s experience--shut himself up in his own room.

He appeared at the dinner-hour with a futile excuse. Mrs. Lismore waited
until the servant had withdrawn. “Now, Ernest,” she said, “it’s time to
tell me the truth.”

Her manner, when she said those few words, took him by surprise. She was
unquestionably confused; and, instead of lookin g at him, she trifled
with the fruit on her plate. Embarrassed on his side, he could only
answer:

“I have nothing to tell.”

“Were there many visitors at the gallery?” she asked.

“About the same as usual.”

“Any that you particularly noticed?” she went on. “I mean, among the
ladies.”

He laughed uneasily. “You forget how interested I am in the pictures,”
 he said.

There was a pause. She looked up at him--and suddenly looked away again.
But he saw it plainly: there were tears in her eyes.

“Do you mind turning down the gas?” she said. “My eyes have been weak
all day.”

He complied with her request--the more readily, having his own reasons
for being glad to escape the glaring scrutiny of the light.

“I think I will rest a little on the sofa,” she resumed. In the position
which he occupied, his back would have been now turned on her. She
stopped him when he tried to move his chair. “I would rather not look at
you, Ernest,” she said, “when you have lost confidence in me.”

Not the words, but the tone, touched all that was generous and noble in
his nature. He left his place, and knelt beside her--and opened to her
his whole heart.

“Am I not unworthy of you?” he asked, when it was over.

She pressed his hand in silence.

“I should be the most ungrateful wretch living,” he said, “if I did
not think of you, and you only, now that my confession is made. We will
leave Munich to-morrow--and, if resolution can help me, I will only
remember the sweetest woman my eyes ever looked on as the creature of a
dream.”

She hid her face on his breast, and reminded him of that letter of her
writing, which had decided the course of their lives.

“When I thought you might meet the happy woman in my life-time, I said
to you, ‘Tell me of it--and I promise to tell _her_ that she has only
to wait.’ Time must pass, Ernest, before it can be needful to perform
my promise. But you might let me see her. If you find her in the gallery
to-morrow, you might bring her here.”

Mrs. Lismore’s request met with no refusal. Ernest was only at a loss to
know how to grant it.

“You tell me she is a copyist of pictures,” his wife reminded him. “She
will be interested in hearing of the portfolio of drawings by the great
French artists which I bought for you in Paris. Ask her to come and see
them, and to tell you if she can make some copies. And say, if you like,
that I shall be glad to become acquainted with her.”

He felt her breath beating fast on his bosom. In the fear that she
might lose all control over herself, he tried to relieve her by speaking
lightly. “What an invention yours is!” he said. “If my wife ever tries
to deceive me, I shall be a mere child in her hands.”

She rose abruptly from the sofa--kissed him on the forehead--and said
wildly, “I shall be better in bed!” Before he could move or speak, she
had left him.

X.

THE next morning he knocked at the door of his wife’s room and asked how
she had passed the night.

“I have slept badly,” she answered, “and I must beg you to excuse my
absence at breakfast-time.” She called him back as he was about to
withdraw. “Remember,” she said, “when you return from the gallery
to-day, I expect that you will not return alone.”

                         *  *  *  *  *

Three hours later he was at home again. The young lady’s services as a
copyist were at his disposal; she had returned with him to look at the
drawings.

The sitting-room was empty when they entered it. He rang for his wife’s
maid--and was informed that Mrs. Lismore had gone out. Refusing to
believe the woman, he went to his wife’s apartments. She was not to be
found.

When he returned to the sitting-room, the young lady was not unnaturally
offended. He could make allowances for her being a little out of
temper at the slight that had been put on her; but he was inexpressibly
disconcerted by the manner--almost the coarse manner--in which she
expressed herself.

“I have been talking to your wife’s maid, while you have been away,” she
said. “I find you have married an old lady for her money. She is jealous
of me, of course?”

“Let me beg you to alter your opinion,” he answered. “You are wronging
my wife; she is incapable of any such feeling as you attribute to her.”

The young lady laughed. “At any rate you are a good husband,” she said
satirically. “Suppose you own the truth? Wouldn’t you like her better if
she was young and pretty like me?”

He was not merely surprised--he was disgusted. Her beauty had so
completely fascinated him, when he first saw her, that the idea of
associating any want of refinement and good breeding with such a
charming creature never entered his mind. The disenchantment to him was
already so complete that he was even disagreeably affected by the tone
of her voice: it was almost as repellent to him as the exhibition of
unrestrained bad temper which she seemed perfectly careless to conceal.

“I confess you surprise me,” he said, coldly.

The reply produced no effect on her. On the contrary, she became more
insolent than ever.

“I have a fertile fancy,” she went on, “and your absurd way of taking a
joke only encourages me! Suppose you could transform this sour old wife
of yours, who has insulted me, into the sweetest young creature that
ever lived, by only holding up your finger--wouldn’t you do it?”

This passed the limits of his endurance. “I have no wish,” he said, “to
forget the consideration which is due to a woman. You leave me but one
alternative.” He rose to go out of the room.

She ran to the door as he spoke, and placed herself in the way of his
going out.

He signed to her to let him pass.

She suddenly threw her arms round his neck, kissed him passionately, and
whispered, with her lips at his ear: “Oh, Ernest, forgive me! Could I
have asked you to marry me for my money if I had not taken refuge in a
disguise?”

XI.

WHEN he had sufficiently recovered to think, he put her back from him.
“Is there an end of the deception now?” he asked, sternly. “Am I to
trust you in your new character?”

“You are not to be harder on me than I deserve,” she answered, gently.
“Did you ever hear of an actress named Miss Max?”

He began to understand her. “Forgive me if I spoke harshly,” he said.
“You have put me to a severe trial.”

She burst into tears. “Love,” she murmured, “is my only excuse.”

From that moment she had won her pardon. He took her hand, and made her
sit by him.

“Yes,” he said, “I have heard of Miss Max and of her wonderful powers of
personation--and I have always regretted not having seen her while she
was on the stage.”

“Did you hear anything more of her, Ernest?”

“Yes, I heard that she was a pattern of modesty and good conduct, and
that she gave up her profession, at the height of her success, to marry
an old man.”

“Will you come with me to my room?” she asked. “I have something there
which I wish to show you.”

It was the copy of her husband’s will.

“Read the lines, Ernest, which begin at the top of the page. Let my dead
husband speak for me.”

The lines ran thus:


“My motive in marrying Miss Max must be stated in this place, in justice
to her--and, I will venture to add, in justice to myself. I felt the
sincerest sympathy for her position. She was without father, mother,
or friends; one of the poor forsaken children, whom the mercy of the
Foundling Hospital provides with a home. Her after life on the stage
was the life of a virtuous woman: persecuted by profligates; insulted
by some of the baser creatures associated with her, to whom she was an
object of envy. I offered her a home, and the protection of a father--on
the only terms which the world would recognize as worthy of us.
My experience of her since our marriage has been the experience of
unvarying goodness, sweetness, and sound sense. She has behaved so
nobly, in a trying position, that I wish her (even in this life) to have
her reward. I entreat her to make a second choice in marriage, which
shall not be a mere form. I firmly believe that she will choose well
and wisely--that she will make the happiness of a man who is worthy
of her--and that, as wife and mother, she will set an example of
inestimable value in the social sphere that she occupies. In proof of
the heartfelt sincerity with which I pay my tribute to her virtues, I
add to this my will the clause that follows.”

With the clause that followed, Ernest was already acquainted.

“Will you now believe that I never loved till I saw your face for the
first time?” said his wife. “I had no experience to place me on my guard
against the fascination--the madness some people might call it--which
possesses a woman when all her heart is given to a man. Don’t despise
me, my dear! Remember that I had to save you from disgrace and ruin.
Besides, my old stage remembrances tempted me. I had acted in a play in
which the heroine did--what I have done! It didn’t end with me, as it
did with her in the story. _She_ was represented as rejoicing in the
success of her disguise. _I_ have known some miserable hours of doubt
and shame since our marriage. When I went to meet you in my own person
at the picture-gallery--oh, what relief, what joy I felt, when I saw
how you admired me--it was not because I could no longer carry on the
disguise. I was able to get hours of rest from the effort; not only at
night, but in the daytime, when I was shut up in my retirement in the
music-room; and when my maid kept watch against discovery. No, my
love! I hurried on the disclosure, because I could no longer endure the
hateful triumph of my own deception. Ah, look at that witness against
me! I can’t bear even to see it!”

She abruptly left him. The drawer that she had opened to take out
the copy of the will also contained the false gray hair which she had
discarded. It had only that moment attracted her notice. She snatched it
up, and turned to the fireplace.

Ernest took it from her, before she could destroy it. “Give it to me,”
 he said.

“Why?”

He drew her gently to his bosom, and answered: “I must not forget my old
wife.”



MISS JEROMETTE AND THE CLERGYMAN.

I.

MY brother, the clergyman, looked over my shoulder before I was aware
of him, and discovered that the volume which completely absorbed my
attention was a collection of famous Trials, published in a new edition
and in a popular form.

He laid his finger on the Trial which I happened to be reading at the
moment. I looked up at him; his face startled me. He had turned pale.
His eyes were fixed on the open page of the book with an expression
which puzzled and alarmed me.

“My dear fellow,” I said, “what in the world is the matter with you?”

He answered in an odd absent manner, still keeping his finger on the
open page.

“I had almost forgotten,” he said. “And this reminds me.”

“Reminds you of what?” I asked. “You don’t mean to say you know anything
about the Trial?”

“I know this,” he said. “The prisoner was guilty.”

“Guilty?” I repeated. “Why, the man was acquitted by the jury, with the
full approval of the judge! What call you possibly mean?”

“There are circumstances connected with that Trial,” my brother
answered, “which were never communicated to the judge or the jury--which
were never so much as hinted or whispered in court. _I_ know them--of
my own knowledge, by my own personal experience. They are very sad, very
strange, very terrible. I have mentioned them to no mortal creature. I
have done my best to forget them. You--quite innocently--have brought
them back to my mind. They oppress, they distress me. I wish I had found
you reading any book in your library, except _that_ book!”

My curiosity was now strongly excited. I spoke out plainly.

“Surely,” I suggested, “you might tell your brother what you are
unwilling to mention to persons less nearly related to you. We have
followed different professions, and have lived in different countries,
since we were boys at school. But you know you can trust me.”

He considered a little with himself.

“Yes,” he said. “I know I can trust you.” He waited a moment, and then
he surprised me by a strange question.

“Do you believe,” he asked, “that the spirits of the dead can return to
earth, and show themselves to the living?”

I answered cautiously--adopting as my own the words of a great English
writer, touching the subject of ghosts.

“You ask me a question,” I said, “which, after five thousand years, is
yet undecided. On that account alone, it is a question not to be trifled
with.”

My reply seemed to satisfy him.

“Promise me,” he resumed, “that you will keep what I tell you a secret
as long as I live. After my death I care little what happens. Let the
story of my strange experience be added to the published experience of
those other men who have seen what I have seen, and who believe what
I believe. The world will not be the worse, and may be the better, for
knowing one day what I am now about to trust to your ear alone.”

My brother never again alluded to the narrative which he had confided to
me, until the later time when I was sitting by his deathbed. He asked if
I still remembered the story of Jeromette. “Tell it to others,” he said,
“as I have told it to you.”

I repeat it after his death--as nearly as I can in his own words.

II.

ON a fine summer evening, many years since, I left my chambers in the
Temple, to meet a fellow-student, who had proposed to me a night’s
amusement in the public gardens at Cremorne.

You were then on your way to India; and I had taken my degree at Oxford.
I had sadly disappointed my father by choosing the Law as my profession,
in preference to the Church. At that time, to own the truth, I had no
serious intention of following any special vocation. I simply wanted an
excuse for enjoying the pleasures of a London life. The study of the
Law supplied me with that excuse. And I chose the Law as my profession
accordingly.

On reaching the place at which we had arranged to meet, I found that
my friend had not kept his appointment. After waiting vainly for ten
minutes, my patience gave way and I went into the Gardens by myself.

I took two or three turns round the platform devoted to the dancers
without discovering my fellow-student, and without seeing any other
person with whom I happened to be acquainted at that time.

For some reason which I cannot now remember, I was not in my usual good
spirits that evening. The noisy music jarred on my nerves, the sight of
the gaping crowd round the platform irritated me, the blandishments of
the painted ladies of the profession of pleasure saddened and disgusted
me. I opened my cigar-case, and turned aside into one of the quiet
by-walks of the Gardens.

A man who is habitually careful in choosing his cigar has this advantage
over a man who is habitually careless. He can always count on smoking
the best cigar in his case, down to the last. I was still absorbed in
choosing _my_ cigar, when I heard these words behind me--spoken in a
foreign accent and in a woman’s voice:

“Leave me directly, sir! I wish to have nothing to say to you.”

I turned round and discovered a little lady very simply and tastefully
dressed, who looked both angry and alarmed as she rapidly passed me on
her way to the more frequented part of the Gardens. A man (evidently
the worse for the wine he had drunk in the course of the evening) was
following her, and was pressing his tipsy attentions on her with the
coarsest insolence of speech and manner. She was young and pretty, and
she cast one entreating look at me as she went by, which it was not in
manhood--perhaps I ought to say, in young-manhood--to resist.

I instantly stepped forward to protect her, careless whether I involved
myself in a discreditable quarrel with a blackguard or not. As a matter
of course, the fellow resented my interference, and my temper gave
way. Fortunately for me, just as I lifted my hand to knock him down, at
policeman appeared who had noticed that he was drunk, and who settled
the dispute officially by turning him out of the Gardens.

I led her away from the crowd that had collected. She was evidently
frightened--I felt her hand trembling on my arm--but she had one great
merit; she made no fuss about it.

“If I can sit down for a few minutes,” she said in her pretty foreign
accent, “I shall soon be myself again, and I shall not trespass any
further on your kindness. I thank you very much, sir, for taking care of
me.”

We sat down on a bench in a retired par t of the Gardens, near a little
fountain. A row of lighted lamps ran round the outer rim of the basin. I
could see her plainly.

I have said that she was “a little lady.” I could not have described her
more correctly in three words.

Her figure was slight and small: she was a well-made miniature of a
woman from head to foot. Her hair and her eyes were both dark. The hair
curled naturally; the expression of the eyes was quiet, and rather sad;
the complexion, as I then saw it, very pale; the little mouth perfectly
charming. I was especially attracted, I remembered, by the carriage of
her head; it was strikingly graceful and spirited; it distinguished her,
little as she was and quiet as she was, among the thousands of other
women in the Gardens, as a creature apart. Even the one marked defect
in her--a slight “cast” in the left eye--seemed to add, in some strange
way, to the quaint attractiveness of her face. I have already spoken of
the tasteful simplicity of her dress. I ought now to add that it was not
made of any costly material, and that she wore no jewels or ornaments of
any sort. My little lady was not rich; even a man’s eye could see that.

She was perfectly unembarrassed and unaffected. We fell as easily into
talk as if we had been friends instead of strangers.

I asked how it was that she had no companion to take care of her. “You
are too young and too pretty,” I said in my blunt English way, “to trust
yourself alone in such a place as this.”

She took no notice of the compliment. She calmly put it away from her as
if it had not reached her ears.

“I have no friend to take care of me,” she said simply. “I was sad
and sorry this evening, all by myself, and I thought I would go to the
Gardens and hear the music, just to amuse me. It is not much to pay at
the gate; only a shilling.”

“No friend to take care of you?” I repeated. “Surely there must be one
happy man who might have been here with you to-night?”

“What man do you mean?” she asked.

“The man,” I answered thoughtlessly, “whom we call, in England, a
Sweetheart.”

I would have given worlds to have recalled those foolish words the
moment they passed my lips. I felt that I had taken a vulgar liberty
with her. Her face saddened; her eyes dropped to the ground. I begged
her pardon.

“There is no need to beg my pardon,” she said. “If you wish to know,
sir--yes, I had once a sweetheart, as you call it in England. He has
gone away and left me. No more of him, if you please. I am rested now. I
will thank you again, and go home.”

She rose to leave me.

I was determined not to part with her in that way. I begged to be
allowed to see her safely back to her own door. She hesitated. I took
a man’s unfair advantage of her, by appealing to her fears. I said,
“Suppose the blackguard who annoyed you should be waiting outside the
gates?” That decided her. She took my arm. We went away together by the
bank of the Thames, in the balmy summer night.

A walk of half an hour brought us to the house in which she lodged--a
shabby little house in a by-street, inhabited evidently by very poor
people.

She held out her hand at the door, and wished me good-night. I was
too much interested in her to consent to leave my little foreign lady
without the hope of seeing her again. I asked permission to call on her
the next day. We were standing under the light of the street-lamp. She
studied my face with a grave and steady attention before she made any
reply.

“Yes,” she said at last. “I think I do know a gentleman when I see him.
You may come, sir, if you please, and call upon me to-morrow.”

So we parted. So I entered--doubting nothing, foreboding nothing--on a
scene in my life which I now look back on with unfeigned repentance and
regret.

III.

I AM speaking at this later time in the position of a clergyman, and
in the character of a man of mature age. Remember that; and you will
understand why I pass as rapidly as possible over the events of the
next year of my life--why I say as little as I can of the errors and the
delusions of my youth.

I called on her the next day. I repeated my visits during the days and
weeks that followed, until the shabby little house in the by-street had
become a second and (I say it with shame and self-reproach) a dearer
home to me.

All of herself and her story which she thought fit to confide to me
under these circumstances may be repeated to you in few words.

The name by which letters were addressed to her was “Mademoiselle
Jeromette.” Among the ignorant people of the house and the small
tradesmen of the neighborhood--who found her name not easy of
pronunciation by the average English tongue--she was known by the
friendly nickname of “The French Miss.” When I knew her, she was
resigned to her lonely life among strangers. Some years had elapsed
since she had lost her parents, and had left France. Possessing a small,
very small, income of her own, she added to it by coloring miniatures
for the photographers. She had relatives still living in France; but
she had long since ceased to correspond with them. “Ask me nothing
more about my family,” she used to say. “I am as good as dead in my own
country and among my own people.”

This was all--literally all--that she told me of herself. I have never
discovered more of her sad story from that day to this.

She never mentioned her family name--never even told me what part of
France she came from or how long she had lived in England. That she was
by birth and breeding a lady, I could entertain no doubt; her manners,
her accomplishments, her ways of thinking and speaking, all proved it.
Looking below the surface, her character showed itself in aspects not
common among young women in these days. In her quiet way she was an
incurable fatalist, and a firm believer in the ghostly reality of
apparitions from the dead. Then again in the matter of money, she had
strange views of her own. Whenever my purse was in my hand, she held me
resolutely at a distance from first to last. She refused to move into
better apartments; the shabby little house was clean inside, and the
poor people who lived in it were kind to her--and that was enough. The
most expensive present that she ever permitted me to offer her was a
little enameled ring, the plainest and cheapest thing of the kind in the
jeweler’s shop. In all relations with me she was sincerity itself. On
all occasions, and under all circumstances, she spoke her mind (as the
phrase is) with the same uncompromising plainness.

“I like you,” she said to me; “I respect you; I shall always be faithful
to you while you are faithful to me. But my love has gone from me. There
is another man who has taken it away with him, I know not where.”

Who was the other man?

She refused to tell me. She kept his rank and his name strict secrets
from me. I never discovered how he had met with her, or why he had left
her, or whether the guilt was his of making of her an exile from her
country and her friends. She despised herself for still loving him; but
the passion was too strong for her--she owned it and lamented it with
the frankness which was so preeminently a part of her character. More
than this, she plainly told me, in the early days of our acquaintance,
that she believed he would return to her. It might be to-morrow, or
it might be years hence. Even if he failed to repent of his own cruel
conduct, the man would still miss her, as something lost out of his
life; and, sooner or later, he would come back.

“And will you receive him if he does come back?” I asked.

“I shall receive him,” she replied, “against my own better judgment--in
spite of my own firm persuasion that the day of his return to me will
bring with it the darkest days of my life.”

I tried to remonstrate with her.

“You have a will of your own,” I said. “Exert it if he attempts to
return to you.”

“I have no will of my own,” she answered quietly, “where _he_ is
concerned. It is my misfortune to love him.” Her eyes rested for a
moment on mine, with the utter self-abandonment of despair. “We have
said enough about this,” she added abruptly. “Let us say no more.”

From that time we never spoke again of the unknown man. During the year
that followed o ur first meeting, she heard nothing of him directly or
indirectly. He might be living, or he might be dead. There came no
word of him, or from him. I was fond enough of her to be satisfied with
this--he never disturbed us.

IV.

THE year passed--and the end came. Not the end as you may have
anticipated it, or as I might have foreboded it.

You remember the time when your letters from home informed you of the
fatal termination of our mother’s illness? It is the time of which I am
now speaking. A few hours only before she breathed her last, she called
me to her bedside, and desired that we might be left together alone.
Reminding me that her death was near, she spoke of my prospects in life;
she noticed my want of interest in the studies which were then
supposed to be engaging my attention, and she ended by entreating me to
reconsider my refusal to enter the Church.

“Your father’s heart is set upon it,” she said. “Do what I ask of you,
my dear, and you will help to comfort him when I am gone.”

Her strength failed her: she could say no more. Could I refuse the last
request she would ever make to me? I knelt at the bedside, and took her
wasted hand in mine, and solemnly promised her the respect which a son
owes to his mother’s last wishes.

Having bound myself by this sacred engagement, I had no choice but to
accept the sacrifice which it imperatively exacted from me. The time
had come when I must tear myself free from all unworthy associations.
No matter what the effort cost me, I must separate myself at once and
forever from the unhappy woman who was not, who never could be, my wife.

At the close of a dull foggy day I set forth with a heavy heart to say
the words which were to part us forever.

Her lodging was not far from the banks of the Thames. As I drew near the
place the darkness was gathering, and the broad surface of the river was
hidden from me in a chill white mist. I stood for a while, with my eyes
fixed on the vaporous shroud that brooded over the flowing water--I
stood and asked myself in despair the one dreary question: “What am I to
say to her?”

The mist chilled me to the bones. I turned from the river-bank, and made
my way to her lodgings hard by. “It must be done!” I said to myself, as
I took out my key and opened the house door.

She was not at her work, as usual, when I entered her little
sitting-room. She was standing by the fire, with her head down and with
an open letter in her hand.

The instant she turned to meet me, I saw in her face that something was
wrong. Her ordinary manner was the manner of an unusually placid and
self-restrained person. Her temperament had little of the liveliness
which we associate in England with the French nature. She was not ready
with her laugh; and in all my previous experience, I had never yet known
her to cry. Now, for the first time, I saw the quiet face disturbed;
I saw tears in the pretty brown eyes. She ran to meet me, and laid her
head on my breast, and burst into a passionate fit of weeping that shook
her from head to foot.

Could she by any human possibility have heard of the coming change in my
life? Was she aware, before I had opened my lips, of the hard necessity
which had brought me to the house?

It was simply impossible; the thing could not be.

I waited until her first burst of emotion had worn itself out. Then
I asked--with an uneasy conscience, with a sinking heart--what had
happened to distress her.

She drew herself away from me, sighing heavily, and gave me the open
letter which I had seen in her hand.

“Read that,” she said. “And remember I told you what might happen when
we first met.”

I read the letter.

It was signed in initials only; but the writer plainly revealed himself
as the man who had deserted her. He had repented; he had returned to
her. In proof of his penitence he was willing to do her the justice
which he had hitherto refused--he was willing to marry her, on the
condition that she would engage to keep the marriage a secret, so
long as his parents lived. Submitting this proposal, he waited to know
whether she would consent, on her side, to forgive and forget.

I gave her back the letter in silence. This unknown rival had done me
the service of paving the way for our separation. In offering her the
atonement of marriage, he had made it, on my part, a matter of duty
to _her_, as well as to myself, to say the parting words. I felt this
instantly. And yet, I hated him for helping me.

She took my hand, and led me to the sofa. We sat down, side by side. Her
face was composed to a sad tranquillity. She was quiet; she was herself
again.

“I have refused to see him,” she said, “until I had first spoken to you.
You have read his letter. What do you say?”

I could make but one answer. It was my duty to tell her what my own
position was in the plainest terms. I did my duty--leaving her free to
decide on the future for herself. Those sad words said, it was useless
to prolong the wretchedness of our separation. I rose, and took her hand
for the last time.

I see her again now, at that final moment, as plainly as if it had
happened yesterday. She had been suffering from an affection of the
throat; and she had a white silk handkerchief tied loosely round her
neck. She wore a simple dress of purple merino, with a black-silk apron
over it. Her face was deadly pale; her fingers felt icily cold as they
closed round my hand.

“Promise me one thing,” I said, “before I go. While I live, I am your
friend--if I am nothing more. If you are ever in trouble, promise that
you will let me know it.”

She started, and drew back from me as if I had struck her with a sudden
terror.

“Strange!” she said, speaking to herself. “_He_ feels as I feel. He is
afraid of what may happen to me, in my life to come.”

I attempted to reassure her. I tried to tell her what was indeed the
truth--that I had only been thinking of the ordinary chances and changes
of life, when I spoke.

She paid no heed to me; she came back and put her hands on my shoulders
and thoughtfully and sadly looked up in my face.

“My mind is not your mind in this matter,” she said. “I once owned to
you that I had my forebodings, when we first spoke of this man’s return.
I may tell you now, more than I told you then. I believe I shall die
young, and die miserably. If I am right, have you interest enough still
left in me to wish to hear of it?”

She paused, shuddering--and added these startling words:

“You _shall_ hear of it.”

The tone of steady conviction in which she spoke alarmed and distressed
me. My face showed her how deeply and how painfully I was affected.

“There, there!” she said, returning to her natural manner; “don’t take
what I say too seriously. A poor girl who has led a lonely life like
mine thinks strangely and talks strangely--sometimes. Yes; I give you
my promise. If I am ever in trouble, I will let you know it. God bless
you--you have been very kind to me--good-by!”

A tear dropped on my face as she kissed me. The door closed between us.
The dark street received me.

It was raining heavily. I looked up at her window, through the drifting
shower. The curtains were parted: she was standing in the gap, dimly lit
by the lamp on the table behind her, waiting for our last look at each
other. Slowly lifting her hand, she waved her farewell at the window,
with the unsought native grace which had charmed me on the night when we
first met. The curtain fell again--she disappeared--nothing was before
me, nothing was round me, but the darkness and the night.

V.

IN two years from that time, I had redeemed the promise given to my
mother on her deathbed. I had entered the Church.

My father’s interest made my first step in my new profession an easy
one. After serving my preliminary apprenticeship as a curate, I was
appointed, before I was thirty years of age, to a living in the West of
England.

My new benefice offered me every advantage that I could possibly
desire--with the one exception of a sufficient income. Although my
wants were few, and although I was still an unmarried man, I found
it desirable, on many accounts, to add to my resources. Following
the example of other young clergymen in my position, I det ermined to
receive pupils who might stand in need of preparation for a career at
the Universities. My relatives exerted themselves; and my good fortune
still befriended me. I obtained two pupils to start with. A third would
complete the number which I was at present prepared to receive.
In course of time, this third pupil made his appearance, under
circumstances sufficiently remarkable to merit being mentioned in
detail.

It was the summer vacation; and my two pupils had gone home. Thanks to a
neighboring clergyman, who kindly undertook to perform my duties for me,
I too obtained a fortnight’s holiday, which I spent at my father’s house
in London.

During my sojourn in the metropolis, I was offered an opportunity
of preaching in a church, made famous by the eloquence of one of the
popular pulpit-orators of our time. In accepting the proposal, I
felt naturally anxious to do my best, before the unusually large and
unusually intelligent congregation which would be assembled to hear me.

At the period of which I am now speaking, all England had been startled
by the discovery of a terrible crime, perpetrated under circumstances
of extreme provocation. I chose this crime as the main subject of my
sermon. Admitting that the best among us were frail mortal creatures,
subject to evil promptings and provocations like the worst among us, my
object was to show how a Christian man may find his certain refuge from
temptation in the safeguards of his religion. I dwelt minutely on
the hardship of the Christian’s first struggle to resist the evil
influence--on the help which his Christianity inexhaustibly held out to
him in the worst relapses of the weaker and viler part of his nature--on
the steady and certain gain which was the ultimate reward of his faith
and his firmness--and on the blessed sense of peace and happiness
which accompanied the final triumph. Preaching to this effect, with the
fervent conviction which I really felt, I may say for myself, at least,
that I did no discredit to the choice which had placed me in the pulpit.
I held the attention of my congregation, from the first word to the
last.

While I was resting in the vestry on the conclusion of the service, a
note was brought to me written in pencil. A member of my congregation--a
gentleman--wished to see me, on a matter of considerable importance
to himself. He would call on me at any place, and at any hour, which
I might choose to appoint. If I wished to be satisfied of his
respectability, he would beg leave to refer me to his father, with whose
name I might possibly be acquainted.

The name given in the reference was undoubtedly familiar to me, as the
name of a man of some celebrity and influence in the world of London. I
sent back my card, appointing an hour for the visit of my correspondent
on the afternoon of the next day.

VI.

THE stranger made his appearance punctually. I guessed him to be some
two or three years younger than myself. He was undeniably handsome; his
manners were the manners of a gentleman--and yet, without knowing why, I
felt a strong dislike to him the moment he entered the room.

After the first preliminary words of politeness had been exchanged
between us, my visitor informed me as follows of the object which he had
in view.

“I believe you live in the country, sir?” he began.

“I live in the West of England,” I answered.

“Do you make a long stay in London?”

“No. I go back to my rectory to-morrow.”

“May I ask if you take pupils?”

“Yes.”

“Have you any vacancy?”

“I have one vacancy.”

“Would you object to let me go back with you to-morrow, as your pupil?”

The abruptness of the proposal took me by surprise. I hesitated.

In the first place (as I have already said), I disliked him. In the
second place, he was too old to be a fit companion for my other two
pupils--both lads in their teens. In the third place, he had asked me to
receive him at least three weeks before the vacation came to an end. I
had my own pursuits and amusements in prospect during that interval, and
saw no reason why I should inconvenience myself by setting them aside.

He noticed my hesitation, and did not conceal from me that I had
disappointed him.

“I have it very much at heart,” he said, “to repair without delay the
time that I have lost. My age is against me, I know. The truth is--I
have wasted my opportunities since I left school, and I am anxious,
honestly anxious, to mend my ways, before it is too late. I wish to
prepare myself for one of the Universities--I wish to show, if I can,
that I am not quite unworthy to inherit my father’s famous name. You are
the man to help me, if I can only persuade you to do it. I was struck by
your sermon yesterday; and, if I may venture to make the confession in
your presence, I took a strong liking to you. Will you see my father,
before you decide to say No? He will be able to explain whatever may
seem strange in my present application; and he will be happy to see you
this afternoon, if you can spare the time. As to the question of terms,
I am quite sure it can be settled to your entire satisfaction.”

He was evidently in earnest--gravely, vehemently in earnest. I
unwillingly consented to see his father.

Our interview was a long one. All my questions were answered fully and
frankly.

The young man had led an idle and desultory life. He was weary of it,
and ashamed of it. His disposition was a peculiar one. He stood sorely
in need of a guide, a teacher, and a friend, in whom he was disposed
to confide. If I disappointed the hopes which he had centered in me, he
would be discouraged, and he would relapse into the aimless and indolent
existence of which he was now ashamed. Any terms for which I might
stipulate were at my disposal if I would consent to receive him, for
three months to begin with, on trial.

Still hesitating, I consulted my father and my friends.

They were all of opinion (and justly of opinion so far) that the new
connection would be an excellent one for me. They all reproached me for
taking a purely capricious dislike to a well-born and well-bred young
man, and for permitting it to influence me, at the outset of my career,
against my own interests. Pressed by these considerations, I allowed
myself to be persuaded to give the new pupil a fair trial. He
accompanied me, the next day, on my way back to the rectory.

VII.

LET me be careful to do justice to a man whom I personally disliked. My
senior pupil began well: he produced a decidedly favorable impression on
the persons attached to my little household.

The women, especially, admired his beautiful light hair, his
crisply-curling beard, his delicate complexion, his clear blue eyes,
and his finely shaped hands and feet. Even the inveterate reserve in his
manner, and the downcast, almost sullen, look which had prejudiced
_me_ against him, aroused a common feeling of romantic enthusiasm in my
servants’ hall. It was decided, on the high authority of the housekeeper
herself, that “the new gentleman” was in love--and, more interesting
still, that he was the victim of an unhappy attachment which had driven
him away from his friends and his home.

For myself, I tried hard, and tried vainly, to get over my first dislike
to the senior pupil.

I could find no fault with him. All his habits were quiet and regular;
and he devoted himself conscientiously to his reading. But, little by
little, I became satisfied that his heart was not in his studies.
More than this, I had my reasons for suspecting that he was concealing
something from me, and that he felt painfully the reserve on his own
part which he could not, or dared not, break through. There were moments
when I almost doubted whether he had not chosen my remote country
rectory as a safe place of refuge from some person or persons of whom he
stood in dread.

For example, his ordinary course of proceeding, in the matter of his
correspondence, was, to say the least of it, strange.

He received no letters at my house. They waited for him at the village
post office. He invariably called for them himself, and invariably
forbore to trust any of my servants with his own letters for the post.
Again, when we were out walking together, I more than once caught him
looking furtively over his shoulder, as if he suspected some person of
following him, for some evil purpose. Being constitutionally a hater of
mysteries, I determined, at an early stage of our intercourse, on
making an effort to clear matters up. There might be just a chance of my
winning the senior pupil’s confidence, if I spoke to him while the last
days of the summer vacation still left us alone together in the house.

“Excuse me for noticing it,” I said to him one morning, while we were
engaged over our books--“I cannot help observing that you appear to have
some trouble on your mind. Is it indiscreet, on my part, to ask if I can
be of any use to you?”

He changed color--looked up at me quickly--looked down again at his
book--struggled hard with some secret fear or secret reluctance that
was in him--and suddenly burst out with this extraordinary question: “I
suppose you were in earnest when you preached that sermon in London?”

“I am astonished that you should doubt it,” I replied.

He paused again; struggled with himself again; and startled me by a
second outbreak, even stranger than the first.

“I am one of the people you preached at in your sermon,” he said.
“That’s the true reason why I asked you to take me for your pupil.
Don’t turn me out! When you talked to your congregation of tortured and
tempted people, you talked of Me.”

I was so astonished by the confession, that I lost my presence of mind.
For the moment, I was unable to answer him.

“Don’t turn me out!” he repeated. “Help me against myself. I am telling
you the truth. As God is my witness, I am telling you the truth!”

“Tell me the _whole_ truth,” I said; “and rely on my consoling and
helping you--rely on my being your friend.”

In the fervor of the moment, I took his hand. It lay cold and still in
mine; it mutely warned me that I had a sullen and a secret nature to
deal with.

“There must be no concealment between us,” I resumed. “You have entered
my house, by your own confession, under false pretenses. It is your duty
to me, and your duty to yourself, to speak out.”

The man’s inveterate reserve--cast off for the moment only--renewed its
hold on him. He considered, carefully considered, his next words before
he permitted them to pass his lips.

“A person is in the way of my prospects in life,” he began slowly, with
his eyes cast down on his book. “A person provokes me horribly. I feel
dreadful temptations (like the man you spoke of in your sermon) when I
am in the person’s company. Teach me to resist temptation. I am afraid
of myself, if I see the person again. You are the only man who can help
me. Do it while you can.”

He stopped, and passed his handkerchief over his forehead.

“Will that do?” he asked--still with his eyes on his book.

“It will _not_ do,” I answered. “You are so far from really opening your
heart to me, that you won’t even let me know whether it is a man or a
woman who stands in the way of your prospects in life. You used the word
‘person,’ over and over again--rather than say ‘he’ or ‘she’ when you
speak of the provocation which is trying you. How can I help a man who
has so little confidence in me as that?”

My reply evidently found him at the end of his resources. He tried,
tried desperately, to say more than he had said yet. No! The words
seemed to stick in his throat. Not one of them would pass his lips.

“Give me time,” he pleaded piteously. “I can’t bring myself to it, all
at once. I mean well. Upon my soul, I mean well. But I am slow at this
sort of thing. Wait till to-morrow.”

To-morrow came--and again he put it off.

“One more day!” he said. “You don’t know how hard it is to speak
plainly. I am half afraid; I am half ashamed. Give me one more day.”

I had hitherto only disliked him. Try as I might (and did) to make
merciful allowance for his reserve, I began to despise him now.

VIII.

THE day of the deferred confession came, and brought an event with it,
for which both he and I were alike unprepared. Would he really have
confided in me but for that event? He must either have done it, or have
abandoned the purpose which had led him into my house.

We met as usual at the breakfast-table. My housekeeper brought in my
letters of the morning. To my surprise, instead of leaving the room
again as usual, she walked round to the other side of the table, and
laid a letter before my senior pupil--the first letter, since his
residence with me, which had been delivered to him under my roof.

He started, and took up the letter. He looked at the address. A spasm
of suppressed fury passed across his face; his breath came quickly; his
hand trembled as it held the letter. So far, I said nothing. I waited to
see whether he would open the envelope in my presence or not.

He was afraid to open it in my presence. He got on his feet; he said,
in tones so low that I could barely hear him: “Please excuse me for a
minute”--and left the room.

I waited for half an hour--for a quarter of an hour after that--and then
I sent to ask if he had forgotten his breakfast.

In a minute more, I heard his footstep in the hall. He opened
the breakfast-room door, and stood on the threshold, with a small
traveling-bag in his hand.

“I beg your pardon,” he said, still standing at the door. “I must ask
for leave of absence for a day or two. Business in London.”

“Can I be of any use?” I asked. “I am afraid your letter has brought you
bad news?”

“Yes,” he said shortly. “Bad news. I have no time for breakfast.”

“Wait a few minutes,” I urged. “Wait long enough to treat me like your
friend--to tell me what your trouble is before you go.”

He made no reply. He stepped into the hall and closed the door--then
opened it again a little way, without showing himself.

“Business in London,” he repeated--as if he thought it highly important
to inform me of the nature of his errand. The door closed for the second
time. He was gone.

I went into my study, and carefully considered what had happened.

The result of my reflections is easily described. I determined on
discontinuing my relations with my senior pupil. In writing to his
father (which I did, with all due courtesy and respect, by that day’s
post), I mentioned as my reason for arriving at this decision:--First,
that I had found it impossible to win the confidence of his son.
Secondly, that his son had that morning suddenly and mysteriously left
my house for London, and that I must decline accepting any further
responsibility toward him, as the necessary consequence.

I had put my letter in the post-bag, and was beginning to feel a little
easier after having written it, when my housekeeper appeared in the
study, with a very grave face, and with something hidden apparently in
her closed hand.

“Would you please look, sir, at what we have found in the gentleman’s
bedroom, since he went away this morning?”

I knew the housekeeper to possess a woman’s full share of that amicable
weakness of the sex which goes by the name of “Curiosity.” I had also,
in various indirect ways, become aware that my senior pupil’s strange
departure had largely increased the disposition among the women of my
household to regard him as the victim of an unhappy attachment. The time
was ripe, as it seemed to me, for checking any further gossip about him,
and any renewed attempts at prying into his affairs in his absence.

“Your only business in my pupil’s bedroom,” I said to the housekeeper,
“is to see that it is kept clean, and that it is properly aired. There
must be no interference, if you please, with his letters, or his papers,
or with anything else that he has left behind him. Put back directly
whatever you may have found in his room.”

The housekeeper had her full share of a woman’s temper as well as of a
woman’s curiosity. She listened to me with a rising color, and a just
perceptible toss of the head.

“Must I put it back, sir, on the floor, between the bed and the wall?”
 she inquired, with an ironical assumption of the humblest deference to
my wishes. “_That’s_ where the girl found it when she was sweeping
the room. Anybody can see for themselves,” pursued the housekeeper
indignantly, “that the poor gentleman has gone away broken-hearted. And
there, in my opinion, is the hussy who is the cause of it!”

With those words, she made me a low curtsey, and laid a small
photographic portrait on the desk at which I was sitting.

I looked at the photograph.

In an instant, my heart was beating wildly--my head turned giddy--the
housekeeper, the furniture, the walls of the room, all swayed and
whirled round me.

The portrait that had been found in my senior pupil’s bedroom was the
portrait of Jeromette!

IX.

I HAD sent the housekeeper out of my study. I was alone, with the
photograph of the Frenchwoman on my desk.

There could surely be little doubt about the discovery that had burst
upon me. The man who had stolen his way into my house, driven by the
terror of a temptation that he dared not reveal, and the man who had
been my unknown rival in the by-gone time, were one and the same!

Recovering self-possession enough to realize this plain truth, the
inferences that followed forced their way into my mind as a matter of
course. The unnamed person who was the obstacle to my pupil’s prospects
in life, the unnamed person in whose company he was assailed by
temptations which made him tremble for himself, stood revealed to me
now as being, in all human probability, no other than Jeromette. Had she
bound him in the fetters of the marriage which he had himself proposed?
Had she discovered his place of refuge in my house? And was the letter
that had been delivered to him of her writing? Assuming these questions
to be answered in the affirmative, what, in that case, was his “business
in London”? I remembered how he had spoken to me of his temptations, I
recalled the expression that had crossed his face when he recognized the
handwriting on the letter--and the conclusion that followed literally
shook me to the soul. Ordering my horse to be saddled, I rode instantly
to the railway-station.

The train by which he had traveled to London had reached the terminus
nearly an hour since. The one useful course that I could take, by way of
quieting the dreadful misgivings crowding one after another on my mind,
was to telegraph to Jeromette at the address at which I had last seen
her. I sent the subjoined message--prepaying the reply:

“If you are in any trouble, telegraph to me. I will be with you by the
first train. Answer, in any case.”

There was nothing in the way of the immediate dispatch of my message.
And yet the hours passed, and no answer was received. By the advice of
the clerk, I sent a second telegram to the London office, requesting an
explanation. The reply came back in these terms:

“Improvements in street. Houses pulled down. No trace of person named in
telegram.”

I mounted my horse, and rode back slowly to the rectory.

“The day of his return to me will bring with it the darkest days of my
life.”..... “I shall die young, and die miserably. Have you interest
enough still left in me to wish to hear of it?” .... “You _ shall_ hear
of it.” Those words were in my memory while I rode home in the cloudless
moonlight night. They were so vividly present to me that I could hear
again her pretty foreign accent, her quiet clear tones, as she spoke
them. For the rest, the emotions of that memorable day had worn me out.
The answer from the telegraph office had struck me with a strange and
stony despair. My mind was a blank. I had no thoughts. I had no tears.

I was about half-way on my road home, and I had just heard the clock of
a village church strike ten, when I became conscious, little by little,
of a chilly sensation slowly creeping through and through me to the
bones. The warm, balmy air of a summer night was abroad. It was the
month of July. In the month of July, was it possible that any living
creature (in good health) could feel cold? It was _not_ possible--and
yet, the chilly sensation still crept through and through me to the
bones.

I looked up. I looked all round me.

My horse was walking along an open highroad. Neither trees nor waters
were near me. On either side, the flat fields stretched away bright and
broad in the moonlight.

I stopped my horse, and looked round me again.

Yes: I saw it. With my own eyes I saw it. A pillar of white
mist--between five and six feet high, as well as I could judge--was
moving beside me at the edge of the road, on my left hand. When I
stopped, the white mist stopped. When I went on, the white mist went on.
I pushed my horse to a trot--the pillar of mist was with me. I urged him
to a gallop---the pillar of mist was with me. I stopped him again--the
pillar of mist stood still.

The white color of it was the white color of the fog which I had seen
over the river--on the night when I had gone to bid her farewell. And
the chill which had then crept through me to the bones was the chill
that was creeping through me now.

I went on again slowly. The white mist went on again slowly--with the
clear bright night all round it.

I was awed rather than frightened. There was one moment, and one only,
when the fear came to me that my reason might be shaken. I caught
myself keeping time to the slow tramp of the horse’s feet with the slow
utterances of these words, repeated over and over again: “Jeromette is
dead. Jeromette is dead.” But my will was still my own: I was able to
control myself, to impose silence on my own muttering lips. And I rode
on quietly. And the pillar of mist went quietly with me.

My groom was waiting for my return at the rectory gate. I pointed to the
mist, passing through the gate with me.

“Do you see anything there?” I said.

The man looked at me in astonishment.

I entered the rectory. The housekeeper met me in the hall. I pointed to
the mist, entering with me.

“Do you see anything at my side?” I asked.

The housekeeper looked at me as the groom had looked at me.

“I am afraid you are not well, sir,” she said. “Your color is all
gone--you are shivering. Let me get you a glass of wine.”

I went into my study, on the ground-floor, and took the chair at my
desk. The photograph still lay where I had left it. The pillar of
mist floated round the table, and stopped opposite to me, behind the
photograph.

The housekeeper brought in the wine. I put the glass to my lips, and
set it down again. The chill of the mist was in the wine. There was
no taste, no reviving spirit in it. The presence of the housekeeper
oppressed me. My dog had followed her into the room. The presence of the
animal oppressed me. I said to the woman: “Leave me by myself, and take
the dog with you.”

They went out, and left me alone in the room.

I sat looking at the pillar of mist, hovering opposite to me.

It lengthened slowly, until it reached to the ceiling. As it lengthened,
it grew bright and luminous. A time passed, and a shadowy appearance
showed itself in the center of the light. Little by little, the shadowy
appearance took the outline of a human form. Soft brown eyes, tender and
melancholy, looked at me through the unearthly light in the mist. The
head and the rest of the face broke next slowly on my view. Then
the figure gradually revealed itself, moment by moment, downward and
downward to the feet. She stood before me as I had last seen her, in
her purple-merino dress, with the black-silk apron, with the white
handkerchief tied loosely round her neck. She stood before me, in the
gentle beauty that I remembered so well; and looked at me as she had
looked when she gave me her last kiss--when her tears had dropped on my
cheek.

I fell on my knees at the table. I stretched out my hands to her
imploringly. I said: “Speak to me--O, once again speak to me,
Jeromette.”

Her eyes rested on me with a divine compassion in them. She lifted her
hand, and pointed to the photograph on my desk, with a gesture which
bade me turn the card. I turned it. The name of the man who had left my
house that morning was inscribed on it, in her own handwriting.

I looked up at her again, when I had read it. She lifted her hand once
more, and pointed to the handkerchief round her neck. As I looked at
it, the fair white silk changed horribly in color--the fair white silk
became darkened and drenched in blood.

A moment more--and the vision of her began to grow dim. By slow degrees,
the figure, then the face, faded back into the shadowy appearance that
I had first seen. The luminous inner light died out in the white mist.
The mist itself dropped slowly downward--floated a moment in airy
circles on the floor--vanished. Nothing was before me but the familiar
wall of the room, and the photograph lying face downward on my desk.

X.

THE next day, the newspapers reported the discovery of a murder in
London. A Frenchwoman was the victim. She had been killed by a wound in
the throat. The crime had been discovered between ten and eleven o’clock
on the previous night.

I leave you to draw your conclusion from what I have related. My own
faith in the reality of the apparition is immovable. I say, and
believe, that Jeromette kept her word with me. She died young, and died
miserably. And I heard of it from herself.

Take up the Trial again, and look at the circumstances that were
revealed during the investigation in court. His motive for murdering her
is there.

You will see that she did indeed marry him privately; that they lived
together contentedly, until the fatal day when she discovered that his
fancy had been caught by another woman; that violent quarrels took place
between them, from that time to the time when my sermon showed him his
own deadly hatred toward her, reflected in the case of another man; that
she discovered his place of retreat in my house, and threatened him by
letter with the public assertion of her conjugal rights; lastly, that
a man, variously described by different witnesses, was seen leaving the
door of her lodgings on the night of the murder. The Law--advancing no
further than this--may have discovered circumstances of suspicion, but
no certainty. The Law, in default of direct evidence to convict the
prisoner, may have rightly decided in letting him go free.

But _I_ persisted in believing that the man was guilty. _I_ declare that
he, and he alone, was the murderer of Jeromette. And now, you know why.



MISS MINA AND THE GROOM

I.

I HEAR that the “shocking story of my conduct” was widely circulated at
the ball, and that public opinion (among the ladies), in every part of
the room, declared I had disgraced myself. But there was one dissentient
voice in this chorus of general condemnation. You spoke, Madam, with all
the authority of your wide celebrity and your high rank. You said: “I am
personally a stranger to the young lady who is the subject of remark.
If I venture to interfere, it is only to remind you that there are two
sides to every question. May I ask if you have waited to pass sentence,
until you have heard what the person accused has to say in her own
defense?”

These just and generous words produced, if I am correctly informed, a
dead silence. Not one of the women who had condemned me had heard me in
my own defense. Not one of them ventured to answer you.

How I may stand in the opinions of such persons as these, is a matter
of perfect indifference to me. My one anxiety is to show that I am not
quite unworthy of your considerate interference in my favor. Will you
honor me by reading what I have to say for myself in these pages?

I will pass as rapidly as I can over the subject of my family; and
I will abstain (in deference to motives of gratitude and honor) from
mentioning surnames in my narrative.

My father was the second son of an English nobleman. A German lady was
his first wife, and my mother. Left a widower, he married for the second
time; the new wife being of American birth. She took a stepmother’s
dislike to me--which, in some degree at least, I must own that I
deserved.

When the newly married pair went to the United States they left me in
England, by my own desire, to live under the protection of my uncle--a
General in the army. This good man’s marriage had been childless, and
his wife (Lady Claudia) was, perhaps on that account, as kindly ready as
her husband to receive me in the character of an adopted daughter. I may
add here, that I bear my German mother’s Christian name, Wilhelmina.
All my friends, in the days when I had friends, used to shorten this to
Mina. Be my friend so far, and call me Mina, too.

After these few words of introduction, will your patience bear with me,
if I try to make you better acquainted with my uncle and aunt, and if I
allude to circumstances connected with my new life which had, as I fear,
some influence in altering my character for the worse?

II.

WHEN I think of the good General’s fatherly kindness to me, I really
despair of writing about him in terms that do justice to his nature. To
own the truth, the tears get into my eyes, and the lines mingle in such
confusion that I cannot read them myself. As for my relations with my
aunt, I only tell the truth when I say that she performed her duties
toward me without the slightest pretension, and in the most charming
manner.

At nearly fifty years old, Lady Claudia was still admired, though she
had lost the one attraction which distinguished her before my time--the
attraction of a perfectly beautiful figure. With fine hair and
expressive eyes, she was otherwise a plain woman. Her unassuming
cleverness and her fascinating manners were the qualities no doubt
which made her popular everywhere. We never quarreled. Not because I was
always amiable, but because my aunt would not allow it. She managed me,
as she managed her husband, with perfect tact. With certain occasional
checks, she absolutely governed the General. There were eccentricities
in his character which made him a man easily ruled by a clever woman.
Deferring to his opinion, so far as appearances went, Lady Claudia
generally contrived to get her own way in the end. Except when he was
at his Club, happy in his gossip, his good dinners, and his whist, my
excellent uncle lived under a despotism, in the happy delusion that he
was master in his own house.

Prosperous and pleasant as it appeared on the surface, my life had its
sad side for a young woman.

In the commonplace routine of our existence, as wealthy people in
the upper rank, there was nothing to ripen the growth of any better
capacities which may have been in my nature. Heartily as I loved and
admired my uncle, he was neither of an age nor of a character to be the
chosen depositary of my most secret thoughts, the friend of my inmost
heart who could show me how to make the best and the most of my life.
With friends and admirers in plenty, I had found no one who could hold
this position toward me. In the midst of society I was, unconsciously, a
lonely woman.

As I remember them, my hours of happiness were the hours when I took
refuge in my music and my books. Out of the house, my one diversion,
always welcome and always fresh, was riding. Without, any false modesty,
I may mention that I had lovers as well as admirers; but not one of them
produced an impression on my heart. In all that related to the tender
passion, as it is called, I was an undeveloped being. The influence
that men have on women, _because_ they are men, was really and truly
a mystery to me. I was ashamed of my own coldness--I tried, honestly
tried, to copy other girls; to feel my heart beating in the presence of
the one chosen man. It was not to be done. When a man pressed my hand, I
felt it in my rings, instead of my heart.

These confessions made, I have done with the past, and may now relate
the events which my enemies, among the ladies, have described as
presenting a shocking story.

III.

WE were in London for the season. One morning, I went out riding with my
uncle, as usual, in Hyde Park.

The General’s service in the army had been in a cavalry
regiment--service distinguished by merits which justified his rapid rise
to the high places in his profession. In the hunting-field, he was noted
as one of the most daring and most accomplished riders in our county. He
had always delighted in riding young and high-spirited horses; and the
habit remained with him after he had quitted the active duties of his
profession in later life. From first to last he had met with no accident
worth remembering, until the unlucky morning when he went out with me.

His horse, a fiery chestnut, ran away with him, in that part of the
Park-ride call ed Rotten Row. With the purpose of keeping clear of other
riders, he spurred his runaway horse at the rail which divides the Row
from the grassy inclosure at its side. The terrified animal swerved in
taking the leap, and dashed him against a tree. He was dreadfully
shaken and injured; but his strong constitution carried him through to
recovery--with the serious drawback of an incurable lameness in one leg.

The doctors, on taking leave of their patient, united in warning him (at
his age, and bearing in mind his weakened leg) to ride no more restive
horses. “A quiet cob, General,” they all suggested. My uncle was sorely
mortified and offended. “If I am fit for nothing but a quiet cob,” he
said, bitterly, “I will ride no more.” He kept his word. No one ever saw
the General on horseback again.

Under these sad circumstances (and my aunt being no horsewoman), I
had apparently no other choice than to give up riding also. But my
kind-hearted uncle was not the man to let me be sacrificed to his own
disappointment. His riding-groom had been one of his soldier-servants
in the cavalry regiment--a quaint sour tempered old man, not at all
the sort of person to attend on a young lady taking her riding-exercise
alone. “We must find a smart fellow who can be trusted,” said the
General. “I shall inquire at the club.”

For a week afterward, a succession of grooms, recommended by friends,
applied for the vacant place.

The General found insurmountable objections to all of them. “I’ll tell
you what I have done,” he announced one day, with the air of a man who
had hit on a grand discovery; “I have advertised in the papers.”

Lady Claudia looked up from her embroidery with the placid smile that
was peculiar to her. “I don’t quite like advertising for a servant,” she
said. “You are at the mercy of a stranger; you don’t know that you are
not engaging a drunkard or a thief.”

“Or you may be deceived by a false character,” I added on my side.
I seldom ventured, at domestic consultations, on giving my opinion
unasked--but the new groom represented a subject in which I felt a
strong personal interest. In a certain sense, he was to be _my_ groom.

“I’m much obliged to you both for warning me that I am so easy to
deceive,” the General remarked satirically. “Unfortunately, the mischief
is done. Three men have answered my advertisement already. I expect them
here tomorrow to be examined for the place.”

Lady Claudia looked up from her embroidery again. “Are you going to see
them yourself?” she asked softly. “I thought the steward--”

“I have hitherto considered myself a better judge of a groom than my
steward,” the General interposed. “However, don’t be alarmed; I won’t
act on my own sole responsibility, after the hint you have given me. You
and Mina shall lend me your valuable assistance, and discover whether
they are thieves, drunkards, and what not, before I feel the smallest
suspicion of it, myself.”

IV.

WE naturally supposed that the General was joking. No. This was one of
those rare occasions on which Lady Claudia’s tact--infallible in matters
of importance--proved to be at fault in a trifle. My uncle’s self-esteem
had been touched in a tender place; and he had resolved to make us feel
it. The next morning a polite message came, requesting our presence in
the library, to see the grooms. My aunt (always ready with her smile,
but rarely tempted into laughing outright) did for once laugh heartily.
“It is really too ridiculous!” she said. However, she pursued her policy
of always yielding, in the first instance. We went together to the
library.

The three grooms were received in the order in which they presented
themselves for approval. Two of them bore the ineffaceable mark of the
public-house so plainly written on their villainous faces, that even
I could see it. My uncle ironically asked us to favor him with our
opinions. Lady Claudia answered with her sweetest smile: “Pardon me,
General--we are here to learn.” The words were nothing; but the manner
in which they were spoken was perfect. Few men could have resisted that
gentle influence--and the General was not one of the few. He stroked his
mustache, and returned to his petticoat government. The two grooms were
dismissed.

The entry of the third and last man took me completely by surprise.

If the stranger’s short coat and light trousers had not proclaimed his
vocation in life, I should have taken it for granted that there had been
some mistake, and that we were favored with a visit from a gentleman
unknown. He was between dark and light in complexion, with frank clear
blue eyes; quiet and intelligent, if appearances were to be trusted;
easy in his movements; respectful in his manner, but perfectly free
from servility. “I say!” the General blurted out, addressing my aunt
confidentially, “_he_ looks as if he would do, doesn’t he?”

The appearance of the new man seemed to have had the same effect on Lady
Claudia which it had produced on me. But she got over her first feeling
of surprise sooner than I did. “You know best,” she answered, with the
air of a woman who declined to trouble herself by giving an opinion.

“Step forward, my man,” said the General. The groom advanced from the
door, bowed, and stopped at the foot of the table--my uncle sitting at
the head, with my aunt and myself on either side of him. The inevitable
questions began.

“What is your name?”

“Michael Bloomfield.”

“Your age?”

“Twenty-six.”

My aunt’s want of interest in the proceedings expressed itself by a
little weary sigh. She leaned back resignedly in her chair.

The General went on with his questions: “What experience have you had as
a groom?”

“I began learning my work, sir, before I was twelve years old.”

“Yes! yes! I mean what private families have you served in?”

“Two, sir.”

“How long have you been in your two situations?”

“Four years in the first; and three in the second.”

The General looked agreeably surprised. “Seven years in only two
situations is a good character in itself,” he remarked. “Who are your
references?”

The groom laid two papers on the table.

“I don’t take written references,” said the General.

“Be pleased to read my papers, sir,” answered the groom.

My uncle looked sharply across the table. The groom sustained the look
with respectful but unshaken composure. The General took up the
papers, and seemed to be once more favorably impressed as he read them.
“Personal references in each case if required in support of strong
written recommendations from both his employers,” he informed my aunt.
“Copy the addresses, Mina. Very satisfactory, I must say. Don’t you
think so yourself?” he resumed, turning again to my aunt.

Lady Claudia replied by a courteous bend of her head. The General went
on with his questions. They related to the management of horses; and
they were answered to his complete satisfaction.

“Michael Bloomfield, you know your business,” he said, “and you have
a good character. Leave your address. When I have consulted your
references, you shall hear from me.”

The groom took out a blank card, and wrote his name and address on it.
I looked over my uncle’s shoulder when he received the card. Another
surprise! The handwriting was simply irreproachable--the lines running
perfectly straight, and every letter completely formed. As this
perplexing person made his modest bow, and withdrew, the General, struck
by an after-thought, called him back from the door.

“One thing more,” said my uncle. “About friends and followers? I
consider it my duty to my servants to allow them to see their relations;
but I expect them to submit to certain conditions in return--”

“I beg your pardon, sir,” the groom interposed. “I shall not give you
any trouble on that score. I have no relations.”

“No brothers or sisters?” asked the General.

“None, sir.”

“Father and mother both dead?”

“I don’t know, sir.”

“You don’t know! What does that mean?”

“I am telling you the plain truth, sir. I never heard who my father and
mother were--and I don’t expect to hear now.”

He said those words with a bitter composure which impressed me
painfully. Lady Claudia was far from feeling it as I did. Her languid
interest in the engagement of the groom seemed to be completely
exhausted--and that was all. She rose, in her easy graceful way, and
looked out of the window at the courtyard and fountain, the house-dog in
his kennel, and the box of flowers in the coachman’s window.

In the meanwhile, the groom remained near the table, respectfully
waiting for his dismissal. The General spoke to him sharply, for the
first time. I could see that my good uncle had noticed the cruel tone of
that passing reference to the parents, and thought of it as I did.

“One word more, before you go,” he said. “If I don’t find you more
mercifully inclined toward my horses than you seem to be toward your
father and mother, you won’t remain long in my service. You might have
told me you had never heard who your parents were, without speaking as
if you didn’t care to hear.”

“May I say a bold word, sir, in my own defense?”

He put the question very quietly, but, at the same time, so firmly that
he even surprised my aunt. She looked round from the window--then turned
back again, and stretched out her hand toward the curtain, intending, as
I supposed, to alter the arrangement of it. The groom went on.

“May I ask, sir, why I should care about a father and mother who
deserted me? Mind what you are about, my lady!” he cried--suddenly
addressing my aunt. “There’s a cat in the folds of that curtain; she
might frighten you.”

He had barely said the words before the housekeeper’s large tabby cat,
taking its noonday siesta in the looped-up fold of the curtain, leaped
out and made for the door.

Lady Claudia was, naturally enough, a little perplexed by the man’s
discovery of an animal completely hidden in the curtain. She appeared
to think that a person who was only a groom had taken a liberty in
presuming to puzzle her. Like her husband, she spoke to Michael sharply.

“Did you see the cat?” she asked.

“No, my lady.”

“Then how did you know the creature was in the curtain?”

For the first time since he had entered the room the groom looked a
little confused.

“It’s a sort of presumption for a man in my position to be subject to
a nervous infirmity,” he answered. “I am one of those persons (the
weakness is not uncommon, as your ladyship is aware) who know by their
own unpleasant sensations when a cat is in the room. It goes a little
further than that with me. The ‘antipathy,’ as the gentlefolks call it,
tells me in what part of the room the cat is.”

My aunt turned to her husband, without attempting to conceal that she
took no sort of interest in the groom’s antipathies.

“Haven’t you done with the man yet?” she asked.

The General gave the groom his dismissal.

“You shall hear from me in three days’ time. Good-morning.”

Michael Bloomfield seemed to have noticed my aunt’s ungracious manner.
He looked at her for a moment with steady attention before he left the
room.

V.

“You don’t mean to engage that man?” said Lady Claudia as the door
closed.

“Why not?” asked my uncle.

“I have taken a dislike to him.”

This short answer was so entirely out of the character of my aunt that
the General took her kindly by the hand, and said:

“I am afraid you are not well.”

She irritably withdrew her hand.

“I don’t feel well. It doesn’t matter.”

“It does matter, Claudia. What can I do for you?”

“Write to the man--” She paused and smiled contemptuously. “Imagine a
groom with an antipathy to cats!” she said, turning to me. “I don’t know
what you think, Mina. I have a strong objection, myself, to servants
who hold themselves above their position in life. Write,” she resumed,
addressing her husband, “and tell him to look for another place.”

“What objection can I make to him?” the General asked, helplessly.

“Good heavens! can’t you make an excuse? Say he is too young.”

My uncle looked at me in expressive silence--walked slowly to the
writing-table--and glanced at his wife, in the faint hope that she might
change her mind. Their eyes met--and she seemed to recover the command
of her temper. She put her hand caressingly on the General’s shoulder.

“I remember the time,” she said, softly, “when any caprice of mine was a
command to you. Ah, I was younger then!”

The General’s reception of this little advance was thoroughly
characteristic of him. He first kissed Lady Claudia’s hand, and then he
wrote the letter. My aunt rewarded him by a look, and left the library.

“What the deuce is the matter with her?” my uncle said to me when we
were alone. “Do you dislike the man, too?”

“Certainly not. As far as I can judge, he appears to be just the sort of
person we want.”

“And knows thoroughly well how to manage horses, my dear. What _can_ be
your aunt’s objection to him?”

As the words passed his lips Lady Claudia opened the library door.

“I am so ashamed of myself,” she said, sweetly. “At my age, I have been
behaving like a spoiled child. How good you are to me, General! Let me
try to make amends for my misconduct. Will you permit me?”

She took up the General’s letter, without waiting for permission; tore
it to pieces, smiling pleasantly all the while; and threw the fragments
into the waste-paper basket. “As if you didn’t know better than I do!”
 she said, kissing him on the forehead. “Engage the man by all means.”

She left the room for the second time. For the second time my uncle
looked at me in blank perplexity--and I looked back at him in the same
condition of mind. The sound of the luncheon bell was equally a relief
to both of us. Not a word more was spoken on the subject of the new
groom. His references were verified; and he entered the General’s
service in three days’ time.

VI.

ALWAYS careful in anything that concerned my welfare, no matter how
trifling it might be, my uncle did not trust me alone with the new
groom when he first entered our service. Two old friends of the General
accompanied me at his special request, and reported the man to be
perfectly competent and trustworthy. After that, Michael rode out with
me alone; my friends among young ladies seldom caring to accompany me,
when I abandoned the park for the quiet country roads on the north and
west of London. Was it wrong in me to talk to him on these expeditions?
It would surely have been treating a man like a brute never to take
the smallest notice of him--especially as his conduct was uniformly
respectful toward me. Not once, by word or look, did he presume on the
position which my favor permitted him to occupy.

Ought I to blush when I confess (though he was only a groom) that he
interested me?

In the first place, there was something romantic in the very blankness
of the story of his life.

He had been left, in his infancy, in the stables of a gentleman living
in Kent, near the highroad between Gravesend and Rochester. The same
day, the stable-boy had met a woman running out of the yard, pursued by
the dog. She was a stranger, and was not well-dressed. While the boy was
protecting her by chaining the dog to his kennel, she was quick enough
to place herself beyond the reach of pursuit.

The infant’s clothing proved, on examination, to be of the finest linen.
He was warmly wrapped in a beautiful shawl of some foreign manufacture,
entirely unknown to all the persons present, including the master and
mistress of the house. Among the folds of the shawl there was discovered
an open letter, without date, signature, or address, which it was
presumed the woman must have forgotten.

Like the shawl, the paper was of foreign manufacture. The handwriting
presented a strongly marked character; and the composition plainly
revealed the mistakes of a person imperfectly acquainted with the
English language. The contents of the letter, after alluding to the
means supplied for the support of the child, announced that the writer
had committed the folly of inclosing a sum of a hundred pounds in a
banknote, “to pay expenses.” In a postscript, an appointment was made
for a meeting in six months’ time, on the eastward side of London
Bridge. The stable-boy’s description of the woman who had passed him
showed that she belonged to the lower class. To such a person a hundred
pounds would be a fortune. She had, no doubt, abandoned the child, and
made off with the money.

No trace of her was ever discovered. On the day of the appointment the
police watched the eastward side of London Bridge without obtaining any
result. Through the kindness of the gentleman in whose stable he had
been found, the first ten years of the boy’s life were passed under the
protection of a charitable asylum. They gave him the name of one of the
little inmates who had died; and they sent him out to service before he
was eleven years old. He was harshly treated and ran away; wandered to
some training-stables near Newmarket; attracted the favorable notice
of the head-groom, was employed among the other boys, and liked the
occupation. Growing up to manhood, he had taken service in private
families as a groom. This was the story of twenty-six years of Michael’s
life.

But there was something in the man himself which attracted attention,
and made one think of him in his absence.

I mean by this, that there was a spirit of resistance to his destiny in
him, which is very rarely found in serving-men of his order. I remember
accompanying the General “on one of his periodical visits of inspection
to the stable.” He was so well satisfied that he proposed extending his
investigations to the groom’s own room.

“If you don object, Michael?” he added, with his customary consideration
for the self-respect of all persons in his employment. Michael’s color
rose a little; he looked at me. “I am afraid the young lady will not
find my room quite so tidy as it ought to be,” he said as he opened the
door for us.

The only disorder in the groom’s room was produced, to our surprise, by
the groom’s books and papers.

Cheap editions of the English poets, translations of Latin and Greek
classics, handbooks for teaching French and German “without a master,”
 carefully written “exercises” in both languages, manuals of shorthand,
with more “exercises” in that art, were scattered over the table, round
the central object of a reading-lamp, which spoke plainly of studies
by night. “Why, what is all this?” cried the General. “Are you going
to leave me, Michael, and set up a school?” Michael answered in sad,
submissive tones. “I try to improve myself, sir--though I sometimes lose
heart and hope.” “Hope of what?” asked my uncle. “Are you not content to
be a servant? Must you rise in the world, as the saying is?” The groom
shrank a little at that abrupt question. “If I had relations to care
for me and help me along the hard ways of life,” he said, “I might be
satisfied, sir, to remain as I am. As it is, I have no one to think
about but myself--and I am foolish enough sometimes to look beyond
myself.”

So far, I had kept silence; but I could no longer resist giving him
a word of encouragement--his confession was so sadly and so patiently
made. “You speak too harshly of yourself,” I said; “the best and
greatest men have begun like you by looking beyond themselves.” For a
moment our eyes met. I admired the poor lonely fellow trying so modestly
and so bravely to teach himself--and I did not care to conceal it. He
was the first to look away; some suppressed emotion turned him deadly
pale. Was I the cause of it? I felt myself tremble as that bold question
came into my mind. The General, with one sharp glance at me, diverted
the talk (not very delicately, as I thought) to the misfortune of
Michael’s birth.

“I have heard of your being deserted in your infancy by some woman
unknown,” he said. “What has become of the things you were wrapped in,
and the letter that was found on you? They might lead to a discovery,
one of these days.” The groom smiled. “The last master I served thought
of it as you do, Sir. He was so good as to write to the gentleman who
was first burdened with the care of me--and the things were sent to me
in return.”

He took up an unlocked leather bag, which opened by touching a brass
knob, and showed us the shawl, the linen (sadly faded by time) and the
letter. We were puzzled by the shawl. My uncle, who had served in
the East, thought it looked like a very rare kind of Persian work. We
examined with interest the letter, and the fine linen. When Michael
quietly remarked, as we handed them back to him, “They keep the secret,
you see,” we could only look at each other, and own there was nothing
more to be said.

VII.

THAT night, lying awake thinking, I made my first discovery of a great
change that had come over me. I felt like a new woman.

Never yet had my life been so enjoyable to me as it was now. I was
conscious of a delicious lightness of heart. The simplest things pleased
me; I was ready to be kind to everybody, and to admire everything. Even
the familiar scenery of my rides in the park developed beauties which
I had never noticed before. The enchantments of music affected me to
tears. I was absolutely in love with my dogs and my birds--and, as for
my maid, I bewildered the girl with presents, and gave her holidays
almost before she could ask for them. In a bodily sense, I felt an
extraordinary accession of strength and activity. I romped with the dear
old General, and actually kissed Lady Claudia, one morning, instead
of letting her kiss me as usual. My friends noticed my new outburst of
gayety and spirit--and wondered what had produced it. I can honestly say
that I wondered too! Only on that wakeful night which followed our visit
to Michael’s room did I arrive at something like a clear understanding
of myself. The next morning completed the process of enlightenment. I
went out riding as usual. The instant when Michael put his hand under
my foot as I sprang into the saddle, his touch flew all over me like a
flame. I knew who had made a new woman of me from that moment.

As to describing the first sense of confusion that overwhelmed me, even
if I were a practiced writer I should be incapable of doing it. I pulled
down my veil, and rode on in a sort of trance. Fortunately for me, our
house looked on the park, and I had only to cross the road. Otherwise I
should have met with some accident if I had ridden through the streets.
To this day, I don’t know where I rode. The horse went his own way
quietly--and the groom followed me.

The groom! Is there any human creature so free from the hateful and
anti-Christian pride of rank as a woman who loves with all her heart and
soul, for the first time in her life? I only tell the truth (in however
unfavorable a light it may place me) when I declare that my confusion
was entirely due to the discovery that I was in love. I was not ashamed
of myself for being in love with the groom. I had given my heart to the
man. What did the accident of his position matter? Put money into his
pocket and a title before his name--by another accident: in speech,
manners, and attainments, he would be a gentleman worthy of his wealth
and worthy of his rank.

Even the natural dread of what my relations and friends might say, if
they discovered my secret, seemed to be a sensation so unworthy of me
and of him, that I looked round, and called to him to speak to me, and
asked him questions about himself which kept him riding nearly side by
side with me. Ah, how I enjoyed the gentle deference and respect of his
manner as he answered me! He was hardly bold enough to raise his eyes to
mine, when I looked at him. Absorbed in the Paradise of my own making,
I rode on slowly, and was only aware that friends had passed and
had recognized me, by seeing him touch his hat. I looked round and
discovered the women smiling ironically as they rode by. That one
circumstance roused me rudely from my dream. I let Michael fall back
again to his proper place, and quickened my horse’s pace; angry with
myself, angry with the world in general, then suddenly changing, and
being fool enough and child enough to feel ready to cry. How long these
varying moods lasted, I don’t know. On returning, I slipped off my horse
without waiting for Michael to help me, and ran into the house without
even wishing him “Good-day.”

VIII.

AFTER taking off my riding-habit, and cooling my hot face with
eau-de-cologne and water, I went down to the room which we called the
morning-room. The piano there was my favorite instrument and I had the
idea of trying what music would do toward helping me to compose myself.

As I sat down before the piano, I heard the opening of the door of the
breakfast-room (separated from me by a curtained archway), and the voice
of Lady Claudia asking if Michael had returned to the stable. On the
servant’s reply in the affirmative, she desired that he might be sent to
her immediately.

No doubt, I ought either to have left the morning-room, or to have let
my aunt know of my presence there. I did neither the one nor the other.
Her first dislike of Michael had, to all appearance, subsided. She had
once or twice actually taken opportunities of speaking to him kindly.
I believed this was due to the caprice of the moment. The tone of her
voice too suggested, on this occasion, that she had some spiteful object
in view, in sending for him. I knew it was unworthy of me--and yet, I
deliberately waited to hear what passed between them.

Lady Claudia began.

“You were out riding to-day with Miss Mina?”

“Yes, my lady.”

“Turn to the light. I wish to see people when I speak to them. You were
observed by some friends of mine; your conduct excited remark. Do you
know your business as a lady’s groom?”

“I have had seven years’ experience, my lady.”

“Your business is to ride at a certain distance behind your mistress.
Has your experience taught you that?”

“Yes, my lady.”

“You were not riding behind Miss Mina--your horse was almost side by
side with hers. Do you deny it?”

“No, my lady.”

“You behaved with the greatest impropriety--you were seen talking to
Miss Mina. Do you deny that?”

“No, my lady.”

“Leave the room. No! come back. Have you any excuse to make?”

“None, my lady.”

“Your insolence is intolerable! I shall speak to the General.”

The sound of the closing door followed.

I knew now what the smiles meant on the false faces of those
women-friends of mine who had met me in the park. An ordinary man, in
Michael’s place, would have mentioned my own encouragement of him as
a sufficient excuse. _He_, with the inbred delicacy and reticence of a
gentleman, had taken all the blame on himself. Indignant and ashamed,
I advanced to the breakfast-room, bent on instantly justifying him.
Drawing aside the curtain, I was startled by a sound as of a person
sobbing. I cautiously looked in. Lady Claudia was prostrate on the sofa,
hiding her face in her hands, in a passion of tears.

I withdrew, completely bewildered. The extraordinary contradictions in
my aunt’s conduct were not at an end yet. Later in the day, I went to my
uncle, resolved to set Michael right in _his_ estimation, and to leave
him to speak to Lady Claudia. The General was in the lowest spirits; he
shook his head ominously the moment. I mentioned the groom’s name. “I
dare say the man meant no harm--but the thing has been observed. I can’t
have you made the subject of scandal, Mina. My wife makes a point of
it--Michael must go.

“You don’t mean to say that she has insisted on your sending Michael
away?”

Before he could answer me, a footman appeared with a message. “My lady
wishes to see you, sir.”

The General rose directly. My curiosity had got, by this time, beyond
all restraint. I was actually indelicate enough to ask if I might go
with him! He stared at me, as well he might. I persisted; I said I
particularly wished to see Lady Claudia. My uncle’s punctilious good
breeding still resisted me. “Your aunt may wish to speak to me in
private,” he said. “Wait a moment, and I will send for you.”

I was incapable of waiting: my obstinacy was something superhuman. The
bare idea that Michael might lose his place, through my fault, made me
desperate, I suppose. “I won’t trouble you to send for me,” I persisted;
“I will go with you at once as far as the door, and wait to hear if I
may come in.” The footman was still present, holding the door open; the
General gave way. I kept so close behind him that my aunt saw me as
her husband entered the room. “Come in, Mina,” she said, speaking and
looking like the charming Lady Claudia of everyday life. Was this the
woman whom I had seen crying her heart out on the sofa hardly an hour
ago?

“On second thoughts,” she continued, turning to the General, “I fear
I may have been a little hasty. Pardon me for troubling you about it
again--have you spoken to Michael yet? No? Then let us err on the side
of kindness; let us look over his misconduct this time.”

My uncle was evidently relieved. I seized the opportunity of making my
confession, and taking the whole blame on myself. Lady Claudia stopped
me with the perfect grace of which she was mistress.

“My good child, don’t distress yourself! don’t make mountains out of
molehills!” She patted me on the cheek with two plump white fingers
which felt deadly cold. “I was not always prudent, Mina, when I was your
age. Besides, your curiosity is naturally excited about a servant who
is--what shall I call him?--a foundling.”

She paused and fixed her eyes on me attentively. “What did he tell you?”
 she asked. “Is it a very romantic story?”

The General began to fidget in his chair. If I had kept my attention on
him, I should have seen in his face a warning to me to be silent. But
my interest at the moment was absorbed in my aunt. Encouraged by her
amiable reception, I was not merely unsuspicious of the trap that she
had set for me--I was actually foolish enough to think that I could
improve Michael’s position in her estimation (remember that I was in
love with him!) by telling his story exactly as I have already told it
in these pages. I spoke with fervor. Will you believe it?--her humor
positively changed again! She flew into a passion with me for the first
time in her life.

“Lies!” she cried. “Impudent lies on the face of them--invented to
appeal to your interest. How dare you repeat them? General! if Mina
had not brought it on herself, this man’s audacity would justify you in
instantly dismissing him. Don’t you agree with me?”

The General’s sense of fair play roused him for once into openly
opposing his wife.

“You are completely mistaken,” he said. “Mina and I have both had the
shawl and the letter in our hands--and (what was there besides?)--ah,
yes, the very linen the child was wrapped in.”

What there was in those words to check Lady Claudia’s anger in its full
flow I was quite unable to understand. If her husband had put a pistol
to her head, he could hardly have silenced her more effectually. She did
not appear to be frightened, or ashamed of her outbreak of rage--she
sat vacant and speechless, with her eyes on the General and her hands
crossed on her lap. After waiting a moment (wondering as I did what
it meant) my uncle rose with his customary resignation and left her. I
followed him. He was unusually silent and thoughtful; not a word passed
between us. I afterward discovered that he was beginning to fear,
poor man, that his wife’s mind must be affected in some way, and was
meditating a consultation with the physician who helped us in cases of
need.

As for myself, I was either too stupid or too innocent to feel any
positive forewarning of the truth, so far. After luncheon, while I was
alone in the conservatory, my maid came to me from Michael, asking if
I had any commands for him in the afternoon. I thought this rather odd;
but it occurred to me that he might want some hours to himself. I made
the inquiry.

To my astonishment, the maid announced that Lady Claudia had employed
Michael to go on an errand for her. The nature of the errand was to take
a letter to her bookseller, and to bring back the books which she had
ordered. With three idle footmen in the house, whose business it was to
perform such service as this, why had she taken the groom away from his
work? The question obtained such complete possession of my mind that I
actually summoned courage enough to go to my aunt. I said I had thought
of driving out in my pony-carriage that afternoon, and I asked if she
objected to sending one of the three indoor servants for her books in
Michael’s place.

She received me with a strange hard stare, and answered with obstinate
self-possession: “I wish Michael to go!” No explanation followed. With
reason or without it, agreeable to me or not agreeable to me, she wished
Michael to go.

I begged her pardon for interfering, and replied that I would give up
the idea of driving on that day. She made no further remark. I left the
room, determining to watch her. There is no defense for my conduct; it
was mean and unbecoming, no doubt. I was drawn on, by some force in me
which I could not even attempt to resist. Indeed, indeed I am not a mean
person by nature!

At first, I thought of speaking to Michael; not with any special motive,
but simply because I felt drawn toward him as the guide and helper in
whom my heart trusted at this crisis in my life. A little consideration,
however, suggested to me that I might be seen speaking to him, and might
so do him an injury. While I was still hesitating, the thought came to
me that my aunt’s motive for sending him to her bookseller might be to
get him out of her way.

Out of her way in the house? No: his place was not in the house. Out of
her way in the stable? The next instant, the idea flashed across my mind
of watching the stable door.

The best bedrooms, my room included, were all in front of the house. I
went up to my maid’s room, which looked on the courtyard; ready with my
excuse, if she happened to be there. She was not there. I placed myself
at the window, in full view of the stable opposite.

An interval elapsed--long or short, I cannot say which; I was too much
excited to look at my watch. All I know is that I discovered her! She
crossed the yard, after waiting to make sure that no one was there to
see her; and she entered the stable by the door which led to that part
of the building occupied by Michael. This time I looked at my watch.

Forty minutes passed before I saw her again. And then, instead of
appearing at the door, she showed herself at the window of Michael’s
room; throwing it wide open. I concealed myself behind the window
curtain, just in time to escape discovery, as she looked up at the
house. She next appeared in the yard, hurrying back. I waited a while,
trying to compose myself in case I met any one on the stairs. There was
little danger of a meeting at that hour. The General was at his club;
the servants were at their tea. I reached my own room without being seen
by any one, and locked myself in.

What had my aunt been doing for forty minutes in Michael’s room? And why
had she opened the window?

I spare you my reflections on these perplexing questions. A convenient
headache saved me from the ordeal of meeting Lady Claudia at the
dinner-table. I passed a restless and miserable night; conscious that
I had found my way blindly, as it were, to some terrible secret which
might have its influence on my whole future life, and not knowing what
to think, or what to do next. Even then, I shrank instinctively from
speaking to my uncle. This was not wonderful. But I felt afraid to speak
to Michael--and that perplexed and alarmed me. Consideration for Lady
Claudia was certainly not the motive that kept me silent, after what I
had seen.

The next morning my pale face abundantly justified the assertion that I
was still ill.

My aunt, always doing her maternal duty toward me, came herself to
inquire after my health before I was out of my room. So certain was she
of not having been observed on the previous day--or so prodigious was
her power of controlling herself--that she actually advised me to go out
riding before lunch, and try what the fresh air and the exercise would
do to relieve me! Feeling that I must end in speaking to Michael, it
struck me that this would be the one safe way of consulting him in
private. I accepted her advice, and had another approving pat on the
cheek from her plump white fingers. They no longer struck cold on my
skin; the customary vital warmth had returned to them. Her ladyship’s
mind had recovered its tranquillity.

IX.

I LEFT the house for my morning ride.

Michael was not in his customary spirits. With some difficulty, I
induced him to tell me the reason. He had decided on giving notice to
leave his situation in the General’s employment. As soon as I
could command myself, I asked what had happened to justify this
incomprehensible proceeding on his part. He silently offered me a
letter. It was written by the master whom he had served before he came
to us; and it announced that an employment as secretary was offered to
him, in the house of a gentleman who was “interested in his creditable
efforts to improve his position in the world.”

What it cost me to preserve the outward appearance of composure as I
handed back the letter, I am ashamed to tell. I spoke to him with some
bitterness. “Your wishes are gratified,” I said; “I don’t wonder
that you are eager to leave your place.” He reined back his horse
and repeated my words. “Eager to leave my place? I am heart-broken at
leaving it.” I was reckless enough to ask why. His head sank. “I daren’t
tell you,” he said. I went on from one imprudence to another. “What are
you afraid of?” I asked. He suddenly looked up at me. His eyes answered:
_“You.”_

Is it possible to fathom the folly of a woman in love? Can any sensible
person imagine the enormous importance which the veriest trifles assume
in her poor little mind? I was perfectly satisfied--even perfectly
happy, after that one look. I rode on briskly for a minute or two--then
the forgotten scene at the stable recurred to my memory. I resumed a
foot-pace and beckoned to him to speak to me.

“Lady Claudia’s bookseller lives in the City, doesn’t he?” I began.

“Yes, miss.”

“Did you walk both ways?”

“Yes.”

“You must have felt tired when you got back?”

“I hardly remember what I felt when I got back--I was met by a
surprise.”

“May I ask what it was?”

“Certainly, miss. Do you remember a black bag of mine?”

“Perfectly.”

“When I returned from the City I found the bag open; and the things I
kept in it--the shawl, the linen, and the letter--”

“Gone?”

“Gone.”

My heart gave one great leap in me, and broke into vehement throbbings,
which made it impossible for me to say a word more. I reined up my
horse, and fixed my eyes on Michael. He was startled; he asked if I felt
faint. I could only sign to him that I was waiting to hear more.

“My own belief,” he proceeded, “is that some person burned the things in
my absence, and opened the window to prevent any suspicion being excited
by the smell. I am certain I shut the window before I left my room. When
I closed it on my return, the fresh air had not entirely removed the
smell of burning; and, what is more, I found a heap of ashes in the
grate. As to the person who has done me this injury, and why it has
been done, those are mysteries beyond my fathoming--I beg your pardon,
miss--I am sure you are not well. Might I advise you to return to the
house?”

I accepted his advice and turned back.

In the tumult of horror and amazement that filled my mind, I could
still feel a faint triumph stirring in me through it all, when I saw how
alarmed and how anxious he was about me. Nothing more passed between
us on the way back. Confronted by the dreadful discovery that I had now
made, I was silent and helpless. Of the guilty persons concerned in
the concealment of the birth, and in the desertion of the infant, my
nobly-born, highly-bred, irreproachable aunt now stood revealed before
me as one! An older woman than I might have been hard put to it to
preserve her presence of mind, in such a position as mine. Instinct,
not reason, served me in my sore need. Instinct, not reason, kept me
passively and stupidly silent when I got back to the house. “We will
talk about it to-morrow,” was all I could say to Michael, when he gently
lifted me from my horse.

I excused myself from appearing at the luncheon-table; and I drew down
the blinds in my sitting-room, so that my face might not betray me when
Lady Claudia’s maternal duty brought her upstairs to make inquiries. The
same excuse served in both cases--my ride had failed to relieve me of
my headache. My aunt’s brief visit led to one result which is worth
mentioning. The indescribable horror of her that I felt forced the
conviction on my mind that we two could live no longer under the same
roof. While I was still trying to face this alternative with the
needful composure, my uncle presented himself, in some anxiety about
my continued illness. I should certainly have burst out crying, when the
kind and dear old man condoled with me, if he had not brought news with
him which turned back all my thoughts on myself and my aunt. Michael had
shown the General his letter and had given notice to leave. Lady Claudia
was present at the time. To her husband’s amazement, she abruptly
interfered with a personal request to Michael to think better of it, and
to remain in his place!

“I should not have troubled you, my dear, on this unpleasant subject,”
 said my uncle, “if Michael had not told me that you were aware of the
circumstances under which he feels it his duty to leave us. After your
aunt’s interference (quite incomprehensible to me), the man hardly
knows what to do. Being your groom, he begs me to ask if there is any
impropriety in his leaving the difficulty to your decision. I tell you
of his request, Mina; but I strongly advise you to decline taking any
responsibility on yourself.”

I answered mechanically, accepting my uncle’s suggestion, while my
thoughts were wholly absorbed in this last of the many extraordinary
proceedings on Lady Claudia’s part since Michael had entered the house.
There are limits--out of books and plays--to the innocence of a young
unmarried woman. After what I had just heard the doubts which had thus
far perplexed me were suddenly and completely cleared up. I said to my
secret self: “She has some human feeling left. If her son goes away, she
knows that they may never meet again!”

From the moment when my mind emerged from the darkness, I recovered the
use of such intelligence and courage as I naturally possessed. From this
point, you will find that, right or wrong, I saw my way before me, and
took it.

To say that I felt for the General with my whole heart, is merely to own
that I could be commonly grateful. I sat on his knee, and laid my cheek
against his cheek, and thanked him for his long, long years of kindness
to me. He stopped me in his simple generous way. “Why, Mina, you talk
as if you were going to leave us!” I started up, and went to the window,
opening it and complaining of the heat, and so concealing from him that
he had unconsciously anticipated the event that was indeed to come. When
I returned to my chair, he helped me to recover myself by alluding once
more to his wife. He feared that her health was in some way impaired. In
the time when they had first met, she was subject to nervous maladies,
having their origin in a “calamity” which was never mentioned by either
of them in later days. She might possibly be suffering again, from
some other form of nervous derangement, and he seriously thought of
persuading her to send for medical advice.

Under ordinary circumstances, this vague reference to a “calamity” would
not have excited any special interest in me. But my mind was now in a
state of morbid suspicion. I had not heard how long my uncle and aunt
had been married; but I remembered that Michael had described himself
as being twenty-six years old. Bearing these circumstances in mind, it
struck me that I might be acting wisely (in Michael’s interest) if I
persuaded the General to speak further of what had happened, at the time
when he met the woman whom an evil destiny had bestowed on him for a
wife. Nothing but the consideration of serving the man I loved would
have reconciled me to making my own secret use of the recollections
which my uncle might innocently confide to me. As it was, I thought the
means would, in this case, he for once justified by the end. Before we
part, I have little doubt that you will think so too.

I found it an easier task than I had anticipated to turn the talk back
again to the days when the General had seen Lady Claudia for the first
time. He was proud of the circumstances under which he had won his wife.
Ah, how my heart ached for him as I saw his eyes sparkle, and the color
mount in his fine rugged face!

This is the substance of what I heard from him. I tell it briefly,
because it is still painful to me to tell it at all.


My uncle had met Lady Claudia at her father’s country house. She had
then reappeared in society, after a period of seclusion, passed partly
in England, partly on the Continent. Before the date of her retirement,
she had been engaged to marry a French nobleman, equally illustrious by
his birth and by his diplomatic services in the East. Within a few weeks
of the wedding-day, he was drowned by the wreck of his yacht. This was
the calamity to which my uncle had referred.

Lady Claudia’s mind was so seriously affected by the dreadful event,
that the doctors refused to answer for the consequences, unless she was
at once placed in the strictest retirement. Her mother, and a French
maid devotedly attached to her, were the only persons whom it was
considered safe for the young lady to see, until time and care had in
some degree composed her. Her return to her friends and admirers, after
the necessary interval of seclusion, was naturally a subject of sincere
rejoicing among the guests assembled in her father’s house. My uncle’s
interest in Lady Claudia soon developed into love. They were equals
in rank, and well suited to each other in age. The parents raised no
obstacles; but they did not conceal from their guest that the disaster
which had befallen their daughter was but too likely to disincline her
to receive his addresses, or any man’s addresses, favorably. To their
surprise, they proved to be wrong. The young lady was touched by the
simplicity and the delicacy with which her lover urged his suit. She
had lived among worldly people. This was a man whose devotion she could
believe to be sincere. They were married.

Had no unusual circumstances occurred? Had nothing happened which the
General had forgotten? Nothing.

X.

IT is surely needless that I should stop here, to draw the plain
inferences from the events just related.

Any person who remembers that the shawl in which the infant was wrapped
came from those Eastern regions which were associated with the French
nobleman’s diplomatic services--also, that the faults of composition
in the letter found on the child were exactly the faults likely to have
been committed by the French maid--any person who follows these traces
can find his way to the truth as I found mine.

Returning for a moment to the hopes which I had formed of being of some
service to Michael, I have only to say that they were at once destroyed,
when I heard of the death by drowning of the man to whom the evidence
pointed as his father. The prospect looked equally barren when I thought
of the miserable mother. That she should openly acknowledge her son
in her position was perhaps not to be expected of any woman. Had she
courage enough, or, in plainer words, heart enough to acknowledge him
privately?

I called to mind again some of the apparent caprices and contradictions
in Lady Claudia’s conduct, on the memorable day when Michael had
presented himself to fill the vacant place. Look back with me to the
record of what she said and did on that occasion, by the light of your
present knowledge, and you will see that his likeness to his father must
have struck her when he entered the room, and that his statement of his
age must have correctly described the age of her son. Recall the actions
that followed, after she had been exhausted by her first successful
efforts at self-control--the withdrawal to the window to conceal her
face; the clutch at the curtain when she felt herself sinking; the
harshness of manner under which she concealed her emotions when
she ventured to speak to him; the reiterated inconsistencies and
vacillations of conduct that followed, all alike due to the protest of
Nature, desperately resisted to the last--and say if I did her injustice
when I believed her to be incapable of running the smallest risk of
discovery at the prompting of maternal love.

There remained, then, only Michael to think of. I remember how he had
spoken of the unknown parents whom he neither expected nor cared to
discover. Still, I could not reconcile it to my conscience to accept a
chance outbreak of temper as my sufficient justification for keeping
him in ignorance of a discovery which so nearly concerned him. It seemed
at least to be my duty to make myself acquainted with the true state of
his feelings, before I decided to bear the burden of silence with me to
my grave.

What I felt it my duty to do in this serious matter, I determined to do
at once. Besides, let me honestly own that I felt lonely and desolate,
oppressed by the critical situation in which I was placed, and eager for
the relief that it would be to me only to hear the sound of Michael’s
voice. I sent my maid to say that I wished to speak to him immediately.
The crisis was already hanging over my head. That one act brought it
down.

XI.

He came in, and stood modestly waiting at the door.

After making him take a chair, I began by saying that I had received
his message, and that, acting on my uncle’s advice, I must abstain from
interfering in the question of his leaving, or not leaving, his place.
Having in this way established a reason for sending for him, I alluded
next to the loss that he had sustained, and asked if he had any prospect
of finding out the person who had entered his room in his absence. On
his reply in the negative, I spoke of the serious results to him of
the act of destruction that had been committed. “Your last chance of
discovering your parents,” I said, “has been cruelly destroyed.”

He smiled sadly. “You know already, miss, that I never expected to
discover them.”

I ventured a little nearer to the object I had in view.

“Do you never think of your mother?” I asked. “At your age, she might be
still living. Can you give up all hope of finding her, without feeling
your heart ache?”

“If I have done her wrong, in believing that she deserted me,” he
answered, “the heart-ache is but a poor way of expressing the remorse
that I should feel.”

I ventured nearer still.

“Even if you were right,” I began--“even it she did desert you--”

He interrupted me sternly. “I would not cross the street to see her,”
 he said. “A woman who deserts her child is a monster. Forgive me for
speaking so, miss! When I see good mothers and their children it maddens
me when I think of what _my_ childhood was.”

Hearing these words, and watching him attentively while he spoke, I
could see that my silence would be a mercy, not a crime. I hastened to
speak of other things.

“If you decide to leave us,” I said, “when shall you go?”

His eyes softened instantly. Little by little the color faded out of his
face as he answered me.

“The General kindly said, when I spoke of leaving my place--” His voice
faltered, and he paused to steady it. “My master,” he resumed, “said
that I need not keep my new employer waiting by staying for the
customary month, provided--provided you were willing to dispense with my
services.”

So far, I had succeeded in controlling myself. At that reply I felt
my resolution failing me. I saw how he suffered; I saw how manfully he
struggled to conceal it.

“I am not willing,” I said. “I am sorry--very, very sorry to lose you.
But I will do anything that is for your good. I can say no more.”

He rose suddenly, as if to leave the room; mastered himself; stood for
a moment silently looking at me--then looked away again, and said his
parting words.

“If I succeed, Miss Mina, in my new employment--if I get on to higher
things--is it--is it presuming too much, to ask if I might, some
day--perhaps when you are out riding alone--if I might speak to
you--only to ask if you are well and happy--”

He could say no more. I saw the tears in his eyes; saw him shaken by the
convulsive breathings which break from men in the rare moments when they
cry. He forced it back even then. He bowed to me--oh, God, he bowed to
me, as if he were only my servant! as if he were too far below me to
take my hand, even at that moment! I could have endured anything else;
I believe I could still have restrained myself under any other
circumstances. It matters little now; my confession must be made,
whatever you may think of me. I flew to him like a frenzied creature--I
threw my arms round his neck--I said to him, “Oh, Michael, don’t you
know that I love you?” And then I laid my head on his breast, and held
him to me, and said no more.

In that moment of silence, the door of the room was opened. I started,
and looked up. Lady Claudia was standing on the threshold.

I saw in her face that she had been listening--she must have followed
him when he was on his way to my room. That conviction steadied me. I
took his hand in mine, and stood side by side with him, waiting for her
to speak first. She looked at Michael, not at me. She advanced a step or
two, and addressed him in these words:

“It is just possible that _you_ have some sense of decency left. Leave
the room.”

That deliberate insult was all that I wanted to make me completely
mistress of myself. I told Michael to wait a moment, and opened my
writing desk. I wrote on an envelope the address in London of a faithful
old servant, who had attended my mother in her last moments. I gave it
to Michael. “Call there to-morrow morning,” I said. “You will find me
waiting for you.”

He looked at Lady Claudia, evidently unwilling to leave me alone with
her. “Fear nothing,” I said; “I am old enough to take care of myself.
I have only a word to say to this lady before I leave the house.” With
that, I took his arm, and walked with him to the door, and said good-by
almost as composedly as if we had been husband and wife already.

Lady Claudia’s eyes followed me as I shut the door again and crossed
the room to a second door which led into my bed-chamber. She suddenly
stepped up to me, just as I was entering the room, and laid her hand on
my arm.

“What do I see in your face?” she asked as much of herself as of
me--with her eyes fixed in keen inquiry on mine.

“You shall know directly,” I answered. “Let me get my bonnet and cloak
first.”

“Do you mean to leave the house?”

“I do.”

She rang the bell. I quietly dressed myself, to go out.

The servant answered the bell, as I returned to the sitting-room.

“Tell your master I wish to see him instantly,” said Lady Claudia.

“My master has gone out, my lady.”

“To his club?”

“I believe so, my lady.”

“I will send you with a letter to him. Come back when I ring again.” She
turned to me as the man withdrew. “Do you refuse to stay here until the
General returns?”

“I shall be happy to see the General, if you will inclose my address in
your letter to him.”

Replying in those terms, I wrote the address for the second time. Lady
Claudia knew perfectly well, when I gave it to her, that I was going
to a respectable house kept by a woman who had nursed me when I was a
child.

“One last question,” she said. “Am I to tell the General that it is your
intention to marry your groom?”

Her tone stung me into making an answer which I regretted the moment it
had passed my lips.

“You can put it more plainly, if you like,” I said. “You can tell the
General that it is my intention to marry _your_ son.”

She was near the door, on the point of leaving me. As I spoke, she
turned with a ghastly stare of horror--felt about her with her hands as
if she was groping in darkness--and dropped on the floor.

I instantly summoned help. The women-servants carried her to my bed.
While they were restoring her to herself, I wrote a few lines telling
the miserable woman how I had discovered her secret.

“Your husband’s tranquillity,” I added, “is as precious to me as my own.
As for your son, you know what he thinks of the mother who deserted him.
Your secret is safe in my keeping--safe from your husband, safe from
your son, to the end of my life.”

I sealed up those words, and gave them to her when she had come to
herself again. I never heard from her in reply. I have never seen her
from that time to this. She knows she can trust me.

And what did my good uncle say, when we next met? I would rather report
what he did, when he had got the better of his first feelings of anger
and surprise on hearing of my contemplated marriage. He consented to
receive us on our wedding-day; and he gave my husband the appointment
which places us both in an independent position for life.

But he had his misgivings. He checked me when I tried to thank him.

“Come back in a year’s time,” he said. “I will wait to be thanked till
the experience of your married life tells me that I have deserved it.”

The year passed; and the General received the honest expression of my
gratitude. He smiled and kissed me; but there was something in his face
which suggested that he was not quite satisfied yet.

“Do you believe that I have spoken sincerely?” I asked.

“I firmly believe it,” he answered--and there he stopped.

A wiser woman would have taken the hint and dropped the subject. My
folly persisted in putting another question:

“Tell me, uncle. Haven’t I proved that I was right when I married my
groom?”

“No, my dear. You have only proved that you are a lucky woman!”



MR. LEPEL AND THE HOUSEKEEPER

FIRST EPOCH.

THE Italians are born actors.

At this conclusion I arrived, sitting in a Roman theater--now many years
since. My friend and traveling companion, Rothsay, cordially agreed
with me. Experience had given us some claim to form an opinion. We had
visited, at that time, nearly every city in Italy. Where-ever a theater
was open, we had attended the performances of the companies which travel
from place to place; and we had never seen bad acting from first to
last. Men and women, whose names are absolutely unknown in England,
played (in modern comedy and drama for the most part) with a general
level of dramatic ability which I have never seen equaled in the
theaters of other nations. Incapable Italian actors there must be, no
doubt. For my own part I have only discovered them, by ones and twos,
in England; appearing among the persons engaged to support Salvini and
Ristori before the audiences of London.

On the occasion of which I am now writing, the night’s performances
consisted of two plays. An accident, to be presently related, prevented
us from seeing more than the introductory part of the second piece.
That one act--in respect of the influence which the remembrance of it
afterward exercised over Rothsay and myself--claims a place of its own
in the opening pages of the present narrative.

The scene of the story was laid in one of the principalities of Italy,
in the bygone days of the Carbonaro conspiracies. The chief persons were
two young noblemen, friends affectionately attached to each other, and a
beautiful girl born in the lower ranks of life.

On the rising of the curtain, the scene before us was the courtyard of
a prison. We found the beautiful girl (called Celia as well as I can
recollect) in great distress; confiding her sorrows to the jailer’s
daughter. Her father was pining in the prison, charged with an offense
of which he was innocent; and she herself was suffering the tortures
of hopeless love. She was on the point of confiding her secret to her
friend, when the appearance of the young nobleman closed her lips. The
girls at once withdrew; and the two friends--whom I now only remember as
the Marquis and the Count--began the dialogue which prepared us for the
story of the play.

The Marquis had been tried for conspiracy against the reigning Prince
and his government; had been found guilty, and is condemned to be shot
that evening. He accepts his sentence with the resignation of a man
who is weary of his life. Young as he is, he has tried the round of
pleasures without enjoyment; he has no interests, no aspirations, no
hopes; he looks on death as a welcome release. His friend the Count,
admitted to a farewell interview, has invented a stratagem by which the
prisoner may escape and take to flight. The Marquis expresses a grateful
sense of obligation, and prefers being shot. “I don’t value my life,”
 he says; “I am not a happy man like you.” Upon this the Count mentions
circumstances which he has hitherto kept secret. He loves the charming
Celia, and loves in vain. Her reputation is unsullied; she possesses
every good quality that a man can desire in a wife--but the Count’s
social position forbids him to marry a woman of low birth. He is
heart-broken; and he too finds life without hope a burden that is not
to be borne. The Marquis at once sees a way of devoting himself to his
friend’s interests. He is rich; his money is at his own disposal; he
will bequeath a marriage portion to Celia which will make her one of the
richest women in Italy. The Count receives this proposal with a sigh.
“No money,” he says, “will remove the obstacle that still remains. My
father’s fatal objection to Celia is her rank in life.” The Marquis
walks apart--considers a little--consults his watch--and returns with a
new idea. “I have nearly two hours of life still left,” he says. “Send
for Celia: she was here just now, and she is probably in her father’s
cell.” The Count is at a loss to understand what this proposal means.
The Marquis explains himself. “I ask your permission,” he resumes, “to
offer marriage to Celia--for your sake. The chaplain of the prison will
perform the ceremony. Before dark, the girl you love will be my widow.
My widow is a lady of title--a fit wife for the greatest nobleman in
the land.” The Count protests and refuses in vain. The jailer is sent
to find Celia. She appears. Unable to endure the scene, the Count rushes
out in horror. The Marquis takes the girl into his confidence, and makes
his excuses. If she becomes a widow of rank, she may not only marry the
Count, but will be in a position to procure the liberty of the innocent
old man, whose strength is failing him under the rigors of imprisonment.
Celia hesitates. After a struggle with herself, filial love prevails,
and she consents. The jailer announces that the chaplain is waiting; the
bride and bridegroom withdraw to the prison chapel. Left on the stage,
the jailer hears a distant sound in the city, which he is at a loss to
understand. It sinks, increases again, travels nearer to the prison, and
now betrays itself as the sound of multitudinous voices in a state of
furious uproar. Has the conspiracy broken out again? Yes! The whole
population has risen; the soldiers have refused to fire on the people;
the terrified Prince has dismissed his ministers, and promises a
constitution. The Marquis, returning from the ceremony which has just
made Celia his wife, is presented with a free pardon, and with the offer
of a high place in the re-formed ministry. A new life is opening before
him--and he has innocently ruined his friend’s prospects! On this
striking situation the drop-curtain falls.

While we were still applauding the first act, Rothsay alarmed me: he
dropped from his seat at my side, like a man struck dead. The stifling
heat in the theater had proved too much for him. We carried him out at
once into the fresh air. When he came to his senses, my friend entreated
me to leave him, and see the end of the play. To my mind, he looked as
if he might faint again. I insisted on going back with him to our hotel.

On the next day I went to the theater, to ascertain if the play would be
repeated. The box-office was closed. The dramatic company had left Rome.

My interest in discovering how the story ended led me next to the
booksellers’ shops--in the hope of buying the play. Nobody knew anything
about it. Nobody could tell me whether it was the original work of an
Italian writer, or whether it had been stolen (and probably disfigured)
from the French. As a fragment I had seen it. As a fragment it has
remained from that time to this.

SECOND EPOCH.

ONE of my objects in writing these lines is to vindicate the character
of an innocent woman (formerly in my service as housekeeper) who has
been cruelly slandered. Absorbed in the pursuit of my purpose, it has
only now occurred to me that strangers may desire to know something more
than they know now of myself and my friend. “Give us some idea,” they
may say, “of what sort of persons you are, if you wish to interest us at
the outset of your story.”

A most reasonable suggestion, I admit. Unfortunately, I am not the right
man to comply with it.

In the first place, I cannot pretend to pronounce judgment on my own
character. In the second place, I am incapable of writing impartially
of my friend. At the imminent risk of his own life, Rothsay rescued me
from a dreadful death by accident, when we were at college together. Who
can expect me to speak of his faults? I am not even capable of seeing
them.

Under these embarrassing circumstances--and not forgetting, at the same
time, that a servant’s opinion of his master and his master’s friends
may generally be trusted not to err on the favorable side--I am tempted
to call my valet as a witness to character.

I slept badly on our first night at Rome; and I happened to be awake
while the man was talking of us confidentially in the courtyard of
the hotel--just under my bedroom window. Here, to the best of my
recollection, is a faithful report of what he said to some friend among
the servants who understood English:

“My master’s well connected, you must know--though he’s only plain Mr.
Lepel. His uncle’s the great lawyer, Lord Lepel; and his late father was
a banker. Rich, did you say? I should think he _was_ rich--and be hanged
to him! No, not married, and not likely to be. Owns he was forty last
birthday; a regular old bachelor. Not a bad sort, taking him altogether.
The worst of him is, he is one of the most indiscreet persons I ever
met with. Does the queerest things, when the whim takes him, and doesn’t
care what other people think of it. They say the Lepels have all got a
slate loose in the upper story. Oh, no; not a very old family--I mean,
nothing compared to the family of his friend, young Rothsay. _They_
count back, as I have heard, to the ancient kings of Scotland. Between
ourselves, the ancient kings haven’t left the Rothsays much money. They
would be glad, I’ll be bound, to get my rich master for one of their
daughters. Poor as Job, I tell you. This young fellow, traveling with
us, has never had a spare five-pound note since he was born. Plenty of
brains in his head, I grant you; and a little too apt sometimes to be
suspicious of other people. But liberal--oh, give him his due--liberal
in a small way. Tips me with a sovereign now and then. I take it--Lord
bless you, I take it. What do you say? Has he got any employment? Not
he! Dabbles in chemistry (experiments, and that sort of thing) by way
of amusing himself; and tells the most infernal lies about it. The other
day he showed me a bottle about as big as a thimble, with what looked
like water in it, and said it was enough to poison everybody in the
hotel. What rot! Isn’t that the clock striking again? Near about
bedtime, I should say. Wish you good night.”

There are our characters--drawn on the principle of justice without
mercy, by an impudent rascal who is the best valet in England. Now you
know what sort of persons we are; and now we may go on again.


Rothsay and I parted, soon after our night at the theater. He went to
Civita Vecchia to join a friend’s yacht, waiting for him in the harbor.
I turned homeward, traveling at a leisurely rate through the Tyrol and
Germany.

After my arrival in England, certain events in my life occurred
which did not appear to have any connection at the time. They led,
nevertheless, to consequences which seriously altered the relations of
happy past years between Rothsay and myself.

The first event took place on my return to my house in London. I found
among the letters waiting for me an invitation from Lord Lepel to spend
a few weeks with him at his country seat in Sussex.

I had made so many excuses, in past years, when I received invitations
from my uncle, that I was really ashamed to plead engagements in London
again. There was no unfriendly feeling between us. My only motive for
keeping away from him took its rise in dislike of the ordinary modes
of life in an English country-house. A man who feels no interest in
politics, who cares nothing for field sports, who is impatient of
amateur music and incapable of small talk, is a man out of his element
in country society. This was my unlucky case. I went to Lord Lepel’s
house sorely against my will; longing already for the day when it would
be time to say good-by.

The routine of my uncle’s establishment had remained unaltered since my
last experience of it.

I found my lord expressing the same pride in his collection of old
masters, and telling the same story of the wonderful escape of his
picture-gallery from fire--I renewed my acquaintance with the same
members of Parliament among the guests, all on the same side in
politics--I joined in the same dreary amusements--I saluted the same
resident priest (the Lepels are all born and bred Roman Catholics)--I
submitted to the same rigidly early breakfast hour; and inwardly cursed
the same peremptory bell, ringing as a means of reminding us of our
meals. The one change that presented itself was a change out of the
house. Death had removed the lodgekeeper at the park-gate. His widow and
daughter (Mrs. Rymer and little Susan) remained in their pretty cottage.
They had been allowed by my lord’s kindness to take charge of the gate.

Out walking, on the morning after my arrival, I was caught in a shower
on my way back to the park, and took shelter in the lodge.

In the bygone days I had respected Mrs. Rymer’s husband as a thoroughly
worthy man--but Mrs. Rymer herself was no great favorite of mine. She
had married beneath her, as the phrase is, and she was a little
too conscious of it. A woman with a sharp eye to her own interests;
selfishly discontented with her position in life, and not very
scrupulous in her choice of means when she had an end in view: that is
how I describe Mrs. Rymer. Her daughter, whom I only remembered as a
weakly child, astonished me when I saw her again after the interval that
had elapsed. The backward flower had bloomed into perfect health.
Susan was now a lovely little modest girl of seventeen--with a natural
delicacy and refinement of manner, which marked her to my mind as one
of Nature’s gentlewomen. When I entered the lodge she was writing at
a table in a corner, having some books on it, and rose to withdraw. I
begged that she would proceed with her employment, and asked if I might
know what it was. She answered me with a blush, and a pretty brightening
of her clear blue eyes. “I am trying, sir, to teach myself French,” she
said. The weather showed no signs of improving--I volunteered to help
her, and found her such an attentive and intelligent pupil that I
looked in at the lodge from time to time afterward, and continued my
instructions. The younger men among my uncle’s guests set their own
stupid construction on my attentions “to the girl at the gate,” as they
called her--rather too familiarly, according to my notions of propriety.
I contrived to remind them that I was old enough to be Susan’s father,
in a manner which put an end to their jokes; and I was pleased to hear,
when I next went to the lodge, that Mrs. Rymer had been wise enough to
keep these facetious gentlemen at their proper distance.

The day of my departure arrived. Lord Leper took leave of me kindly, and
asked for news of Rothsay. “Let me know when your friend returns,” my
uncle said; “he belongs to a good old stock. Put me in mind of him when
I next invite you to come to my house.”

On my way to the train I stopped of course at the lodge to say good-by.
Mrs. Rymer came out alone I asked for Susan.

“My daughter is not very well to-day.”

“Is she confined to her room?”

“She is in the parlor.”

I might have been mistaken, but I thought Mrs. Rymer answered me in no
very friendly way. Resolved to judge for myself, I entered the lodge,
and found my poor little pupil sitting in a corner, crying. When I asked
her what was the matter, the excuse of a “bad headache” was the only
reply that I received. The natures of young girls are a hopeless
puzzle to me. Susan seemed, for some reason which it was impossible to
understand, to be afraid to look at me.

“Have you and your mother been quarreling?” I asked.

“Oh, no!”

She denied it with such evident sincerity that I could not for a moment
suspect her of deceiving me. Whatever the cause of her distress might
be, it was plain that she had her own reasons for keeping it a secret.

Her French books were on the table. I tried a little allusion to her
lessons.

“I hope you will go on regularly with your studies,” I said.

“I will do my best, sir--without you to help me.”

She said it so sadly that I proposed--purely from the wish to encourage
her--a continuation of our lessons through the post.

“Send your exercises to me once a week,” I suggested; “and I will return
them corrected.”

She thanked me in low tones, with a shyness of manner which I had
never noticed in her before. I had done my best to cheer her--and I was
conscious, as we shook hands at parting, that I had failed. A feeling
of disappointment overcomes me when I see young people out of spirits. I
was sorry for Susan.

THIRD EPOCH.

ONE of my faults (which has not been included in the list set forth
by my valet) is a disinclination to occupy myself with my own domestic
affairs. The proceedings of my footman, while I had been away from
home, left me no alternative but to dismiss him on my return. With this
exertion of authority my interference as chief of the household came to
an end. I left it to my excellent housekeeper, Mrs. Mozeen, to find
a sober successor to the drunken vagabond who had been sent away. She
discovered a respectable young man--tall, plump, and rosy--whose name
was Joseph, and whose character was beyond reproach. I have but one
excuse for noticing such a trifling event as this. It took its place, at
a later period, in the chain which was slowly winding itself round me.

My uncle had asked me to prolong my visit and I should probably
have consented, but for anxiety on the subject of a near and dear
relative--my sister. Her health had been failing since the death of her
husband, to whom she was tenderly attached. I heard news of her while I
was in Sussex, which hurried me back to town. In a month more, her death
deprived me of my last living relation. She left no children; and my two
brothers had both died unmarried while they were still young men.

This affliction placed me in a position of serious embarrassment, in
regard to the disposal of my property after my death.

I had hitherto made no will; being well aware that my fortune (which was
entirely in money) would go in due course of law to the person of all
others who would employ it to the best purpose--that is to say, to my
sister as my nearest of kin. As I was now situated, my property would
revert to my uncle if I died intestate. He was a richer man than I was.
Of his two children, both sons, the eldest would inherit his estates:
the youngest had already succeeded to his mother’s ample fortune. Having
literally no family claims on me, I felt bound to recognize the wider
demands of poverty and misfortune, and to devote my superfluous wealth
to increasing the revenues of charitable institutions. As to minor
legacies, I owed it to my good housekeeper, Mrs. Mozeen, not to forget
the faithful services of past years. Need I add--if I had been free to
act as I pleased--that I should have gladly made Rothsay the object of
a handsome bequest? But this was not to be. My friend was a man morbidly
sensitive on the subject of money. In the early days of our intercourse
we had been for the first and only time on the verge of a quarrel, when
I had asked (as a favor to myself) to be allowed to provide for him in
my will.

“It is because I am poor,” he explained, “that I refuse to profit by
your kindness--though I feel it gratefully.”

I failed to understand him--and said so plainly.

“You will understand this,” he resumed; “I should never recover my sense
of degradation, if a mercenary motive on my side was associated with
our friendship. Don’t say it’s impossible! You know as well as I do that
appearances would be against me, in the eyes of the world. Besides, I
don’t want money; my own small income is enough for me. Make me your
executor if you like, and leave me the customary present of five hundred
pounds. If you exceed that sum I declare on my word of honor that I
will not touch one farthing of it.” He took my hand, and pressed it
fervently. “Do me a favor,” he said. “Never let us speak of this again!”

I understood that I must yield--or lose my friend.

In now making my will, I accordingly appointed Rothsay one of my
executors, on the terms that he had prescribed. The minor legacies
having been next duly reduced to writing, I left the bulk of my fortune
to public charities.

My lawyer laid the fair copy of the will on my table.

“A dreary disposition of property for a man of your age,” he said, “I
hope to receive a new set of instructions before you are a year older.”

“What instructions?” I asked.

“To provide for your wife and children,” he answered.

My wife and children! The idea seemed to be so absurd that I burst out
laughing. It never occurred to me that there could be any absurdity from
my own point of view.

I was sitting alone, after my legal adviser had taken his leave, looking
absently at the newly-engrossed will, when I heard a sharp knock at the
house-door which I thought I recognized. In another minute Rothsay’s
bright face enlivened my dull room. He had returned from the
Mediterranean that morning.

“Am I interrupting you?” he asked, pointing to the leaves of manuscript
before me. “Are you writing a book?”

“I am making my will.”

His manner changed; he looked at me seriously.

“Do you remember what I said, when we once talked of your will?” he
asked. I set his doubts at rest immediately--but he was not quite
satisfied yet. “Can’t you put your will away?” he suggested. “I hate the
sight of anything that reminds me of death.”

“Give me a minute to sign it,” I said--and rang to summon the witnesses.

Mrs. Mozeen answered the bell. Rothsay looked at her, as if he wished to
have my housekeeper put away as well as my will. From the first
moment when he had seen her, he conceived a great dislike to that good
creature. There was nothing, I am sure, personally repellent about her.
She was a little slim quiet woman, with a pale complexion and bright
brown eyes. Her movements were gentle; her voice was low; her decent
gray dress was adapted to her age. Why Rothsay should dislike her was
more than he could explain himself. He turned his unreasonable
prejudice into a joke--and said he hated a woman who wore slate colored
cap-ribbons!

I explained to Mrs. Mozeen that I wanted witnesses to the signature of
my will. Naturally enough--being in the room at the time--she asked if
she could be one of them.

I was obliged to say No; and not to mortify her, I gave the reason.

“My will recognizes what I owe to your good services,” I said. “If
you are one of the witnesses, you will lose your legacy. Send up the
men-servants.”

With her customary tact, Mrs. Mozeen expressed her gratitude silently,
by a look--and left the room.

“Why couldn’t you tell that woman to send the servants, without
mentioning her legacy?” Rothsay asked. “My friend Lepel, you have done a
very foolish thing.”

“In what way?”

“You have given Mrs. Mozeen an interest in your death.”

It was impossible to make a serious reply to this ridiculous exhibition
of Rothsay’s prejudice against poor Mrs. Mozeen.

“When am I to be murdered?” I asked. “And how is it to be done? Poison?”

“I’m not joking,” Rothsay answered. “You are infatuated about your
housekeeper. When you spoke of her legacy, did you notice her eyes.”

“Yes.”

“Did nothing strike you?”

“It struck me that they were unusually well preserved eyes for a woman
of her age.”

The appearance of the valet and the footman put an end to this idle
talk. The will was executed, and locked up. Our conversation turned on
Rothsay’s travels by sea. The cruise had been in every way successful.
The matchless shores of the Mediterranean defied description; the
sailing of the famous yacht had proved to be worthy of her reputation;
and, to crown all, Rothsay had come back to England, in a fair way, for
the first time in his life, of making money.

“I have discovered a treasure,” he announced.

“It _was_ a dirty little modern picture, picked up in a by-street at
Palermo. It is a Virgin and Child, by Guido.”

On further explanation it appeared that the picture exposed for sale was
painted on copper. Noticing the contrast between the rare material and
the wretchedly bad painting that covered it, Rothsay had called t o mind
some of the well-known stories of valuable works of art that had been
painted over for purposes of disguise. The price asked for the picture
amounted to little more than the value of the metal. Rothsay bought it.
His knowledge of chemistry enabled him to put his suspicion successfully
to the test; and one of the guests on board the yacht--a famous French
artist--had declared his conviction that the picture now revealed to
view was a genuine work by Guido. Such an opinion as this convinced
me that it would be worth while to submit my friend’s discovery to
the judgment of other experts. Consulted independently, these critics
confirmed the view taken by the celebrated personage who had first seen
the work. This result having been obtained, Rothsay asked my advice next
on the question of selling his picture. I at once thought of my uncle.
An undoubted work by Guido would surely be an acquisition to his
gallery. I had only (in accordance with his own request) to let him know
that my friend had returned to England. We might take the picture with
us, when we received our invitation to Lord Lepel’s house.

FOURTH EPOCH.

My uncle’s answer arrived by return of post. Other engagements obliged
him to defer receiving us for a month. At the end of that time, we were
cordially invited to visit him, and to stay as long as we liked.

In the interval that now passed, other events occurred--still of the
trifling kind.

One afternoon, just as I was thinking of taking my customary ride in the
park, the servant appeared charged with a basket of flowers, and with
a message from Mrs. Rymer, requesting me to honor her by accepting a
little offering from her daughter. Hearing that she was then waiting
in the hall, I told the man to show her in. Susan (as I ought to have
already mentioned) had sent her exercises to me regularly every week.
In returning them corrected, I had once or twice added a word of
well-deserved approval. The offering of flowers was evidently intended
to express my pupil’s grateful sense of the interest taken in her by her
teacher.

I had no reason, this time, to suppose that Mrs. Rymer entertained an
unfriendly feeling toward me. At the first words of greeting that passed
between us I perceived a change in her manner, which ran in the opposite
extreme. She overwhelmed me with the most elaborate demonstrations of
politeness and respect; dwelling on her gratitude for my kindness in
receiving her, and on her pride at seeing her daughter’s flowers on my
table, until I made a resolute effort to stop her by asking (as if it
was actually a matter of importance to me!) whether she was in London on
business or on pleasure.

“Oh, on business, sir! My poor husband invested his little savings in
bank stock, and I have just been drawing my dividend. I do hope you
don’t think my girl over-bold in venturing to send you a few flowers.
She wouldn’t allow me to interfere. I do assure you she would gather and
arrange them with her own hands. In themselves I know they are hardly
worth accepting; but if you will allow the motive to plead--”

I made another effort to stop Mrs. Rymer; I said her daughter could not
have sent me a prettier present.

The inexhaustible woman only went on more fluently than ever.

“She is so grateful, sir, and so proud of your goodness in looking at
her exercises. The difficulty of the French language seem as nothing to
her, now her motive is to please you. She is so devoted to her studies
that I find it difficult to induce her to take the exercise necessary
to her health; and, as you may perhaps remember, Susan was always
rather weakly as a child. She inherits her father’s constitution, Mr.
Lepel--not mine.”

Here, to my infinite relief, the servant appeared, announcing that my
horse was at the door.

Mrs. Rymer opened her mouth. I saw a coming flood of apologies on the
point of pouring out--and seized my hat on the spot. I declared I had an
appointment; I sent kind remembrances to Susan (pitying her for having
such a mother with my whole heart); I said I hoped to return to my
uncle’s house soon, and to continue the French lessons. The one thing
more that I remember was finding myself safe in the saddle, and out of
the reach of Mrs. Rymer’s tongue.

Reflecting on what had passed, it was plain to me that this woman had
some private end in view, and that my abrupt departure had prevented her
from finding the way to it. What motive could she possibly have for that
obstinate persistence in presenting poor Susan under a favorable aspect,
to a man who had already shown that he was honestly interested in her
pretty modest daughter? I tried hard to penetrate the mystery--and gave
it up in despair.

Three days before the date at which Rothsay and I were to pay our visit
to Lord Lepel, I found myself compelled to undergo one of the minor
miseries of human life. In other words I became one of the guests at a
large dinner-party. It was a rainy day in October. My position at the
table placed me between a window that was open and a door that was
hardly ever shut. I went to bed shivering; and woke the next morning
with a headache and a difficulty in breathing. On consulting the doctor,
I found that I was suffering from an attack of bronchitis. There was
no reason to be alarmed. If I remained indoors, and submitted to the
necessary treatment, I might hope to keep my engagement with my uncle in
ten days or a fortnight.

There was no alternative but to submit. I accordingly arranged with
Rothsay that he should present himself at Lord Lepel’s house (taking
the picture with him), on the date appointed for our visit, and that I
should follow as soon as I was well enough to travel.

On the day when he was to leave London, my friend kindly came to keep me
company for a while. He was followed into my room by Mrs. Mozeen, with
a bottle of medicine in her hand. This worthy creature, finding that the
doctor’s directions occasionally escaped my memory, devoted herself to
the duty of administering the remedies at the prescribed intervals of
time. When she left the room, having performed her duties as usual, I
saw Rothsay’s eyes follow her to the door with an expression of sardonic
curiosity. He put a strange question to me as soon as we were alone.

“Who engaged that new servant of yours?” he asked. “I mean the fat
fellow, with the curly flaxen hair.”

“Hiring servants,” I replied, “is not much in my way. I left the
engagement of the new man to Mrs. Mozeen.”

Rothsay walked gravely up to my bedside.

“Lepel,” he said, “your respectable housekeeper is in love with the fat
young footman.”

It is not easy to amuse a man suffering from bronchitis. But this
new outbreak of absurdity was more than I could resist, even with a
mustard-plaster on my chest.

“I thought I should raise your spirits,” Rothsay proceeded. “When I came
to your house this morning, the valet opened the door to me. I expressed
my surprise at his condescending to take that trouble. He informed
me that Joseph was otherwise engaged. ‘With anybody in particular?’
I asked, humoring the joke. ‘Yes, sir, with the housekeeper. She’s
teaching him how to brush his hair, so as to show off his good looks
to the best advantage.’ Make up your mind, my friend, to lose Mrs.
Mozeen--especially if she happens to have any money.”

“Nonsense, Rothsay! The poor woman is old enough to be Joseph’s mother.”

“My good fellow, that won’t make any difference to Joseph. In the days
when we were rich enough to keep a man-servant, our footman--as handsome
a fellow as ever you saw, and no older than I am--married a witch with
a lame leg. When I asked him why he had made such a fool of himself he
looked quite indignant, and said: ‘Sir! she has got six hundred pounds.’
He and the witch keep a public house. What will you bet me that we don’t
see your housekeeper drawing beer at the bar, and Joseph getting drunk
in the parlor, before we are a year older?”

I was not well enough to prolong my enjoyment of Rothsay’s boyish humor.
Besides, exaggeration to be really amusing must have some relation, no
matter how slender it may be, to the truth. My housekeeper belonged to a
respectable family, and was essentially a person accustomed to respect
herself. Her brother occupied a position of responsibility in the
establishment of a firm of chemists whom I had employed for years past.
Her late husband had farmed his own land, and had owed his ruin to
calamities for which he was in no way responsible. Kind-hearted Mrs.
Mozeen was just the woman to take a motherly interest in a
well-disposed lad like Joseph; and it was equally characteristic of
my valet--especially when Rothsay was thoughtless enough to encourage
him--to pervert an innocent action for the sake of indulging in a stupid
jest. I took advantage of my privilege as an invalid, and changed the
subject.

A week passed. I had expected to hear from Rothsay. To my surprise and
disappointment no letter arrived.

Susan was more considerate. She wrote, very modestly and prettily, to
say that she and her mother had heard of my illness from Mr. Rothsay,
and to express the hope that I should soon be restored to health. A few
days later, Mrs. Rymer’s politeness carried her to the length of taking
the journey to London to make inquiries at my door. I did not see her,
of course. She left word that she would have the honor of calling again.

The second week followed. I had by that time perfectly recovered from my
attack of bronchitis--and yet I was too ill to leave the house.

The doctor himself seemed to be at a loss to understand the symptoms
that now presented themselves. A vile sensation of nausea tried my
endurance, and an incomprehensible prostration of strength depressed
my spirits. I felt such a strange reluctance to exert myself that I
actually left it to Mrs. Mozeen to write to my uncle in my name, and say
that I was not yet well enough to visit him. My medical adviser tried
various methods of treatment; my housekeeper administered the prescribed
medicines with unremitting care; but nothing came of it. A physician of
great authority was called into consultation. Being completely puzzled,
he retreated to the last refuge of bewildered doctors. I asked him what
was the matter with me. And he answered: “Suppressed gout.”

FIFTH EPOCH.

MIDWAY in the third week, my uncle wrote to me as follows:


“I have been obliged to request your friend Rothsay to bring his visit
to a conclusion. Although he refuses to confess it, I have reason to
believe that he has committed the folly of falling seriously in love
with the young girl at my lodge gate. I have tried remonstrance in vain;
and I write to his father at the same time that I write to you. There
is much more that I might say. I reserve it for the time when I hope to
have the pleasure of seeing you, restored to health.”


Two days after the receipt of this alarming letter Rothsay returned to
me.

Ill as I was, I forgot my sufferings the moment I looked at him. Wild
and haggard, he stared at me with bloodshot eyes like a man demented.

“Do you think I am mad? I dare say I am. I can’t live without her.”
 Those were the first words he said when we shook hands.

But I had more influence over him than any other person; and, weak as I
was, I exerted it. Little by little, he became more reasonable; he began
to speak like his old self again.

To have expressed any surprise, on my part, at what had happened, would
have been not only imprudent, but unworthy of him and of me. My first
inquiry was suggested by the fear that he might have been hurried into
openly confessing his passion to Susan--although his position forbade
him to offer marriage. I had done him an injustice. His honorable nature
had shrunk from the cruelty of raising hopes, which, for all he knew
to the contrary, might never be realized. At the same time, he had his
reasons for believing that he was at least personally acceptable to her.

“She was always glad to see me,” said poor Rothsay. “We constantly
talked of you. She spoke of your kindness so prettily and so gratefully.
Oh, Lepel, it is not her beauty only that has won my heart! Her nature
is the nature of an angel.”

His voice failed him. For the first time in my remembrance of our long
companionship, he burst into tears.

I was so shocked and distressed that I had the greatest difficulty in
preserving my own self-control. In the effort to comfort him, I asked if
he had ventured to confide in his father.

“You are the favorite son,” I reminded him. “Is there no gleam of hope
in the future?”

He had written to his father. In silence he gave me the letter in reply.

It was expressed with a moderation which I had hardly dared to expect.
Mr. Rothsay the elder admitted that he had himself married for love, and
that his wife’s rank in the social scale (although higher than Susan’s)
had not been equal to his own.

“In such a family as ours,” he wrote--perhaps with pardonable pride--“we
raise our wives to our own degree. But this young person labors under a
double disadvantage. She is obscure, and she is poor. What have you to
offer her? Nothing. And what have I to give you? Nothing.”

This meant, as I interpreted it, that the main obstacle in the way was
Susan’s poverty. And I was rich! In the excitement that possessed me, I
followed the impulse of the moment headlong, like a child.

“While you were away from me,” I said to Rothsay, “did you never once
think of your old friend? Must I remind you that I can make Susan your
wife with one stroke of my pen?” He looked at me in silent surprise. I
took my check-book from the drawer of the table, and placed the inkstand
within reach. “Susan’s marriage portion,” I said, “is a matter of a line
of writing, with my name at the end of it.”

He burst out with an exclamation that stopped me, just as my pen touched
the paper.

“Good heavens!” he cried, “you are thinking of that play we saw at Rome!
Are we on the stage? Are you performing the part of the Marquis--and am
I the Count?”

I was so startled by this wild allusion to the past--I recognized with
such astonishment the reproduction of one of the dramatic situations
in the play, at a crisis in his life and mine--that the use of the
pen remained suspended in my hand. For the first time in my life I was
conscious of a sensation which resembled superstitious dread.

Rothsay recovered himself first. He misinterpreted what was passing in
my mind.

“Don’t think me ungrateful,” he said. “You dear, kind, good fellow,
consider for a moment, and you will see that it can’t be. What would be
said of her and of me, if you made Susan rich with your money, and if I
married her? The poor innocent would be called your cast-off mistress.
People would say: ‘He has behaved liberally to her, and his needy friend
has taken advantage of it.’”

The point of view which I had failed to see was put with terrible
directness of expression: the conviction that I was wrong was literally
forced on me. What reply could I make? Rothsay evidently felt for me.

“You are ill,” he said, gently; “let me leave you to rest.”

He held out his hand to say good-by. I insisted on his taking up his
abode with me, for the present at least. Ordinary persuasion failed to
induce him to yield. I put it on selfish grounds next.

“You have noticed that I am ill,” I said, “I want you to keep me
company.”

He gave way directly.

Through the wakeful night, I tried to consider what moral remedies might
be within our reach. The one useful conclusion at which I could arrive
was to induce Rothsay to try what absence and change might do to compose
his mind. To advise him to travel alone was out of the question. I wrote
to his one other old friend besides myself--the friend who had taken him
on a cruise in the Mediterranean.

The owner of the yacht had that very day given directions to have his
vessel laid up for the winter season. He at once countermanded the order
by telegraph. “I am an idle man,” he said, “and I am as fond of Rothsay
as you are. I will take him wherever he likes to go.” It was not easy to
persuade the object of these kind intentions to profit by them. Nothing
that I could say roused him. I spoke to him of his picture. He had left
it at my uncle’s house, and neither knew nor cared to know whether it
had been sold or not. The one consideration which ultimately influenced
Rothsay was presented by the doctor; speaking as follows (to quote his
own explanation) in the interests of my health:

“I warned your friend,” he said, “that his conduct was causing anxiety
which you were not strong enough to bear. On hearing this he at once
promised to follow the advice which you had given to him, and to join
the yacht. As you know, he has kept his word. May I ask if he has ever
followed the medical profession?”

Replying in the negative, I begged the doctor to tell me why he had put
his question.

He answered, “Mr. Rothsay requested me to tell him all that I knew
about your illness. I complied, of course; mentioning that I had lately
adopted a new method of treatment, and that I had every reason to feel
confident of the results. He was so interested in the symptoms of your
illness, and in the remedies being tried, that he took notes in his
pocketbook of what I had said. When he paid me that compliment, I
thought it possible that I might be speaking to a colleague.”

I was pleased to hear of my friend’s anxiety for my recovery. If I had
been in better health, I might have asked myself what reason he could
have had for making those entries in his pocketbook.

Three days later, another proof reached me of Rothsay’s anxiety for my
welfare.

The owner of the yacht wrote to beg that I would send him a report of my
health, addressed to a port on the south coast of England, to which they
were then bound. “If we don’t hear good news,” he added, “I have reason
to fear that Rothsay will overthrow our plans for the recovery of his
peace of mind by leaving the vessel, and making his own inquiries at
your bedside.”

With no small difficulty I roused myself sufficiently to write a few
words with my own hand. They were words that lied--for my poor friend’s
sake. In a postscript, I begged my correspondent to let me hear if the
effect produced on Rothsay had answered to our hopes and expectations.

SIXTH EPOCH.

THE weary days followed each other--and time failed to justify the
doctor’s confidence in his new remedies. I grew weaker and weaker.

My uncle came to see me. He was so alarmed that he insisted on a
consultation being held with his own physician. Another great authority
was called in, at the same time, by the urgent request of my own medical
man. These distinguished persons held more than one privy council,
before they would consent to give a positive opinion. It was an evasive
opinion (encumbered with hard words of Greek and Roman origin) when it
was at last pronounced. I waited until they had taken their leave, and
then appealed to my own doctor. “What do these men really think?” I
asked. “Shall I live, or die?”

The doctor answered for himself as well as for his illustrious
colleagues. “We have great faith in the new prescriptions,” he said.

I understood what that meant. They were afraid to tell me the truth. I
insisted on the truth.

“How long shall I live?” I said. “Till the end of the year?”

The reply followed in one terrible word:

“Perhaps.”

It was then the first week in December. I understood that I might
reckon--at the utmost--on three weeks of life. What I felt, on arriving
at this conclusion, I shall not say. It is the one secret I keep from
the readers of these lines.

The next day, Mrs. Rymer called once more to make inquiries. Not
satisfied with the servant’s report, she entreated that I would consent
to see her. My housekeeper, with her customary kindness, undertook to
convey the message. If she had been a wicked woman, would she have acted
in this way? “Mrs. Rymer seems to be sadly distressed,” she pleaded. “As
I understand, sir, she is suffering under some domestic anxiety which
can only be mentioned to yourself.”

Did this anxiety relate to Susan? The bare doubt of it decided me. I
consented to see Mrs. Rymer. Feeling it necessary to control her in the
use of her tongue, I spoke the moment the door was opened.

“I am suffering from illness; and I must ask you to spare me as much as
possible. What do you wish to say to me?”

The tone in which I addressed Mrs. Rymer would have offended a more
sensitive woman. The truth is, she had chosen an unfortunate time for
her visit. There were fluctuations in the progress of my malady; there
were days when I felt better, and days when I felt worse--and this was
a bad day. Moreover, my uncle had tried my temper that morning. He had
called to see me, on his way to winter in the south of France by his
physician’s advice; and he recommended a trial of change of air in
my case also. His country house (only thirty miles from London) was
entirely at my disposal; and the railway supplied beds for invalids. It
was useless to answer that I was not equal to the effort. He reminded me
that I had exerted myself to leave my bedchamber for my arm-chair in the
next room, and that a little additional resolution would enable me to
follow his advice. We parted in a state of irritation on either side
which, so far as I was concerned, had not subsided yet.

“I wish to speak to you, sir, about my daughter,” Mrs. Rymer answered.

The mere allusion to Susan had its composing effect on me. I said kindly
that I hoped she was well.

“Well in body,” Mrs. Rymer announced. “Far from it, sir, in mind.”

Before I could ask what this meant, we were interrupted by the
appearance of the servant, bringing the letters which had arrived for me
by the afternoon post. I told the man, impatiently, to put them on the
table at my side.

“What is distressing Susan?” I inquired, without stopping to look at the
letters.

“She is fretting, sir, about your illness. Oh, Mr. Lepel, if you would
only try the sweet country air! If you only had my good little Susan to
nurse you!”

_She_, too, taking my uncle’s view! And talking of Susan as my nurse!

“What are you thinking of?” I asked her. “A young girl like your
daughter nursing Me! You ought to have more regard for Susan’s good
name!”

“I know what _you_ ought to do!” She made that strange reply with a
furtive look at me, half in anger, half in alarm.

“Go on,” I said.

“Will you turn me out of your house for my impudence?” she asked.

“I will hear what you have to say to me. What ought I to do?”

“Marry Susan.”

I heard the woman plainly--and yet, I declare, I doubted the evidence of
my senses.

“She’s breaking her heart for you,” Mrs. Rymer burst out. “She’s been in
love with you since you first darkened our doors--and it will end in the
neighbors finding it out. I did my duty to her; I tried to stop it; I
tried to prevent you from seeing her, when you went away. Too late; the
mischief was done. When I see my girl fading day by day--crying about
you in secret, talking about you in her dreams--I can’t stand it; I must
speak out. Oh, yes, I know how far beneath you she is--the daughter of
your uncle’s servant. But she’s your equal, sir, in the sight of Heaven.
My lord’s priest converted her only last year--and my Susan is as good a
Papist as yourself.”

How could I let this go on? I felt that I ought to have stopped it
before.

“It’s possible,” I said, “that you may not be deliberately deceiving
me. If you are yourself deceived, I am bound to tell you the truth. Mr.
Rothsay loves your daughter, and, what is more, Mr. Rothsay has reason
to know that Susan--”

“That Susan loves him?” she interposed, with a mocking laugh. “Oh, Mr.
Lepel, is it possible that a clever man like you can’t see clearer than
that? My girl in love with Mr. Rothsay! She wouldn’t have looked at him
a second time if he hadn’t talked to her about _you_. When I complained
privately to my lord of Mr. Rothsay hanging about the lodge, do you
think she turned as pale as ashes, and cried when _he_ passed through
the gate, and said good-by?”

She had complained of Rothsay to Lord Lepel--I understood her at last!
She knew that my friend and all his family were poor. She had put
her own construction on the innocent interest that I had taken in her
daughter. Careless of the difference in rank, blind to the malady that
was killing me, she was now bent on separating Rothsay and Susan, by
throwing the girl into the arms of a rich husband like myself!

“You are wasting your breath,” I told her; “I don’t believe one word you
say to me.”

“Believe Susan, then!” cried the reckless woman. “Let me bring her here.
If she’s too shamefaced to own the truth, look at her--that’s all I
ask--look at her, and judge for yourself!”

This was intolerable. In justice to Susan, in justice to Rothsay, I
insisted on silence. “No more of it!” I said. “Take care how you provoke
me. Don’t you see that I am ill? don’t you see that you are irritating
me to no purpose?”

She altered her tone. “I’ll wait,” she said, quietly, “while you compose
yourself.”

With those words, she walked to the window, and stood there with
her back toward me. Was the wretch taking advantage of my helpless
condition? I stretched out my hand to ring the bell, and have her sent
away--and hesitated to degrade Susan’s mother, for Susan’s sake. In
my state of prostration, how could I arrive at a decision? My mind was
dreadfully disturbed; I felt the imperative necessity of turning my
thoughts to some other subject. Looking about me, the letters on the
table attracted my attention. Mechanically, I took them up; mechanically
I put them down again. Two of them slipped from my trembling fingers;
my eyes fell on the uppermost of the two. The address was in the
handwriting of the good friend with whom Rothsay was sailing.

Just as I had been speaking of Rothsay, here was the news of him for
which I had been waiting.

I opened the letter and read these words:


“There is, I fear, but little hope for our friend--unless this girl on
whom he has set his heart can (by some lucky change of circumstances)
become his wife. He has tried to master his weakness; but his own
infatuation is too much for him. He is really and truly in a state of
despair. Two evenings since--to give you a melancholy example of what I
mean--I was in my cabin, when I heard the alarm of a man overboard. The
man was Rothsay. My sailing-master, seeing that he was unable to swim,
jumped into the sea and rescued him, as I got on deck. Rothsay declares
it to have been an accident; and everybody believes him but myself.
I know the state of his mind. Don’t be alarmed; I will have him well
looked after; and I won’t give him up just yet. We are still bound
southward, with a fair wind. If the new scenes which I hope to show him
prove to be of no avail, I must reluctantly take him back to England.
In that case, which I don’t like to contemplate, you may see him
again--perhaps in a month’s time.”


He might return in a month’s time--return to hear of the death of the
one friend, on whose power and will to help him he might have relied.
If I failed to employ in his interests the short interval of life still
left to me, could I doubt (after what I had just read) what the end
would be? How could I help him? Oh, God! how could I help him?

Mrs. Rymer left the window, and returned to the chair which she had
occupied when I first received her.

“Are you quieter in your mind now?” she asked.

I neither answered her nor looked at her.

Still determined to reach her end, she tried again to force her unhappy
daughter on me. “Will you consent,” she persisted, “to see Susan?”

If she had been a little nearer to me, I am afraid I should have struck
her. “You wretch!” I said, “do you know that I am a dying man?”

“While there’s life there’s hope,” Mrs. Rymer remarked.

I ought to have controlled myself; but it was not to be done.

“Hope of your daughter being my rich widow?” I asked.

Her bitter answer followed instantly.

“Even then,” she said, “Susan wouldn’t marry Rothsay.”

A lie! If circumstances favored her, I knew, on Rothsay’s authority,
what Susan would do.

The thought burst on my mind, like light bursting on the eyes of a man
restored to sight. If Susan agreed to go through the form of marriage
with a dying bridegroom, my rich widow could (and would) become
Rothsay’s wife. Once more, the remembrance of the play at Rome returned,
and set the last embers of resolution, which sickness and suffering had
left to me, in a flame. The devoted friend of that imaginary story had
counted on death to complete his generous purpose in vain: _he_ had
been condemned by the tribunal of man, and had been reprieved. I--in
his place, and with his self-sacrifice in my mind--might found a firmer
trust in the future; for I had been condemned by the tribunal of God.

Encouraged by my silence, the obstinate woman persisted. “Won’t you even
send a message to Susan?” she asked.

Rashly, madly, without an instant’s hesitation, I answered:

“Go back to Susan, and say I leave it to _her_.”

Mrs. Rymer started to her feet. “You leave it to Susan to be your wife,
if she likes?”

“I do.”

“And if she consents?”

“_I_ consent.”

In two weeks and a day from that time, the deed was done. When Rothsay
returned to England, he would ask for Susan--and he would find my
virgin-widow rich and free.

SEVENTH EPOCH.

WHATEVER may be thought of my conduct, let me say this in justice to
myself--I was resolved that Susan should not be deceived.

Half an hour after Mrs. Rymer had left my house, I wrote to her
daughter, plainly revealing the motive which led me to offer marriage,
solely in the future interest of Rothsay and herself. “If you refuse,” I
said in conclusion, “you may depend on my understanding you and feeling
for you. But, if you consent--then I have a favor to ask Never let us
speak to one another of the profanation that we have agreed to commit,
for your faithful lover’s sake.”

I had formed a high opinion of Susan--too high an opinion as it seemed.
Her reply surprised and disappointed me. In other words, she gave her
consent.

I stipulated that the marriage should be kept strictly secret, for a
certain period. In my own mind I decided that the interval should
be held to expire, either on the day of my death, or on the day when
Rothsay returned.

My next proceeding was to write in confidence to the priest whom I have
already mentioned, in an earlier part of these pages. He has reasons of
his own for not permitting me to disclose the motive which induced him
to celebrate my marriage privately in the chapel at Lord Lepel’s house.
My uncle’s desire that I should try change of air, as offering a last
chance of recovery, was known to my medical attendant, and served as
a sufficient reason (although he protested against the risk) for my
removal to the country. I was carried to the station, and placed on
a bed--slung by ropes to the ceiling of a saloon carriage, so as to
prevent me from feeling the vibration when the train was in motion.
Faithful Mrs. Mozeen entreated to be allowed to accompany me. I was
reluctantly compelled to refuse compliance with this request, in justice
to the claims of my lord’s housekeeper; who had been accustomed to
exercise undivided authority in the household, and who had made every
preparation for my comfort. With her own hands, Mrs. Mozeen packed
everything that I required, including the medicines prescribed for the
occasion. She was deeply affected, poor soul, when we parted.

I bore the journey--happily for me, it was a short one--better than had
been anticipated. For the first few days that followed, the purer air of
the country seemed, in some degree, to revive me. But the deadly sense
of weakness, the slow sinking of the vital power in me, returned as the
time drew near for the marriage. The ceremony was performed at night.
Only Susan and her mother were present. No persons in the house but
ourselves had the faintest suspicion of what had happened.

I signed my new will (the priest and Mrs. Rymer being the witnesses)
in my bed that night. It left everything that I possessed, excepting a
legacy to Mrs. Mozeen, to my wife.

Obliged, it is needless to say, to preserve appearances, Susan remained
at the lodge as usual. But it was impossible to resist her entreaty to
be allowed to attend on me, for a few hours daily, as assistant to the
regular nurse. When she was alone with me, and had no inquisitive eyes
to dread, the poor girl showed a depth of feeling, which I was unable to
reconcile with the motives that could alone have induced her (as I then
supposed) to consent to the mockery of our marriage. On occasions when
I was so far able to resist the languor that oppressed me as to observe
what was passing at my bedside--I saw Susan look at me as if there were
thoughts in her pressing for utterance which she hesitated to express.
Once, she herself acknowledged this. “I have so much to say to you,” she
owned, “when you are stronger and fitter to hear me.” At other times,
her nerves seemed to be shaken by the spectacle of my sufferings. Her
kind hands trembled and made mistakes, when they had any nursing duties
to perform near me. The servants, noticing her, used to say, “That
pretty girl seems to be the most awkward person in the house.” On the
day that followed the ceremony in the chapel, this want of self-control
brought about an accident which led to serious results.

In removing the small chest which held my medicines from the shelf
on which it was placed, Susan let it drop on the floor. The two
full bottles still left were so completely shattered that not even a
teaspoonful of the contents was saved.

Shocked at what she had done, the poor girl volunteered to go herself to
my chemist in London by the first train. I refused to allow it. What did
it matter to me now, if my death from exhaustion was hastened by a day
or two? Why need my life be prolonged artificially by drugs, when I had
nothing left to live for? An excuse for me which would satisfy others
was easily found. I said that I had been long weary of physic, and that
the accident had decided me on refusing to take more.

That night I did not wake quite so often as usual. When she came to me
the next day, Susan noticed that I looked better. The day after, the
other nurse made the same observation. At the end of the week, I was
able to leave my bed, and sit by the fireside, while Susan read to
me. Some mysterious change in my health had completely falsified the
prediction of the medical men. I sent to London for my doctor--and told
him that the improvement in me had begun on the day when I left off
taking his remedies. “Can you explain it?” I asked.

He answered that no such “resurrection from the dead” (as he called it)
had ever happened in his long experience. On leaving me, he asked for
the latest prescriptions that had been written. I inquired what he was
going to do with them. “I mean to go to the chemist,” he replied, “and
to satisfy myself that your medicines have been properly made up.”

I owed it to Mrs. Mozeen’s true interest in me to tell her what had
happened. The same day I wrote to her. I also mentioned what the
doctor had said, and asked her to call on him, and ascertain if the
prescriptions had been shown to the chemist, and if any mistake had been
made.

A more innocently intended letter than this never was written. And yet
there are people who have declared that it was inspired by suspicion of
Mrs. Mozeen!

EIGHTH EPOCH.

WHETHER I was so weakened by illness as to be incapable of giving my
mind to more than one subject for reflection at a time (that subject
being now the extraordinary recovery of my health)--or whether I was
preoccupied by the effort, which I was in honor bound to make, to resist
the growing attraction to me of Susan’s society--I cannot presume to
say. This only I know: when the discovery of the terrible position
toward Rothsay in which I now stood suddenly overwhelmed me, an interval
of some days had passed. I cannot account for it. I can only say--so it
was.

Susan was in the room. I was wholly unable to hide from her the sudden
change of color which betrayed the horror that had overpowered me. She
said, anxiously: “What has frightened you?”

I don’t think I heard her. The play was in my memory again--the fatal
play, which had wound itself into the texture of Rothsay’s life and
mine. In vivid remembrance, I saw once more the dramatic situation of
the first act, and shrank from the reflection of it in the disaster
which had fallen on my friend and myself.

“What has frightened you?” Susan repeated.

I answered in one word--I whispered his name: “Rothsay!”

She looked at me in innocent surprise. “Has he met with some
misfortune?” she asked, quietly.

“Misfortune”--did she call it? Had I not said enough to disturb her
tranquillity in mentioning Rothsay’s name? “I am living!” I said.
“Living--and likely to live!”

Her answer expressed fervent gratitude. “Thank God for it!”

I looked at her, astonished as she had been astonished when she looked
at me.

“Susan, Susan,” I cried--“must I own it? I love you!”

She came nearer to me with timid pleasure in her eyes--with the first
faint light of a smile playing round her lips.

“You say it very strangely,” she murmured. “Surely, my dear one,
you ought to love me? Since the first day when you gave me my French
lesson--haven’t I loved You?”

“You love _me?_” I repeated. “Have you read--?” My voice failed me; I
could say no more.

She turned pale. “Read what?” she asked.

“My letter.”

“What letter?”

“The letter I wrote to you before we were married.”


Am I a coward? The bare recollection of what followed that reply makes
me tremble. Time has passed. I am a new man now; my health is restored;
my happiness is assured: I ought to be able to write on. No: it is
not to be done. How can I think coolly? how force myself to record the
suffering that I innocently, most innocently, inflicted on the sweetest
and truest of women? Nothing saved us from a parting as absolute as the
parting that follows death but the confession that had been wrung from
me at a time when my motive spoke for itself. The artless avowal of her
affection had been justified, had been honored, by the words which laid
my heart at her feet when I said “I love you.”

*****

She had risen to leave me. In a last look, we had silently resigned
ourselves to wait, apart from each other, for the day of reckoning that
must follow Rothsay’s return, when we heard the sound of carriage-wheels
on the drive that led to the house. In a minute more the man himself
entered the room.

He looked first at Susan--then at me. In both of us he saw the traces
that told of agitation endured, but not yet composed. Worn and weary he
waited, hesitating, near the door.

“Am I intruding?” he asked.

“We were thinking of you, and speaking of you,” I replied, “just before
you came in.”

“_We?_” he repeated, turning toward Susan once more. After a pause, he
offered me his hand--and drew it back.

“You don’t shake hands with me,” he said.

“I am waiting, Rothsay, until I know that we are the same firm friends
as ever.”

For the third time he looked at Susan.

“Will _you_ shake hands?” he asked.

She gave him her hand cordially. “May I stay here?” she said, addressing
herself to me.

In my situation at that moment, I understood the generous purpose that
animated her. But she had suffered enough already--I led her gently to
the door. “It will be better,” I whispered, “if you will wait downstairs
in the library.” She hesitated. “What will they say in the house?” she
objected, thinking of the servants and of the humble position which she
was still supposed to occupy. “It matters nothing what they say, now.” I
told her. She left us.

“There seems to be some private understanding between you,” Rothsay
said, when we were alone.

“You shall hear what it is,” I answered. “But I must beg you to excuse
me if I speak first of myself.”

“Are you alluding to your health?”

“Yes.”

“Quite needless, Lepel. I met your doctor this morning. I know that a
council of physicians decided you would die before the year was out.”

He paused there.

“And they proved to be wrong,” I added.

“They might have proved to be right,” Rothsay rejoined, “but for the
accident which spilled your medicine and the despair of yourself which
decided you on taking no more.”

I could hardly believe that I understood him. “Do you assert,” I said,
“that my medicine would have killed me, if I had taken the rest of it?”

“I have no doubt that it would.”

“Will you explain what you mean?”

“Let me have your explanation first. I was not prepared to find Susan in
your room. I was surprised to see traces of tears in her face. Something
has happened in my absence. Am I concerned in it?”

“You are.”

I said it quietly--in full possession of myself. The trial of fortitude
through which I had already passed seemed to have blunted my customary
sense of feeling. I approached the disclosure which I was now bound to
make with steady resolution, resigned to the worst that could happen
when the truth was known.

“Do you remember the time,” I resumed, “when I was so eager to serve you
that I proposed to make Susan your wife by making her rich?”

“Yes.”

“Do you remember asking me if I was thinking of the play we saw together
at Rome? Is the story as present to your mind now, as it was then?”

“Quite as present.”

“You asked if I was performing the part of the Marquis--and if you were
the Count. Rothsay! the devotion of that ideal character to his friend
has been my devotion; his conviction that his death would justify what
he had done for his friend’s sake, has been _my_ conviction; and as it
ended with him, so it has ended with me--his terrible position is _my_
terrible position toward you, at this moment.”

“Are you mad?” Rothsay asked, sternly.

I passed over that first outbreak of his anger in silence.

“Do you mean to tell me you have married Susan?” he went on.

“Bear this in mind,” I said. “When I married her, I was doomed to death.
Nay, more. In your interests--as God is my witness--I welcomed death.”

He stepped up to me, in silence, and raised his hand with a threatening
gesture.

That action at once deprived me of my self-possession. I spoke with the
ungovernable rashness of a boy.

“Carry out your intention,” I said. “Insult me.”

His hand dropped.

“Insult me,” I repeated; “it is one way out of the unendurable situation
in which we are placed. You may trust me to challenge you. Duels are
still fought on the Continent; I will follow you abroad; I will choose
pistols; I will take care that we fight on the fatal foreign system; and
I will purposely miss you. Make her what I intended her to be--my rich
widow.”

He looked at me attentively.

“Is _that_ your refuge?” he asked, scornfully. “No! I won’t help you to
commit suicide.”

God forgive me! I was possessed by a spirit of reckless despair; I did
my best to provoke him.

“Reconsider your decision,” I said; “and remember--you tried to commit
suicide yourself.”

He turned quickly to the door, as if he distrusted his own powers of
self-control.

“I wish to speak to Susan,” he said, keeping his back turned on me.

“You will find her in the library.”

He left me.

I went to the window. I opened it and let the cold wintry air blow over
my burning head. I don’t know how long I sat at the window. There came a
time when I saw Rothsay on the house steps. He walked rapidly toward the
park gate. His head was down; he never once looked back at the room in
which he had left me.

As he passed out of my sight, I felt a hand laid gently on my shoulder.
Susan had returned to me.

“He will not come back,” she said. “Try still to remember him as your
old friend. He asks you to forgive and forget.”

She had made the peace between us. I was deeply touched; my eyes filled
with tears as I looked at her. She kissed me on the forehead and went
out. I afterward asked what had passed between them when Rothsay spoke
with her in the library. She never has told me what they said to each
other; and she never will. She is right.


Later in the day I was told that Mrs. Rymer had called, and wished to
“pay her respects.”

I refused to see her. Whatever claim she might have otherwise had on my
consideration had been forfeited by the infamy of her conduct, when
she intercepted my letter to Susan. Her sense of injury on receiving my
message was expressed in writing, and was sent to me the same evening.
The last sentence in her letter was characteristic of the woman.

“However your pride may despise me,” she wrote, “I am indebted to you
for the rise in life that I have always desired. You may refuse to see
me--but you can’t prevent my being the mother-in-law of a gentleman.”


Soon afterward, I received a visit which I had hardly ventured to
expect. Busy as he was in London, my doctor came to see me. He was not
in his usual good spirits.

“I hope you don’t bring me any bad news?” I said.

“You shall judge for yourself,” he replied. “I come from Mr. Rothsay, to
say for him what he is not able to say for himself.”

“Where is he?”

“He has left England.”

“For any purpose that you know of?”

“Yes. He has sailed to join the expedition of rescue--I ought rather to
call it the forlorn hope--which is to search for the lost explorers in
Central Australia.”

In other words, he had gone to seek death in the fatal footsteps of
Burke and Wills. I could not trust myself to speak.

The doctor saw that there was a reason for my silence, and that he would
do well not to notice it. He changed the subject.

“May I ask,” he said, “if you have heard from the servants left in
charge at your house in London?”

“Has anything happened?”

“Something has happened which they are evidently afraid to tell you,
knowing the high opinion which you have of Mrs. Mozeen. She has suddenly
quitted your service, and has gone, nobody knows where. I have taken
charge of a letter which she left for you.”

He handed me the letter. As soon as I had recovered myself, I looked at
it.

There was this inscription on the address: “For my good master, to wait
until he returns home.” The few lines in the letter itself ran thus:


“Distressing circumstances oblige me to leave you, sir, and do not
permit me to enter into particulars. In asking your pardon, I offer
my sincere thanks for your kindness, and my fervent prayers for your
welfare.”


That was all. The date had a special interest for me. Mrs. Mozeen had
written on the day when she must have received my letter--the letter
which has already appeared in these pages.

“Is there really nothing known of the poor woman’s motives?” I asked.

“There are two explanations suggested,” the doctor informed me. “One of
them, which is offered by your female servants, seems to me absurd. They
declare that Mrs. Mozeen, at her mature age, was in love with the young
man who is your footman! It is even asserted that she tried to recommend
herself to him, by speaking of the money which she expected to bring to
the man who would make her his wife. The footman’s reply, informing her
that he was already engaged to be married, is alleged to be the cause
which has driven her from your house.”

I begged that the doctor would not trouble himself to repeat more of
what my women servants had said.

“If the other explanation,” I added, “is equally unworthy of notice--”

“The other explanation,” the doctor interposed, “comes from Mr. Rothsay,
and is of a very serious kind.”

Rothsay’s opinion demanded my respect.

“What view does he take?” I inquired.

“A view that startles me,” the doctor said. “You remember my telling
you of the interest he took in your symptoms, and in the remedies I had
employed? Well! Mr. Rothsay accounts for the incomprehensible recovery
of your health by asserting that poison--probably administered in small
quantities, and intermitted at intervals in fear of discovery--has been
mixed with your medicine; and he asserts that the guilty person is Mrs.
Mozeen.”

It was impossible that I could openly express the indignation that I
felt on hearing this. My position toward Rothsay forced me to restrain
myself.

“May I ask,” the doctor continued, “if Mrs. Mozeen was aware that she
had a legacy to expect at your death?”

“Certainly.”

“Has she a brother who is one of the dispensers employed by your
chemists?”

“Yes.”

“Did she know that I doubted if my prescriptions had been properly
prepared, and that I intended to make inquiries?”

“I wrote to her myself on the subject.”

“Do you think her brother told her that I was referred to _him_, when I
went to the chemists?”

“I have no means of knowing what her brother did.”

“Can you at least tell me when she received your letter?”

“She must have received it on the day when she left my house.”

The doctor rose with a grave face.

“These are rather extraordinary coincidences,” he remarked.

I merely replied, “Mrs. Mozeen is as incapable of poisoning as I am.”

The doctor wished me good-morning.

I repeat here my conviction of my housekeeper’s innocence. I protest
against the cruelty which accuses her. And, whatever may have been
her motive in suddenly leaving my service, I declare that she still
possesses my sympathy and esteem, and I invite her to return to me if
she ever sees these lines.

I have only to add, by way of postscript, that we have heard of the safe
return of the expedition of rescue. Time, as my wife and I both hope,
may yet convince Rothsay that he will not be wrong in counting on
Susan’s love--the love of a sister.

In the meanwhile we possess a memorial of our absent friend. We have
bought his picture.



MR. CAPTAIN AND THE NYMPH.

I.

“THE Captain is still in the prime of life,” the widow remarked. “He has
given up his ship; he possesses a sufficient income, and he has nobody
to live with him. I should like to know why he doesn’t marry.”

“The Captain was excessively rude to Me,” the widow’s younger sister
added, on her side. “When we took leave of him in London, I asked if
there was any chance of his joining us at Brighton this season. He
turned his back on me as if I had mortally offended him; and he made me
this extraordinary answer: ‘Miss! I hate the sight of the sea.’ The
man has been a sailor all his life. What does he mean by saying that he
hates the sight of the sea?”

These questions were addressed to a third person present--and the person
was a man. He was entirely at the mercy of the widow and the widow’s
sister. The other ladies of the family--who might have taken him under
their protection--had gone to an evening concert. He was known to be the
Captain’s friend, and to be well acquainted with events in the
Captain’s life. As it happened, he had reasons for hesitating to revive
associations connected with those events. But what polite alternative
was left to him? He must either inflict disappointment, and, worse
still, aggravate curiosity--or he must resign himself to circumstances,
and tell the ladies why the Captain would never marry, and why (sailor
as he was) he hated the sight of the sea. They were both young women and
handsome women--and the person to whom they had appealed (being a man)
followed the example of submission to the sex, first set in the garden
of Eden. He enlightened the ladies, in the terms that follow:

THE British merchantman, _Fortuna_, sailed from the port of Liverpool
(at a date which it is not necessary to specify) with the morning tide.
She was bound for certain islands in the Pacific Ocean, in search of a
cargo of sandal-wood--a commodity which, in those days, found a ready
and profitable market in the Chinese Empire.

A large discretion was reposed in the Captain by the owners, who knew
him to be not only trustworthy, but a man of rare ability, carefully
cultivated during the leisure hours of a seafaring life. Devoted
heart and soul to his professional duties, he was a hard reader and an
excellent linguist as well. Having had considerable experience among
the inhabitants of the Pacific Islands, he had attentively studied their
characters, and had mastered their language in more than one of its many
dialects. Thanks to the valuable information thus obtained, the Captain
was never at a loss to conciliate the islanders. He had more than once
succeeded in finding a cargo under circumstances in which other captains
had failed.

Possessing these merits, he had also his fair share of human defects.
For instance, he was a little too conscious of his own good looks--of
his bright chestnut hair and whiskers, of his beautiful blue eyes,
of his fair white skin, which many a woman had looked at with the
admiration that is akin to envy. His shapely hands were protected by
gloves; a broad-brimmed hat sheltered his complexion in fine weather
from the sun. He was nice in the choice of his perfumes; he never drank
spirits, and the smell of tobacco was abhorrent to him. New men among
his officers and his crew, seeing him in his cabin, perfectly dressed,
washed, and brushed until he was an object speckless to look upon--a
merchant-captain soft of voice, careful in his choice of words, devoted
to study in his leisure hours--were apt to conclude that they had
trusted themselves at sea under a commander who was an anomalous mixture
of a schoolmaster and a dandy. But if the slightest infraction of
discipline took place, or if the storm rose and the vessel proved to
be in peril, it was soon discovered that the gloved hands held a rod of
iron; that the soft voice could make itself heard through wind and sea
from one end of the deck to the other; and that it issued orders which
the greatest fool on board discovered to be orders that had saved the
ship. Throughout his professional life, the general impression that this
variously gifted man produced on the little world about him was always
the same. Some few liked him; everybody respected him; nobody understood
him. The Captain accepted these results. He persisted in reading his
books and protecting his complexion, with this result: his owners shook
hands with him, and put up with his gloves.

The _Fortuna_ touched at Rio for water, and for supplies of food which
might prove useful in case of scurvy. In due time the ship rounded Cape
Horn, favored by the finest weather ever known in those latitudes by the
oldest hand on board. The mate--one Mr. Duncalf--a boozing, wheezing,
self-confident old sea-dog, with a flaming face and a vast vocabulary
of oaths, swore that he didn’t like it. “The foul weather’s coming, my
lads,” said Mr. Duncalf. “Mark my words, there’ll be wind enough to take
the curl out of the Captain’s whiskers before we are many days older!”

For one uneventful week, the ship cruised in search of the islands to
which the owners had directed her. At the end of that time the wind took
the predicted liberties with the Captain’s whiskers; and Mr. Duncalf
stood revealed to an admiring crew in the character of a true prophet.

For three days and three nights the _Fortuna_ ran before the storm, at
the mercy of wind and sea. On the fourth morning the gale blew itself
out, the sun appeared again toward noon, and the Captain was able to
take an observation. The result informed him that he was in a part of
the Pacific Ocean with which he was entirely unacquainted. Thereupon,
the officers were called to a council in the cabin.

Mr. Duncalf, as became his rank, was consulted first. His opinion
possessed the merit of brevity. “My lads, this ship’s bewitched. Take my
word for it, we shall wish ourselves back in our own latitudes before we
are many days older.” Which, being interpreted, meant that Mr. Duncalf
was lost, like his superior officer, in a part of the ocean of which he
knew nothing.

The remaining members of the council having no suggestions to offer,
left the Captain to take his own way. He decided (the weather being fine
again) to stand on under an easy press of sail for four-and-twenty hours
more, and to see if anything came of it.

Soon after nightfall, something did come of it. The lookout forward
hailed the quarter-deck with the dread cry, “Breakers ahead!” In less
than a minute more, everybody heard the crash of the broken water. The
_Fortuna_ was put about, and came round slowly in the light wind. Thanks
to the timely alarm and the fine weather, the safety of the vessel was
easily provided for. They kept her under a short sail; and they waited
for the morning.

The dawn showed them in the distance a glorious green island, not marked
in the ship’s charts--an island girt about by a coral-reef, and having
in its midst a high-peaked mountain which looked, through the telescope,
like a mountain of volcanic origin. Mr. Duncalf, taking his morning
draught of rum and water, shook his groggy old head and said (and
swore): “My lads, I don’t like the look of that island.” The Captain
was of a different opinion. He had one of the ship’s boats put into the
water; he armed himself and four of his crew who accompanied him; and
away he went in the morning sunlight to visit the island.

Skirting round the coral reef, they found a natural breach, which proved
to be broad enough and deep enough not only for the passage of the boat,
but of the ship herself if needful. Crossing the broad inner belt of
smooth water, they approached the golden sands of the island, strew ed
with magnificent shells, and crowded by the dusky islanders--men,
women, and children, all waiting in breathless astonishment to see the
strangers land.

The Captain kept the boat off, and examined the islanders carefully.
The innocent, simple people danced, and sang, and ran into the water,
imploring their wonderful white visitors by gestures to come on shore.
Not a creature among them carried arms of any sort; a hospitable
curiosity animated the entire population. The men cried out, in their
smooth musical language, “Come and eat!” and the plump black-eyed women,
all laughing together, added their own invitation, “Come and be kissed!”
 Was it in mortals to resist such temptations as these? The Captain
led the way on shore, and the women surrounded him in an instant,
and screamed for joy at the glorious spectacle of his whiskers, his
complexion, and his gloves. So the mariners from the far north were
welcomed to the newly-discovered island.

III.

THE morning wore on. Mr. Duncalf, in charge of the ship, cursing the
island over his rum and water, as a “beastly green strip of a place, not
laid down in any Christian chart,” was kept waiting four mortal hours
before the Captain returned to his command, and reported himself to his
officers as follows:

He had found his knowledge of the Polynesian dialects sufficient to
make himself in some degree understood by the natives of the new
island. Under the guidance of the chief he had made a first journey of
exploration, and had seen for himself that the place was a marvel of
natural beauty and fertility. The one barren spot in it was the peak of
the volcanic mountain, composed of crumbling rock; originally no doubt
lava and ashes, which had cooled and consolidated with the lapse of
time. So far as he could see, the crater at the top was now an extinct
crater. But, if he had understood rightly, the chief had spoken of
earthquakes and eruptions at certain bygone periods, some of which lay
within his own earliest recollections of the place.

Adverting next to considerations of practical utility, the Captain
announced that he had seen sandal-wood enough on the island to load a
dozen ships, and that the natives were willing to part with it for a
few toys and trinkets generally distributed among them. To the mate’s
disgust, the _Fortuna_ was taken inside the reef that day, and was
anchored before sunset in a natural harbor. Twelve hours of recreation,
beginning with the next morning, were granted to the men, under the wise
restrictions in such cases established by the Captain. That interval
over, the work of cutting the precious wood and loading the ship was to
be unremittingly pursued.

Mr. Duncalf had the first watch after the _Fortuna_ had been made snug.
He took the boatswain aside (an ancient sea-dog like himself), and he
said in a gruff whisper: “My lad, this here ain’t the island laid down
in our sailing orders. See if mischief don’t come of disobeying orders
before we are many days older.”

Nothing in the shape of mischief happened that night. But at sunrise
the next morning a suspicious circumstance occurred; and Mr. Duncalf
whispered to the boatswain: “What did I tell you?” The Captain and the
chief of the islanders held a private conference in the cabin, and the
Captain, after first forbidding any communication with the shore until
his return, suddenly left the ship, alone with the chief, in the chief’s
own canoe.

What did this strange disappearance mean? The Captain himself, when
he took his seat in the canoe, would have been puzzled to answer that
question. He asked, in the nearest approach that his knowledge could
make to the language used in the island, whether he would be a long time
or a short time absent from his ship.

The chief answered mysteriously (as the Captain understood him) in these
words: “Long time or short time, your life depends on it, and the lives
of your men.”

Paddling his light little boat in silence over the smooth water inside
the reef, the chief took his visitor ashore at a part of the island
which was quite new to the Captain. The two crossed a ravine, and
ascended an eminence beyond. There the chief stopped, and silently
pointed out to sea.

The Captain looked in the direction indicated to him, and discovered a
second and a smaller island, lying away to the southwest. Taking out his
telescope from the case by which it was slung at his back, he narrowly
examined the place. Two of the native canoes were lying off the shore
of the new island; and the men in them appeared to be all kneeling
or crouching in curiously chosen attitudes. Shifting the range of his
glass, he next beheld a white-robed figure, tall and solitary--the one
inhabitant of the island whom he could discover. The man was standing on
the highest point of a rocky cape. A fire was burning at his feet. Now
he lifted his arms solemnly to the sky; now he dropped some invisible
fuel into the fire, which made a blue smoke; and now he cast other
invisible objects into the canoes floating beneath him, which the
islanders reverently received with bodies that crouched in abject
submission. Lowering his telescope, the Captain looked round at the
chief for an explanation. The chief gave the explanation readily. His
language was interpreted by the English stranger in these terms:

“Wonderful white man! the island you see yonder is a Holy Island. As
such it is _Taboo_--an island sanctified and set apart. The honorable
person whom you notice on the rock is an all-powerful favorite of the
gods. He is by vocation a Sorcerer, and by rank a Priest. You now see
him casting charms and blessings into the canoes of our fishermen, who
kneel to him for fine weather and great plenty of fish. If any profane
person, native or stranger, presumes to set foot on that island, my
otherwise peaceful subjects will (in the performance of a religious
duty) put that person to death. Mention this to your men. They will be
fed by my male people, and fondled by my female people, so long as they
keep clear of the Holy Isle. As they value their lives, let them respect
this prohibition. Is it understood between us? Wonderful white man! my
canoe is waiting for you. Let us go back.”

Understanding enough of the chief’s language (illustrated by his
gestures) to receive in the right spirit the communication thus
addressed to him, the Captain repeated the warning to the ship’s company
in the plainest possible English. The officers and men then took their
holiday on shore, with the exception of Mr. Duncalf, who positively
refused to leave the ship. For twelve delightful hours they were fed by
the male people, and fondled by the female people, and then they were
mercilessly torn from the flesh-pots and the arms of their new friends,
and set to work on the sandal-wood in good earnest. Mr. Duncalf
superintended the loading, and waited for the mischief that was to come
of disobeying the owners’ orders with a confidence worthy of a better
cause.

IV.

STRANGELY enough, chance once more declared itself in favor of the
mate’s point of view. The mischief did actually come; and the chosen
instrument of it was a handsome young islander, who was one of the sons
of the chief.

The Captain had taken a fancy to the sweet-tempered, intelligent lad.
Pursuing his studies in the dialect of the island, at leisure hours,
he had made the chief’s son his tutor, and had instructed the youth
in English by way of return. More than a month had passed in this
intercourse, and the ship’s lading was being rapidly completed--when, in
an evil hour, the talk between the two turned on the subject of the Holy
Island.

“Does nobody live on the island but the Priest?” the Captain asked.

The chief’s son looked round him suspiciously. “Promise me you won’t
tell anybody!” he began very earnestly.

The Captain gave his promise.

“There is one other person on the island,” the lad whispered; “a person
to feast your eyes upon, if you could only see her! She is the Priest’s
daughter. Removed to the island in her infancy, she has never left
it since. In that sacred solitude she has only looked on two human
beings--her father and her mother. I once saw her from my canoe, taking
care not to attract her notice, or to approach too near the holy soil.
Oh, so young, dear master, and, oh, so beautiful!” The chief’s son
completed the description by kissing his own hands as an expression of
rapture.

The Captain’s fine blue eyes sparkled. He asked no more questions; but,
later on that day, he took his telescope with him, and paid a secret
visit to the eminence which overlooked the Holy Island. The next day,
and the next, he privately returned to the same place. On the fourth
day, fatal Destiny favored him. He discovered the nymph of the island.

Standing alone upon the cape on which he had already seen her father,
she was feeding some tame birds which looked like turtle-doves. The
glass showed the Captain her white robe, fluttering in the sea-breeze;
her long black hair falling to her feet; her slim and supple young
figure; her simple grace of attitude, as she turned this way and that,
attending to the wants of her birds. Before her was the blue ocean;
behind her rose the lustrous green of the island forest. He looked and
looked until his eyes and arms ached. When she disappeared among the
trees, followed by her favorite birds, the Captain shut up his telescope
with a sigh, and said to himself: “I have seen an angel!”

From that hour he became an altered man; he was languid, silent,
interested in nothing. General opinion, on board his ship, decided that
he was going to be taken ill.

A week more elapsed, and the officers and crew began to talk of the
voyage to their market in China. The Captain refused to fix a day for
sailing. He even took offense at being asked to decide. Instead of
sleeping in his cabin, he went ashore for the night.

Not many hours afterward (just before daybreak), Mr. Duncalf, snoring
in his cabin on deck, was aroused by a hand laid on his shoulder. The
swinging lamp, still alight, showed him the dusky face of the chief’s
son, convulsed with terror. By wild signs, by disconnected words in
the little English which he had learned, the lad tried to make the mate
understand him. Dense Mr. Duncalf, understanding nothing, hailed the
second officer, on the opposite side of the deck. The second officer was
young and intelligent; he rightly interpreted the terrible news that had
come to the ship.

The Captain had broken his own rules. Watching his opportunity, under
cover of the night, he had taken a canoe, and had secretly crossed the
channel to the Holy Island. No one had been near him at the time but
the chief’s son. The lad had vainly tried to induce him to abandon his
desperate enterprise, and had vainly waited on the shore in the hope
of hearing the sound of the paddle announcing his return. Beyond all
reasonable doubt, the infatuated man had set foot on the shores of the
tabooed island.

The one chance for his life was to conceal what he had done, until the
ship could be got out of the harbor, and then (if no harm had come to
him in the interval) to rescue him after nightfall. It was decided to
spread the report that he had really been taken ill, and that he was
confined to his cabin. The chief’s son, whose heart the Captain’s
kindness had won, could be trusted to do this, and to keep the secret
faithfully for his good friend’s sake.

Toward noon, the next day, they attempted to take the ship to sea, and
failed for want of wind. Hour by hour, the heat grew more oppressive. As
the day declined, there were ominous appearances in the western heaven.
The natives, who had given some trouble during the day by their anxiety
to see the Captain, and by their curiosity to know the cause of the
sudden preparations for the ship’s departure, all went ashore together,
looking suspiciously at the sky, and reappeared no more. Just at
midnight, the ship (still in her snug berth inside the reef) suddenly
trembled from her keel to her uppermost masts. Mr. Duncalf, surrounded
by the startled crew, shook his knotty fist at the island as if he could
see it in the dark. “My lads, what did I tell you? That was a shock of
earthquake.”

With the morning the threatening aspect of the weather unexpectedly
disappeared. A faint hot breeze from the land, just enough to give
the ship steerage-way, offered Mr. Duncalf a chance of getting to sea.
Slowly the _Fortuna_, with the mate himself at the wheel, half sailed,
half drifted into the open ocean. At a distance of barely two miles from
the island the breeze was felt no more, and the vessel lay becalmed for
the rest of the day.

At night the men waited their orders, expecting to be sent after their
Captain in one of the boats. The intense darkness, the airless heat, and
a second shock of earthquake (faintly felt in the ship at her present
distance from the land) warned the mate to be cautious. “I smell
mischief in the air,” said Mr. Duncalf. “The Captain must wait till I am
surer of the weather.”

Still no change came with the new day. The dead calm continued, and the
airless heat. As the day declined, another ominous appearance became
visible. A thin line of smoke was discovered through the telescope,
ascending from the topmost peak of the mountain on the main island. Was
the volcano threatening an eruption? The mate, for one, entertained no
doubt of it. “By the Lord, the place is going to burst up!” said Mr.
Duncalf. “Come what may of it, we must find the Captain to-night!”

V.

WHAT was the Captain doing? and what chance had the crew of finding him
that night?

He had committed himself to his desperate adventure, without forming
any plan for the preservation of his own safety; without giving even a
momentary consideration to the consequences which might follow the risk
that he had run. The charming figure that he had seen haunted him night
and day. The image of the innocent creature, secluded from humanity
in her island solitude, was the one image that filled his mind. A man,
passing a woman in the street, acts on the impulse to turn and follow
her, and in that one thoughtless moment shapes the destiny of his future
life. The Captain had acted on a similar impulse, when he took the first
canoe he had found on the beach, and shaped his reckless course for the
tabooed island.

Reaching the shore while it was still dark, he did one sensible
thing--he hid the canoe so that it might not betray him when the
daylight came. That done, he waited for the morning on the outskirts of
the forest.

The trembling light of dawn revealed the mysterious solitude around him.
Following the outer limits of the trees, first in one direction, then
in another, and finding no trace of any living creature, he decided on
penetrating to the interior of the island. He entered the forest.

An hour of walking brought him to rising ground. Continuing the ascent,
he got clear of the trees, and stood on the grassy top of a broad cliff
which overlooked the sea. An open hut was on the cliff. He cautiously
looked in, and discovered that it was empty. The few household utensils
left about, and the simple bed of leaves in a corner, were covered with
fine sandy dust. Night-birds flew blundering out of the inner cavities
of the roof, and took refuge in the shadows of the forest below. It was
plain that the hut had not been inhabited for some time past.

Standing at the open doorway and considering what he should do next,
the Captain saw a bird flying toward him out of the forest. It was a
turtle-dove, so tame that it fluttered close up to him. At the same
moment the sound of sweet laughter became audible among the trees. His
heart beat fast; he advanced a few steps and stopped. In a moment more
the nymph of the island appeared, in her white robe, ascending the cliff
in pursuit of her truant bird. She saw the strange man, and suddenly
stood still; struck motionless by the amazing discovery that had burst
upon her. The Captain approached, smiling and holding out his hand. She
never moved; she stood before him in helpless wonderment--her lovely
black eyes fixed spellbound on his face; her dusky bosom palpitating
above the fallen folds of her robe; her rich red lips parted in mute
astonishment. Feasting his eyes on her beauty in silence, the Captain
after a while ventured to speak to her in the language of the main
island. The sound of his voice, addressing her in the words that she
understood, roused the lovely creature to action. She started, stepped
close up to him, and dropped on her knees at his feet.

“My father worships invisible deities,” she said, softly. “Are you a
visible deity? Has my mother sent you?” She pointed as she spoke to the
deserted hut behind them. “You appear,” she went on, “in the place where
my mother died. Is it for her sake that you show yourself to her child?
Beautiful deity, come to the Temple--come to my father!”

The Captain gently raised her from the ground. If her father saw him, he
was a doomed man.

Infatuated as he was, he had sense enough left to announce himself
plainly in his own character, as a mortal creature arriving from a
distant land. The girl instantly drew back from him with a look of
terror.

“He is not like my father,” she said to herself; “he is not like me. Is
he the lying demon of the prophecy? Is he the predestined destroyer of
our island?”

The Captain’s experience of the sex showed him the only sure way out
of the awkward position in which he was now placed. He appealed to his
personal appearance.

“Do I look like a demon?” he asked.

Her eyes met his eyes; a faint smile trembled on her lips. He ventured
on asking what she meant by the predestined destruction of the island.
She held up her hand solemnly, and repeated the prophecy.

The Holy Island was threatened with destruction by an evil being, who
would one day appear on its shores. To avert the fatality the place
had been sanctified and set apart, under the protection of the gods
and their priest. Here was the reason for the taboo, and for the
extraordinary rigor with which it was enforced. Listening to her with
the deepest interest, the Captain took her hand and pressed it gently.

“Do I feel like a demon?” he whispered.

Her slim brown fingers closed frankly on his hand. “You feel soft and
friendly,” she said with the fearless candor of a child. “Squeeze me
again. I like it!”

The next moment she snatched her hand away from him; the sense of his
danger had suddenly forced itself on her mind. “If my father sees you,”
 she said, “he will light the signal fire at the Temple, and the people
from the other island will come here and put you to death. Where is
your canoe? No! It is daylight. My father may see you on the water.”
 She considered a little, and, approaching him, laid her hands on his
shoulders. “Stay here till nightfall,” she resumed. “My father never
comes this way. The sight of the place where my mother died is
horrible to him. You are safe here. Promise to stay where you are till
night-time.”

The Captain gave his promise.

Freed from anxiety so far, the girl’s mobile temperament recovered
its native cheerfulness, its sweet gayety and spirit. She admired the
beautiful stranger as she might have admired a new bird that had flown
to her to be fondled with the rest. She patted his fair white skin, and
wished she had a skin like it. She lifted the great glossy folds of her
long black hair, and compared it with the Captain’s bright curly locks,
and longed to change colors with him from the bottom of her heart. His
dress was a wonder to her; his watch was a new revelation. She rested
her head on his shoulder to listen delightedly to the ticking, as he
held the watch to her ear. Her fragrant breath played on his face, her
warm, supple figure rested against him softly. The Captain’s arm stole
round her waist, and the Captain’s lips gently touched her cheek. She
lifted her head with a look of pleased surprise. “Thank you,” said the
child of Nature, simply. “Kiss me again; I like it. May I kiss you?”
 The tame turtle-dove perched on her shoulder as she gave the Captain her
first kiss, and diverted her thoughts to the pets that she had left, in
pursuit of the truant dove. “Come,” she said, “and see my birds. I keep
them on this side of the forest. There is no danger, so long as you
don’t show yourself on the other side. My name is Aimata. Aimata will
take care of you. Oh, what a beautiful white neck you have!” She put her
arm admiringly round his neck. The Captain’s arm held her tenderly to
him. Slowly the two descended the cliff, and were lost in the leafy
solitudes of the forest. And the tame dove fluttered before them, a
winged messenger of love, cooing to his mate.

VI.

THE night had come, and the Captain had not left the island.

Aimata’s resolution to send him away in the darkness was a forgotten
resolution already. She had let him persuade her that he was in no
danger, so long as he remained in the hut on the cliff; and she had
promised, at parting, to return to him while the Priest was still
sleeping, at the dawn of day.

He was alone in the hut. The thought of the innocent creature whom he
loved was sorrowfully as well as tenderly present to his mind. He almost
regretted his rash visit to the island. “I will take her with me to
England,” he said to himself. “What does a sailor care for the opinion
of the world? Aimata shall be my wife.”

The intense heat oppressed him. He stepped out on the cliff, toward
midnight, in search of a breath of air.

At that moment, the first shock of earthquake (felt in the ship while
she was inside the reef) shook the ground he stood on. He instantly
thought of the volcano on the main island. Had he been mistaken in
supposing the crater to be extinct? Was the shock that he had just felt
a warning from the volcano, communicated through a submarine connection
between the two islands? He waited and watched through the hours of
darkness, with a vague sense of apprehension, which was not to be
reasoned away. With the first light of daybreak he descended into the
forest, and saw the lovely being whose safety was already precious to
him as his own, hurrying to meet him through the trees.

She waved her hand distractedly as she approached him. “Go!” she cried;
“go away in your canoe before our island is destroyed!”

He did his best to quiet her alarm. Was it the shock of earthquake that
had frightened her? No: it was more than the shock of earthquake--it was
something terrible which had followed the shock. There was a lake
near the Temple, the waters of which were supposed to be heated by
subterranean fires. The lake had risen with the earthquake, had bubbled
furiously, and had then melted away into the earth and been lost. Her
father, viewing the portent with horror, had gone to the cape to watch
the volcano on the main island, and to implore by prayers and sacrifices
the protection of the gods. Hearing this, the Captain entreated Aimata
to let him see the emptied lake, in the absence of the Priest. She
hesitated; but his influence was all-powerful. He prevailed on her to
turn back with him through the forest.

Reaching the furthest limit of the trees, they came out upon open rocky
ground which sloped gently downward toward the center of the island.
Having crossed this space, they arrived at a natural amphitheater of
rock. On one side of it the Temple appeared, partly excavated, partly
formed by a natural cavern. In one of the lateral branches of the cavern
was the dwelling of the Priest and his daughter. The mouth of it looked
out on the rocky basin of the lake. Stooping over the edge, the Captain
discovered, far down in the empty depths, a light cloud of steam. Not a
drop of water was visible, look where he might.

Aimata pointed to the abyss, and hid her face on his bosom. “My father
says,” she whispered, “that it is your doing.”

The Captain started. “Does your father know that I am on the island?”

She looked up at him with a quick glance of reproach. “Do you think I
would tell him, and put your life in peril?” she asked. “My father felt
the destroyer of the island in the earthquake; my father saw the coming
destruction in the disappearance of the lake.” Her eyes rested on him
with a loving languor. “Are you indeed the demon of the prophecy?” she
said, winding his hair round her finger. “I am not afraid of you, if
you are. I am a creature bewitched; I love the demon.” She kissed him
passionately. “I don’t care if I die,” she whispered between the kisses,
“if I only die with you!”

The Captain made no attempt to reason with her. He took the wiser
way--he appealed to her feelings.

“You will come and live with me happily in my own country,” he said. “My
ship is waiting for us. I will take you home with me, and you shall be
my wife.”

She clapped her hands for joy. Then she thought of her father, and drew
back from him in tears.

The Captain understood her. “Let us leave this dreary place,” he
suggested. “We will talk about it in the cool glades of the forest,
where you first said you loved me.”

She gave him her hand. “Where I first said I loved you!” she repeated,
smiling tenderly as she looked at him. They left the lake together.

VII.

THE darkness had fallen again; and the ship was still becalmed at sea.

Mr. Duncalf came on deck after his supper. The thin line of smoke, seen
rising from the peak of the mountain that evening, was now succeeded by
ominous flashes of fire from the same quarter, intermittently visible.
The faint hot breeze from the land was felt once more. “There’s just an
air of wind,” Mr. Duncalf remarked. “I’ll try for the Captain while I
have the chance.”

One of the boats was lowered into the water--under command of the
second mate, who had already taken the bearings of the tabooed island by
daylight. Four of the men were to go with him, and they were all to be
well armed. Mr. Duncalf addressed his final instructions to the officer
in the boat.

“You will keep a lookout, sir, with a lantern in the bows. If the
natives annoy you, you know what to do. Always shoot natives. When you
get anigh the island, you will fire a gun and sing out for the Captain.”

“Quite needless,” interposed a voice from the sea. “The Captain is
here!”

Without taking the slightest notice of the astonishment that he had
caused, the commander of the _Fortuna_ paddled his canoe to the side of
the ship. Instead of ascending to the deck, he stepped into the boat,
waiting alongside. “Lend me your pistols,” he said quietly to the second
officer, “and oblige me by taking your men back to their duties on
board.” He looked up at Mr. Duncalf and gave some further directions.
“If there is any change in the weather, keep the ship standing off and
on, at a safe distance from the land, and throw up a rocket from time to
time to show your position. Expect me on board again by sunrise.”

“What!” cried the mate. “Do you mean to say you are going back to the
island--in that boat--all by yourself?”

“I am going back to the island,” answered the Captain, as quietly as
ever; “in this boat--all by myself.” He pushed off from the ship, and
hoisted the sail as he spoke.

“You’re deserting your duty!” the old sea-dog shouted, with one of his
loudest oaths.

“Attend to my directions,” the Captain shouted back, as he drifted away
into the darkness.

Mr. Duncalf--violently agitated for the first time in his life--took
leave of his superior officer, with a singular mixture of solemnity and
politeness, in these words:

“The Lord have mercy on your soul! I wish you good-evening.”

VIII.

ALONE in the boat, the Captain looked with a misgiving mind at the
flashing of the volcano on the main island.

If events had favored him, he would have removed Aimata to the shelter
of the ship on the day when he saw the emptied basin on the lake. But
the smoke of the Priest’s sacrifice had been discovered by the chief;
and he had dispatched two canoes with instructions to make inquiries.
One of the canoes had returned; the other was kept in waiting off the
cape, to place a means of communicating with the main island at the
disposal of the Priest. The second shock of earthquake had naturally
increased the alarm of the chief. He had sent messages to the Priest,
entreating him to leave the island, and other messages to Aimata
suggesting that she should exert her influence over her father, if he
hesitated. The Priest refused to leave the Temple. He trusted in his
gods and his sacrifices--he believed they might avert the fatality that
threatened his sanctuary.

Yielding to the holy man, the chief sent re-enforcements of canoes to
take their turn at keeping watch off the headland. Assisted by torches,
the islanders were on the alert (in superstitious terror of the demon of
the prophecy) by night as well as by day. The Captain had no alternative
but to keep in hiding, and to watch his opportunity of approaching the
place in which he had concealed his canoe. It was only after Aimata had
left him as usual, to return to her father at the close of evening, that
the chances declared themselves in his favor. The fire-flashes from the
mountain, visible when the night came, had struck terror into the hearts
of the men on the watch. They thought of their wives, their children,
and their possessions on the main island, and they one and all deserted
their Priest. The Captain seized the opportunity of communicating with
the ship, and of exchanging a frail canoe which he was ill able to
manage, for a swift-sailing boat capable of keeping the sea in the event
of stormy weather.

As he now neared the land, certain small sparks of red, moving on the
distant water, informed him that the canoes of the sentinels had been
ordered back to their duty.

Carefully avoiding the lights, he reached his own side of the island
without accident, and, guided by the boat’s lantern, anchored under the
cliff. He climbed the rocks, advanced to the door of the hut, and was
met, to his delight and astonishment, by Aimata on the threshold.

“I dreamed that some dreadful misfortune had parted us forever,” she
said; “and I came here to see if my dream was true. You have taught me
what it is to be miserable; I never felt my heart ache till I looked
into the hut and found that you had gone. Now I have seen you, I am
satisfied. No! you must not go back with me. My father may be out
looking for me. It is you that are in danger, not I. I know the forest
as well by dark as by daylight.”

The Captain detained her when she tried to leave him.

“Now you _are_ here,” he said, “why should I not place you at once in
safety? I have been to the ship; I have brought back one of the boats.
The darkness will befriend us--let us embark while we can.”

She shrank away as he took her hand. “You forget my father!” she said.

“Your father is in no danger, my love. The canoes are waiting for him at
the cape; I saw the lights as I passed.”

With that reply he drew her out of the hut and led her toward the
sea. Not a breath of the breeze was now to be felt. The dead calm had
returned--and the boat was too large to be easily managed by one man
alone at the oars.

“The breeze may come again,” he said. “Wait here, my angel, for the
chance.”

As he spoke, the deep silence of the forest below them was broken by a
sound. A harsh wailing voice was heard, calling:

“Aimata! Aimata!”

“My father!” she whispered; “he has missed me. If he comes here you are
lost.”

She kissed him with passionate fervor; she held him to her for a moment
with all her strength.

“Expect me at daybreak,” she said, and disappeared down the landward
slope of the cliff.

He listened, anxious for her safety. The voices of the father and
daughter just reached him from among the trees. The Priest spoke in
no angry tones; she had apparently found an acceptable excuse for her
absence. Little by little, the failing sound of their voices told him
that they were on their way back together to the Temple. The silence
fell again. Not a ripple broke on the beach. Not a leaf rustled in the
forest. Nothing moved but the reflected flashes of the volcano on the
main island over the black sky. It was an airless and an awful calm.

He went into the hut, and laid down on his bed of leaves--not to sleep,
but to rest. All his energies might be required to meet the coming
events of the morning. After the voyage to and from the ship, and the
long watching that had preceded it, strong as he was he stood in need of
repose.

For some little time he kept awake, thinking. Insensibly the oppression
of the intense heat, aided in its influence by his own fatigue,
treacherously closed his eyes. In spite of himself, the weary man fell
into a deep sleep.

He was awakened by a roar like the explosion of a park of artillery. The
volcano on the main island had burst into a state of eruption. Smoky
flame-light overspread the sky, and flashed through the open doorway of
the hut. He sprang from his bed--and found himself up to his knees in
water.

Had the sea overflowed the land?

He waded out of the hut, and the water rose to his middle. He looked
round him by the lurid light of the eruption. The one visible object
within the range of view was the sea, stained by reflections from the
blood-red sky, swirling and rippling strangely in the dead calm. In a
moment more, he became conscious that the earth on which he stood was
sinking under his feet. The water rose to his neck; the last vestige of
the roof of the hut disappeared.

He looked round again, and the truth burst on him. The island was
sinking--slowly, slowly sinking into volcanic depths, below even the
depth of the sea! The highest object was the hut, and that had dropped
inch by inch under water before his own eyes. Thrown up to the surface
by occult volcanic influences, the island had sunk back, under the same
influences, to the obscurity from which it had emerged!

A black shadowy object, turning in a wide circle, came slowly near him
as the all-destroying ocean washed its bitter waters into his mouth. The
buoyant boat, rising as the sea rose, had dragged its anchor, and was
floating round in the vortex made by the slowly sinking island. With a
last desperate hope that Aimata might have been saved as _he_ had been
saved, he swam to the boat, seized the heavy oars with the strength of a
giant, and made for the place (so far as he could guess at it now) where
the lake and the Temple had once been.

He looked round and round him; he strained his eyes in the vain attempt
to penetrate below the surface of the seething dimpling sea. Had the
panic-stricken watchers in the canoes saved themselves, without an
effort to preserve the father and daughter? Or had they both been
suffocated before they could make an attempt to escape? He called to her
in his misery, as if she could hear him out of the fathomless depths:
“Aimata! Aimata!” The roar of the distant eruption answered him. The
mounting fires lit the solitary sea far and near over the sinking
island. The boat turned slowly and more slowly in the lessening vortex.
Never again would those gentle eyes look at him with unutterable love!
Never again would those fresh lips touch his lips with their fervent
kiss! Alone, amid the savage forces of Nature in conflict, the miserable
mortal lifted his hands in frantic supplication--and the burning sky
glared down on him in its pitiless grandeur, and struck him to his knees
in the boat. His reason sank with his sinking limbs. In the merciful
frenzy that succeeded the shock, he saw afar off, in her white robe, an
angel poised on the waters, beckoning him to follow her to the brighter
and the better world. He loosened the sail, he seized the oars; and the
faster he pursued it, the faster the mocking vision fled from him over
the empty and endless sea.

IX.

THE boat was discovered, on the next morning, from the ship.

All that the devotion of the officers of the _Fortuna_ could do for
their unhappy commander was done on the homeward voyage. Restored to
his own country, and to skilled medical help, the Captain’s mind by
slow degrees recovered its balance. He has taken his place in society
again--he lives and moves and manages his affairs like the rest of us.
But his heart is dead to all new emotions; nothing remains in it but the
sacred remembrance of his lost love. He neither courts nor avoids
the society of women. Their sympathy finds him grateful, but their
attractions seem to be lost on him; they pass from his mind as they pass
from his eyes--they stir nothing in him but the memory of Aimata.


“Now you know, ladies, why the Captain will never marry, and why (sailor
as he is) he hates the sight of the sea.”



MR. MARMADUKE AND THE MINISTER.

I.

September 13th.--Winter seems to be upon us, on the Highland Border,
already.

I looked out of window, as the evening closed in, before I barred
the shutters and drew the curtains for the night. The clouds hid the
hilltops on either side of our valley. Fantastic mists parted and
met again on the lower slopes, as the varying breeze blew them. The
blackening waters of the lake before our window seemed to anticipate
the coming darkness. On the more distant hills the torrents were just
visible, in the breaks of the mist, stealing their way over the brown
ground like threads of silver. It was a dreary scene. The stillness of
all things was only interrupted by the splashing of our little waterfall
at the back of the house. I was not sorry to close the shutters, and
confine the view to the four walls of our sitting-room.

The day happened to be my birthday. I sat by the peat-fire, waiting
for the lamp and the tea-tray, and contemplating my past life from the
vantage-ground, so to speak, of my fifty-fifth year.

There was wonderfully little to look back on. Nearly thirty years since,
it pleased an all-wise Providence to cast my lot in this remote
Scottish hamlet, and to make me Minister of Cauldkirk, on a stipend of
seventy-four pounds sterling per annum. I and my surroundings have grown
quietly older and older together. I have outlived my wife; I have buried
one generation among my parishioners, and married another; I have borne
the wear and tear of years better than the kirk in which I minister
and the manse (or parsonage-house) in which I live--both sadly out of
repair, and both still trusting for the means of reparation to the pious
benefactions of people richer than myself. Not that I complain, be
it understood, of the humble position which I occupy. I possess many
blessings; and I thank the Lord for them. I have my little bit of land
and my cow. I have also my good daughter, Felicia; named after her
deceased mother, but inheriting her comely looks, it is thought, rather
from myself.

Neither let me forget my elder sister, Judith; a friendless single
person, sheltered under my roof, whose temperament I could wish somewhat
less prone to look at persons and things on the gloomy side, but whose
compensating virtues Heaven forbid that I should deny. No; I am grateful
for what has been given me (from on high), and resigned to what has been
taken away. With what fair prospects did I start in life! Springing from
a good old Scottish stock, blessed with every advantage of education
that the institutions of Scotland and England in turn could offer; with
a career at the Bar and in Parliament before me--and all cast to the
winds, as it were, by the measureless prodigality of my unhappy father,
God forgive him! I doubt if I had five pounds left in my purse, when the
compassion of my relatives on the mother’s side opened a refuge to me
at Cauldkirk, and hid me from the notice of the world for the rest of my
life.


September 14th.--Thus far I had posted up my Diary on the evening of the
13th, when an event occurred so completely unexpected by my household
and myself, that the pen, I may say, dropped incontinently from my hand.

It was the time when we had finished our tea, or supper--I hardly know
which to call it. In the silence, we could hear the rain pouring against
the window, and the wind that had risen with the darkness howling
round the house. My sister Judith, taking the gloomy view according to
custom--copious draughts of good Bohea and two helpings of such a
mutton ham as only Scotland can produce had no effect in raising her
spirits--my sister, I say, remarked that there would be ships lost
at sea and men drowned this night. My daughter Felicia, the
brightest-tempered creature of the female sex that I have ever met with,
tried to give a cheerful turn to her aunt’s depressing prognostication.
“If the ships must be lost,” she said, “we may surely hope that the men
will be saved.” “God willing,” I put in--thereby giving to my daughter’s
humane expression of feeling the fit religious tone that was all it
wanted--and then went on with my written record of the events and
reflections of the day. No more was said. Felicia took up a book. Judith
took up her knitting.

On a sudden, the silence was broken by a blow on the house-door.

My two companions, as is the way of women, set up a scream. I was
startled myself, wondering who could be out in the rain and the darkness
and striking at the door of the house. A stranger it must be. Light or
dark, any person in or near Cauldkirk, wanting admission, would know
where to find the bell-handle at the side of the door. I waited a
while to hear what might happen next. The stroke was repeated, but more
softly. It became me as a man and a minister to set an example. I went
out into the passage, and I called through the door, “Who’s there?”

A man’s voice answered--so faintly that I could barely hear him--“A lost
traveler.”

Immediately upon this my cheerful sister expressed her view of the
matter through the open parlor door. “Brother Noah, it’s a robber. Don’t
let him in!”

What would the Good Samaritan have done in my place? Assuredly he would
have run the risk and opened the door. I imitated the Good Samaritan.

A man, dripping wet, with a knapsack on his back and a thick stick in
his hand, staggered in, and would, I think, have fallen in the passage
if I had not caught him by the arm. Judith peeped out at the parlor
door, and said, “He’s drunk.” Felicia was behind her, holding up a
lighted candle, the better to see what was going on. “Look at his
face, aunt,” says she. “Worn out with fatigue, poor man. Bring him in,
father--bring him in.”

Good Felicia! I was proud of my girl. “He’ll spoil the carpet,” says
sister Judith. I said, “Silence, for shame!” and brought him in, and
dropped him dripping into my own armchair. Would the Good Samaritan have
thought of his carpet or his chair? I did think of them, but I overcame
it. Ah, we are a decadent generation in these latter days!

“Be quick, father”’ says Felicia; “he’ll faint if you don’t give him
something!”

I took out one of our little drinking cups (called among us a “Quaigh”),
while Felicia, instructed by me, ran to the kitchen for the cream-jug.
Filling the cup with whisky and cream in equal proportions, I offered it
to him. He drank it off as if it had been so much water. “Stimulant and
nourishment, you’ll observe, sir, in equal portions,” I remarked to him.
“How do you feel now?”

“Ready for another,” says he.

Felicia burst out laughing. I gave him another. As I turned to hand it
to him, sister Judith came behind me, and snatched away the cream-jug.
Never a generous person, sister Judith, at the best of times--more
especially in the matter of cream.

He handed me back the empty cup. “I believe, sir, you have saved my
life,” he said. “Under Providence,” I put in--adding, “But I would
remark, looking to the state of your clothes, that I have yet another
service to offer you, before you tell us how you came into this pitiable
state.” With that reply, I led him upstairs, and set before him the
poor resources of my wardrobe, and left him to do the best he could with
them. He was rather a small man, and I am in stature nigh on six feet.
When he came down to us in my clothes, we had the merriest evening
that I can remember for years past. I thought Felicia would have had a
hysteric fit; and even sister Judith laughed--he did look such a comical
figure in the minister’s garments.

As for the misfortune that had befallen him, it offered one more example
of the preternatural rashness of the English traveler in countries
unknown to him. He was on a walking tour through Scotland; and he had
set forth to go twenty miles a-foot, from a town on one side of the
Highland Border, to a town on the other, without a guide. The only
wonder is that he found his way to Cauldkirk, instead of perishing of
exposure among the lonesome hills.

“Will you offer thanks for your preservation to the Throne of Grace, in
your prayers to-night?” I asked him. And he answered, “Indeed I will!”

We have a spare room at the manse; but it had not been inhabited for
more than a year past. Therefore we made his bed, for that night, on the
sofa in the parlor; and so left him, with the fire on one side of his
couch, and the whisky and the mutton ham on the other in case of need.
He mentioned his name when we bade him good-night. Marmaduke Falmer
of London, son of a minister of the English Church Establishment, now
deceased. It was plain, I may add, before he spoke, that we had offered
the hospitality of the manse to a man of gentle breeding.



September 15th.--I have to record a singularly pleasant day; due partly
to a return of the fine weather, partly to the good social gifts of our
guest.

Attired again in his own clothing, he was, albeit wanting in height, a
finely proportioned man, with remarkably small hands and feet; having
also a bright mobile face, and large dark eyes of an extraordinary
diversity of expression. Also, he was of a sweet and cheerful humor;
easily pleased with little things, and amiably ready to make his gifts
agreeable to all of us. At the same time, a person of my experience and
penetration could not fail to perceive that he was most content when
in company with Felicia. I have already mentioned my daughter’s comely
looks and good womanly qualities. It was in the order of nature that
a young man (to use his own phrase) getting near to his thirty-first
birthday should feel drawn by sympathy toward a well-favored young woman
in her four-and-twentieth year. In matters of this sort I have always
cultivated a liberal turn of mind, not forgetting my own youth.

As the evening closed in, I was sorry to notice a certain change in
our guest for the worse. He showed signs of fatigue--falling asleep at
intervals in his chair, and waking up and shivering. The spare room was
now well aired, having had a roaring fire in it all day.

I begged him not to stand on ceremony, and to betake himself at once to
his bed. Felicia (having learned the accomplishment from her excellent
mother) made him a warm sleeping-draught of eggs, sugar, nutmeg, and
spirits, delicious alike to the senses of smell and taste. Sister Judith
waited until he had closed the door behind him, and then favored me with
one of her dismal predictions. “You’ll rue the day, brother, when you
let him into the house. He is going to fall ill on our hands.”

II.

November 28th.--God be praised for all His mercies! This day, our guest,
Marmaduke Falmer, joined us downstairs in the sitting-room for the first
time since his illness.

He is sadly deteriorated, in a bodily sense, by the wasting rheumatic
fever that brought him nigh to death; but he is still young, and the
doctor (humanly speaking) has no doubt of his speedy and complete
recovery. My sister takes the opposite view. She remarked, in his
hearing, that nobody ever thoroughly got over a rheumatic fever. Oh,
Judith! Judith! it’s well for humanity that you’re a single person! If
haply, there had been any man desperate enough to tackle such a woman in
the bonds of marriage, what a pessimist progeny must have proceeded from
you!

Looking back over my Diary for the last two months and more, I see one
monotonous record of the poor fellow’s sufferings; cheered and varied,
I am pleased to add, by the devoted services of my daughter at the sick
man’s bedside. With some help from her aunt (most readily given when he
was nearest to the point of death), and with needful services performed
in turn by two of our aged women in Cauldkirk, Felicia could not have
nursed him more assiduously if he had been her own brother. Half the
credit of bringing him through it belonged (as the doctor himself
confessed) to the discreet young nurse, always ready through the worst
of the illness, and always cheerful through the long convalescence that
followed. I must also record to the credit of Marmaduke that he was
indeed duly grateful. When I led him into the parlor, and he saw Felicia
waiting by the armchair, smiling and patting the pillows for him,
he took her by the hand, and burst out crying. Weakness, in part, no
doubt--but sincere gratitude at the bottom of it, I am equally sure.



November 29th.--However, there are limits even to sincere gratitude. Of
this truth Mr. Marmaduke seems to be insufficiently aware. Entering the
sitting-room soon after noon today, I found our convalescent guest and
his nurse alone. His head was resting on her shoulder; his arm was round
her waist--and (the truth before everything) Felicia was kissing him.

A man may be of a liberal turn of mind, and may yet consistently object
to freedom when it takes the form of unlicensed embracing and kissing;
the person being his own daughter, and the place his own house. I signed
to my girl to leave us; and I advanced to Mr. Marmaduke, with my opinion
of his conduct just rising in words to my lips--when he staggered me
with amazement by asking for Felicia’s hand in marriage.

“You need feel no doubt of my being able to offer to your daughter a
position of comfort and respectability,” he said. “I have a settled
income of eight hundred pounds a year.”

His raptures over Felicia; his protestations that she was the first
woman he had ever really loved; his profane declaration that he
preferred to die, if I refused to let him be her husband--all these
flourishes, as I may call them, passed in at one of my ears and out at
the other. But eight hundred pounds sterling per annum, descending as
it were in a golden avalanche on the mind of a Scottish minister
(accustomed to thirty years’ annual contemplation of seventy-four
pounds)--eight hundred a year, in one young man’s pocket, I say,
completely overpowered me. I just managed to answer, “Wait till
tomorrow”--and hurried out of doors to recover my self-respect, if the
thing was to be anywise done. I took my way through the valley. The sun
was shining, for a wonder. When I saw my shadow on the hillside, I saw
the Golden Calf as an integral part of me, bearing this inscription in
letters of flame--“Here’s another of them!”



_November 30th._--I have made amends for yesterday’s backsliding; I have
acted as becomes my parental dignity and my sacred calling.

The temptation to do otherwise, has not been wanting. Here is sister
Judith’s advice: “Make sure that he has got the money first; and, for
Heaven’s sake, nail him!” Here is Mr. Marmaduke’s proposal: “Make any
conditions you please, so long as you give me your daughter.” And,
lastly, here is Felicia’s confession: “Father, my heart is set on him.
Oh, don’t be unkind to me for the first time in your life!”

But I have stood firm. I have refused to hear any more words on the
subject from any one of them, for the next six months to come.

“So serious a venture as the venture of marriage,” I said, “is not to
be undertaken on impulse. As soon as Mr. Marmaduke can travel, I request
him to leave us, and not to return again for six months. If, after that
interval, he is still of the same mind, and my daughter is still of the
same mind, let him return to Cauldkirk, and (premising that I am in all
other respects satisfied) let him ask me for his wife.”

There were tears, there were protestations; I remained immovable. A week
later, Mr. Marmaduke left us, on his way by easy stages to the south. I
am not a hard man. I rewarded the lovers for their obedience by keeping
sister Judith out of the way, and letting them say their farewell words
(accompaniments included) in private.

III.

May 28th.--A letter from Mr. Marmaduke, informing me that I may
expect him at Cauldkirk, exactly at the expiration of the six months’
interval--viz., on June the seventh.

Writing to this effect, he added a timely word on the subject of his
family. Both his parents were dead; his only brother held a civil
appointment in India, the place being named. His uncle (his father’s
brother) was a merchant resident in London; and to this near relative he
referred me, if I wished to make inquiries about him. The names of
his bankers, authorized to give me every information in respect to
his pecuniary affairs, followed. Nothing could be more plain and
straightforward. I wrote to his uncle, and I wrote to his bankers.
In both cases the replies were perfectly satisfactory--nothing in the
slightest degree doubtful, no prevarications, no mysteries. In a
word, Mr. Marmaduke himself was thoroughly well vouched for, and Mr.
Marmaduke’s income was invested in securities beyond fear and beyond
reproach. Even sister Judith, bent on picking a hole in the record
somewhere, tried hard, and could make nothing of it.

The last sentence in Mr. Marmaduke’s letter was the only part of it
which I failed to read with pleasure.

He left it to me to fix the day for the marriage, and he entreated
that I would make it as early a day as possible. I had a touch of the
heartache when I thought of parting with Felicia, and being left at home
with nobody but Judith. However, I got over it for that time, and,
after consulting my daughter, we decided on naming a fortnight after Mr.
Marmaduke’s arrival--that is to say, the twenty-first of June. This
gave Felicia time for her preparations, besides offering to me
the opportunity of becoming better acquainted with my son-in-law’s
disposition. The happiest marriage does indubitably make its demands
on human forbearance; and I was anxious, among other things, to assure
myself of Mr. Marmaduke’s good temper.

IV.

June 22d.--The happy change in my daughter’s life (let me say nothing
of the change in _my_ life) has come: they were married yesterday.
The manse is a desert; and sister Judith was never so uncongenial a
companion to me as I feel her to be now. Her last words to the married
pair, when they drove away, were: “Lord help you both; you have all your
troubles before you!”

I had no heart to write yesterday’s record, yesterday evening, as usual.
The absence of Felicia at the supper-table completely overcame me. I,
who have so often comforted others in their afflictions, could find no
comfort for myself. Even now that the day has passed, the tears come
into my eyes, only with writing about it. Sad, sad weakness! Let me
close my Diary, and open the Bible--and be myself again.



June 23d.--More resigned since yesterday; a more becoming and more pious
frame of mind--obedient to God’s holy will, and content in the belief
that my dear daughter’s married life will be a happy one.

They have gone abroad for their holiday--to Switzerland, by way
of France. I was anything rather than pleased when I heard that my
son-in-law proposed to take Felicia to that sink of iniquity, Paris. He
knows already what I think of balls and playhouses, and similar devils’
diversions, and how I have brought up my daughter to think of them--the
subject having occurred in conversation among us more than a week since.
That he could meditate taking a child of mine to the headquarters of
indecent jiggings and abominable stage-plays, of spouting rogues and
painted Jezebels, was indeed a heavy blow.

However, Felicia reconciled me to it in the end. She declared that her
only desire in going to Paris was to see the picture-galleries, the
public buildings, and the fair outward aspect of the city generally.
“Your opinions, father, are my opinions,” she said; “and Marmaduke, I am
sure, will so shape our arrangements as to prevent our passing a Sabbath
in Paris.” Marmaduke not only consented to this (with the perfect good
temper of which I have observed more than one gratifying example in
him), but likewise assured me that, speaking for himself personally, it
would be a relief to him when they got to the mountains and the lakes.
So that matter was happily settled. Go where they may, God bless and
prosper them!

Speaking of relief, I must record that Judith has gone away to Aberdeen
on a visit to some friends. “You’ll be wretched enough here,” she said
at parting, “all by yourself.” Pure vanity and self-complacence! It may
be resignation to her absence, or it may be natural force of mind, I
began to be more easy and composed the moment I was alone, and this
blessed state of feeling has continued uninterruptedly ever since.

V.

September 5th.--A sudden change in my life, which it absolutely startles
me to record. I am going to London!

My purpose in taking this most serious step is of a twofold nature. I
have a greater and a lesser object in view.

The greater object is to see my daughter, and to judge for myself
whether certain doubts on the vital question of her happiness, which now
torment me night and day, are unhappily founded on truth. She and her
husband returned in August from their wedding-tour, and took up their
abode in Marmaduke’s new residence in London. Up to this time, Felicia’s
letters to me were, in very truth, the delight of my life--she was so
entirely happy, so amazed and delighted with all the wonderful things
she saw, so full of love and admiration for the best husband that ever
lived. Since her return to London, I perceive a complete change.

She makes no positive complaint, but she writes in a tone of weariness
and discontent; she says next to nothing of Marmaduke, and she dwells
perpetually on the one idea of my going to London to see her. I hope
with my whole heart that I am wrong; but the rare allusions to her
husband, and the constantly repeated desire to see her father (while she
has not been yet three months married), seem to me to be bad signs. In
brief, my anxiety is too great to be endured. I have so arranged matters
with one of my brethren as to be free to travel to London cheaply by
steamer; and I begin the journey tomorrow.

My lesser object may be dismissed in two words. Having already decided
on going to London, I propose to call on the wealthy nobleman who owns
all the land hereabouts, and represent to him the discreditable, and
indeed dangerous, condition of the parish kirk for want of means to
institute the necessary repairs. If I find myself well received, I
shall put in a word for the manse, which is almost in as deplorable a
condition as the church. My lord is a wealthy man--may his heart and his
purse be opened unto me!

Sister Judith is packing my portmanteau. According to custom, she
forbodes the worst. “Never forget,” she says, “that I warned you against
Marmaduke, on the first night when he entered the house.”

VI.

September 10th.--After more delays than one, on land and sea, I was at
last set ashore near the Tower, on the afternoon of yesterday. God help
us, my worst anticipations have been realized! My beloved Felicia has
urgent and serious need of me.

It is not to be denied that I made my entry into my son-in-law’s house
in a disturbed and irritated frame of mind. First, my temper was tried
by the almost interminable journey, in the noisy and comfortless vehicle
which they call a cab, from the river-wharf to the west-end of London,
where Marmaduke lives. In the second place, I was scandalized and
alarmed by an incident which took place--still on the endless journey
from east to west--in a street hard by the market of Covent Garden.

We had just approached a large building, most profusely illuminated with
gas, and exhibiting prodigious colored placards having inscribed on
them nothing but the name of Barrymore. The cab came suddenly to
a standstill; and looking out to see what the obstacle might be, I
discovered a huge concourse of men and women, drawn across the pavement
and road alike, so that it seemed impossible to pass by them. I inquired
of my driver what this assembling of the people meant. “Oh,” says
he, “Barrymore has made another hit.” This answer being perfectly
unintelligible to me, I requested some further explanation, and
discovered that “Barrymore” was the name of a stage-player favored
by the populace; that the building was a theater, and that all these
creatures with immortal souls were waiting, before the doors opened, to
get places at the show!

The emotions of sorrow and indignation caused by this discovery so
absorbed me that I failed to notice an attempt the driver made to pass
through, where the crowd seemed to be thinner, until the offended people
resented the proceeding. Some of them seized the horse’s head; others
were on the point of pulling the driver off his box, when providentially
the police interfered. Under their protection, we drew back, and reached
our destination in safety, by another way. I record this otherwise
unimportant affair, because it grieved and revolted me (when I thought
of the people’s souls), and so indisposed my mind to take cheerful views
of anything. Under these circumstances, I would fain hope that I have
exaggerated the true state of the case, in respect to my daughter’s
married life.

My good girl almost smothered me with kisses. When I at last got a fair
opportunity of observing her, I thought her looking pale and worn and
anxious. Query: Should I have arrived at this conclusion if I had met
with no example of the wicked dissipations of London, and if I had
ridden at my ease in a comfortable vehicle?

They had a succulent meal ready for me, and, what I call, fair enough
whisky out of Scotland. Here again I remarked that Felicia ate very
little, and Marmaduke nothing at all. He drank wine, too--and, good
heavens, champagne wine!--a needless waste of money surely when there
was whisky on the table. My appetite being satisfied, my son-in-law went
out of the room, and returned with his hat in his hand. “You and Felicia
have many things to talk about on your first evening together. I’ll
leave you for a while--I shall only be in the way.” So he spoke. It was
in vain that his wife and I assured him he was not in the way at all. He
kissed his hand, and smiled pleasantly, and left us.

“There, father!” says Felicia. “For the last ten days he has gone
out like that, and left me alone for the whole evening. When we first
returned from Switzerland, he left me in the same mysterious way, only
it was after breakfast then. Now he stays at home in the daytime, and
goes out at night.”

I inquired if she had not summoned him to give her some explanation.

“I don’t know what to make of his explanation,” says Felicia. “When he
went away in the daytime, he told me he had business in the City. Since
he took to going out at night, he says he goes to his club.”

“Have you asked where his club is, my dear?”

“He says it’s in Pall Mall. There are dozens of clubs in that
street--and he has never told me the name of _his_ club. I am completely
shut out of his confidence. Would you believe it, father? he has not
introduced one of his friends to me since we came home. I doubt if they
know where he lives, since he took this house.”

What could I say?

I said nothing, and looked round the room. It was fitted up with
perfectly palatial magnificence. I am an ignorant man in matters of this
sort, and partly to satisfy my curiosity, partly to change the
subject, I asked to see the house. Mercy preserve us, the same grandeur
everywhere! I wondered if even such an income as eight hundred a year
could suffice for it all. In a moment when I was considering this,
a truly frightful suspicion crossed my mind. Did these mysterious
absences, taken in connection with the unbridled luxury that surrounded
us, mean that my son-in-law was a gamester? a shameless shuffler of
cards, or a debauched bettor on horses? While I was still completely
overcome by my own previsions of evil, my daughter put her arm in mine
to take me to the top of the house.

For the first time I observed a bracelet of dazzling gems on her wrist.
“Not diamonds?” I said. She answered, with as much composure as if
she had been the wife of a nobleman, “Yes, diamonds--a present from
Marmaduke.” This was too much for me; my previsions, so to speak, forced
their way into words. “Oh, my poor child!” I burst out, “I’m in mortal
fear that your husband’s a gamester!”

She showed none of the horror I had anticipated; she only shook her head
and began to cry.

“Worse than that, I’m afraid,” she said.

I was petrified; my tongue refused its office, when I would fain have
asked her what she meant. Her besetting sin, poor soul, is a proud
spirit. She dried her eyes on a sudden, and spoke out freely, in these
words: “I am not going to cry about it. The other day, father, we were
out walking in the park. A horrid, bold, yellow-haired woman passed us
in an open carriage. She kissed her hand to Marmaduke, and called out
to him, ‘How are you, Marmy?’ I was so indignant that I pushed him away
from me, and told him to go and take a drive with his lady. He burst out
laughing. ‘Nonsense!’ he said; ‘she has known me for years--you don’t
understand our easy London manners.’ We have made it up since then; but
I have my own opinion of the creature in the open carriage.”

Morally speaking, this was worse than all. But, logically viewed, it
completely failed as a means of accounting for the diamond bracelet and
the splendor of the furniture.

We went on to the uppermost story. It was cut off from the rest of the
house by a stout partition of wood, and a door covered with green baize.

When I tried the door it was locked. “Ha!” says Felicia, “I wanted you
to see it for yourself!” More suspicious proceedings on the part of
my son-in-law! He kept the door constantly locked, and the key in his
pocket. When his wife asked him what it meant, he answered: “My study is
up there--and I like to keep it entirely to myself.” After such a reply
as that, the preservation of my daughter’s dignity permitted but one
answer: “Oh, keep it to yourself, by all means!”

My previsions, upon this, assumed another form.

I now asked myself--still in connection with my son-in-law’s extravagant
expenditure--whether the clew to the mystery might not haply be the
forging of bank-notes on the other side of the baize door. My mind
was prepared for anything by this time. We descended again into the
dining-room. Felicia saw how my spirits were dashed, and came and
perched upon my knee. “Enough of my troubles for to-night, father,”
 she said. “I am going to be your little girl again, and we will talk
of nothing but Cauldkirk, until Marmaduke comes back.” I am one of the
firmest men living, but I could not keep the hot tears out of my eyes
when she put her arm round my neck and said those words. By good fortune
I was sitting with my back to the lamp; she didn’t notice me.

A little after eleven o’clock Marmaduke returned. He looked pale and
weary. But more champagne, and this time something to eat with it,
seemed to set him to rights again--no doubt by relieving him from the
reproaches of a guilty conscience.

I had been warned by Felicia to keep what had passed between us a secret
from her husband for the present; so we had (superficially speaking) a
merry end to the evening. My son-in-law was nearly as good company as
ever, and wonderfully fertile in suggestions and expedients when he saw
they were wanted. Hearing from his wife, to whom I had mentioned it,
that I purposed representing the decayed condition of the kirk and manse
to the owner of Cauldkirk and the country round about, he strongly urged
me to draw up a list of repairs that were most needful, before I waited
on my lord. This advice, vicious and degraded as the man who offered it
may be, is sound advice nevertheless. I shall assuredly take it.

So far I had written in my Diary, in the forenoon. Returning to my daily
record, after a lapse of some hours, I have a new mystery of iniquity to
chronicle. My abominable son-in-law now appears (I blush to write it) to
be nothing less than an associate of thieves!

After the meal they call luncheon, I thought it well before recreating
myself with the sights of London, to attend first to the crying
necessities of the kirk and the manse. Furnished with my written list, I
presented myself at his lordship’s residence. I was immediately informed
that he was otherwise engaged, and could not possibly receive me. If
I wished to see my lord’s secretary, Mr. Helmsley, I could do so.
Consenting to this, rather than fail entirely in my errand, I was shown
into the secretary’s room.

Mr. Helmsley heard what I had to say civilly enough; expressing,
however, grave doubts whether his lordship would do anything for me, the
demands on his purse being insupportably numerous already. However, he
undertook to place my list before his employer, and to let me know the
result. “Where are you staying in London?” he asked. I answered: “With
my son-in-law, Mr. Marmaduke Falmer.” Before I could add the address,
the secretary started to his feet and tossed my list back to me across
the table in the most uncivil manner.

“Upon my word,” says he, “your assurance exceeds anything I ever heard
of. Your son-in-law is concerned in the robbery of her ladyship’s
diamond bracelet--the discovery was made not an hour ago. Leave the
house, sir, and consider yourself lucky that I have no instructions to
give you in charge to the police.” I protested against this unprovoked
outrage, with a violence of language which I would rather not recall.
As a minister, I ought, under every provocation, to have preserved my
self-control.

The one thing to do next was to drive back to my unhappy daughter.

Her guilty husband was with her. I was too angry to wait for a fit
opportunity of speaking. The Christian humility which I have all my life
cultivated as the first of virtues sank, as it were, from under me. In
terms of burning indignation I told them what had happened. The result
was too distressing to be described. It ended in Felicia giving her
husband back the bracelet. The hardened reprobate laughed at us. “Wait
till I have seen his lordship and Mr. Helmsley,” he said, and left the
house.

Does he mean to escape to foreign parts? Felicia, womanlike, believes in
him still; she is quite convinced that there must be some mistake. I am
myself in hourly expectation of the arrival of the police.



With gratitude to Providence, I note before going to bed the harmless
termination of the affair of the bracelet--so far as Marmaduke is
concerned. The agent who sold him the jewel has been forced to come
forward and state the truth. His lordship’s wife is the guilty person;
the bracelet was hers--a present from her husband. Harassed by debts
that she dare not acknowledge, she sold it; my lord discovered that it
was gone; and in terror of his anger the wretched woman took refuge in a
lie.

She declared that the bracelet had been stolen from her. Asked for the
name of the thief, the reckless woman (having no other name in her mind
at the moment) mentioned the man who had innocently bought the jewel of
her agent, otherwise my unfortunate son-in-law. Oh, the profligacy of
the modern Babylon! It was well I went to the secretary when I did or we
should really have had the police in the house. Marmaduke found them in
consultation over the supposed robbery, asking for his address.
There was a dreadful exhibition of violence and recrimination at his
lordship’s residence: in the end he re-purchased the bracelet. My
son-in-law’s money has been returned to him; and Mr. Helmsley has sent
me a written apology.

In a worldly sense, this would, I suppose, be called a satisfactory
ending.

It is not so to my mind. I freely admit that I too hastily distrusted
Marmaduke; but am I, on that account, to give him back immediately
the place which he once occupied in my esteem? Again this evening he
mysteriously quitted the house, leaving me alone with Felicia, and
giving no better excuse for his conduct than that he had an engagement.
And this when I have a double claim on his consideration, as his
father-in-law and his guest.



September 11th.--The day began well enough. At breakfast, Marmaduke
spoke feelingly of the unhappy result of my visit to his lordship, and
asked me to let him look at the list of repairs. “It is just useless
to expect anything from my lord, after what has happened,” I said.
“Besides, Mr. Helmsley gave me no hope when I stated my case to him.”
 Marmaduke still held out his hand for the list. “Let me try if I can
get some subscribers,” he replied. This was kindly meant, at any rate.
I gave him the list; and I began to recover some of my old friendly
feeling for him. Alas! the little gleam of tranquillity proved to be of
short duration.

We made out our plans for the day pleasantly enough. The check came when
Felicia spoke next of our plans for the evening. “My father has only
four days more to pass with us,” she said to her husband. “Surely you
won’t go out again to-night, and leave him?” Marmaduke’s face clouded
over directly; he looked embarrassed and annoyed. I sat perfectly
silent, leaving them to settle it by themselves.

“You will stay with us this evening, won’t you?” says Felicia. No: he
was not free for the evening. “What! another engagement? Surely you can
put it off?” No; impossible to put it off. “Is it a ball, or a party of
some kind?” No answer; he changed the subject--he offered Felicia the
money repaid to him for the bracelet. “Buy one for yourself, my dear,
this time.” Felicia handed him back the money, rather too haughtily,
perhaps. “I don’t want a bracelet,” she said; “I want your company in
the evening.”

He jumped up, good-tempered as he was, in something very like a
rage--then looked at me, and checked himself on the point (as I believe)
of using profane language. “This is downright persecution!” he burst
out, with an angry turn of his head toward his wife. Felicia got up, in
her turn. “Your language is an insult to my father and to me!” He looked
thoroughly staggered at this: it was evidently their first serious
quarrel.

Felicia took no notice of him. “I will get ready directly, father;
and we will go out together.” He stopped her as she was leaving the
room--recovering his good temper with a readiness which it pleased me
to see. “Come, come, Felicia! We have not quarreled yet, and we won’t
quarrel now. Let me off this one time more, and I will devote the next
three evenings of your father’s visit to him and to you. Give me a kiss,
and make it up.” My daughter doesn’t do things by halves. She gave him a
dozen kisses, I should think--and there was a happy end of it.

“But what shall we do to-morrow evening?” says Marmaduke, sitting down
by his wife, and patting her hand as it lay in his.

“Take us somewhere,” says she. Marmaduke laughed. “Your father objects
to public amusements. Where does he want to go to?” Felicia took up the
newspaper. “There is an oratorio at Exeter Hall,” she said; “my father
likes music.” He turned to me. “You don’t object to oratorios, sir?”
 “I don’t object to music,” I answered, “so long as I am not required
to enter a theater.” Felicia handed the newspaper to me. “Speaking of
theaters, father, have you read what they say about the new play? What a
pity it can’t be given out of a theater!” I looked at her in speechless
amazement. She tried to explain herself. “The paper says that the new
play is a service rendered to the cause of virtue; and that the great
actor, Barrymore, has set an example in producing it which deserves the
encouragement of all truly religious people. Do read it, father!” I held
up my hands in dismay. My own daughter perverted! pinning her faith on
a newspaper! speaking, with a perverse expression of interest, of
a stage-play and an actor! Even Marmaduke witnessed this lamentable
exhibition of backsliding with some appearance of alarm. “It’s not
her fault, sir,” he said, interceding with me. “It’s the fault of the
newspaper. Don’t blame her!” I held my peace; determining inwardly to
pray for her. Shortly afterward my daughter and I went out. Marmaduke
accompanied us part of the way, and left us at a telegraph office.
“Who are you going to telegraph to?” Felicia asked. Another mystery! He
answered, “Business of my own, my dear”--and went into the office.



September 12th.--Is my miserable son-in-law’s house under a curse?
The yellow-haired woman in the open carriage drove up to the door at
half-past ten this morning, in a state of distraction. Felicia and I saw
her from the drawing-room balcony--a tall woman in gorgeous garments.
She knocked with her own hand at the door--she cried out distractedly,
“Where is he? I must see him!” At the sound of her voice, Marmaduke
(playing with his little dog in the drawing-room) rushed downstairs and
out into the street. “Hold your tongue!” we heard him say to her. “What
are you here for?”

What she answered we failed to hear; she was certainly crying. Marmaduke
stamped on the pavement like a man beside himself--took her roughly by
the arm, and led her into the house.

Before I could utter a word, Felicia left me and flew headlong down the
stairs.

She was in time to hear the dining-room locked. Following her, I
prevented the poor jealous creature from making a disturbance at the
door. God forgive me--not knowing how else to quiet her--I degraded
myself by advising her to listen to what they said. She instantly
opened the door of the back dining-room, and beckoned to me to follow.
I naturally hesitated. “I shall go mad,” she whispered, “if you leave me
by myself!” What could I do? I degraded myself the second time. For my
own child--in pity for my own child!

We heard them, through the flimsy modern folding-doors, at those times
when he was most angry, and she most distracted. That is to say, we
heard them when they spoke in their loudest tones.

“How did you find out where I live?” says he. “Oh, you’re ashamed of
me?” says she. “Mr. Helmsley was with us yesterday evening. That’s how I
found out!” “What do you mean?” “I mean that Mr. Helmsley had your card
and address in his pocket. Ah, you were obliged to give your address
when you had to clear up that matter of the bracelet! You cruel,
cruel man, what have I done to deserve such a note as you sent me this
morning?” “Do what the note tells you!” “Do what the note tells me?
Did anybody ever hear a man talk so, out of a lunatic asylum? Why,
you haven’t even the grace to carry out your own wicked deception--you
haven’t even gone to bed!” There the voices grew less angry, and
we missed what followed. Soon the lady burst out again, piteously
entreating him this time. “Oh, Marmy, don’t ruin me! Has anybody
offended you? Is there anything you wish to have altered? Do you want
more money? It is too cruel to treat me in this way--it is indeed!” He
made some answer, which we were not able to hear; we could only suppose
that he had upset her temper again. She went on louder than ever “I’ve
begged and prayed of you--and you’re as hard as iron. I’ve told you
about the Prince--and _that_ has had no effect on you. I have done now.
We’ll see what the doctor says.” He got angry, in his turn; we heard him
again. “I won’t see the doctor!” “Oh, you refuse to see the doctor?--I
shall make your refusal known--and if there’s law in England, you shall
feel it!” Their voices dropped again; some new turn seemed to be taken
by the conversation. We heard the lady once more, shrill and joyful this
time. “There’s a dear! You see it, don’t you, in the right light? And
you haven’t forgotten the old times, have you? You’re the same dear,
honorable, kind-hearted fellow that you always were!”

I caught hold of Felicia, and put my hand over her mouth.

There was a sound in the next room which might have been--I cannot be
certain--the sound of a kiss. The next moment, we heard the door of the
room unlocked. Then the door of the house was opened, and the noise
of retreating carriage-wheels followed. We met him in the hall, as he
entered the house again.

My daughter walked up to him, pale and determined.

“I insist on knowing who that woman is, and what she wants here.” Those
were her first words. He looked at her like a man in utter confusion.
“Wait till this evening; I am in no state to speak to you now!” With
that, he snatched his hat off the hall table and rushed out of the
house.

It is little more than three weeks since they returned to London from
their happy wedding-tour--and it has come to this!

The clock has just struck seven; a letter has been left by a messenger,
addressed to my daughter. I had persuaded her, poor soul, to lie down
in her own room. God grant that the letter may bring her some tidings of
her husband! I please myself in the hope of hearing good news.

My mind has not been kept long in suspense. Felicia’s waiting-woman has
brought me a morsel of writing paper, with these lines penciled on it
in my daughter’s handwriting: “Dearest father, make your mind easy.
Everything is explained. I cannot trust myself to speak to you about it
to-night--and _he_ doesn’t wish me to do so. Only wait till tomorrow,
and you shall know all. He will be back about eleven o’clock. Please
don’t wait up for him--he will come straight to me.”



September 13th.--The scales have fallen from my eyes; the light is let
in on me at last. My bewilderment is not to be uttered in words--I am
like a man in a dream.

Before I was out of my room in the morning, my mind was upset by the
arrival of a telegram addressed to myself. It was the first thing of
the kind I ever received; I trembled under the prevision of some new
misfortune as I opened the envelope.

Of all the people in the world, the person sending the telegram was
sister Judith! Never before did this distracting relative confound me
as she confounded me now. Here is her message: “You can’t come back. An
architect from Edinburgh asserts his resolution to repair the kirk and
the manse. The man only waits for his lawful authority to begin. The
money is ready--but who has found it? Mr. Architect is forbidden to
tell. We live in awful times. How is Felicia?”

Naturally concluding that Judith’s mind must be deranged, I went
downstairs to meet my son-in-law (for the first time since the events
of yesterday) at the late breakfast which is customary in this house. He
was waiting for me--but Felicia was not present. “She breakfasts in
her room this morning,” says Marmaduke; “and I am to give you the
explanation which has already satisfied your daughter. Will you take
it at great length, sir? or will you have it in one word?” There was
something in his manner that I did not at all like--he seemed to be
setting me at defiance. I said, stiffly, “Brevity is best; I will have
it in one word.”

“Here it is then,” he answered. “I am Barrymore.”


POSTSCRIPT ADDED BY FELICIA.

If the last line extracted from my dear father’s Diary does not contain
explanation enough in itself, I add some sentences from Marmaduke’s
letter to me, sent from the theater last night. (N. B.--I leave out the
expressions of endearment: they are my own private property.)

... “Just remember how your father talked about theaters and actors,
when I was at Cauldkirk, and how you listened in dutiful agreement with
him. Would he have consented to your marriage if he had known that I was
one of the ‘spouting rogues,’ associated with the ‘painted Jezebels’
of the playhouse? He would never have consented--and you yourself, my
darling, would have trembled at the bare idea of marrying an actor.

“Have I been guilty of any serious deception? and have my friends been
guilty in helping to keep my secret? My birth, my name, my surviving
relatives, my fortune inherited from my father--all these important
particulars have been truly stated. The name of Barrymore is nothing but
the name that I assumed when I went on the stage.

“As to what has happened, since our return from Switzerland, I own
that I ought to have made my confession to you. Forgive me if I weakly
hesitated. I was so fond of you; and I so distrusted the Puritanical
convictions which your education had rooted in your mind, that I put it
off from day to day. Oh, my angel....!

“Yes, I kept the address of my new house a secret from all my friends,
knowing they would betray me if they paid us visits. As for my
mysteriously-closed study, it was the place in which I privately
rehearsed my new part. When I left you in the mornings, it was to go
to the theater rehearsals. My evening absences began of course with the
first performance.

“Your father’s arrival seriously embarrassed me. When you (most
properly) insisted on my giving up some of my evenings to him, you
necessarily made it impossible for me to appear on the stage. The one
excuse I could make to the theater was, that I was too ill to act. It
did certainly occur to me to cut the Gordian knot by owning the truth.
But your father’s horror, when you spoke of the newspaper review of the
play, and the shame and fear you showed at your own boldness, daunted me
once more.

“The arrival at the theater of my written excuse brought the manageress
down upon me, in a state of distraction. Nobody could supply my place;
all the seats were taken; and the Prince was expected. There was what
we call a scene between the poor lady and myself. I felt I was in the
wrong; I saw that the position in which I had impulsively placed myself
was unworthy of me--and it ended in my doing my duty to the theater and
the public. But for the affair of the bracelet, which obliged me as an
honorable man to give my name and address, the manageress would not have
discovered me. She, like every one else, only knew of my address at
my bachelor chambers. How could you be jealous of the old theatrical
comrade of my first days on the stage? Don’t you know yet that you are
the one woman in the world....?

“A last word relating to your father, and I have done.

“Do you remember my leaving you at the telegraph office? It was to send
a message to a friend of mine, an architect in Edinburgh, instructing
him to go immediately to Cauldkirk, and provide for the repairs at my
expense. The theater, my dear, more than trebles my paternal income,
and I can well afford it. Will your father refuse to accept a tribute
of respect to a Scottish minister, because it is paid out of an actor’s
pocket? You shall ask him the question.

“And, I say, Felicia--will you come and see me act? I don’t expect your
father to enter a theater; but, by way of further reconciling him to his
son-in-law, suppose you ask him to hear me read the play?”



MR. PERCY AND THE PROPHET.

PART 1.--THE PREDICTION.


CHAPTER I.

THE QUACK.

THE disasters that follow the hateful offense against Christianity,
which men call war, were severely felt in England during the peace that
ensued on the overthrow of Napoleon at Waterloo. With rare exceptions,
distress prevailed among all classes of the community. The starving
nation was ripe and ready for a revolutionary rising against its rulers,
who had shed the people’s blood and wasted the people’s substance in
a war which had yielded to the popular interests absolutely nothing in
return.

Among the unfortunate persons who were driven, during the disastrous
early years of this century, to strange shifts and devices to obtain
the means of living, was a certain obscure medical man, of French
extraction, named Lagarde. The Doctor (duly qualified to bear the title)
was an inhabitant of London; living in one of the narrow streets which
connect the great thoroughfare of the Strand with the bank of the
Thames.

The method of obtaining employment chosen by poor Lagarde, as the one
alternative left in the face of starvation, was, and is still considered
by the medical profession to be, the method of a quack. He advertised in
the public journals.

Addressing himself especially to two classes of the community, the
Doctor proceeded in these words:

“I have the honor of inviting to my house, in the first place: Persons
afflicted with maladies which ordinary medical practice has failed to
cure--and, in the second place: Persons interested in investigations,
the object of which is to penetrate the secrets of the future. Of the
means by which I endeavor to alleviate suffering and to enlighten
doubt, it is impossible to speak intelligibly within the limits of an
advertisement. I can only offer to submit my system to public inquiry,
without exacting any preliminary fee from ladies and gentlemen who may
honor me with a visit. Those who see sufficient reason to trust
me, after personal experience, will find a money-box fixed on the
waiting-room table, into which they can drop their offerings according
to their means. Those whom I am not fortunate enough to satisfy will be
pleased to accept the expression of my regret, and will not be expected
to give anything. I shall be found at home every evening between the
hours of six and ten.”

Toward the close of the year 1816 this strange advertisement became a
general topic of conversation among educated people in London. For some
weeks the Doctor’s invitations were generally accepted--and, all things
considered, were not badly remunerated. A faithful few believed in him,
and told wonderful stories of what he had pronounced and prophesied
in the sanctuary of his consulting-room. The majority of his visitors
simply viewed him in the light of a public amusement, and wondered
why such a gentlemanlike man should have chosen to gain his living by
exhibiting himself as a quack.


CHAPTER II.

THE NUMBERS.

ON a raw and snowy evening toward the latter part of January, 1817, a
gentleman, walking along the Strand, turned into the street in which
Doctor Lagarde lived, and knocked at the physician’s door.

He was admitted by an elderly male servant to a waiting-room on the
first floor. The light of one little lamp, placed on a bracket fixed to
the wall, was so obscured by a dark green shade as to make it difficult,
if not impossible, for visitors meeting by accident to recognize each
other. The metal money-box fixed to the table was just visible. In the
flickering light of a small fire, the stranger perceived the figures of
three men seated, apart and silent, who were the only occupants of the
room beside himself.

So far as objects were to be seen, there was nothing to attract
attention in the waiting-room. The furniture was plain and neat, and
nothing more. The elderly servant handed a card, with a number inscribed
on it, to the new visitor, said in a whisper, “Your number will be
called, sir, in your turn,” and disappeared. For some minutes nothing
disturbed the deep silence but the faint ticking of a clock. After a
while a bell rang from an inner room, a door opened, and a gentleman
appeared, whose interview with Doctor Lagarde had terminated.
His opinion of the sitting was openly expressed in one emphatic
word--“Humbug!” No contribution dropped from his hand as he passed the
money-box on his way out.

The next number (being Number Fifteen) was called by the elderly
servant, and the first incident occurred in the strange series of events
destined to happen in the Doctor’s house that night.

One after another the three men who had been waiting rose, examined
their cards under the light of the lamp, and sat down again surprised
and disappointed.

The servant advanced to investigate the matter. The numbers possessed
by the three visitors, instead of being Fifteen, Sixteen and Seventeen,
proved to be Sixteen, Seventeen and Eighteen. Turning to the stranger
who had arrived the last, the servant said:

“Have I made a mistake, sir? Have I given you Number Fifteen instead of
Number Eighteen?”

The gentleman produced his numbered card.

A mistake had certainly been made, but not the mistake that the servant
supposed. The card held by the latest visitor turned out to be the
card previously held by the dissatisfied stranger who had just left
the room--Number Fourteen! As to the card numbered Fifteen, it was only
discovered the next morning lying in a corner, dropped on the floor!

Acting on his first impulse, the servant hurried out, calling to the
original holder of Fourteen to come back and bear his testimony to that
fact. The street-door had been opened for him by the landlady of
the house. She was a pretty woman--and the gentleman had fortunately
lingered to talk to her. He was induced, at the intercession of the
landlady, to ascend the stairs again.

On returning to the waiting-room, he addressed a characteristic question
to the assembled visitors. “_More_ humbug?” asked the gentleman who
liked to talk to a pretty woman.

The servant--completely puzzled by his own stupidity--attempted to make
his apologies.

“Pray forgive me, gentlemen,” he said. “I am afraid I have confused the
cards I distribute with the cards returned to me. I think I had better
consult my master.”

Left by themselves, the visitors began to speak jestingly of the strange
situation in which they were placed. The original holder of Number
Fourteen described his experience of the Doctor in his own pithy way.
“I applied to the fellow to tell my fortune. He first went to sleep over
it, and then he said he could tell me nothing. I asked why. ‘I don’t
know,’ says he. ‘_ I_ do,’ says I--‘humbug!’ I’ll bet you the long odds,
gentlemen, that _you_ find it humbug, too.”

Before the wager could be accepted or declined, the door of the inner
room was opened again. The tall, spare, black figure of a new personage
appeared on the threshold, relieved darkly against the light in the room
behind him. He addressed the visitors in these words:

“Gentlemen, I must beg your indulgence. The accident--as we now suppose
it to be--which has given to the last comer the number already held by a
gentleman who has unsuccessfully consulted me, may have a meaning which
we can none of us at present see. If the three visitors who have been
so good as to wait will allow the present holder of Number Fourteen
to consult me out of his turn--and if the earlier visitor who left me
dissatisfied with his consultation will consent to stay here a little
longer--something may happen which will justify a trifling sacrifice of
your own convenience. Is ten minutes’ patience too much to ask of you?”

The three visitors who had waited longest consulted among themselves,
and (having nothing better to do with their time) decided on accepting
the Doctor’s proposal. The visitor who believed it all to be “humbug”
 coolly took a gold coin out of his pocket, tossed it into the air,
caught it in his closed hand, and walked up to the shaded lamp on the
bracket.

“Heads, stay,” he said, “Tails, go.” He opened his hand, and looked at
the coin. “Heads! Very good. Go on with your hocus-pocus, Doctor--I’ll
wait.”

“You believe in chance,” said the Doctor, quietly observing him. “That
is not my experience of life.”

He paused to let the stranger who now held Number Fourteen pass him into
the inner room--then followed, closing the door behind him.


CHAPTER III.

THE CONSULTATION.

THE consulting-room was better lighted than the waiting-room, and that
was the only difference between the two. In the one, as in the other, no
attempt was made to impress the imagination. Everywhere, the commonplace
furniture of a London lodging-house was left without the slightest
effort to alter or improve it by changes of any kind.

Seen under the clearer light, Doctor Lagarde appeared to be the last
person living who would consent to degrade himself by an attempt at
imposture of any kind. His eyes were the dreamy eyes of a visionary; his
look was the prematurely-aged look of a student, accustomed to give the
hours to his book which ought to have been given to his bed. To state
it briefly, he was a man who might easily be deceived by others, but who
was incapable of consciously practicing deception himself.

Signing to his visitor to be seated, he took a chair on the opposite
side of the small table that stood between them--waited a moment with
his face hidden in his hands, as if to collect himself--and then spoke.

“Do you come to consult me on a case of illness?” he inquired, “or do
you ask me to look to the darkness which hides your future life?”

The answer to these questions was frankly and briefly expressed. “I have
no need to consult you about my health. I come to hear what you can tell
me of my future life.”

“I can try,” pursued the Doctor; “but I cannot promise to succeed.”

“I accept your conditions,” the stranger rejoined. “I never believe nor
disbelieve. If you will excuse my speaking frankly, I mean to observe
you closely, and to decide for myself.”

Doctor Lagarde smiled sadly.

“You have heard of me as a charlatan who contrives to amuse a few idle
people,” he said. “I don’t complain of that; my present position leads
necessarily to misinterpretation of myself and my motives. Still, I may
at least say that I am the victim of a sincere avowal of my belief in
a great science. Yes! I repeat it, a great science! New, I dare say, to
the generation we live in, though it was known and practiced in the days
when pyramids were built. The age is advancing; and the truths which
it is my misfortune to advocate, before the time is ripe for them, are
steadily forcing their way to recognition. I am resigned to wait. My
sincerity in this matter has cost me the income that I derived from my
medical practice. Patients distrust me; doctors refuse to consult with
me. I could starve if I had no one to think of but myself. But I have
another person to consider, who is very dear to me; and I am driven,
literally driven, either to turn beggar in the streets, or do what I am
doing now.”

He paused, and looked round toward the corner of the room behind him.
“Mother,” he said gently, “are you ready?”

An elderly lady, dressed in deep mourning, rose from her seat in the
corner. She had been, thus far, hidden from notice by the high back of
the easy-chair in which her son sat. Excepting some f olds of fine black
lace, laid over her white hair so as to form a head-dress at once simple
and picturesque, there was nothing remarkable in her attire. The visitor
rose and bowed. She gravely returned his salute, and moved so as to
place herself opposite to her son.

“May I ask what this lady is going to do?” said the stranger.

“To be of any use to you,” answered Doctor Lagarde, “I must be thrown
into the magnetic trance. The person who has the strongest influence
over me is the person who will do it to-night.”

He turned to his mother. “When you like,” he said.

Bending over him, she took both the Doctor’s hands, and looked steadily
into his eyes. No words passed between them; nothing more took place. In
a minute or two, his head was resting against the back of the chair, and
his eyelids had closed.

“Are you sleeping?” asked Madame Lagarde.

“I am sleeping,” he answered.

She laid his hands gently on the arms of the chair, and turned to
address the visitor.

“Let the sleep gain on him for a minute or two more,” she said. “Then
take one of his hands, and put to him what questions you please.”

“Does he hear us now, madam?”

“You might fire off a pistol, sir, close to his ear, and he would not
hear it. The vibration might disturb him; that is all. Until you or I
touch him, and so establish the nervous sympathy, he is as lost to all
sense of our presence here, as if he were dead.”

“Are you speaking of the thing called Animal Magnetism, madam?”

“Yes, sir.”

“And you believe in it, of course?”

“My son’s belief, sir, is my belief in this thing as in other things.
I have heard what he has been saying to you. It is for me that he
sacrifices himself by holding these exhibitions; it is in my poor
interests that his hardly-earned money is made. I am in infirm health;
and, remonstrate as I may, my son persists in providing for me, not
the bare comforts only, but even the luxuries of life. Whatever I may
suffer, I have my compensation; I can still thank God for giving me
the greatest happiness that a woman can enjoy, the possession of a good
son.”

She smiled fondly as she looked at the sleeping man. “Draw your chair
nearer to him,” she resumed, “and take his hand. You may speak freely
in making your inquiries. Nothing that happens in this room goes out of
it.”

With those words she returned to her place, in the corner behind her
son’s chair.

The visitor took Doctor Lagarde’s hand. As they touched each other,
he was conscious of a faintly-titillating sensation in his own hand--a
sensation which oddly reminded him of bygone experiments with an
electrical machine, in the days when he was a boy at school!

“I wish to question you about my future life,” he began. “How ought I to
begin?”

The Doctor spoke his first words in the monotonous tones of a man
talking in his sleep.

“Own your true motive before you begin,” he said. “Your interest in your
future life is centered in a woman. You wish to know if her heart will
be yours in the time that is to come--and there your interest in your
future life ends.”

This startling proof of the sleeper’s capacity to look, by sympathy,
into his mind, and to see there his most secret thoughts, instead of
convincing the stranger, excited his suspicions. “You have means of
getting information,” he said, “that I don’t understand.”

The Doctor smiled, as if the idea amused him.

Madame Lagarde rose from her seat and interposed.

“Hundreds of strangers come here to consult my son,” she said quietly.
“If you believe that we know who those strangers are, and that we have
the means of inquiring into their private lives before they enter this
room, you believe in something much more incredible than the magnetic
sleep!”

This was too manifestly true to be disputed. The visitor made his
apologies.

“I should like to have _some_ explanation,” he added. “The thing is so
very extraordinary. How can I prevail upon Doctor Lagarde to enlighten
me?”

“He can only tell you what he sees,” Madame Lagarde answered; “ask
him that, and you will get a direct reply. Say to him: ‘Do you see the
lady?’”

The stranger repeated the question. The reply followed at once, in these
words:

“I see two figures standing side by side. One of them is your figure.
The other is the figure of a lady. She only appears dimly. I can
discover nothing but that she is taller than women generally are, and
that she is dressed in pale blue.”

The man to whom he was speaking started at those last words. “Her
favorite color!” he thought to himself--forgetting that, while he held
the Doctor’s hand, the Doctor could think with _his_ mind.

“Yes,” added the sleeper quietly, “her favorite color, as you know. She
fades and fades as I look at her,” he went on. “She is gone. I only see
_you_, under a new aspect. You have a pistol in your hand. Opposite to
you, there stands the figure of another man. He, too, has a pistol in
his hand. Are you enemies? Are you meeting to fight a duel? Is the lady
the cause? I try, but I fail to see her.”

“Can you describe the man?”

“Not yet. So far, he is only a shadow in the form of a man.”

There was another interval. An appearance of disturbance showed itself
on the sleeper’s face. Suddenly, he waved his free hand in the direction
of the waiting-room.

“Send for the visitors who are there,” he said. “They are all to come
in. Each one of them is to take one of my hands in turn--while you
remain where you are, holding the other hand. Don’t let go of me, even
for a moment. My mother will ring.”

Madame Lagarde touched a bell on the table. The servant received his
orders from her and retired. After a short absence, he appeared again
in the consulting-room, with one visitor only waiting on the threshold
behind him.


CHAPTER IV.

THE MAN.

“The other three gentlemen have gone away, madam,” the servant
explained, addressing Madame Lagarde. “They were tired of waiting. I
found _this_ gentleman fast asleep; and I am afraid he is angry with me
for taking the liberty of waking him.”

“Sleep of the common sort is evidently not allowed in this house.” With
that remark the gentleman entered the room, and stood revealed as the
original owner of the card numbered Fourteen.

Viewed by the clear lamplight, he was a tall, finely-made man, in
the prime of life, with a florid complexion, golden-brown hair, and
sparkling blue eyes. Noticing Madame Lagarde, he instantly checked the
flow of his satire, with the instinctive good-breeding of a gentleman.
“I beg your pardon,” he said; “I have a great many faults, and a habit
of making bad jokes is one of them. Is the servant right, madam, in
telling me that I have the honor of presenting myself here at your
request?”

Madame Lagarde briefly explained what had passed.

The florid gentleman (still privately believing it to be all “humbug”)
was delighted to make himself of any use. “I congratulate you, sir,”
 he said, with his easy humor, as he passed the visitor who had become
possessed of his card. “Number Fourteen seems to be a luckier number in
your keeping than it was in mine.”

As he spoke, he took Doctor Lagarde’s disengaged hand. The instant
they touched each other the sleeper started. His voice rose; his face
flushed. “You are the man!” he exclaimed. “I see you plainly now!”

“What am I doing?”

“You are standing opposite to the gentleman here who is holding my other
hand; and (as I have said already) you have met to fight a duel.”

The unbeliever cast a shrewd look at his companion in the consultation.

“Considering that you and I are total strangers, sir,” he said, “don’t
you think the Doctor had better introduce us, before he goes any
further? We have got to fighting a duel already, and we may as well know
who we are, before the pistols go off.” He turned to Doctor Lagarde.
“Dramatic situations don’t amuse me out of the theater,” he resumed.
“Let me put you to a very commonplace test. I want to be introduced to
this gentleman. Has he told you his name?”

“No.”

“Of course, you know it, without being told?”

“Certainly. I have only to look into your own knowledge of yourselves,
while I am in this trance, and while you have got my hands, to know both
your names as well as you do.”

“Introduce us, then!” retorted the jesting gentleman. “And take my name
first.”

“Mr. Percy Linwood,” replied the Doctor; “I have the honor of presenting
you to Captain Bervie, of the Artillery.”

With one accord, the gentlemen both dropped Doctor Lagarde’s hands, and
looked at each other in blank amazement.

“Of course he has discovered our names somehow!” said Mr. Percy Linwood,
explaining the mystery to his own perfect satisfaction in that way.

Captain Bervie had not forgotten what Madame Lagarde had said to
him, when he too had suspected a trick. He now repeated it (quite
ineffectually) for Mr. Linwood’s benefit. “If you don’t feel the force
of that argument as I feel it,” he added, “perhaps, as a favor to me,
sir, you will not object to our each taking the Doctor’s hand again,
and hearing what more he can tell us while he remains in the state of
trance?”

“With the greatest pleasure!” answered good-humored Mr. Linwood. “Our
friend is beginning to amuse me; I am as anxious as you are to know what
he is going to see next.”

Captain Bervie put the next question.

“You have seen us ready to fight a duel--can you tell us the result?”

“I can tell you nothing more than I have told you already. The figures
of the duelists have faded away, like the other figures I saw before
them. What I see now looks like the winding gravel-path of a garden. A
man and a woman are walking toward me. The man stops, and places a ring
on the woman’s finger, and kisses her.”

Captain Bervie opened his lips to continue his inquiries--turned
pale--and checked himself. Mr. Linwood put the next question.

“Who is the happy man?” he asked.

“_You_ are the happy man,” was the instantaneous reply.

“Who is the woman?” cried Captain Bervie, before Mr. Linwood could speak
again.

“The same woman whom I saw before; dressed in the same color, in pale
blue.”

Captain Bervie positively insisted on receiving clearer information than
this. “Surely you can see _something_ of her personal appearance?” he
said.

“I can see that she has long dark-brown hair, falling below her waist.
I can see that she has lovely dark-brown eyes. She has the look of a
sensitive nervous person. She is quite young. I can see no more.”

“Look again at the man who is putting the ring on her finger,” said the
Captain. “Are you sure that the face you see is the face of Mr. Percy
Linwood?”

“I am absolutely sure.”

Captain Bervie rose from his chair.

“Thank you, madam,” he said to the Doctor’s mother. “I have heard
enough.”

He walked to the door. Mr. Percy Linwood dropped Doctor Lagarde’s hand,
and appealed to the retiring Captain with a broad stare of astonishment.

“You don’t really believe this?” he said.

“I only say I have heard enough,” Captain Bervie answered.

Mr. Linwood could hardly fail to see that any further attempt to treat
the matter lightly might lead to undesirable results.

“It is difficult to speak seriously of this kind of exhibition,” he
resumed quietly. “But I suppose I may mention a mere matter of fact,
without meaning or giving offense. The description of the lady, I can
positively declare, does not apply in any single particular to any one
whom I know.”

Captain Bervie turned round at the door. His patience was in some danger
of failing him. Mr. Linwood’s unruffled composure, assisted in its
influence by the presence of Madame Lagarde, reminded him of the claims
of politeness. He restrained the rash words as they rose to his lips.
“You may make new acquaintances, sir,” was all that he said. “_You_ have
the future before you.”

Upon that, he went out. Percy Linwood waited a little, reflecting on the
Captain’s conduct.

Had Doctor Lagarde’s description of the lady accidentally answered the
description of a living lady whom Captain Bervie knew? Was he by any
chance in love with her? and had the Doctor innocently reminded him that
his love was not returned? Assuming this to be likely, was it really
possible that he believed in prophetic revelations offered to him under
the fantastic influence of a trance? Could any man in the possession
of his senses go to those lengths? The Captain’s conduct was simply
incomprehensible.

Pondering these questions, Percy decided on returning to his place by
the Doctor’s chair. “Of one thing I am certain, at any rate,” he thought
to himself. “I’ll see the whole imposture out before I leave the house!”

He took Doctor Lagarde’s hand. “Now, then! what is the next discovery?”
 he asked.

The sleeper seemed to find some difficulty in answering the question.

“I indistinctly see the man and the woman again,” he said.

“Am I the man still?” Percy inquired.

“No. The man, this time, is the Captain. The woman is agitated by
something that he is saying to her. He seems to be trying to persuade
her to go away with him. She hesitates. He whispers something in her
ear. She yields. He leads her away. The darkness gathers behind them. I
look and look, and I can see no more.”

“Shall we wait awhile?” Percy suggested, “and then try again?”

Doctor Lagarde sighed, and reclined in his chair. “My head is heavy,” he
said; “my spirits are dull. The darkness baffles me. I have toiled long
enough for you. Drop my hand and leave me to rest.”

Hearing those words, Madame Lagarde approached her son’s chair.

“It will be useless, sir, to ask him any more questions to-night,” she
said. “He has been weak and nervous all day, and he is worn out by the
effort he has made. Pardon me, if I ask you to step aside for a moment,
while I give him the repose that he needs.”

She laid her right hand gently on the Doctor’s head, and kept it there
for a minute or so. “Are you at rest now?” she asked.

“I am at rest,” he answered, in faint, drowsy tones.

Madame Lagarde returned to Percy. “If you are not yet satisfied,” she
said, “my son will be at your service to-morrow evening, sir.”

“Thank you, madam, I have only one more question to ask, and you can no
doubt answer it. When your son wakes, will he remember what he has said
to Captain Bervie and to myself?”

“My son will be as absolutely ignorant of everything that he has seen,
and of everything that he has said in the trance, as if he had been at
the other end of the world.”

Percy Linwood swallowed this last outrageous assertion with an effort
which he was quite unable to conceal. “Many thanks, madam,” he said; “I
wish you good-night.”

Returning to the waiting-room, he noticed the money-box fixed to the
table. “These people look poor,” he thought to himself, “and I feel
really indebted to them for an amusing evening. Besides, I can afford
to be liberal, for I shall certainly never go back.” He dropped a
five-pound note into the money-box, and left the house.

Walking toward his club, Percy’s natural serenity of mind was a little
troubled by the remembrance of Captain Bervie’s language and conduct.
The Captain had interested the young man in spite of himself. His
first idea was to write to Bervie, and mention what had happened at the
renewed consultation with Doctor Lagarde. On second thoughts, he saw
reason to doubt how the Captain might receive such an advance as this,
on the part of a stranger. “After all,” Percy decided, “the whole thing
is too absurd to be worth thinking about seriously. Neither he nor I are
likely to meet again, or to see the Doctor again--and there’s an end of
it.”

He never was more mistaken in his life. The end of it was not to come
for many a long day yet.


PART II.--THE FULFILLMENT.


CHAPTER V.

THE BALLROOM.

WHILE the consultation at Doctor Lagarde’s was still fresh in the memory
of the persons present at it, Chance or Destiny, occupied in sowing
the seeds for the harvest of the future, discovered as one of its fit
instruments a retired military officer named Major Mulvany.

The Major was a smart little man, who persisted in setting up the
appearance of youth as a means of hiding the reality of fifty. Being
still a bachelor, and being always ready to make himself agreeable, he
was generally popular in the society of women. In the ballroom he was a
really welcome addition to the company. The German waltz had then been
imported into England little more than three years since. The outcry
raised against the dance, by persons ski lled in the discovery of latent
impropriety, had not yet lost its influence in certain quarters. Men who
could waltz were scarce. The Major had successfully grappled with the
difficulties of learning the dance in mature life; and the young ladies
rewarded him nobly for the effort. That is to say, they took the
assumption of youth for granted in the palpable presence of fifty.

Knowing everybody and being welcome everywhere, playing a good hand at
whist, and having an inexhaustible fancy in the invention of a dinner,
Major Mulvany naturally belonged to all the best clubs of his time.
Percy Linwood and he constantly met in the billiard-room or at
the dinner-table. The Major approved of the easy, handsome,
pleasant-tempered young man. “I have lost the first freshness of youth,”
 he used to say, with pathetic resignation, “and I see myself revived, as
it were, in Percy. Naturally I like Percy.”

About three weeks after the memorable evening at Doctor Lagarde’s, the
two friends encountered each other on the steps of a club.

“Have you got anything to do to-night?” asked the Major.

“Nothing that I know of,” said Percy, “unless I go to the theater.”

“Let the theater wait, my boy. My old regiment gives a ball at Woolwich
to-night. I have got a ticket to spare; and I know several sweet girls
who are going. Some of them waltz, Percy! Gather your rosebuds while you
may. Come with me.”

The invitation was accepted as readily as it was given. The Major found
the carriage, and Percy paid for the post-horses. They entered the
ballroom among the earlier guests; and the first person whom they met,
waiting near the door, was--Captain Bervie.

Percy bowed a little uneasily. “I feel some doubt,” he said, laughing,
“whether we have been properly introduced to one another or not.”

“Not properly introduced!” cried Major Mulvany. “I’ll soon set that
right. My dear friend, Percy Linwood; my dear friend, Arthur Bervie--be
known to each other! esteem each other!”

Captain Bervie acknowledged the introduction by a cold salute. Percy,
yielding to the good-natured impulse of the moment, alluded to what had
happened in Doctor Lagarde’s consulting-room.

“You missed something worth hearing when you left the Doctor the other
night,” he said. “We continued the sitting; and _you_ turned up again
among the persons of the drama, in a new character--”

“Excuse me for interrupting you,” said Captain Bervie. “I am a member
of the committee, charged with the arrangements of the ball, and I must
really attend to my duties.”

He withdrew without waiting for a reply. Percy looked round wonderingly
at Major Mulvany. “Strange!” he said, “I feel rather attracted toward
Captain Bervie; and he seems to have taken such a dislike to me that he
can hardly behave with common civility. What does it mean?”

“I’ll tell you,” answered the Major, confidentially. “Arthur Bervie is
madly in love--madly is really the word--with a Miss Bowmore. And (this
is between ourselves) the young lady doesn’t feel it quite in the same
way. A sweet girl; I’ve often had her on my knee when she was a child.
Her father and mother are old friends of mine. She is coming to the ball
to-night. That’s the true reason why Arthur left you just now. Look at
him--waiting to be the first to speak to her. If he could have his way,
he wouldn’t let another man come near the poor girl all through the
evening; he really persecutes her. I’ll introduce you to Miss Bowmore;
and you will see how he looks at us for presuming to approach her. It’s
a great pity; she will never marry him. Arthur Bervie is a man in a
thousand; but he’s fast becoming a perfect bear under the strain on his
temper. What’s the matter? You don’t seem to be listening to me.”

This last remark was perfectly justified. In telling the Captain’s
love-story, Major Mulvany had revived his young friend’s memory of the
lady in the blue dress, who had haunted the visions of Doctor Lagarde.

“Tell me,” said Percy, “what is Miss Bowmore like? Is there anything
remarkable in her personal appearance? I have a reason for asking.”

As he spoke, there arose among the guests in the rapidly-filling
ballroom a low murmur of surprise and admiration. The Major laid one
hand on Percy’s shoulder, and, lifting the other, pointed to the door.

“What is Miss Bowmore like?” he repeated. “There she is! Let her answer
for herself.”

Percy turned toward the lower end of the room.

A young lady was entering, dressed in plain silk, and the color of
it was a pale blue! Excepting a white rose at her breast, she wore no
ornament of any sort. Doubly distinguished by the perfect simplicity of
her apparel, and by her tall, supple, commanding figure, she took rank
at once as the most remarkable woman in the room. Moving nearer to her
through the crowd, under the guidance of the complaisant Major, young
Linwood gained a clearer view of her hair, her complexion, and the color
of her eyes. In every one of these particulars she was the living image
of the woman described by Doctor Lagarde!

While Percy was absorbed over this strange discovery, Major Mulvany had
got within speaking distance of the young lady and of her mother, as
they stood together in conversation with Captain Bervie. “My dear
Mrs. Bowmore, how well you are looking! My dear Miss Charlotte, what a
sensation you have made already! The glorious simplicity (if I may so
express myself) of your dress is--is--what was I going to say?--the
ideas come thronging on me; I merely want words.”

Miss Bowmore’s magnificent brown eyes, wandering from the Major to
Percy, rested on the young man with a modest and momentary interest,
which Captain Bervie’s jealous attention instantly detected.

“They are forming a dance,” he said, pressing forward impatiently to
claim his partner. “If we don’t take our places we shall be too late.”

“Stop! stop!” cried the Major. “There is a time for everything, and this
is the time for presenting my dear friend here, Mr. Percy Linwood. He
is like me, Miss Charlotte--_he_ has been struck by your glorious
simplicity, and _he_ wants words.” At this part of the presentation, he
happened to look toward the irate Captain, and instantly gave him a
hint on the subject of his temper. “I say, Arthur Bervie! we are all
good-humored people here. What have you got on your eyebrows? It looks
like a frown; and it doesn’t become you. Send for a skilled waiter, and
have it brushed off and taken away directly!”

“May I ask, Miss Bowmore, if you are disengaged for the next dance?”
 said Percy, the moment the Major gave him an opportunity of speaking.

“Miss Bowmore is engaged to _me_ for the next dance,” said the angry
Captain, before the young lady could answer.

“The third dance, then?” Percy persisted, with his brightest smile.

“With pleasure, Mr. Linwood,” said Miss Bowmore. She would have been
no true woman if she had not resented the open exhibition of Arthur’s
jealousy; it was like asserting a right over her to which he had not
the shadow of a claim. She threw a look at Percy as her partner led her
away, which was the severest punishment she could inflict on the man who
ardently loved her.

The third dance stood in the programme as a waltz.

In jealous distrust of Percy, the Captain took the conductor of the
band aside, and used his authority as committeeman to substitute another
dance. He had no sooner turned his back on the orchestra than the
wife of the Colonel of the regiment, who had heard him, spoke to the
conductor in her turn, and insisted on the original programme being
retained. “Quote the Colonel’s authority,” said the lady, “if Captain
Bervie ventures to object.” In the meantime, the Captain, on his way to
rejoin Charlotte, was met by one of his brother officers, who summoned
him officially to an impending debate of the committee charged with the
administrative arrangements of the supper-table. Bervie had no choice
but to follow his brother officer to the committee-room.

Barely a minute later the conductor appeared at his desk, and the first
notes of the music rose low and plaintive, introducing the third dance.

“Percy, my boy!” cried the Major, recognizing the melody, “you’re in
luck’s way--it’s going to be a waltz!”

Almost as he spoke, the notes of the symphony glided by subtle
modulations into the inspiriting air of the waltz. Percy claimed his
partner’s hand. Miss Charlotte hesitated, and looked at her mother.

“Surely you waltz?” said Percy.

“I have learned to waltz,” she answered, modestly; “but this is such a
large room, and there are so many people!”

“Once round,” Percy pleaded; “only once round!”

Miss Bowmore looked again at her mother. Her foot was keeping time
with the music, under her dress; her heart was beating with a delicious
excitement; kind-hearted Mrs. Bowmore smiled and said: “Once round, my
dear, as Mr. Linwood suggests.”

In another moment Percy’s arm took possession of her waist, and they
were away on the wings of the waltz!

Could words describe, could thought realize, the exquisite enjoyment
of the dance? Enjoyment? It was more--it was an epoch in Charlotte’s
life--it was the first time she had waltzed with a man. What a
difference between the fervent clasp of Percy’s arm and the cold, formal
contact of the mistress who had taught her! How brightly his eyes looked
down into hers; admiring her with such a tender restraint, that there
could surely be no harm in looking up at him now and then in return.
Round and round they glided, absorbed in the music and in themselves.
Occasionally her bosom just touched him, at those critical moments when
she was most in need of support. At other intervals, she almost let her
head sink on his shoulder in trying to hide from him the smile which
acknowledged his admiration too boldly. “Once round,” Percy had
suggested; “once round,” her mother had said. They had been ten, twenty,
thirty times round; they had never stopped to rest like other dancers;
they had centered the eyes of the whole room on them--including the eyes
of Captain Bervie--without knowing it; her delicately pale complexion
had changed to rosy-red; the neat arrangement of her hair had become
disturbed; her bosom was rising and falling faster and faster in the
effort to breathe--before fatigue and heat overpowered her at last, and
forced her to say to him faintly, “I’m very sorry--I can’t dance any
more!”

Percy led her into the cooler atmosphere of the refreshment-room, and
revived her with a glass of lemonade. Her arm still rested on his--she
was just about to thank him for the care he had taken of her--when
Captain Bervie entered the room.

“Mrs. Bowmore wishes me to take you back to her,” he said to Charlotte.
Then, turning to Percy, he added: “Will you kindly wait here while I
take Miss Bowmore to the ballroom? I have a word to say to you--I will
return directly.”

The Captain spoke with perfect politeness--but his face betrayed him. It
was pale with the sinister whiteness of suppressed rage.

Percy sat down to cool and rest himself. With his experience of the
ways of men, he felt no surprise at the marked contrast between Captain
Bervie’s face and Captain Bervie’s manner. “He has seen us waltzing,
and he is coming back to pick a quarrel with me.” Such was the
interpretation which Mr. Linwood’s knowledge of the world placed
on Captain Bervie’s politeness. In a minute or two more the Captain
returned to the refreshment-room, and satisfied Percy that his
anticipations had not deceived him.


CHAPTER VI.

LOVE.

FOUR days had passed since the night of the ball.

Although it was no later in the year than the month of February, the
sun was shining brightly, and the air was as soft as the air of a day in
spring. Percy and Charlotte were walking together in the little garden
at the back of Mr. Bowmore’s cottage, near the town of Dartford, in
Kent.

“Mr. Linwood,” said the young lady, “you were to have paid us your first
visit the day after the ball. Why have you kept us waiting? Have you
been too busy to remember your new friends?”

“I have counted the hours since we parted, Miss Charlotte. If I had not
been detained by business--”

“I understand! For three days business has controlled you. On the fourth
day, you have controlled business--and here you are? I don’t believe one
word of it, Mr. Linwood!”

There was no answering such a declaration as this. Guiltily conscious
that Charlotte was right in refusing to accept his well-worn excuse,
Percy made an awkward attempt to change the topic of conversation.

They happened, at the moment, to be standing near a small conservatory
at the end of the garden. The glass door was closed, and the few plants
and shrubs inside had a lonely, neglected look. “Does nobody ever
visit this secluded place?” Percy asked, jocosely, “or does it hide
discoveries in the rearing of plants which are forbidden mysteries to a
stranger?”

“Satisfy your curiosity, Mr. Linwood, by all means,” Charlotte answered
in the same tone. “Open the door, and I will follow you.”

Percy obeyed. In passing through the doorway, he encountered the bare
hanging branches of some creeping plant, long since dead, and detached
from its fastenings on the woodwork of the roof. He pushed aside the
branches so that Charlotte could easily follow him in, without being
aware that his own forced passage through them had a little deranged
the folds of spotless white cambric which a well-dressed gentleman wore
round his neck in those days. Charlotte seated herself, and directed
Percy’s attention to the desolate conservatory with a saucy smile.

“The mystery which your lively imagination has associated with this
place,” she said, “means, being interpreted, that we are too poor to
keep a gardener. Make the best of your disappointment, Mr. Linwood, and
sit here by me. We are out of hearing and out of sight of mamma’s other
visitors. You have no excuse now for not telling me what has really kept
you away from us.”

She fixed her eyes on him as she said those words. Before Percy could
think of another excuse, her quick observation detected the disordered
condition of his cravat, and discovered the upper edge of a black
plaster attached to one side of his neck.

“You have been hurt in the neck!” she said. “That is why you have kept
away from us for the last three days!”

“A mere trifle,” he answered, in great confusion; “please don’t notice
it.”

Her eyes, still resting on his face, assumed an expression of suspicious
inquiry, which Percy was entirely at a loss to understand. Suddenly, she
started to her feet, as if a new idea had occurred to her. “Wait here,”
 she said, flushing with excitement, “till I come back: I insist on it!”

Before Percy could ask for an explanation she had left the conservatory.

In a minute or two, Miss Bowmore returned, with a newspaper in her hand.
“Read that,” she said, pointing to a paragraph distinguished by a line
drawn round it in ink.

The passage that she indicated contained an account of a duel which had
recently taken place in the neighborhood of London. The names of the
duelists were not mentioned. One was described as an officer, and the
other as a civilian. They had quarreled at cards, and had fought
with pistols. The civilian had had a narrow escape of his life. His
antagonist’s bullet had passed near enough to the side of his neck
to tear the flesh, and had missed the vital parts, literally, by a
hair’s-breadth.

Charlotte’s eyes, riveted on Percy, detected a sudden change of color in
his face the moment he looked at the newspaper. That was enough for her.
“You _are_ the man!” she cried. “Oh, for shame, for shame! To risk your
life for a paltry dispute about cards!”

“I would risk it again,” said Percy, “to hear you speak as if you set
some value on it.”

She looked away from him without a word of reply. Her mind seemed to
be busy again with its own thoughts. Did she meditate returning to the
subject of the duel? Was she not satisfied with the discovery which she
had just made?

No such doubts as these troubled the mind of Percy Linwood. Intoxicated
by the charm of her presence, emboldened by her innocent betrayal of
the interest that she felt in him, he opened his whole heart to her
as unreservedly as if they had known each other from the days of their
childhood. There was but one excuse for him. Charlotte was his first
love.

“You don’t know how completely you have become a part of my life, since
we met at the ball,” he went on. “That one delightful dance seemed, by
some magic which I can’t explain, to draw us together in a few minutes
as if we had known each other for years. Oh, dear! I could make such a
confession of what I felt--only I am afraid of offending you by speaking
too soon. Women are so dreadfully difficult to understand. How is a man
to know at what time it is considerate toward them to conceal his true
feelings; and at what time it is equally considerate to express his true
feelings? One doesn’t know whether it is a matter of days or weeks or
months--there ought to be a law to settle it. Dear Miss Charlotte, when
a poor fellow loves you at first sight, as he has never loved any other
woman, and when he is tormented by the fear that some other man may
be preferred to him, can’t you forgive him if he lets out the truth a
little too soon?” He ventured, as he put that very downright question,
to take her hand. “It really isn’t my fault,” he said, simply. “My heart
is so full of you I can talk of nothing else.”

To Percy’s delight, the first experimental pressure of his hand, far
from being resented, was softly returned. Charlotte looked at him again,
with a new resolution in her face.

“I’ll forgive you for talking nonsense, Mr. Linwood,” she said; “and I
will even permit you to come and see me again, on one condition--that
you tell the whole truth about the duel. If you conceal the smallest
circumstance, our acquaintance is at an end.”

“Haven’t I owned everything already?” Percy inquired, in great
perplexity. “Did I say No, when you told me I was the man?”

“Could you say No, with that plaster on your neck?” was the ready
rejoinder. “I am determined to know more than the newspaper tells me.
Will you declare, on your word of honor, that Captain Bervie had nothing
to do with the duel? Can you look me in the face, and say that the real
cause of the quarrel was a disagreement at cards? When you were talking
with me just before I left the ball, how did you answer a gentleman who
asked you to make one at the whist-table? You said, ‘I don’t play at
cards.’ Ah! You thought I had forgotten that? Don’t kiss my hand! Trust
me with the whole truth, or say good-by forever.”

“Only tell me what you wish to know, Miss Charlotte,” said Percy humbly.
“If you will put the questions, I will give the answers--as well as I
can.”

On this understanding, Percy’s evidence was extracted from him as
follows:

“Was it Captain Bervie who quarreled with you?”

“Yes.”

“Was it about me?”

“Yes.”

“What did he say?”

“He said I had committed an impropriety in waltzing with you.”

“Why?”

“Because your parents disapproved of your waltzing in a public
ballroom.”

“That’s not true! What did he say next?”

“He said I had added tenfold to my offense, by waltzing with you in such
a manner as to make you the subject of remark to the whole room.”

“Oh! did you let him say that?”

“No; I contradicted him instantly. And I said, besides, ‘It’s an insult
to Miss Bowmore, to suppose that she would permit any impropriety.’”

“Quite right! And what did he say?”

“Well, he lost his temper; I would rather not repeat what he said when
he was mad with jealousy. There was nothing to be done with him but to
give him his way.”

“Give him his way? Does that mean fight a duel with him?”

“Don’t be angry--it does.”

“And you kept my name out of it, by pretending to quarrel at the
card-table?”

“Yes. We managed it when the cardroom was emptying at supper-time, and
nobody was present but Major Mulvany and another friend as witnesses.”

“And when did you fight the duel?”

“The next morning.”

“You never thought of _me_, I suppose?”

“Indeed, I did; I was very glad that you had no suspicion of what we
were at.”

“Was that all?”

“No; I had your flower with me, the flower you gave me out of your
nosegay, at the ball.”

“Well?”

“Oh, never mind, it doesn’t matter.”

“It does matter. What did you do with my flower?”

“I gave it a sly kiss while they were measuring the ground; and (don’t
tell anybody!) I put it next to my heart to bring me luck.”

“Was that just before he shot at you?”

“Yes.”

“How did he shoot?”

“He walked (as the seconds had arranged it) ten paces forward; and then
he stopped, and lifted his pistol--”

“Don’t tell me any more! Oh, to think of my being the miserable cause of
such horrors! I’ll never dance again as long as I live. Did you think he
had killed you, when the bullet wounded your poor neck?”

“No; I hardly felt it at first.”

“Hardly felt it? How he talks! And when the wretch had done his best to
kill you, and when it came to your turn, what did you do?”

“Nothing.”

“What! You didn’t walk your ten paces forward?”

“No.”

“And you never shot at him in return?”

“No; I had no quarrel with him, poor fellow; I just stood where I was,
and fired in the air--”

Before he could stop her, Charlotte seized his hand, and kissed it with
an hysterical fervor of admiration, which completely deprived him of his
presence of mind.

“Why shouldn’t I kiss the hand of a hero?” she cried, with tears of
enthusiasm sparkling in her eyes. “Nobody but a hero would have given
that man his life; nobody but a hero would have pardoned him, while the
blood was streaming from the wound that he had inflicted. I respect you,
I admire you. Oh, don’t think me bold! I can’t control myself when I
hear of anything noble and good. You will understand me better when we
get to be old friends--won’t you?”

She spoke in low sweet tones of entreaty. Percy’s arm stole softly round
her.

“Are we never to be nearer and dearer to each other than old friends?”
 he asked in a whisper. “I am not a hero--your goodness overrates me,
dear Miss Charlotte. My one ambition is to be the happy man who is
worthy enough to win _you_. At your own time! I wouldn’t distress you,
I wouldn’t confuse you, I wouldn’t for the whole world take advantage of
the compliment which your sympathy has paid to me. If it offends you, I
won’t even ask if I may hope.”

She sighed as he said the last words; trembled a little, and silently
looked at him.

Percy read his answer in her eyes. Without meaning it on either side
their heads drew nearer together; their cheeks, then their lips,
touched. She started back from him, and rose to leave the conservatory.
At the same moment, the sound of slowly-approaching footsteps became
audible on the gravel walk of the garden. Charlotte hurried to the door.

“My father!” she exclaimed, turning to Percy. “Come, and be introduced
to him.”

Percy followed her into the garden.


CHAPTER VII.

POLITICS.

JUDGING by appearances, Mr. Bowmore looked like a man prematurely wasted
and worn by the cares of a troubled life. His eyes presented the one
feature in which his daughter resembled him. In shape and color
they were exactly reproduced in Charlotte; the difference was in the
expression. The father’s look was habitually restless, eager, and
suspicious. Not a trace was to be seen in it of the truthfulness and
gentleness which made the charm of the daughter’s expression. A man
whose bitter experience of the world had soured his temper and shaken
his faith in his fellow-creatures--such was Mr. Bowmore as he presented
himself on the surface. He received Percy politely--but with a
preoccupied air. Every now and then, his restless eyes wandered from the
visitor to an open letter in his hand. Charlotte, observing him, pointed
to the letter.

“Have you any bad news there, papa?” she asked.

“Dreadful news!” Mr. Bowmore answered. “Dreadful news, my child, to
every Englishman who respects the liberties which his ancestors won. My
correspondent is a man who is in the confidence of the Ministers,” he
continued, addressing Percy. “What do you think is the remedy that the
Government proposes for the universal distress among the population,
caused by an infamous and needless war? Despotism, Mr. Linwood;
despotism in this free country is the remedy! In one week more, sir,
Ministers will bring in a Bill for suspending the Habeas Corpus Act!”

Before Percy could do justice in words to the impression produced on
him, Charlotte innocently asked a question which shocked her father.

“What is the Habeas Corpus Act, papa”’

“Good God!” cried Mr. Bowmore, “is it possible that a child of mine has
grown up to womanhood, in ignorance of the palladium of English liberty?
Oh, Charlotte! Charlotte!”

“I am very sorry, papa. If you will only tell me, I will never forget
it.”

Mr. Bowmore reverently uncovered his head, saluting an invisible Habeas
Corpus Act. He took his daughter by the hand, with a certain parental
sternness: his voice trembled with emotion as he spoke his next words:

“The Habeas Corpus Act, my child, forbids the imprisonment of an English
subject, unless that imprisonment can be first justified by law. Not
even the will of the reigning monarch can prevent us from appearing
before the judges of the land, and summoning them to declare whether our
committal to prison is legally just.”

He put on his hat again. “Never forget what I have told you, Charlotte!”
 he said solemnly. “I would not remove my hat, sir,” he continuing,
turning to Percy, “in the presence of the proudest autocrat that ever
sat on a throne. I uncover, in homage to the grand law which asserts the
sacredness of human liberty. When Parliament has sanctioned the infamous
Bill now before it, English patriots may be imprisoned, may even be
hanged, on warrants privately obtained by the paid spies and informers
of the men who rule us. Perhaps I weary you, sir. You are a young man;
the conduct of the Ministry may not interest you.”

“On the contrary,” said Percy, “I have the strongest personal interest
in the conduct of the Ministry.”

“How? in what way?” cried Mr. Bowmore eagerly.

“My late father had a claim on government,” Percy answered, “for money
expended in foreign service. As his heir, I inherit the claim, which
has been formally recognized by the present Ministers. My petition for
a settlement will be presented by friends of mine who can advocate my
interests in the House of Commons.”

Mr. Bowmore took Percy’s hand, and shook it warmly.

“In such a matter as this you cannot have too many friends to help you,”
 he said. “I myself have some influence, as representing opinion outside
the House; and I am entirely at your service. Come tomorrow, and let us
talk over the details of your claim at my humble dinner-table. To-day
I must attend a meeting of the Branch-Hampden-Club, of which I am
vice-president, and to which I am now about to communicate the alarming
news which my letter contains. Excuse me for leaving you--and count on a
hearty welcome when we see you to-morrow.”

The amiable patriot saluted his daughter with a smile, and disappeared.

“I hope you like my father?” said Charlotte. “All our friends say
he ought to be in Parliament. He has tried twice. The expenses were
dreadful; and each time the other man defeated him. The agent says he
would be certainly elected, if he tried again; but there is no money,
and we mustn’t think of it.”

A man of a suspicious turn of mind might have discovered, in those
artless words, the secret of Mr. Bowmore’s interest in the success of
his young friend’s claim on the Government. One British subject, with a
sum of ready money at his command, may be an inestimably useful
person to another British subject (without ready money) who cannot sit
comfortably unless he sits in Parliament. But honest Percy Linwood was
not a man of a suspicious turn of mind. He had just opened his lips
to echo Charlotte’s filial glorification of her father, when a
shabbily-dressed man-servant met them with a message, for which they
were both alike unprepared:

“Captain Bervie has called, Miss, to say good-by, and my mistress
requests your company in the parlor.”


CHAPTER VIII.

THE WARNING.

HAVING delivered his little formula of words, the shabby servant cast a
look of furtive curiosity at Percy and withdrew. Charlotte turned to her
lover, with indignation sparkling in her eyes and flushing on her cheeks
at the bare idea of seeing Captain Bervie again. “Does he think I will
breathe the same air,” she exclaimed, “with the man who attempted to
take your life!”

Percy gently remonstrated with her.

“You are sadly mistaken,” he said. “Captain Bervie stood to receive my
fire as fairly as I stood to receive his. When I discharged my pistol
in the air, he was the first man who ran up to me, and asked if I was
seriously hurt. They told him my wound was a trifle; and he fell on his
knees and thanked God for preserving my life from his guilty hand. ‘I
am no longer the rival who hates you,’ he said. ‘Give me time to try if
change of scene will quiet my mind; and I will be _your_ brother, and
_her_ brother.’ Whatever his faults may be, Charlotte, Arthur Bervie has
a great heart. Go in, I entreat you, and be friends with him as I am.”

Charlotte listened with downcast eyes and changing color. “You believe
him?” she asked in low and trembling tones.

“I believe him as I believe You,” Percy answered.

She secretly resented the comparison, and detested the Captain more
heartily than ever. “I will go in and see him, if you wish it,” she
said. “But not by myself. I want you to come with me.”

“Why?” Percy asked.

“I want to see what his face says, when you and he meet.”

“Do you still doubt him, Charlotte?”

She made no reply. Percy had done his best to convince her, and had
evidently failed.

They went together into the cottage. Fixing her eyes steadily on the
Captain’s face, Charlotte saw it turn pale when Percy followed her into
the parlor. The two men greeted one another cordially. Charlotte sat
down by her mother, preserving her composure so far as appearances went.
“I hear you have called to bid us good-by,” she said to Bervie. “Is it
to be a long absence?”

“I have got two months’ leave,” the Captain answered, without looking at
her while he spoke.

“Are you going abroad?”

“Yes. I think so.”

She turned away to her mother. Bervie seized the opportunity of speaking
to Percy. “I have a word of advice for your private ear.” At the same
moment, Charlotte whispered to her mother: “Don’t encourage him to
prolong his visit.”

The Captain showed no intention to prolong his visit. To Charlotte’s
surprise, when he took leave of the ladies, Percy also rose to go. “His
carriage,” he said, “was waiting at the door; and he had offered to take
Captain Bervie back to London.”

Charlotte instantly suspected an arrangement between the two men for a
confidential interview. Her obstinate distrust of Bervie strengthened
tenfold. She reluctantly gave him her hand, as he parted from her at the
parlor-door. The effort of concealing her true feeling toward him gave a
color and a vivacity to her face which made her irresistibly beautiful.
Bervie looked at the woman whom he had lost with an immeasurable sadness
in his eyes. “When we meet again,” he said, “you will see me in a new
character.” He hurried out of the gate, as if he feared to trust himself
for a moment longer in her presence.

Charlotte followed Percy into the passage. “I shall be here to-morrow,
dearest!” he said, and tried to raise her hand to his lips. She abruptly
drew it away. “Not that hand!” she answered. “Captain Bervie has just
touched it. Kiss the other!”

“Do you still doubt the Captain?” said Percy, amused by her petulance.

She put her arm over his shoulder, and touched the plaster on his neck
gently with her finger. “There’s one thing I don’t doubt,” she said:
“the Captain did _that!_”

Percy left her, laughing. At the front gate of the cottage he found
Arthur Bervie in conversation with the same shabbily-dressed man-servant
who had announced the Captain’s visit to Charlotte.

“What has become of the other servant?” Bervie asked. “I mean the old
man who has been with Mr. Bowmore for so many years.”

“He has left his situation, sir.”

“Why?”

“As I understand, sir, he spoke disrespectfully to the master.”

“Oh! And how came the master to hear of _you?_”

“I advertised; and Mr. Bowmore answered my advertisement.”

Bervie looked hard at the man for a moment, and then joined Percy at the
carriage door. The two gentlemen started for London.

“What do you think of Mr. Bowmore’s new servant?” asked the Captain as
they drove away from the cottage. “I don’t like the look of the fellow.”

“I didn’t particularly notice him,” Percy answered.

There was a pause. When the conversation was resumed, it turned on
common-place subjects. The Captain looked uneasily out of the carriage
window. Percy looked uneasily at the Captain.

They had left Dartford about two miles behind them, when Percy noticed
an old gabled house, sheltered by magnificent trees, and standing on an
eminence well removed from the high-road. Carriages and saddle-horses
were visible on the drive in front, and a flag was hoisted on a staff
placed in the middle of the lawn.

“Something seems to be going on there,” Percy remarked. “A fine old
house! Who does it belong to?”

Bervie smiled. “It belongs to my father,” he said. “He is chairman of
the bench of local magistrates, and he receives his brother justices
to-day, to celebrate the opening of the sessions.”

He stopped and looked at Percy with some embarrassment. “I am afraid I
have surprised and disappointed you,” he resumed, abruptly changing the
subject. “I told you when we met just now at Mr. Bowmore’s cottage that
I had something to say to you; and I have not yet said it. The truth is,
I don’t feel sure whether I have been long enough your friend to take
the liberty of advising you.”

“Whatever your advice is,” Percy answered, “trust me to take it kindly
on my side.”

Thus encouraged, the Captain spoke out.

“You will probably pass much of your time at the cottage,” he began,
“and you will be thrown a great deal into Mr. Bowmore’s society. I have
known him for many years. Speaking from that knowledge, I most seriously
warn you against him as a thoroughly unprincipled and thoroughly
dangerous man.”

This was strong language--and, naturally enough, Percy said so. The
Captain justified his language.

“Without alluding to Mr. Bowmore’s politics,” he went on, “I can tell
you that the motive of everything he says and does is vanity. To the
gratification of that one passion he would sacrifice you or me, his wife
or his daughter, without hesitation and without remorse. His one desire
is to get into Parliament. You are wealthy, and you can help him. He
will leave no effort untried to reach that end; and, if he gets you into
political difficulties, he will desert you without scruple.”

Percy made a last effort to take Mr. Bowmore’s part--for the one
irresistible reason that he was Charlotte’s father.

“Pray don’t think I am unworthy of your kind interest in my welfare,”
 he pleaded. “Can you tell me of any _facts_ which justify what you have
just said?”

“I can tell you of three facts,” Bervie said. “Mr. Bowmore belongs to
one of the most revolutionary clubs in England; he has spoken in the
ranks of sedition at public meetings; and his name is already in the
black book at the Home Office. So much for the past. As to the future,
if the rumor be true that Ministers mean to stop the insurrectionary
risings among the population by suspending the Habeas Corpus Act, Mr.
Bowmore will certainly be in danger; and it may be my father’s duty to
grant the warrant that apprehends him. Write to my father to verify what
I have said, and I will forward your letter by way of satisfying him
that he can trust you. In the meantime, refuse to accept Mr. Bowmore’s
assistance in the matter of your claim on Parliament; and, above all
things, stop him at the outset, when he tries to steal his way into your
intimacy. I need not caution you to say nothing against him to his wife
and daughter. His wily tongue has long since deluded them. Don’t let
him delude _you!_ Have you thought any more of our evening at Doctor
Lagarde’s?” he asked, abruptly changing the subject.

“I hardly know,” said Percy, still under the impression of the
formidable warning which he had just received.

“Let me jog your memory,” the other continued. “You went on with the
consultation by yourself, after I had left the Doctor’s house. It will
be really doing me a favor if you can call to mind what Lagarde saw in
the trance--in my absence?”

Thus entreated Percy roused himself. His memory of events were still
fresh enough to answer the call that his friend had made on it. In
describing what had happened, he accurately repeated all that the Doctor
had said.

Bervie dwelt on the words with alarm in his face as well as surprise.

“A man like me, trying to persuade a woman like--” he checked himself,
as if he was afraid to let Charlotte’s name pass his lips. “Trying to
induce a woman to go away with me,” he resumed, “and persuading her at
last? Pray, go on! What did the Doctor see next?”

“He was too much exhausted, he said, to see any more.”

“Surely you returned to consult him again?”

“No; I had had enough of it.”

“When we get to London,” said the Captain, “we shall pass along the
Strand, on the way to your chambers. Will you kindly drop me at the
turning that leads to the Doctor’s lodgings?”

Percy looked at him in amazement. “You still take it seriously?” he
said.

“Is it _not_ serious?” Bervie asked. “Have you and I, so far, not done
exactly what this man saw us doing? Did we not meet, in the days when we
were rivals (as he saw us meet), with the pistols in our hands? Did you
not recognize his description of the lady when you met her at the ball,
as I recognized it before you?”

“Mere coincidences!” Percy answered, quoting Charlotte’s opinion when
they had spoken together of Doctor Lagarde, but taking care not to cite
his authority. “How many thousand men have been crossed in love? How
many thousand men have fought duels for love? How many thousand
women choose blue for their favorite color, and answer to the vague
description of the lady whom the Doctor pretended to see?”

“Say that it is so,” Bervie rejoined. “The thing is remarkable, even
from your point of view. And if more coincidences follow, the result
will be more remarkable still.”

Arrived at the Strand, Percy set the Captain down at the turning which
led to the Doctor’s lodgings. “You will call on me or write me word, if
anything remarkable happens?” he said.

“You shall hear from me without fail,” Bervie replied.

That night, the Captain’s pen performed the Captain’s promise, in few
and startling words.

“Melancholy news! Madame Lagarde is dead. Nothing is known of her son
but that he has left England. I have found out that he is a political
exile. If he has ventured back to France, it is barely possible that
I may hear something of him. I have friends at the English embassy in
Paris who will help me to make inquiries; and I start for the Continent
in a day or two. Write to me while I am away, to the care of my father,
at ‘The Manor House, near Dartford.’ He will always know my address
abroad, and will forward your letters. For your own sake, remember the
warning I gave you this afternoon! Your faithful friend, A. B.”


CHAPTER IX.

OFFICIAL SECRETS

THERE WAS a more serious reason than Bervie was aware of, at the time,
for the warning which he had thought it his duty to address to Percy
Linwood. The new footman who had entered Mr. Bowmore’s service was a
Spy.

Well practiced in the infamous vocation that he followed, the wretch had
been chosen by the Department of Secret Service at the Home Office, to
watch the proceedings of Mr. Bowmore and his friends, and to report the
result to his superiors. It may not be amiss to add that the employment
of paid spies and informers, by the English Government of that time,
was openly acknowledged in the House of Lords, and was defended as a
necessary measure in the speeches of Lord Redesdale and Lord Liverpool.*

The reports furnished by the Home Office Spy, under these circumstances,
begin with the month of March, and take the form of a series of notes
introduced as follows:

“MR. SECRETARY--Since I entered Mr. Bowmore’s service, I have the honor
to inform you that my eyes and ears have been kept in a state of active
observation; and I can further certify that my means of making myself
useful in the future to my honorable employers are in no respect
diminished. Not the slightest suspicion of my true character is felt by
any person in the house.

FIRST NOTE.

“The young gentleman now on a visit to Mr. Bowmore is, as you have been
correctly informed, Mr. Percy Linwood. Although he is engaged to be
married to Miss Bowmore, he is not discreet enough to conceal a certain
want of friendly feeling, on his part, toward her father. The young lady
has noticed this, and has resented it. She accuses her lover of having
allowed himself to be prejudiced against Mr. Bowmore by some slanderous
person unknown.

“Mr. Percy’s clumsy defense of himself led (in my hearing) to a quarrel!
Nothing but his prompt submission prevented the marriage engagement from
being broken off.

“‘If you showed a want of confidence in Me’ (I heard Miss Charlotte
say), ‘I might forgive it. But when you show a want of confidence in
a man so noble as my father, I have no mercy on you.’ After such an
expression of filial sentiment as this, Mr. Percy wisely took the
readiest way of appealing to the lady’s indulgence. The young man has
a demand on Parliament for moneys due to his father’s estate; and he
pleased and flattered Miss Charlotte by asking Mr. Bowmore to advise
him as to the best means of asserting his claim. By way of advancing
his political interests, Mr. Bowmore introduced him to the local Hampden
Club; and Miss Charlotte rewarded him with a generosity which must not
be passed over in silence. Her lover was permitted to put an engagement
ring on her finger, and to kiss her afterward to his heart’s content.”

SECOND NOTE.

“Mr. Percy has paid more visits to the Republican Club; and Justice
Bervie (father of the Captain) has heard of it, and has written to his
son. The result that might have been expected has followed. Captain
Bervie announces his return to England, to exert his influence for
political good against the influence of Mr. Bowmore for political evil.

“In the meanwhile, Mr. Percy’s claim has been brought before the House
of Commons, and has been adjourned for further consideration in six
months’ time. Both the gentlemen are indignant--especially Mr. Bowmore.
He has called a meeting of the Club to consider his young friend’s
wrongs, and has proposed the election of Mr. Percy as a member of that
revolutionary society.”

THIRD NOTE.

“Mr. Percy has been elected. Captain Bervie has tried to awaken his
mind to a sense of the danger that threatens him, if he persists in
associating with his republican friends--and has utterly failed. Mr.
Bowmore and Mr. Percy have made speeches at the Club, intended to force
the latter gentleman’s claim on the immediate attention of Government.
Mr. Bowmore’s flow of frothy eloquence has its influence (as you know
from our shorthand writers’ previous reports) on thousands of ignorant
people. As it seems to me, the reasons for at once putting this man in
prison are beyond dispute. Whether it is desirable to include Mr. Percy
in the order of arrest, I must not venture to decide. Let me only hint
that his seditious speech rivals the more elaborate efforts of Mr.
Bowmore himself.

“So much for the present. I may now respectfully direct your attention
to the future.

“On the second of April next the Club assembles a public meeting, ‘in
aid of British liberty,’ in a field near Dartford. Mr. Bowmore is to
preside, and is to be escorted afterward to Westminster Hall on his
way to plead Mr. Percy’s cause, in his own person, before the House
of Commons. He is quite serious in declaring that ‘the minions of
Government dare not touch a hair of his head.’ Miss Charlotte agrees
with her father And Mr. Percy agrees with Miss Charlotte. Such is the
state of affairs at the house in which I am acting the part of domestic
servant.

“I inclose shorthand reports of the speeches recently delivered at the
Hampden Club, and have the honor of waiting for further orders.”

FOURTH NOTE.

“Your commands have reached me by this morning’s post.

“I immediately waited on Justice Bervie (in plain clothes, of course),
and gave him your official letter, instructing me to arrest Mr. Bowmore
and Mr. Percy Linwood.

“The venerable magistrate hesitated.

“He quite understood the necessity for keeping the arrest a strict
secret, in the interests of Government. The only reluctance he felt in
granting the warrant related to his son’s intimate friend. But for the
peremptory tone of your letter, I really believe he would have asked
you to give Mr. Percy time for consideration. Not being rash enough to
proceed to such an extreme as this, he slyly consulted the young man’s
interests by declining, on formal grounds, to date the warrant earlier
than the second of April. Please note that my visit to him was paid at
noon, on the thirty-first of March.

“If the object of this delay (to which I was obliged to submit) is
to offer a chance of escape to Mr. Percy, the same chance necessarily
includes Mr. Bowmore, whose name is also in the warrant. Trust me to
keep a watchful eye on both these gentlemen; especially on Mr. Bowmore.
He is the most dangerous man of the two, and the most likely, if he
feels any suspicions, to slip through the fingers of the law.

“I have also to report that I discovered three persons in the hall of
Justice Bervie’s house, as I went out.

“One of them was his son, the Captain; one was his daughter, Miss
Bervie; and the third was that smooth-tongued old soldier, Major
Mulvany. If the escape of Mr. Bowmore and Mr. Linwood is in
contemplation, mark my words: the persons whom I have just mentioned
will be concerned in it--and perhaps Miss Charlotte herself as well. At
present, she is entirely unsuspicious of any misfortune hanging over
her head; her attention being absorbed in the preparation of her bridal
finery. As an admirer myself of the fair sex, I must own that it seems
hard on the girl to have her lover clapped into prison, before the
wedding-day.

“I will bring you word of the arrest myself. There will be plenty of
time to catch the afternoon coach to London.

“Here--unless something happens which it is impossible to foresee--my
report may come to an end.”

     * Readers who may desire to test the author’s authority for
     this statement, are referred to “The Annual Register” for
     1817, Chapters I. and III.; and, further on, to page 66 in
     the same volume.


CHAPTER X.

THE ELOPEMENT.

ON the evening of the first of April, Mrs. Bowmore was left alone with
the servants. Mr. Bowmore and Percy had gone out together to attend a
special meeting of the Club. Shortly afterward Miss Charlotte had left
the cottage, under very extraordinary circumstances.

A few minutes only after the departure of her father and Percy,
she received a letter, which appeared to cause her the most violent
agitation. She said to Mrs. Bowmore:

“Mamma, I must see Captain Bervie for a few minutes in private, on a
matter of serious importance to all of us. He is waiting at the front
gate, and he will come in if I show myself at the hall door.”

Upon this, Mrs. Bowmore had asked for an explanation.

“There is no time for explanation,” was the only answer she received; “I
ask you to leave me for five minutes alone with the Captain.”

Mrs. Bowmore still hesitated. Charlotte snatched up her garden hat, and
declared, wildly, that she would go out to Captain Bervie, if she was
not permitted to receive him at home. In the face of this declaration,
Mrs. Bowmore yielded, and left the room.

In a minute more the Captain made his appearance.

Although she had given way, Mrs. Bowmore was not disposed to trust her
daughter, without supervision, in the society of a man whom Charlotte
herself had reviled as a slanderer and a false friend. She took up her
position in the veranda outside the parlor, at a safe distance from one
of the two windows of the room which had been left partially open to
admit the fresh air. Here she waited and listened.

The conversation was for some time carried on in whispers.

As they became more and more excited, both Charlotte and Bervie ended in
unconsciously raising their voices.

“I swear it to you on my faith as a Christian!” Mrs. Bowmore heard the
Captain say. “I declare before God who hears me that I am speaking the
truth!”

And Charlotte had answered, with a burst of tears:

“I can’t believe you! I daren’t believe you! Oh, how can you ask me to
do such a thing? Let me go! let me go!”

Alarmed at those words, Mrs. Bowmore advanced to the window and looked
in.

Bervie had put her daughter’s arm on his arm, and was trying to induce
her to leave the parlor with him. She resisted, and implored him to
release her. He dropped her arm, and whispered in her ear. She looked at
him--and instantly made up her mind.

“Let me tell my mother where I am going,” she said; “and I will
consent.”

“Be it so!” he answered. “And remember one thing: every minute is
precious; the fewest words are the best.”

Mrs. Bowmore re-entered the cottage by the adjoining room, and met them
in the passage. In few words, Charlotte spoke.

“I must go at once to Justice Bervie’s house. Don’t be afraid, mamma! I
know what I am about, and I know I am right.”

“Going to Justice Bervie’s!” cried Mrs. Bowmore, in the utmost extremity
of astonishment. “What will your father say, what will Percy think, when
they come back from the Club?”

“My sister’s carriage is waiting for me close by,” Bervie answered. “It
is entirely at Miss Bowmore’s disposal. She can easily get back, if she
wishes to keep her visit a secret, before Mr. Bowmore and Mr. Linwood
return.”

He led her to the door as he spoke. She ran back and kissed her mother
tenderly. Mrs. Bowmore called to them to wait.

“I daren’t let you go,” she said to her daughter, “without your father’s
leave!”

Charlotte seemed not to hear, the Captain seemed not to hear. They ran
across the front garden, and through the gate--and were out of sight in
less than a minute.

More than two hours passed; the sun sank below the horizon, and still
there were no signs of Charlotte’s return.

Feeling seriously uneasy, Mrs. Bowmore crossed the room to ring the
bell, and send the man-servant to Justice Bervie’s house to hasten her
daughter’s return.

As she approached the fireplace, she was startled by a sound of stealthy
footsteps in the hall, followed by a loud noise as of some heavy object
that had dropped on the floor. She rang the bell violently, and opened
the door of the parlor. At the same moment, the spy-footman passed her,
running out, apparently in pursuit of somebody, at the top of his speed.
She followed him, as rapidly as she could, across the little front
garden, to the gate. Arrived in the road, she was in time to see him
vault upon the luggage-board at the back of a post-chaise before the
cottage, just as the postilion started the horses on their way to
London. The spy saw Mrs. Bowmore looking at him, and pointed, with an
insolent nod of his head, first to the inside of the vehicle, and then
over it to the high-road; signing to her that he designed to accompany
the person in the post-chaise to the end of the journey.

Turning to go back, Mrs. Bowmore saw her own bewilderment reflected in
the faces of the two female servants, who had followed her out.

“Who can the footman be after, ma’am?” asked the cook. “Do you think
it’s a thief?”

The housemaid pointed to the post-chaise, barely visible in the
distance.

“Simpleton!” she said. “Do thieves travel in that way? I wish my master
had come back,” she proceeded, speaking to herself: “I’m afraid there’s
something wrong.”

Mrs. Bowmore, returning through the garden-gate, instantly stopped and
looked at the woman.

“What makes you mention your master’s name, Amelia, when you fear that
something is wrong?” she asked.

Amelia changed color, and looked confused.

“I am loth to alarm you, ma’am,” she said; “and I can’t rightly see what
it is my duty to do.”

Mrs. Bowmore’s heart sank within her under the cruelest of all terrors,
the terror of something unknown. “Don’t keep me in suspense,” she said
faintly. “Whatever it is, let me know it.”

She led the way back to the parlor. The housemaid followed her. The cook
(declining to be left alone) followed the housemaid.

“It was something I heard early this afternoon, ma’am,” Amelia began.
“Cook happened to be busy--”

The cook interposed: she had not forgiven the housemaid for calling
her a simpleton. “No, Amelia, if you _must_ bring me into it--not busy.
Uneasy in my mind on the subject of the soup.”

“I don’t know that your mind makes much difference,” Amelia resumed.
“What it comes to is this--it was I, and not you, who went into the
kitchen-garden for the vegetables.”

“Not by _my_ wish, Heaven knows!” persisted the cook.

“Leave the room!” said Mrs. Bowmore. Even her patience had given way at
last.

The cook looked as if she declined to believe her own ears. Mrs. Bowmore
pointed to the door. The cook said “Oh?”--accenting it as a question.
Mrs. Bowmore’s finger still pointed. The cook, in solemn silence,
yielded to circumstances, and banged the door.

“I was getting the vegetables, ma’am,” Amelia proceeded, “when I heard
voices on the other side of the paling. The wood is so old that one can
see through the cracks easy enough. I saw my master, and Mr. Linwood,
and Captain Bervie. The Captain seemed to have stopped the other two on
the pathway that leads to the field; he stood, as it might be, between
them and the back way to the house--and he spoke severely, that he did!”

“What did Captain Bervie say?”

“He said these words, ma’am: ‘For the last time, Mr. Bowmore,’ says he,
‘will you understand that you are in danger, and that Mr. Linwood is
in danger, unless you both leave this neighborhood to-night?’ My master
made light of it. ‘For the last time,’ says he, ‘will you refer us to
a proof of what you say, and allow us to judge for ourselves?’ ‘I have
told you already,’ says the Captain, ‘I am bound by my duty toward
another person to keep what I know a secret.’ ‘Very well,’ says my
master, ‘_I_ am bound by my duty to my country. And I tell you this,’
says he, in his high and mighty way, ‘neither Government, nor the spies
of Government, dare touch a hair of my head: they know it, sir, for the
head of the people’s friend!’”

“That’s quite true,” said Mrs. Bowmore, still believing in her husband
as firmly as ever.

Amelia went on:

“Captain Bervie didn’t seem to think so,” she said. “He lost his temper.
‘What stuff!’ says he; ‘there’s a Government spy in your house at this
moment, disguised as your footman.’ My master looked at Mr. Linwood,
and burst out laughing. ‘You won’t beat that, Captain,’ says he, ‘if you
talk till doomsday.’ He turned about without a word more, and went home.
The Captain caught Mr. Linwood by the arm, as soon as they were alone.
‘For God’s sake,’ says he, ‘don’t follow that madman’s example!’”

Mrs. Bowmore was shocked. “Did he really call my husband a madman?” she
asked.

“He did, indeed, ma’am--and he was in earnest about it, too. ‘If you
value your liberty,’ he says to Mr. Linwood; ‘if you hope to become
Charlotte’s husband, consult your own safety. I can give you a passport.
Escape to France and wait till this trouble is over.’ Mr. Linwood was
not in the best of tempers--Mr. Linwood shook him off. ‘Charlotte’s
father will soon be my father,’ says he, ‘do you think I will desert
him? My friends at the Club have taken up my claim; do you think I will
forsake them at the meeting to-morrow? You ask me to be unworthy of
Charlotte, and unworthy of my friends--you insult me, if you say more.’
He whipped round on his heel, and followed my master.”

“And what did the Captain do?”

“Lifted up his hands, ma’am, to the heavens, and looked--I declare it
turned my blood to see him. If there’s truth in mortal man, it’s my firm
belief--”

What the housemaid’s belief was, remained unexpressed. Before she could
get to her next word, a shriek of horror from the hall announced that
the cook’s powers of interruption were not exhausted yet.

Mistress and servant both hurried out in terror of they knew not what.
There stood the cook, alone in the hall, confronting the stand on which
the overcoats and hats of the men of the family were placed.

“Where’s the master’s traveling coat?” cried the cook, staring wildly at
an unoccupied peg. “And where’s his cap to match! Oh Lord, he’s off in
the post-chaise! and the footman’s after him!”

Simpleton as she was, the woman had blundered on a very serious
discovery.

Coat and cap--both made after a foreign pattern, and both strikingly
remarkable in form and color to English eyes--had unquestionably
disappeared. It was equally certain that they were well known to the
foot man, whom the Captain had declared to be a spy, as the coat and cap
which his master used in traveling. Had Mr. Bowmore discovered (since
the afternoon) that he was really in danger? Had the necessities of
instant flight only allowed him time enough to snatch his coat and cap
out of the hall? And had the treacherous manservant seen him as he was
making his escape to the post-chaise? The cook’s conclusions answered
all these questions in the affirmative--and, if Captain Bervie’s words
of warning had been correctly reported, the cook’s conclusion for once
was not to be despised.

Under this last trial of her fortitude, Mrs. Bowmore’s feeble reserves
of endurance completely gave way. The poor lady turned faint and giddy.
Amelia placed her on a chair in the hall, and told the cook to open the
front door, and let in the fresh air.

The cook obeyed; and instantly broke out with a second terrific scream;
announcing nothing less, this time, than the appearance of Mr. Bowmore
himself, alive and hearty, returning with Percy from the meeting at the
Club!

The inevitable inquiries and explanations followed.

Fully assured, as he had declared himself to be, of the sanctity of his
person (politically speaking), Mr. Bowmore turned pale, nevertheless,
when he looked at the unoccupied peg on his clothes stand. Had some
man unknown personated him? And had a post-chaise been hired to lead an
impending pursuit of him in the wrong direction? What did it mean? Who
was the friend to whose services he was indebted? As for the proceedings
of the man-servant, but one interpretation could now be placed on them.
They distinctly justified what Captain Bervie had said of him. Mr.
Bowmore thought of the Captain’s other assertion, relating to the urgent
necessity for making his escape; and looked at Percy in silent dismay;
and turned paler than ever.

Percy’s thoughts, diverted for the moment only from the lady of his
love, returned to her with renewed fidelity. “Let us hear what Charlotte
thinks of it,” he said. “Where is she?”

It was impossible to answer this question plainly and in few words.

Terrified at the effect which her attempt at explanation produced on
Percy, helplessly ignorant when she was called upon to account for her
daughter’s absence, Mrs. Bowmore could only shed tears and express a
devout trust in Providence. Her husband looked at the new misfortune
from a political point of view. He sat down and slapped his forehead
theatrically with the palm of his hand. “Thus far,” said the patriot,
“my political assailants have only struck at me through the newspapers.
_Now_ they strike at me through my child!”

Percy made no speeches. There was a look in his eyes which boded ill
for Captain Bervie if the two met. “I am going to fetch her,” was all he
said, “as fast as a horse can carry me.”

He hired his horse at an inn in the town, and set forth for Justice
Bervie’s house at a gallop.

During Percy’s absence, Mr. Bowmore secured the front and back entrances
to the cottage with his own hands.

These first precautions taken, he ascended to his room and packed his
traveling-bag. “Necessaries for my use in prison,” he remarked. “The
bloodhounds of Government are after me.” “Are they after Percy, too?”
 his wife ventured to ask. Mr. Bowmore looked up impatiently, and
cried “Pooh!”--as if Percy was of no consequence. Mrs. Bowmore thought
otherwise: the good woman privately packed a bag for Percy, in the
sanctuary of her own room.

For an hour, and more than an hour, no event of any sort occurred.

Mr. Bowmore stalked up and down the parlor, meditating. At intervals,
ideas of flight presented themselves attractively to his mind. At
intervals, ideas of the speech that he had prepared for the public
meeting on the next day took their place. “If I fly to-night,” he wisely
observed, “what will become of my speech? I will _not_ fly to-night! The
people shall hear me.”

He sat down and crossed his arms fiercely. As he looked at his wife
to see what effect he had produced on her, the sound of heavy
carriage-wheels and the trampling of horses penetrated to the parlor
from the garden-gate.

Mr. Bowmore started to his feet, with every appearance of having
suddenly altered his mind on the question of flight. Just as he reached
the hall, Percy’s voice was heard at the front door. “Let me in.
Instantly! Instantly!”

Mrs. Bowmore drew back the bolts before the servants could help her.
“Where is Charlotte?” she cried; seeing Percy alone on the doorstep.

“Gone!” Percy answered furiously. “Eloped to Paris with Captain Bervie!
Read her own confession. They were just sending the messenger with it,
when I reached the house.”

He handed a note to Mrs. Bowmore, and turned aside to speak to her
husband while she read it. Charlotte wrote to her mother very briefly;
promising to explain everything on her return. In the meantime, she had
left home under careful protection--she had a lady for her companion
on the journey--and she would write again from Paris. So the letter,
evidently written in great haste, began and ended.

Percy took Mr. Bowmore to the window, and pointed to a carriage and four
horses waiting at the garden-gate.

“Do you come with me, and back me with your authority as her father?” he
asked, sternly. “Or do you leave me to go alone?”

Mr. Bowmore was famous among his admirers for his “happy replies.” He
made one now.

“I am not Brutus,” he said. “I am only Bowmore. My daughter before
everything. Fetch my traveling-bag.”

While the travelers’ bags were being placed in the chaise, Mr. Bowmore
was struck by an idea.

He produced from his coat-pocket a roll of many papers thickly covered
with writing. On the blank leaf in which they were tied up, he wrote
in the largest letters: “Frightful domestic calamity! Vice-President
Bowmore obliged to leave England! Welfare of a beloved daughter! His
speech will be read at the meeting by Secretary Joskin, of the Club.
(Private to Joskin. Have these lines printed and posted everywhere. And,
when you read my speech, for God’s sake don’t drop your voice at the
ends of the sentences.)”

He threw down the pen, and embraced Mrs. Bowmore in the most summary
manner. The poor woman was ordered to send the roll of paper to the
Club, without a word to comfort and sustain her from her husband’s
lips. Percy spoke to her hopefully and kindly, as he kissed her cheek at
parting.

On the next morning, a letter, addressed to Mrs. Bowmore, was delivered
at the cottage by private messenger.

Opening the letter, she recognized the handwriting of her husband’s old
friend, and her old friend--Major Mulvany. In breathless amazement, she
read these lines:

“DEAR MRS. BOWMORE--In matters of importance, the golden rule is never
to waste words. I have performed one of the great actions of my life--I
have saved your husband.

“How I discovered that my friend was in danger, I must not tell you
at present. Let it be enough if I say that I have been a guest under
Justice Bervie’s hospitable roof, and that I know of a Home Office spy
who has taken you unawares, under pretense of being your footman. If
I had not circumvented him, the scoundrel would have imprisoned your
husband, and another dear friend of mine. This is how I did it.

“I must begin by appealing to your memory.

“Do you happen to remember that your husband and I are as near as may be
of about the same height? Very good, so far. Did you, in the next place,
miss Bowmore’s traveling coat and cap from their customary peg? I am the
thief, dearest lady; I put them on my own humble self. Did you hear a
sudden noise in the hall? Oh, forgive me--I made the noise! And it
did just what I wanted of it. It brought the spy up from the kitchen,
suspecting that something might be wrong.

“What did the wretch see when he got into the hall? His master, in
traveling costume, running out. What did he find when he reached the
garden? His master escaping, in a post-chaise, on the road to London.
What did he do, the born blackguard that he was? Jumped up behind the
chaise to make sure of his prisoner. It was dark when we got to London.
In a hop, skip, and jump, I was out of the carriage, and in at my own
door, before he could look me in the face.

“The date of the warrant, you must know, obliged him to wait till the
morning. All that night, he and the Bow Street runners kept watch They
came in with the sunrise--and who did they find? Major Mulvany snug in
his bed, and as innocent as the babe unborn. Oh, they did their duty!
Searched the place from the kitchen to the garrets--and gave it up.
There’s but one thing I regret--I let the spy off without a good
thrashing. No matter. I’ll do it yet, one of these days.

“Let me know the first good news of our darling fugitives, and I shall
be more than rewarded for what little I have done.

“Your always devoted,

“TERENCE MULVANY.”


CHAPTER XI.

PURSUIT AND DISCOVERY.

FEELING himself hurried away on the road to Dover, as fast as four
horses could carry him, Mr. Bowmore had leisure to criticise Percy’s
conduct, from his own purely selfish point of view.

“If you had listened to my advice,” he said, “you would have treated
that man Bervie like the hypocrite and villain that he is. But no! you
trusted to your own crude impressions. Having given him your hand
after the duel (I would have given him the contents of my pistol!) you
hesitated to withdraw it again, when that slanderer appealed to your
friendship not to cast him off. Now you see the consequence!”

“Wait till we get to Paris!” All the ingenuity of Percy’s traveling
companion failed to extract from him any other answer than that.

Foiled so far, Mr. Bowmore began to start difficulties next. Had they
money enough for the journey? Percy touched his pocket, and answered
shortly, “Plenty.” Had they passports? Percy sullenly showed a letter.
“There is the necessary voucher from a magistrate,” he said. “The consul
at Dover will give us our passports. Mind this!” he added, in warning
tones, “I have pledged my word of honor to Justice Bervie that we have
no political object in view in traveling to France. Keep your politics
to yourself, on the other side of the Channel.”

Mr. Bowmore listened in blank amazement. Charlotte’s lover was appearing
in a new character--the character of a man who had lost his respect for
Charlotte’s father!

It was useless to talk to him. He deliberately checked any further
attempts at conversation by leaning back in the carriage, and closing
his eyes. The truth is, Mr. Bowmore’s own language and conduct were
insensibly producing the salutary impression on Percy’s mind which
Bervie had vainly tried to convey, under the disadvantage of having
Charlotte’s influence against him. Throughout the journey, Percy did
exactly what Bervie had once entreated him to do--he kept Mr. Bowmore at
a distance.

At every stage, they inquired after the fugitives. At every stage, they
were answered by a more or less intelligible description of Bervie and
Charlotte, and of the lady who accompanied them. No disguise had been
attempted; no person had in any case been bribed to conceal the truth.

When the first tumult of his emotions had in some degree subsided, this
strange circumstance associated itself in Percy’s mind with the equally
unaccountable conduct of Justice Bervie, on his arrival at the manor
house.

The old gentleman met his visitor in the hall, without expressing, and
apparently without feeling, any indignation at his son’s conduct. It was
even useless to appeal to him for information. He only said, “I am
not in Arthur’s confidence; he is of age, and my daughter (who has
volunteered to accompany him) is of age. I have no claim to control
them. I believe they have taken Miss Bowmore to Paris; and that is all I
know about it.”

He had shown the same dense insensibility in giving his official voucher
for the passports. Percy had only to satisfy him on the question of
politics; and the document was drawn out as a matter of course. Such had
been the father’s behavior; and the conduct of the son now exhibited the
same shameless composure. To what conclusion did this discovery point?
Percy abandoned the attempt to answer that question in despair.

They reached Dover toward two o’clock in the morning.

At the pier-head they found a coast-guardsman on duty, and received more
information.

In 1817 the communication with France was still by sailing-vessels.
Arriving long after the departure of the regular packet, Bervie had
hired a lugger, and had sailed with the two ladies for Calais, having a
fresh breeze in his favor. Percy’s first angry impulse was to follow him
instantly. The next moment he remembered the insurmountable obstacle of
the passports. The Consul would certainly not grant those essentially
necessary documents at two in the morning!

The only alternative was to wait for the regular packet, which sailed
some hours later--between eight and nine o’clock in the forenoon. In
this case, they might apply for their passports before the regular
office hours, if they explained the circumstances, backed by the
authority of the magistrate’s letter.

Mr. Bowmore followed Percy to the nearest inn that was open, sublimely
indifferent to the delays and difficulties of the journey. He ordered
refreshments with the air of a man who was performing a melancholy duty
to himself, in the name of humanity.

“When I think of my speech,” he said, at supper, “my heart bleeds for
the people. In a few hours more, they will assemble in their thousands,
eager to hear me. And what will they see? Joskin in my place! Joskin
with a manuscript in his hand! Joskin, who drops his voice at the ends
of his sentences! I will never forgive Charlotte. Waiter, another glass
of brandy and water.”

After an unusually quick passage across the Channel, the travelers
landed on the French coast, before the defeated spy had returned from
London to Dartford by stage-coach. Continuing their journey by post as
far as Amiens, they reached that city in time to take their places by
the diligence to Paris.

Arrived in Paris, they encountered another incomprehensible proceeding
on the part of Captain Bervie.

Among the persons assembled in the yard to see the arrival of the
diligence was a man with a morsel of paper in his hand, evidently on
the lookout for some person whom he expected to discover among the
travelers. After consulting his bit of paper, he looked with steady
attention at Percy and Mr. Bowmore, and suddenly approached them. “If
you wish to see the Captain,” he said, in broken English, “you will find
him at that hotel.” He handed a printed card to Percy, and disappeared
among the crowd before it was possible to question him.

Even Mr. Bowmore gave way to human weakness, and condescended to
feel astonished in the face of such an event as this. “What next?” he
exclaimed.

“Wait till we get to the hotel,” said Percy.

In half an hour more the landlord had received them, and the waiter had
led them to the right door. Percy pushed the man aside, and burst into
the room.

Captain Bervie was alone, reading a newspaper. Before the first furious
words had escaped Percy’s lips, Bervie silenced him by pointing to a
closed door on the right of the fireplace.

“She is in that room,” he said; “speak quietly, or you may frighten her.
I know what you are going to say,” he added, as Percy stepped nearer to
him. “Will you hear me in my own defense, and then decide whether I am
the greatest scoundrel living, or the best friend you ever had?”

He put the question kindly, with something that was at once grave and
tender in his look and manner. The extraordinary composure with which
he acted and spoke had its tranquilizing influence over Percy. He felt
himself surprised into giving Bervie a hearing.

“I will tell you first what I have done,” the Captain proceeded, “and
next why I did it. I have taken it on myself, Mr. Linwood, to make an
alteration in your wedding arrangements. Instead of being married at
Dartford church, you will be married (if you see no objection) at the
chapel of the embassy in Paris, by my old college friend the chaplain.”

This was too much for Percy’s self-control. “Your audacity is beyond
belief,” he broke out.

“And beyond endurance,” Mr. Bowmore added. “Understand this, sir!
Whatever your defense may be, I object, under any circumstances, to be
made the victim of a trick.”

“You are the victim of your own obstinate refusal to profit by a plain
warning,” Bervie rejoined. “At the eleventh hour, I entreated you, and
I entreated Mr. Linwood, to provide for your own safety; and I spoke in
vain.”

Percy’s patience gave way once more.

“To use your own language,” he said, “I have still to decide whether
you have behaved toward me like a scoundrel or a friend. You have said
nothing to justify yourself yet.”

“Very well put!” Mr. Bowmore chimed in. “Come to the point, sir! My
daughter’s reputation is in question.”

“Miss Bowmore’s reputation is not in question for a single instant,”
 Bervie answered. “My sister has been the companion of her journey from
first to last.”

“Journey?” Mr. Bowmore repeated, indignantly. “I want to know, sir, what
the journey means. As an outraged father, I ask one plain question. Why
did you run away with my daughter?”

Bervie took a slip of paper from his pocket, and handed it to Percy with
a smile.

It was a copy of the warrant which Justice Bervie’s duty had compelled
him to issue for the “arrest of Orlando Bowmore and Percy Linwood.”
 There was no danger in divulging the secret now. British warrants were
waste-paper in France, in those days.

“I ran away with the bride,” Bervie said coolly, “in the certain
knowledge that you and Mr. Bowmore would run after me. If I had not
forced you both to follow me out of England on the first of April, you
would have been made State prisoners on the second. What do you say to
my conduct now?”

“Wait, Percy, before you answer him,” Mr. Bowmore interposed. “He is
ready enough at excusing himself. But, observe--he hasn’t a word to say
in justification of my daughter’s readiness to run away with him.”

“Have you quite done?” Bervie asked, as quietly as ever.

Mr. Bowmore reserved the right of all others which he most prized,
the right of using his tongue. “For the present,” he answered in his
loftiest manner, “I have done.”

Bervie proceeded: “Your daughter consented to run away with me, because
I took her to my father’s house, and prevailed upon him to trust her
with the secret of the coming arrests. She had no choice left but to let
her obstinate father and her misguided lover go to prison--or to take
her place with my sister and me in the traveling-carriage.” He appealed
once more to Percy. “My friend, you remember the day when you spared my
life. Have I remembered it, too?”

For once, there was an Englishman who was not contented to express the
noblest emotions that humanity can feel by the commonplace ceremony of
shaking hands. Percy’s heart overflowed. In an outburst of unutterable
gratitude he threw himself on Bervie’s breast. As brothers the two men
embraced. As brothers they loved and trusted one another, from that day
forth.

The door on the right was softly opened from within. A charming
face--the dark eyes bright with happy tears, the rosy lips just
opening into a smile--peeped into the room. A low sweet voice, with an
under-note of trembling in it, made this modest protest, in the form of
an inquiry:

“When you have quite done, Percy, with our good friend, perhaps you will
have something to say to ME?”

LAST WORDS.

THE persons immediately interested in the marriage of Percy and
Charlotte were the only persons present at the ceremony.

At the little breakfast afterward, in the French hotel, Mr. Bowmore
insisted on making a speech to a select audience of six; namely, the
bride and bridegroom, the bridesmaid, the Chaplain, the Captain, and
Mrs. Bowmore. But what does a small audience matter? The English frenzy
for making speeches is not to be cooled by such a trifle as that. At
the end of the world, the expiring forces of Nature will hear a dreadful
voice--the voice of the last Englishman delivering the last speech.

Percy wisely made his honeymoon a long one; he determined to be quite
sure of his superior influence over his wife before he trusted her
within reach of her father again.

Mr. and Mrs. Bowmore accompanied Captain Bervie and Miss Bervie on
their way back to England, as far as Boulogne. In that pleasant town the
banished patriot set up his tent. It was a cheaper place to live in than
Paris, and it was conveniently close to England, when he had quite made
up his mind whether to be an exile on the Continent, or to go back to
his own country and be a martyr in prison. In the end, the course of
events settled that question for him. Mr. Bowmore returned to England,
with the return of the Habeas Corpus Act.


The years passed. Percy and Charlotte (judged from the romantic point of
view) became two uninteresting married people. Bervie (always remaining
a bachelor) rose steadily in his profession, through the higher grades
of military rank. Mr. Bowmore, wisely overlooked by a new Government,
sank back again into the obscurity from which shrewd Ministers would
never have assisted him to emerge. The one subject of interest left,
among the persons of this little drama, was now represented by Doctor
Lagarde. Thus far, not a trace had been discovered of the French
physician, who had so strangely associated the visions of his magnetic
sleep with the destinies of the two men who had consulted him.

Steadfastly maintaining his own opinion of the prediction and the
fulfillment, Bervie persisted in believing that he and Lagarde (or
Percy and Lagarde) were yet destined to meet, and resume the unfinished
consultation at the point where it had been broken off. Persons, happy
in the possession of “sound common sense,” who declared the prediction
to be skilled guesswork, and the fulfillment manifest coincidence,
ridiculed the idea of finding Doctor Lagarde as closely akin to that
other celebrated idea of finding the needle in the bottle of hay. But
Bervie’s obstinacy was proverbial. Nothing shook his confidence in his
own convictions.

More than thirteen years had elapsed since the consultation at the
Doctor’s lodgings, when Bervie went to Paris to spend a summer holiday
with his friend, the chaplain at the English embassy. His last words to
Percy and Charlotte when he took his leave were: “Suppose I meet with
Doctor Lagarde?”

It was then the year 1830. Bervie arrived at his friend’s rooms on the
24th of July. On the 27th of the month the famous revolution broke out
which dethroned Charles the Tenth in three days.

On the second day, Bervie and his host ventured into the streets,
watching the revolution (like other reckless Englishmen) at the risk of
their lives. In the confusion around them they were separated. Bervie,
searching for his companion, found his progress stopped by a barricade,
which had been desperately attacked, and desperately defended. Men in
blouses and men in uniform lay dead and dying together: the tricolored
flag waved over them, in token of the victory of the people.

Bervie had just revived a poor wretch with a drink from an overthrown
bowl of water, which still had a few drops left in it, when he felt
a hand laid on his shoulder from behind. He turned and discovered a
National Guard, who had been watching his charitable action. “Give a
helping hand to that poor fellow,” said the citizen-soldier, pointing to
a workman standing near, grimed with blood and gunpowder. The tears were
rolling down the man’s cheeks. “I can’t see my way, sir, for crying,”
 he said. “Help me to carry that sad burden into the next street.” He
pointed to a rude wooden litter, on which lay a dead or wounded man, his
face and breast covered with an old cloak. “There is the best friend
the people ever had,” the workman said. “He cured us, comforted us,
respected us, loved us. And there he lies, shot dead while he was
binding up the wounds of friends and enemies alike!”

“Whoever he is, he has died nobly,” Bervie answered “May I look at him?”

The workman signed that he might look.

Bervie lifted the cloak--and met with Doctor Lagarde once more.



MISS BERTHA AND THE YANKEE.

[PRELIMINARY STATEMENTS OF WITNESSES FOR THE DEFENSE, COLLECTED AT THE
OFFICE OF THE SOLICITOR.]

No. 1.--Miss Bertha Laroche, of Nettlegrove Hall, testifies and says:--

I.

TOWARD the middle of June, in the year 1817, I went to take the waters
at Maplesworth, in Derbyshire, accompanied by my nearest relative--my
aunt.

I am an only child; and I was twenty-one years old at my last birthday.
On coming of age I inherited a house and lands in Derbyshire, together
with a fortune in money of one hundred thousand pounds. The only
education which I have received has been obtained within the last two or
three years of my life; and I have thus far seen nothing of Society,
in England or in any other civilized part of the world. I can be a
competent witness, it seems, in spite of these disadvantages. Anyhow, I
mean to tell the truth.

My father was a French colonist in the island of Saint Domingo. He died
while I was very young; leaving to my mother and to me just enough to
live on, in the remote part of the island in which our little property
was situated. My mother was an Englishwoman. Her delicate health made it
necessary for her to leave me, for many hours of the day, under the care
of our household slaves. I can never forget their kindness to me; but,
unfortunately, their ignorance equaled their kindness. If we had been
rich enough to send to France or England for a competent governess we
might have done very well. But we were not rich enough. I am ashamed to
say that I was nearly thirteen years old before I had learned to read
and write correctly.

Four more years passed--and then there came a wonderful event in our
lives, which was nothing less than the change from Saint Domingo to
England.

My mother was distantly related to an ancient and wealthy English
family. She seriously offended those proud people by marrying an obscure
foreigner, who had nothing to live on but his morsel of land in the West
Indies. Having no expectations from her relatives, my mother preferred
happiness with the man she loved to every other consideration; and I,
for one, think she was right. From that moment she was cast off by the
head of the family. For eighteen years of her life, as wife, mother,
and widow, no letters came to her from her English home. We had just
celebrated my seventeenth birthday when the first letter came. It
informed my mother that no less than three lives, which stood between
her and the inheritance of certain portions of the family property,
had been swept away by death. The estate and the fortune which I have
already mentioned had fallen to her in due course of law, and her
surviving relatives were magnanimously ready to forgive her at last!

We wound up our affairs at Saint Domingo, and we went to England to take
possession of our new wealth.

At first, the return to her native air seemed to have a beneficial
effect on my mother’s health. But it was a temporary improvement only.
Her constitution had been fatally injured by the West Indian climate,
and just as we had engaged a competent person to look after my neglected
education, my constant attendance was needed at my mother’s bedside. We
loved each other dearly, and we wanted no strange nurses to come
between us. My aunt (my mother’s sister) relieved me of my cares in the
intervals when I wanted rest.

For seven sad months our dear sufferer lingered. I have only one
remembrance to comfort me; my mother’s last kiss was mine--she died
peacefully with her head on my bosom.

I was nearly nineteen years old before I had sufficiently rallied my
courage to be able to think seriously of myself and my prospects.

At that age one does not willingly submit one’s self for the first time
to the authority of a governess. Having my aunt for a companion and
protectress, I proposed to engage my own masters and to superintend my
own education.

My plans failed to meet with the approval of the head of the family. He
declared (most unjustly, as the event proved) that my aunt was not a
fit person to take care of me. She had passed all the later years of her
life in retirement. A good creature, he admitted, in her own way, but
she had no knowledge of the world, and no firmness of character. The
right person to act as my chaperon, and to superintend my education, was
the high-minded and accomplished woman who had taught his own daughters.

I declined, with all needful gratitude and respect, to take his advice.
The bare idea of living with a stranger so soon after my mother’s death
revolted me. Besides, I liked my aunt, and my aunt liked me. Being made
acquainted with my decision, the head of the family cast me off, exactly
as he had cast off my mother before me.

So I lived in retirement with my good aunt, and studied industriously
to improve my mind until my twenty-first birthday came. I was now an
heiress, privileged to think and act for myself. My aunt kissed me
tenderly. We talked of my poor mother, and we cried in each other’s arms
on the memorable day that made a wealthy woman of me. In a little time
more, other troubles than vain regrets for the dead were to try me, and
other tears were to fill my eyes than the tears which I had given to the
memory of my mother.

II.

I MAY now return to my visit, in June, 1817, to the healing springs at
Maplesworth.

This famous inland watering-place was only between nine and ten miles
from my new home called Nettlegrove Hall. I had been feeling weak and
out of spirits for some months, and our medical adviser recommended
change of scene and a trial of the waters at Maplesworth. My aunt and
I established ourselves in comfortable apartments, with a letter of
introduction to the chief doctor in the place. This otherwise harmless
and worthy man proved, strangely enough, to be the innocent cause of the
trials and troubles which beset me at the outset of my new life.

The day after we had presented our letter of introduction, we met the
doctor on the public walk. He was accompanied by two strangers, both
young men, and both (so far as my ignorant opinion went) persons of some
distinction, judging by their dress and manners. The doctor said a few
kind words to us, and rejoined his two companions. Both the gentlemen
looked at me, and both took off their hats as my aunt and I proceeded on
our walk.

I own I thought occasionally of the well-bred strangers during the rest
of the day, especially of the shortest of the two, who was also the
handsomest of the two to my thinking. If this confession seems rather
a bold one, remember, if you please, that I had never been taught to
conceal my feelings at Saint Domingo, and that the events which followed
our arrival in England had kept me completely secluded from the society
of other young ladies of my age.

The next day, while I was drinking my glass of healing water (extremely
nasty water, by the way) the doctor joined us.

While he was asking me about my health, the two strangers made their
appearance again, and took off their hats again. They both looked
expectantly at the doctor, and the doctor (in performance of a promise
which he had already made, as I privately suspected) formally introduced
them to my aunt and to me. First (I put the handsomest man first)
Captain Arthur Stanwick, of the army, home from India on leave,
and staying at Maplesworth to take the waters; secondly, Mr. Lionel
Varleigh, of Boston, in America, visiting England, after traveling all
over Europe, and stopping at Maplesworth to keep company with his friend
the Captain.

On their introduction, the two gentlemen, observing, no doubt, that I
was a little shy, forbore delicately from pressing their society on us.

Captain Stanwick, with a beautiful smile, and with teeth worthy of the
smile, stroked his whiskers, and asked me if I had found any benefit
from taking the waters. He afterward spoke in great praise of the
charming scenery in the neighborhood of Maplesworth, and then, turning
away, addressed his next words to my aunt. Mr. Varleigh took his place.
Speaking with perfect gravity, and with no whiskers to stroke, he said:

“I have once tried the waters here out of curiosity. I can sympathize,
miss, with the expression which I observed on your face when you emptied
your glass just now. Permit me to offer you something nice to take the
taste of the waters out of your mouth.” He produced from his pocket a
beautiful little box filled with sugar-plums. “I bought it in Paris,”
 h e explained. “Having lived a good deal in France, I have got into a
habit of making little presents of this sort to ladies and children. I
wouldn’t let the doctor see it, miss, if I were you. He has the usual
medical prejudice against sugar-plums.” With that quaint warning, he,
too, made his bow and discreetly withdrew.

Thinking it over afterward, I acknowledged to myself that the English
Captain--although he was the handsomest man of the two, and possessed
the smoothest manners--had failed, nevertheless, to overcome my shyness.
The American traveler’s unaffected sincerity and good-humor, on the
other hand, set me quite at my ease. I could look at him and thank
him, and feel amused at his sympathy with the grimace I had made, after
swallowing the ill-flavored waters. And yet, while I lay awake at night,
wondering whether we should meet our new acquaintances on the next day,
it was the English Captain that I most wanted to see again, and not
the American traveler! At the time, I set this down to nothing more
important than my own perversity. Ah, dear! dear! I know better than
that now.

The next morning brought the doctor to our hotel on a special visit to
my aunt. He invented a pretext for sending me into the next room,
which was so plainly a clumsy excuse that my curiosity was aroused. I
gratified my curiosity. Must I make my confession plainer still? Must
I acknowledge that I was mean enough to listen on the other side of the
door?

I heard my dear innocent old aunt say: “Doctor! I hope you don’t see
anything alarming in the state of Bertha’s health.”

The doctor burst out laughing. “My dear madam! there is nothing in the
state of the young lady’s health which need cause the smallest anxiety
to you or to me. The object of my visit is to justify myself for
presenting those two gentlemen to you yesterday. They are both greatly
struck by Miss Bertha’s beauty, and they both urgently entreated me
to introduce them. Such introductions, I need hardly say, are marked
exceptions to my general rule. In ninety-nine cases out of a hundred I
should have said No. In the cases of Captain Stanwick and Mr. Varleigh,
however, I saw no reason to hesitate. Permit me to assure you that I am
not intruding on your notice two fortune-hunting adventurers. They are
both men of position and men of property. The family of the Stanwicks
has been well known to me for years; and Mr. Varleigh brought me a
letter from my oldest living friend, answering for him as a gentleman in
the highest sense of the word. He is the wealthiest man of the two;
and it speaks volumes for him, in my opinion, that he has preserved his
simplicity of character after a long residence in such places as Paris
and Vienna. Captain Stanwick has more polish and ease of manner, but,
looking under the surface, I rather fancy there may be something a
little impetuous and domineering in his temper. However, we all have our
faults. I can only say, for both these young friends of mine, that you
need feel no scruple about admitting them to your intimacy, if they
happen to please you--and your niece. Having now, I hope, removed any
doubts which may have troubled you, pray recall Miss Bertha. I am afraid
I have interrupted you in discussing your plans for the day.”

The smoothly eloquent doctor paused for the moment; and I darted away
from the door.

Our plans for the day included a drive through the famous scenery near
the town. My two admirers met us on horseback. Here, again, the Captain
had the advantage over his friend. His seat in the saddle and his
riding-dress were both perfect things in their way. The Englishman rode
on one side of the carriage and the American on the other. They both
talked well, but Mr. Varleigh had seen more of the world in general than
Captain Stanwick, and he made himself certainly the more interesting and
more amusing companion of the two.

On our way back my admiration was excited by a thick wood, beautifully
situated on rising ground at a little distance from the high-road: “Oh,
dear,” I said, “how I should like to take a walk in that wood!” Idle,
thoughtless words; but, oh, what remembrances crowd on me as I think of
them now!

Captain Stanwick and Mr. Varleigh at once dismounted and offered
themselves as my escort. The coachman warned them to be careful; people
had often lost themselves, he said, in that wood. I asked the name of
it. The name was Herne Wood. My aunt was not very willing to leave her
comfortable seat in the carriage, but it ended in her going with us.

Before we entered the wood, Mr. Varleigh noted the position of the
high-road by his pocket-compass. Captain Stanwick laughed at him, and
offered me his arm. Ignorant as I was of the ways of the world and the
rules of coquetry, my instinct (I suppose) warned me not to distinguish
one of the gentlemen too readily at the expense of the other. I took my
aunt’s arm and settled it in that way.

A winding path led us into the wood.

On a nearer view, the place disappointed me; the further we advanced,
the more horribly gloomy it grew. The thickly-growing trees shut out
the light; the damp stole over me little by little until I shivered; the
undergrowth of bushes and thickets rustled at intervals mysteriously,
as some invisible creeping creature passed through it. At a turn in the
path we reached a sort of clearing, and saw the sky and the sunshine
once more. But, even here, a disagreeable incident occurred. A snake
wound his undulating way across the open space, passing close by me, and
I was fool enough to scream. The Captain killed the creature with his
riding-cane, taking a pleasure in doing it which I did not like to see.

We left the clearing and tried another path, and then another. And still
the horrid wood preyed on my spirits. I agreed with my aunt that we
should do well to return to the carriage. On our way back we missed the
right path, and lost ourselves for the moment. Mr. Varleigh consulted
his compass, and pointed in one direction. Captain Stanwick, consulting
nothing but his own jealous humor, pointed in the other. We followed
Mr. Varleigh’s guidance, and got back to the clearing. He turned to
the Captain, and said, good-humoredly: “You see the compass was right.”
 Captain Stanwick, answered, sharply: “There are more ways than one
out of an English wood; you talk as if we were in one of your American
forests.”

Mr. Varleigh seemed to be at a loss to understand his rudeness; there
was a pause. The two men looked at each other, standing face to face
on the brown earth of the clearing--the Englishman’s ruddy countenance,
light auburn hair and whiskers, and well-opened bold blue eyes,
contrasting with the pale complexion, the keenly-observant look, the
dark closely-cut hair, and the delicately-lined face of the American.
It was only for a moment: I had barely time to feel uneasy before
they controlled themselves and led us back to the carriage, talking as
pleasantly as if nothing had happened. For days afterward, nevertheless,
that scene in the clearing--the faces and figures of the two men, the
dark line of trees hemming them in on all sides, the brown circular
patch of ground on which they stood--haunted my memory, and got in the
way of my brighter and happier thoughts. When my aunt inquired if I had
enjoyed the day, I surprised her by saying No. And when she asked why, I
could only answer: “It was all spoiled by Herne Wood.”

III.

THREE weeks passed.

The terror of those dreadful days creeps over me again when I think of
them. I mean to tell the truth without shrinking; but I may at least
consult my own feelings by dwelling on certain particulars as briefly as
I can. I shall describe my conduct toward the two men who courted me
in the plainest terms, if I say that I distinguished neither of them.
Innocently and stupidly I encouraged them both.

In books, women are generally represented as knowing their own minds in
matters which relate to love and marriage. This is not my experience of
myself. Day followed day; and, ridiculous as it may appear, I could not
decide which of my two admirers I liked best!

Captain Stanwick was, at first, the man of my choice. While he kept his
temper under control, h e charmed me. But when he let it escape him, he
sometimes disappointed, sometimes irritated me. In that frame of mind
I turned for relief to Lionel Varleigh, feeling that he was the more
gentle and the more worthy man of the two, and honestly believing, at
such times, that I preferred him to his rival. For the first few days
after our visit to Herne Wood I had excellent opportunities of comparing
them. They paid their visits to us together, and they divided their
attentions carefully between me and my aunt. At the end of the week,
however, they began to present themselves separately. If I had possessed
any experience of the natures of men, I might have known what this
meant, and might have seen the future possibility of some more
serious estrangement between the two friends, of which I might be the
unfortunate cause. As it was; I never once troubled my head about what
might be passing out of my presence. Whether they came together, or
whether they came separately, their visits were always agreeable to me.
and I thought of nothing and cared for nothing more.

But the time that was to enlighten me was not far off.

One day Captain Stanwick called much earlier than usual. My aunt had
not yet returned from her morning walk. The Captain made some excuse for
presenting himself under these circumstances which I have now forgotten.

Without actually committing himself to a proposal of marriage he spoke
with such tender feeling, he managed his hold on my inexperience so
delicately, that he entrapped me into saying some words, on my side,
which I remembered with a certain dismay as soon as I was left alone
again. In half an hour more, Mr. Lionel Varleigh was announced as my
next visitor. I at once noticed a certain disturbance in his look and
manner which was quite new in my experience of him. I offered him a
chair. To my surprise he declined to take it.

“I must trust to your indulgence to permit me to put an embarrassing
question to you,” he began. “It rests with you, Miss Laroche, to decide
whether I shall remain here, or whether I shall relieve you of my
presence by leaving the room.”

“What can you possibly mean?” I asked.

“Is it your wish,” he went on, “that I should pay you no more visits
except in Captain Stanwick’s company, or by Captain Stanwick’s express
permission?”

My astonishment deprived me for the moment of the power of answering
him. “Do you really mean that Captain Stanwick has forbidden you to call
on me?” I asked as soon as I could speak.

“I have exactly repeated what Captain Stanwick said to me half an hour
since,” Lionel Varleigh answered.

In my indignation at hearing this, I entirely forgot the rash words of
encouragement which the Captain had entrapped me into speaking to him.
When I think of it now, I am ashamed to repeat the language in which I
resented this man’s presumptuous assertion of authority over me. Having
committed one act of indiscretion already, my anxiety to assert my
freedom of action hurried me into committing another. I bade Mr.
Varleigh welcome whenever he chose to visit me, in terms which made
his face flush under the emotions of pleasure and surprise which I had
aroused in him. My wounded vanity acknowledged no restraints. I signed
to him to take a seat on the sofa at my side; I engaged to go to
his lodgings the next day, with my aunt, and see the collection of
curiosities which he had amassed in the course of his travels. I almost
believe, if he had tried to kiss me, that I was angry enough with the
Captain to have let him do it!

Remember what my life had been--remember how ignorantly I had passed the
precious days of my youth, how insidiously a sudden accession of wealth
and importance had encouraged my folly and my pride--and try, like good
Christians, to make some allowance for me!

My aunt came in from her walk, before Mr. Varleigh’s visit had ended.
She received him rather coldly, and he perceived it. After reminding me
of our appointment for the next day, he took his leave.

“What appointment does Mr. Varleigh mean?” my aunt asked, as soon as we
were alone. “Is it wise, under the circumstances, to make appointments
with Mr. Varleigh?” she said, when I had answered her question. I
naturally inquired what she meant. My aunt replied, “I have met Captain
Stanwick while I was out walking. He has told me something which I am
quite at a loss to understand. Is it possible, Bertha, that you have
received a proposal of marriage from him favorably, without saying one
word about your intentions to me?”

I instantly denied it. However rashly I might have spoken, I had
certainly said nothing to justify Captain Stanwick in claiming me as his
promised wife. In his mean fear of a fair rivalry with Mr. Varleigh, he
had deliberately misinterpreted me. “If I marry either of the two,” I
said, “it will be Mr. Varleigh!”

My aunt shook her head. “These two gentlemen seem to be both in love
with you, Bertha. It is a trying position for you between them, and I am
afraid you have acted with some indiscretion. Captain Stanwick tells me
that he and his friend have come to a separation already. I fear you are
the cause of it. Mr. Varleigh has left the hotel at which he was staying
with the Captain, in consequence of a disagreement between them this
morning. You were not aware of that when you accepted his invitation.
Shall I write an excuse for you? We must, at least, put off the visit,
my dear, until you have set yourself right with Captain Stanwick.”

I began to feel a little alarmed, but I was too obstinate to yield
without a struggle. “Give me time to think over it,” I said. “To write
an excuse seems like acknowledging the Captain’s authority. Let us wait
till to-morrow morning.”

IV.

THE morning brought with it another visit from Captain Stanwick. This
time my aunt was present. He looked at her without speaking, and turned
to me, with his fiery temper showing itself already in his eyes.

“I have a word to say to you in private,” he began.

“I have no secrets from my aunt,” I answered. “Whatever you have to say,
Captain Stanwick, may be said here.”

He opened his lips to reply, and suddenly checked himself. He was
controlling his anger by so violent an effort that it turned his ruddy
face pale. For the moment he conquered his temper--he addressed himself
to me with the outward appearance of respect at least.

“Has that man Varleigh lied?” he asked; “or have you given _him_ hopes,
too--after what you said to me yesterday?”

“I said nothing to you yesterday which gives you any right to put that
question to me,” I rejoined. “You have entirely misunderstood me, if you
think so.”

My aunt attempted to say a few temperate words, in the hope of soothing
him. He waved his hand, refusing to listen to her, and advanced closer
to me.

“_You_ have misunderstood _me_,” he said, “if you think I am a man to be
made a plaything of in the hands of a coquette!”

My aunt interposed once more, with a resolution which I had not expected
from her.

“Captain Stanwick,” she said, “you are forgetting yourself.”

He paid no heed to her; he persisted in speaking to me. “It is my
misfortune to love you,” he burst out. “My whole heart is set on you. I
mean to be your husband, and no other man living shall stand in my way.
After what you said to me yesterday, I have a right to consider that you
have favored my addresses. This is not a mere flirtation. Don’t think
it! I say it’s the passion of a life! Do you hear? It’s the passion of
a man’s whole life! I am not to be trifled with. I have had a night of
sleepless misery about you--I have suffered enough for you--and you’re
not worth it. Don’t laugh! This is no laughing matter. Take care,
Bertha! Take care!”

My aunt rose from her chair. She astonished me. On all ordinary
occasions the most retiring, the most feminine of women, she now
walked up to Captain Stanwick and looked him full in the face, without
flinching for an instant.

“You appear to have forgotten that you are speaking in the presence of
two ladies,” she said. “Alter your tone, sir, or I shall be obliged to
take my niece out of the room.”

Half angry, half frightened, I tried to speak in my turn. My aunt signed
to me to be silent. The Captain drew back a step as if he felt her
reproof. But his eyes, still fixed on me, were as fiercely bright as
ever. _There_ the gentleman’s superficial good-breeding failed to hide
the natural man beneath.

“I will leave you in undisturbed possession of the room,” he said to my
aunt with bitter politeness. “Before I go, permit me to give your niece
an opportunity of reconsidering her conduct before it is too late.” My
aunt drew back, leaving him free to speak to me. After considering for
a moment, he laid his hand firmly, but not roughly, on my arm. “You have
accepted Lionel Varleigh’s invitation to visit him,” he said, “under
pretense of seeing his curiosities. Think again before you decide on
keeping that engagement. If you go to Varleigh tomorrow, you will repent
it to the last day of your life.” Saying those words, in a tone which
made me tremble in spite of myself, he walked to the door. As he laid
his hand on the lock, he turned toward me for the last time. “I forbid
you to go to Varleigh’s lodgings,” he said, very distinctly and quietly.
“Understand what I tell you. I forbid it.”

With those words he left us.

My aunt sat down by me and took my hand kindly. “There is only one
thing to be done,” she said; “we must return at once to Nettlegrove.
If Captain Stanwick attempts to annoy you in your own house, we have
neighbors who will protect us, and we have Mr. Loring, our rector, to
appeal to for advice. As for Mr. Varleigh, I will write our excuses
myself before we go away.”

She put out her hand to ring the bell and order the carriage. I stopped
her. My childish pride urged me to assert myself in some way, after the
passive position that I had been forced to occupy during the interview
with Captain Stanwick.

“No,” I said, “it is not acting fairly toward Mr. Varleigh to break our
engagement with him. Let us return to Nettlegrove by all means, but
let us first call on Mr. Varleigh and take our leave. Are we to
behave rudely to a gentleman who has always treated us with the utmost
consideration, because Captain Stanwick has tried to frighten us by
cowardly threats? The commonest feeling of self-respect forbids it.”

My aunt protested against this outbreak of folly with perfect temper
and good sense. But my obstinacy (my firmness as I thought it!) was
immovable. I left her to choose between going with me to Mr. Varleigh,
or letting me go to him by myself. Finding it useless to resist, she
decided, it is needless to say, on going with me.

We found Mr. Varleigh very courteous, but more than usually grave
and quiet. Our visit only lasted for a few minutes; my aunt using the
influence of her age and her position to shorten it. She mentioned
family affairs as the motive which recalled us to Nettlegrove. I took it
on myself to invite Mr. Varleigh to visit me at my own house. He bowed
and thanked me, without engaging himself to accept the invitation. When
I offered him my hand at parting, he raised it to his lips, and kissed
it with a fervor that agitated me. His eyes looked into mine with a
sorrowful admiration, with a lingering regret, as if they were taking
their leave of me for a long while. “Don’t forget me!” he whispered,
as he stood at the door, while I followed my aunt out. “Come to
Nettlegrove,” I whispered back. His eyes dropped to the ground; he let
me go without a word more.

This, I declare solemnly, was all that passed at our visit. By some
unexpressed consent among us, no allusion whatever was made to Captain
Stanwick; not even his name was mentioned. I never knew that the two men
had met, just before we called on Mr. Varleigh. Nothing was said which
could suggest to me the slightest suspicion of any arrangement for
another meeting between them later in the day. Beyond the vague threats
which had escaped Captain Stanwick’s lips--threats which I own I was
rash enough to despise--I had no warning whatever of the dreadful events
which happened at Maplesworth on the day after our return to Nettlegrove
Hall.

I can only add that I am ready to submit to any questions that may be
put to me. Pray don’t think me a heartless woman. My worst fault was
ignorance. In those days, I knew nothing of the false pretenses under
which men hide what is selfish and savage in their natures from the
women whom it is their interest to deceive.

No. 2.--Julius Bender, fencing-master, testifies and says:--

I am of German nationality; established in England as teacher of the use
of the sword and the pistol since the beginning of the present year.

Finding business slack in London, it unfortunately occurred to me to try
what I could do in the country. I had heard of Maplesworth as a place
largely frequented by visitors on account of the scenery, as well as by
invalids in need of taking the waters; and I opened a gallery there at
the beginning of the season of 1817, for fencing and pistol practice.
About the visitors I had not been deceived; there were plenty of idle
young gentlemen among them who might have been expected to patronize my
establishment. They showed the most barbarous indifference to the
noble art of attack and defense--came by twos and threes, looked at
my gallery, and never returned. My small means began to fail me. After
paying my expenses, I was really at my wits’ end to find a few pounds to
go on with, in the hope of better days.

One gentleman, I remember, who came to see me, and who behaved most
liberally.

He described himself as an American, and said he had traveled a
great deal. As my ill luck would have it, he stood in no need of my
instructions. On the two or three occasions when he amused himself
with my foils and my pistols, he proved to be one of the most expert
swordsmen and one of the finest shots that I ever met with. It was not
wonderful: he had by nature cool nerves and a quick eye; and he had been
taught by the masters of the art in Vienna and Paris.

Early in July--the 9th or 10th of the month, I think--I was sitting
alone in my gallery, looking ruefully enough at the last two sovereigns
in my purse, when a gentleman was announced who wanted a lesson. “A
_private_ lesson,” he said, with emphasis, looking at the man who
cleaned and took care of my weapons.

I sent the man out of the room. The stranger (an Englishman, and, as I
fancied, judging by outward appearances, a military man as well) took
from his pocket-book a fifty-pound banknote, and held it up before me.
“I have a heavy wager depending on a fencing match,” he said, “and I
have no time to improve myself. Teach me a trick which will make me a
match for a man skilled in the use of the foil, and keep the secret--and
there are fifty pounds for you.”

I hesitated. I did indeed hesitate, poor as I was. But this devil of a
man held his banknote before me whichever way I looked, and I had only
two pounds left in the world!

“Are you going to fight a duel?” I asked.

“I have already told you what I am going to do,” he answered.

I waited a little. The infernal bank-note still tempted me. In spite of
myself, I tried him again.

“If I teach you the trick,” I persisted, “will you undertake to make no
bad use of your lesson?”

“Yes,” he said, impatiently enough.

I was not quite satisfied yet.

“Will you promise it, on your word of honor?” I asked.

“Of course I will,” he answered. “Take the money, and don’t keep me
waiting any longer.”

I took the money, and I taught him the trick--and I regretted it
almost as soon as it was done. Not that I knew, mind, of any serious
consequences that followed; for I returned to London the next morning.
My sentiments were those of a man of honor, who felt that he had
degraded his art, and who could not be quite sure that he might not have
armed the hand of an assassin as well. I have no more to say.

No. 3.--Thomas Outwater, servant to Captain Stanwick, testifies and
says:--

If I did not firmly believe my master to be out of his senses, no
punishment that I could receive would prevail upon me to tell of him
what I am going to tell now.

But I say he is mad, and therefore not accountable for what he has
done--mad for love of a young woman. If I could have my way, I should
like to twist her neck, though she _is_ a lady, and a great heiress
into the bargain. Before she came between them, my master and Mr.
Varleigh were more like brothers than anything else. She set them at
variance, and whether she meant to do it or not is all the same to me.
I own I took a dislike to her when I first saw her. She was one of
the light-haired, blue-eyed sort, with an innocent look and a snaky
waist--not at all to be depended on, as I have found them.

I hear I am not expected to give an account of the disagreement between
the two gentlemen, of which this lady was the cause. I am to state what
I did in Maplesworth, and what I saw afterward in Herne Wood. Poor as
I am, I would give a five-pound note to anybody who could do it for me.
Unfortunately, I must do it for myself.

On the 10th of July, in the evening, my master went, for the second time
that day, to Mr. Varleigh’s lodgings.

I am certain of the date, because it was the day of publication of the
town newspaper, and there was a law report in it which set everybody
talking. There had been a duel with pistols, a day or two before,
between a resident in the town and a visitor, caused by some dispute
about horses. Nothing very serious came of the meeting. One of the men
only was hurt, and the wound proved to be of no great importance. The
awkward part of the matter was that the constables appeared on the
ground, before the wounded man had been removed. He and his two seconds
were caught, and the prisoners were committed for trial. Dueling (the
magistrates said) was an inhuman and unchristian practice, and they were
determined to put the law in force and stop it. This sentence made a
great stir in the town, and fixed the date, as I have just said, in my
mind.

Having been accidentally within hearing of some of the disputes
concerning Miss Laroche between my master and Mr. Varleigh, I had my
misgivings about the Captain’s second visit to the friend with whom he
had quarreled already. A gentleman called on him, soon after he had gone
out, on important business. This gave me an excuse for following him
to Mr. Varleigh’s rooms with the visitor’s card, and I took the
opportunity.

I heard them at high words on my way upstairs, and waited a little on
the landing. The Captain was in one of his furious rages; Mr. Varleigh
was firm and cool as usual. After listening for a minute or so, I heard
enough (in my opinion) to justify me in entering the room. I caught
my master in the act of lifting his cane--threatening to strike Mr.
Varleigh. He instantly dropped his hand, and turned on me in a fury at
my intrusion. Taking no notice of this outbreak of temper, I gave him
his friend’s card, and went out. A talk followed in voices too low for
me to hear outside the room, and then the Captain approached the door.
I got out of his way, feeling very uneasy about what was to come next. I
could not presume to question Mr. Varleigh. The only thing I could think
of was to tell the young lady’s aunt what I had seen and heard, and
to plead with Miss Laroche herself to make peace between them. When I
inquired for the ladies at their lodgings, I was told that they had left
Maplesworth.

I saw no more of the Captain that night.

The next morning he seemed to be quite himself again. He said to me,
“Thomas, I am going sketching in Herne Wood. Take the paint-box and the
rest of it, and put this into the carriage.”

He handed me a packet as thick as my arm, and about three feet long,
done up in many folds of canvas. I made bold to ask what it was.
He answered that it was an artist’s sketching umbrella, packed for
traveling.

In an hour’s time, the carriage stopped on the road below Herne Wood.
My master said he would carry his sketching things himself, and I was to
wait with the carriage. In giving him the so-called umbrella, I took the
occasion of his eye being off me for the moment to pass my hand over it
carefully; and I felt, through the canvas, the hilt of a sword. As an
old soldier, I could not be mistaken--the hilt of a sword.

What I thought, on making this discovery, does not much matter. What I
did was to watch the Captain into the wood, and then to follow him.

I tracked him along the path to where there was a clearing in the midst
of the trees. There he stopped, and I got behind a tree. He undid the
canvas, and produced _two_ swords concealed in the packet. If I had felt
any doubts before, I was certain of what was coming now. A duel without
seconds or witnesses, by way of keeping the town magistrates in the
dark--a duel between my master and Mr. Varleigh! As his name came into
my mind, the man himself appeared, making his way into the clearing from
the other side of the wood.

What could I do to stop it? No human creature was in sight. The nearest
village was a mile away, reckoning from the further side of the wood.
The coachman was a stupid old man, quite useless in a difficulty, even
if I had had time enough to go back to the road and summon him to help
me. While I was thinking about it, the Captain and Mr. Varleigh had
stripped to their shirts and trousers. When they crossed their swords, I
could stand it no longer--I burst in on them. “For God Almighty’s sake,
gentlemen,” I cried out, “don’t fight without seconds!” My master turned
on me, like the madman he was, and threatened me with the point of his
sword. Mr. Varleigh pulled me back out of harm’s way. “Don’t be afraid,”
 he whispered, as he led me back to the verge of the clearing; “I have
chosen the sword instead of the pistol expressly to spare his life.”

Those noble words (spoken by as brave and true a man as ever breathed)
quieted me. I knew Mr. Varleigh had earned the repute of being one of
the finest swordsmen in Europe.

The duel began. I was placed behind my master, and was consequently
opposite to his antagonist. The Captain stood on his defense, waiting
for the other to attack. Mr. Varleigh made a pass. I was opposite the
point of his sword; I saw it touch the Captain’s left shoulder. In the
same instant of time my master struck up his opponent’s sword with his
own weapon, seized Mr. Varleigh’s right wrist in his left hand, and
passed his sword clean through Mr. Varleigh’s breast. He fell, the
victim of a murderous trick--fell without a word or a cry.

The Captain turned slowly, and faced me with his bloody sword in his
hand. I can’t tell you how he looked; I can only say that the sight of
him turned me faint with terror. I was at Waterloo--I am no coward. But
I tell you the cold sweat poured down my face like water. I should have
dropped if I had not held by the branch of a tree.

My master waited until I had in a measure recovered myself. “Feel if his
heart beats,” he said, pointing to the man on the ground.

I obeyed. He was dead--the heart was still; the beat of the pulse was
gone. I said, “You have killed him!”

The Captain made no answer. He packed up the two swords again in the
canvas, and put them under his arm. Then he told me to follow him with
the sketching materials. I drew back from him without speaking; there
was a horrid hollow sound in his voice that I did not like. “Do as I
tell you,” he said: “you have yourself to thank for it if I refuse to
lose sight of you now.” I managed to say that he might trust me to say
nothing. He refused to trust me; he put out his hand to take hold of me.
I could not stand that. “I’ll go with you,” I said; “don’t touch me!”
 We reached the carriage and returned to Maplesworth. The same day we
traveled by post to London.

In London I contrived to give the Captain the slip. By the first coach
the next morning I want back to Maplesworth, eager to hear what had
happened, and if the body had been found. Not a word of news reached me;
nothing seemed to be known of the duel in Herne Wood.

I went to the wood--on foot, fearing that I might be traced if I hired a
carriage. The country round was as solitary as usual. Not a creature was
near when I entered the wood; not a creature was near when I looked into
the clearing.

There was nothing on the ground. The body was gone.

No. 4.--The Reverend Alfred Loring, Rector of Nettlegrove, testifies and
says:--

I.

EARLY in the month of October, 1817, I was informed that Miss Bertha
Laroche had called at my house, and wished to see me in private.

I had first been presented to Miss Laroche on her arrival, with her
aunt, to take possession of her property at Nettlegrove Hall. My
opportunities of improving my acquaintance with her had not been so
numerous as I could have desired, and I sincerely regretted it. She had
produced a very favorable impression on me. Singularly inexperienced and
impulsive--with an odd mixture of shyness and vivacity in her manner,
and subject now and then to outbursts of vanity and petulance which she
was divertingly incapable of concealing--I could detect, nevertheless,
under the surface the signs which told of a true and generous nature,
of a simple and pure heart. Her personal appearance, I should add,
was attractive in a remarkable degree. There was something in it so
peculiar, and at the same time so fascinating, that I am conscious it
may have prejudiced me in her favor. For fear of this acknowledgment
being misunderstood, I think it right to add that I am old enough to be
her grandfather, and that I am also a married man.

I told the servant to show Miss Laroche into my study.

The moment she entered the room, her appearance alarmed me: she looked
literally panic-stricken. I offered to send for my wife; she refused the
proposal. I entreated her to take time at least to compose herself. It
was not in her impulsive nature to do this. She said, “Give me your hand
to encourage me, and let me speak while I can.” I gave her my hand, poor
soul. I said, “Speak to me, my dear, as if I were your father.”

So far as I could understand the incoherent statement which she
addressed to me, she had been the object of admiration (while visiting
Maplesworth) of two gentlemen, who both desired to marry her. Hesitating
between them and perfectly inexperienced in such matters, she had been
the unfortunate cause of enmity between the rivals, and had returned to
Nettlegrove, at her aunt’s suggestion, as the best means of extricating
herself from a very embarrassing position. The removal failing to
alleviate her distressing recollections of what had happened, she and
her aunt had tried a further change by making a tour of two months on
the Continent. She had returned in a more quiet frame of mind. To her
great surprise, she had heard nothing of either of her two suitors, from
the day when she left Maplesworth to the day when she presented herself
at my rectory.

Early that morning she was walking, after breakfast, in the park at
Nettlegrove when she heard footsteps behind her. She turned, and found
herself face to face with one of her suitors at Maplesworth. I am
informed that there is no necessity now for my suppressing the name. The
gentleman was Captain Stanwick.

He was so fearfully changed for the worse that she hardly knew him
again.

After his first glance at her, he held his hand over his bloodshot eyes
as if the sunlight hurt them. Without a word to prepare her for the
disclosure, he confessed that he had killed Mr. Varleigh in a duel.
His remorse (he declared) had unsettled his reason: only a few days had
passed since he had been released from confinement in an asylum.

“You are the cause of it,” he said wildly. “It is for love of you. I
have but one hope left to live for--my hope in you. If you cast me off,
my mind is made up. I will give my life for the life that I have taken;
I will die by my own hand. Look at me, and you will see that I am in
earnest. My future as a living man depends on your decision. Think of
it to-day, and meet me here to-morrow. Not at this time; the horrid
daylight feels like fire in my eyes, and goes like fire to my brain.
Wait till sunset--you will find me here.”

He left her as suddenly as he had appeared. When she had sufficiently
recovered herself to be able to think, she decided on saying nothing of
what had happened to her aunt. She took her way to the rectory to seek
my advice.

It is needless to encumber my narrative by any statement of
the questions which I felt it my duty to put to her under these
circumstances. My inquiries informed me that Captain Stanwick had in the
first instance produced a favorable impression on her. The less showy
qualities of Mr. Varleigh had afterward grown on her liking; aided
greatly by the repelling effect on her mind of the Captain’s violent
language and conduct when he had reason to suspect that his rival
was being preferred to him. When she knew the horrible news of Mr.
Varleigh’s death, she “knew her own heart” (to repeat her exact words to
me) by the shock that she felt. Toward Captain Stanwick the only
feeling of which she was now conscious was, naturally, a feeling of the
strongest aversion.

My own course in this difficult and painful matter appeared to me to be
clear. “It is your duty as a Christian to see this miserable man again,”
 I said. “And it is my duty as your friend and pastor, to sustain you
under the trial. I will go with you to-morrow to the place of meeting.”

II.

THE next evening we found Captain Stanwick waiting for us in the park.

He drew back on seeing me. I explained to him, temperately and firmly,
what my position was. With sullen looks he resigned himself to endure
my presence. By degrees I won his confidence. My first impression of him
remains unshaken--the man’s reason was unsettled. I suspected that the
assertion of his release was a falsehood, and that he had really escaped
from the asylum. It was impossible to lure him into telling me where the
place was. He was too cunning to do this--too cunning to say anything
about his relations, when I tried to turn the talk that way next. On the
other hand, he spoke with a revolting readiness of the crime that he
had committed, and of his settled resolution to destroy himself if Miss
Laroche refused to be his wife. “I have nothing else to live for; I am
alone in the world,” he said. “Even my servant has deserted me. He knows
how I killed Lionel Varleigh.” He paused and spoke his next words in a
whisper to me. “I killed him by a trick--he was the best swordsman of
the two.”

This confession was so horrible that I could only attribute it to an
insane delusion. On pressing my inquiries, I found that the same idea
must have occurred to the poor wretch’s relations, and to the doctors
who signed the certificates for placing him under medical care. This
conclusion (as I afterward heard) was greatly strengthened by the fact
that Mr. Varleigh’s body had not been found on the reported scene of the
duel. As to the servant, he had deserted his master in London, and had
never reappeared. So far as my poor judgment went, the question before
me was not of delivering a self-accused murderer to justice (with no
corpse to testify against him), but of restoring an insane man to the
care of the persons who had been appointed to restrain him.

I tried to test the strength of his delusion in an interval when he was
not urging his shocking entreaties on Miss Laroche. “How do you know
that you killed Mr. Varleigh?” I said.

He looked at me with a wild terror in his eyes. Suddenly he lifted
his right hand, and shook it in the air, with a moaning cry, which was
unmistakably a cry of pain. “Should I see his ghost,” he asked, “if I
had not killed him? I know it, by the pain that wrings me in the hand
that stabbed him. Always in my right hand! always the same pain at the
moment when I see him!” He stopped and ground his teeth in the agony and
reality of his delusion. “Look!” he cried. “Look between the two trees
behind you. There he is--with his dark hair, and his shaven face, and
his steady look! There he is, standing before me as he stood in the
wood, with his eyes on my eyes, and his sword feeling mine!” He turned
to Miss Laroche. “Do _you_ see him too?” he asked eagerly. “Tell me the
truth. My whole life depends on your telling me the truth.”

She controlled herself with a wonderful courage. “I don’t see him,” she
answered.

He took out his handkerchief, and passed it over his face with a gasp
of relief. “There is my last chance!” he said. “If she will be true to
me--if she will be always near me, morning, noon, and night, I shall be
released from the sight of him. See! he is fading away already! Gone!”
 h e cried, with a scream of exultation. He fell on his knees, and looked
at Miss Laroche like a savage adoring his idol. “Will you cast me off
now?” he asked, humbly. “Lionel was fond of you in his lifetime. His
spirit is a merciful spirit. He shrinks from frightening you, he has
left me for your sake; he will release me for your sake. Pity me, take
me to live with you--and I shall never see him again!”

It was dreadful to hear him. I saw that the poor girl could endure no
more. “Leave us,” I whispered to her; “I will join you at the house.”

He heard me, and instantly placed himself between us. “Let her promise,
or she shan’t go.”

She felt, as I felt, the imperative necessity of saying anything that
might soothe him. At a sign from me she gave him her promise to return.

He was satisfied--he insisted on kissing her hand, and then he let
her go. I had by this time succeeded in inducing him to trust me. He
proposed, of his own accord, that I should accompany him to the inn in
the village at which he had been staying. The landlord (naturally enough
distrusting his wretched guest) had warned him that morning to find some
other place of shelter. I engaged to use my influence with the man to
make him change his purpose, and I succeeded in effecting the necessary
arrangements for having the poor wretch properly looked after. On my
return to my own house, I wrote to a brother magistrate living near
me, and to the superintendent of our county asylum, requesting them
to consult with me on the best means of lawfully restraining Captain
Stanwick until we could communicate with his relations. Could I have
done more than this? The event of the next morning answered that
question--answered it at once and forever.

III.

PRESENTING myself at Nettlegrove Hall toward sunset, to take charge of
Miss Laroche, I was met by an obstacle in the shape of a protest from
her aunt.

This good lady had been informed of the appearance of Captain Stanwick
in the park, and she strongly disapproved of encouraging any further
communication with him on the part of her niece. She also considered
that I had failed in my duty in still leaving the Captain at liberty.
I told her that I was only waiting to act on the advice of competent
persons, who would arrive the next day to consult with me; and I did my
best to persuade her of the wisdom of the course that I had taken in
the meantime. Miss Laroche, on her side, was resolved to be true to the
promise that she had given. Between us, we induced her aunt to yield on
certain conditions.

“I know the part of the park in which the meeting is to take place,” the
old lady said; “it is my niece’s favorite walk. If she is not brought
back to me in half an hour’s time, I shall send the men-servants to
protect her.”

The twilight was falling when we reached the appointed place. We found
Captain Stanwick angry and suspicious; it was not easy to pacify him
on the subject of our delay. His insanity seemed to me to be now more
marked than ever. He had seen, or dreamed of seeing, the ghost during
the past night. For the first time (he said) the apparition of the dead
man had spoken to him. In solemn words it had condemned him to expiate
his crime by giving his life for the life that he had taken. It had
warned him not to insist on marriage with Bertha Laroche: “She shall
share your punishment if she shares your life. And you shall know it by
this sign--_She shall see me as you see me._”

I tried to compose him. He shook his head in immovable despair. “No,”
 he answered; “if she sees him when I see him, there ends the one hope
of release that holds me to life. It will be good-by between us, and
good-by forever!”

We had walked on, while we were speaking, to a part of the park through
which there flowed a rivulet of clear water. On the further bank, the
open ground led down into a wooded valley. On our side of the stream
rose a thick plantation of fir-trees intersected by a winding path.
Captain Stanwick stopped as we reached the place. His eyes rested, in
the darkening twilight, on the narrow space pierced by the path among
the trees. On a sudden he lifted his right hand, with the same cry of
pain which we had heard before; with his left hand he took Miss Laroche
by the arm. “There!” he said. “Look where I look! Do you see him there?”

As the words passed his lips, a dimly-visible figure appeared, advancing
toward us along the path.

Was it the figure of a living man? or was it the creation of my own
excited fancy? Before I could ask myself the question, the man advanced
a step nearer to us. A last gleam of the dying light fell on his face
through an opening in the trees. At the same instant Miss Laroche
started back from Captain Stanwick with a scream of terror. She would
have fallen if I had not been near enough to support her. The Captain
was instantly at her side again. “Speak!” he cried. “Do _you_ see it,
too?”

She was just able to say “Yes” before she fainted in my arms.

He stooped over her, and touched her cold cheek with his lips. “Goodby!”
 he said, in tones suddenly and strangely changed to the most exquisite
tenderness. “Good-by, forever!”

He leaped the rivulet; he crossed the open ground; he was lost to sight
in the valley beyond.

As he disappeared, the visionary man among the fir-trees advanced;
passed in silence; crossed the rivulet at a bound; and vanished as the
figure of the Captain had vanished before him.

I was left alone with the swooning woman. Not a sound, far or near,
broke the stillness of the coming night.

No 5.--Mr. Frederic Darnel, Member of the College of Surgeons, testifies
and says:--

IN the intervals of my professional duty I am accustomed to occupy
myself in studying Botany, assisted by a friend and neighbor, whose
tastes in this respect resemble my own. When I can spare an hour or
two from my patients, we go out together searching for specimens. Our
favorite place is Herne Wood. It is rich in material for the botanist,
and it is only a mile distant from the village in which I live.

Early in July, my friend and I made a discovery in the wood of a very
alarming and unexpected kind. We found a man in the clearing, prostrated
by a dangerous wound, and to all appearance dead.

We carried him to the gamekeeper’s cottage on the outskirts of the
woods, and on the side of it nearest to our village. He and his boy were
out, but the light cart in which he makes his rounds, in the remoter
part of his master’s property, was in the outhouse. While my friend was
putting the horse to, I examined the stranger’s wound. It had been quite
recently inflicted, and I doubted whether it had (as yet, at any rate)
really killed him. I did what I could with the linen and cold water
which the gamekeeper’s wife offered to me, and then my friend and I
removed him carefully to my house in the cart. I applied the necessary
restoratives, and I had the pleasure of satisfying myself that the vital
powers had revived. He was perfectly unconscious, of course, but the
action of the heart became distinctly perceptible, and I had hopes.

In a few days more I felt fairly sure of him. Then the usual fever set
in. I was obliged, in justice to his friends, to search his clothes in
presence of a witness. We found his handkerchief, his purse, and his
cigar-case, and nothing more. No letters or visiting cards; nothing
marked on his clothes but initials. There was no help for it but to wait
to identify him until he could speak.

When that time came, he acknowledged to me that he had divested himself
purposely of any clew to his identity, in the fear (if some mischance
happened to him) of the news of it reaching his father and mother
abruptly, by means of the newspapers. He had sent a letter to his
bankers in London, to be forwarded to his parents, if the bankers
neither saw him nor heard from him in a month’s time. His first act was
to withdraw this letter. The other particulars which he communicated to
me are, I am told, already known. I need only add that I willingly kept
his secret, simply speaking of him in the neighborhood as a traveler
from foreign parts who had met with an accident.

His convalescence was a long one. It was the beginning of October
before he was completely restored to health. When he left us he went to
London. He behaved most liberally to me; and we parted with sincere good
wishes on either side.

No. 6.--_Mr. Lionel Varleigh, of Boston, U. S. A., testifies and
says:--_

MY first proceeding, on my recovery, was to go to the relations of
Captain Stanwick in London, for the purpose of making inquiries about
him.

I do not wish to justify myself at the expense of that miserable man. It
is true that I loved Miss Laroche too dearly to yield her to any rival
except at her own wish. It is also true that Captain Stanwick more than
once insulted me, and that I endured it. He had suffered from sunstroke
in India, and in his angry moments he was hardly a responsible being.
It was only when he threatened me with personal chastisement that my
patience gave way. We met sword in hand. In my mind was the resolution
to spare his life. In his mind was the resolution to kill me. I have
forgiven him. I will say no more.

His relations informed me of the symptoms of insane delusion which he
had shown after the duel; of his escape from the asylum in which he had
been confined; and of the failure to find him again.

The moment I heard this news the dread crossed my mind that Stanwick
had found his way to Miss Laroche. In an hour more I was traveling to
Nettlegrove Hall.

I arrived late in the evening, and found Miss Laroche’s aunt in great
alarm about her niece’s safety. The young lady was at that very moment
speaking to Stanwick in the park, with only an old man (the rector) to
protect her. I volunteered to go at once, and assist in taking care of
her. A servant accompanied me to show me the place of meeting. We heard
voices indistinctly, but saw no one. The servant pointed to a path
through the fir-trees. I went on quickly by myself, leaving the man
within call. In a few minutes I came upon them suddenly, at a little
distance from me, on the bank of a stream.

The fear of seriously alarming Miss Laroche, if I showed myself too
suddenly, deprived me for a moment of my presence of mind. Pausing to
consider what it might be best to do, I was less completely protected
from discovery by the trees than I had supposed. She had seen me; I
heard her cry of alarm. The instant afterward I saw Stanwick leap over
the rivulet and take to flight. That action roused me. Without stopping
for a word of explanation, I pursued him.

Unhappily, I missed my footing in the obscure light, and fell on the
open ground beyond the stream. When I had gained my feet once more,
Stanwick had disappeared among the trees which marked the boundary of
the park beyond me. I could see nothing of him, and I could hear nothing
of him, when I came out on the high-road. There I met with a laboring
man who showed me the way to the village. From the inn I sent a letter
to Miss Laroche’s aunt, explaining what had happened, and asking leave
to call at the Hall on the next day.

Early in the morning the rector came to me at the inn. He brought sad
news. Miss Laroche was suffering from a nervous attack, and my visit to
the Hall must be deferred. Speaking next of the missing man, I heard all
that Mr. Loring could tell me. My intimate knowledge of Stanwick enabled
me to draw my own conclusion from the facts. The thought instantly
crossed my mind that the poor wretch might have committed his expiatory
suicide at the very spot on which he had attempted to kill me. Leaving
the rector to institute the necessary inquiries, I took post-horses to
Maplesworth on my way to Herne Wood.

Advancing from the high-road to the wood, I saw two persons at a little
distance from me--a man in the dress of a gamekeeper, and a lad. I was
too much agitated to take any special notice of them; I hurried along
the path which led to the clearing. My presentiment had not misled me.
There he lay, dead on the scene of the duel, with a blood-stained razor
by his side! I fell on my knees by the corpse; I took his cold hand in
mine; and I thanked God that I had forgiven him in the first days of my
recovery.

I was still kneeling, when I felt myself seized from behind. I struggled
to my feet, and confronted the gamekeeper. He had noticed my hurry in
entering the wood; his suspicions had been aroused, and he and the lad
had followed me. There was blood on my clothes; there was horror in
my face. Appearances were plainly against me; I had no choice but to
accompany the gamekeeper to the nearest magistrate.

My instructions to my solicitor forbade him to vindicate my innocence by
taking any technical legal objections to the action of the magistrate
or of the coroner. I insisted on my witnesses being summoned to the
lawyer’s office, and allowed to state, in their own way, what they could
truly declare on my behalf; and I left my defense to be founded upon the
materials thus obtained. In the meanwhile I was detained in custody, as
a matter of course.

With this event the tragedy of the duel reached its culminating point. I
was accused of murdering the man who had attempted to take my life!


This last incident having been related, all that is worth noticing in
my contribution to the present narrative comes to an end. I was tried
in due course of law. The evidence taken at my solicitor’s office was
necessarily altered in form, though not in substance, by the examination
to which the witnesses were subjected in a court of justice. So
thoroughly did our defense satisfy the jury, that they became restless
toward the close of the proceedings, and returned their verdict of Not
Guilty without quitting the box.

When I was a free man again, it is surely needless to dwell on the
first use that I made of my honorable acquittal. Whether I deserved the
enviable place that I occupied in Bertha’s estimation, it is not for me
to say. Let me leave the decision to the lady who has ceased to be Miss
Laroche--I mean the lady who has been good enough to become my wife.



MISS DULANE AND MY LORD.

Part I.

TWO REMONSTRATIONS.

I.

ONE afternoon old Miss Dulane entered her drawing-room; ready to receive
visitors, dressed in splendor, and exhibiting every outward appearance
of a defiant frame of mind.

Just as a saucy bronze nymph on the mantelpiece struck the quarter to
three on an elegant clock under her arm, a visitor was announced--“Mrs.
Newsham.”

Miss Dulane wore her own undisguised gray hair, dressed in perfect
harmony with her time of life. Without an attempt at concealment, she
submitted to be too short and too stout. Her appearance (if it had only
been made to speak) would have said, in effect: “I am an old woman, and
I scorn to disguise it.”

Mrs. Newsham, tall and elegant, painted and dyed, acted on the opposite
principle in dressing, which confesses nothing. On exhibition before the
world, this lady’s disguise asserted that she had reached her thirtieth
year on her last birthday. Her husband was discreetly silent, and Father
Time was discreetly silent: they both knew that her last birthday had
happened thirty years since.

“Shall we talk of the weather and the news, my dear? Or shall we come to
the object of your visit at once?” So Miss Dulane opened the interview.

“Your tone and manner, my good friend, are no doubt provoked by the
report in the newspaper of this morning. In justice to you, I refuse to
believe the report.” So Mrs. Newsham adopted her friend’s suggestion.

“You kindness is thrown away, Elizabeth. The report is true.”

“Matilda, you shock me!”

“Why?”

“At your age!”

“If _he_ doesn’t object to my age, what does it matter to _you?_”

“Don’t speak of that man!”

“Why not?”

“He is young enough to be your son; and he is marrying you--impudently,
undisguisedly marrying you--for your money!”

“And I am marrying him--impudently, undisguisedly marrying him--for his
rank.”

“You needn’t remind me, Matilda, that you are the daughter of a tailor.”

“In a week or two more, Elizabeth, I shall remind you that I am the wife
of a nobleman’s son.”

“A younger son; don’t forget that.”

“A younger son, as you say. He finds the social position, and I find the
money--half a million at my own sole disposal. My future husband is a
good fellow in his way, and his future wife is another good fellow in
her way. To look at your grim face, one would suppose there were no such
things in the world as marriages of convenience.”

“Not at your time of life. I tell you plainly, your marriage will be a
public scandal.”

“That doesn’t frighten us,” Miss Dulane remarked. “We are resigned to
every ill-natured thing that our friends can say of us. In course of
time, the next nine days’ wonder will claim public attention, and we
shall be forgotten. I shall be none the less on that account Lady
Howel Beaucourt. And my husband will be happy in the enjoyment of every
expensive taste which a poor man call gratify, for the first time in
his life. Have you any more objections to make? Don’t hesitate to speak
plainly.”

“I have a question to ask, my dear.”

“Charmed, I am sure, to answer it--if I can.”

“Am I right in supposing that Lord Howel Beaucourt is about half your
age?”

“Yes, dear; my future husband is as nearly as possible half as old as I
am.”

Mrs. Newsham’s uneasy virtue shuddered. “What a profanation of
marriage!” she exclaimed.

“Nothing of the sort,” her friend pronounced positively. “Marriage, by
the law of England (as my lawyer tells me), is nothing but a contract.
Who ever heard of profaning a contract?”

“Call it what you please, Matilda. Do you expect to live a happy life,
at your age, with a young man for your husband?”

“A happy life,” Miss Dulane repeated, “because it will be an innocent
life.” She laid a certain emphasis on the last word but one.

Mrs. Newsham resented the emphasis, and rose to go. Her last words were
the bitterest words that she had spoken yet.

“You have secured such a truly remarkable husband, my dear, that I
am emboldened to ask a great favor. Will you give me his lordship’s
photograph?”

“No,” said Miss Dulane, “I won’t give you his lordship’s photograph.”

“What is your objection, Matilda?”

“A very serious objection, Elizabeth. You are not pure enough in mind to
be worthy of my husband’s photograph.”

With that reply the first of the remonstrances assumed hostile
proportions, and came to an untimely end.

II.

THE second remonstrance was reserved for a happier fate. It took its
rise in a conversation between two men who were old and true friends. In
other words, it led to no quarreling.

The elder man was one of those admirable human beings who are cordial,
gentle, and good-tempered, without any conscious exercise of their own
virtues. He was generally known in the world about him by a fond and
familiar use of his Christian name. To call him “Sir Richard” in these
pages (except in the character of one of his servants) would be
simply ridiculous. When he lent his money, his horses, his house, and
(sometimes, after unlucky friends had dropped to the lowest social
depths) even his clothes, this general benefactor was known, in the best
society and the worst society alike, as “Dick.” He filled the hundred
mouths of Rumor with his nickname, in the days when there was an
opera in London, as the proprietor of the “Beauty-box.” The ladies who
occupied the box were all invited under the same circumstances. They
enjoyed operatic music; but their husbands and fathers were not rich
enough to be able to gratify that expensive taste. Dick’s carriage
called for them, and took them home again; and the beauties all agreed
(if he ever married) that Mrs. Dick would be the most enviable woman on
the face of the civilized earth. Even the false reports, which declared
that he was privately married already, and on bad terms with his
wife, slandered him cordially under the popular name. And his intimate
companions, when they alluded among each other to a romance in his life
which would remain a hidden romance to the end of his days, forgot that
the occasion justified a serious and severe use of his surname, and
blamed him affectionately as “poor dear Dick.”

The hour was midnight; and the friends, whom the most hospitable of men
delighted to assemble round his dinner-table, had taken their leave with
the exception of one guest specially detained by the host, who led him
back to the dining-room.

“You were angry with our friends,” Dick began, “when they asked you
about that report of your marriage. You won’t be angry with Me. Are you
really going to be the old maid’s husband?”

This plain question received a plain reply: “Yes, I am.”

Dick took the young lord’s hand. Simply and seriously, he said: “Accept
my congratulations.”

Howel Beaucourt started as if he had received a blow instead of a
compliment.

“There isn’t another man or woman in the whole circle of my
acquaintance,” he declared, “who would have congratulated me on marrying
Miss Dulane. I believe you would make allowances for me if I had
committed murder.”

“I hope I should,” Dick answered gravely. “When a man is my
friend--murder or marriage--I take it for granted that he has a reason
for what he does. Wait a minute. You mustn’t give me more credit than
I deserve. I don’t agree with you. If I were a marrying man myself, I
shouldn’t pick an old maid--I should prefer a young one. That’s a matter
of taste. You are not like me. _You_ always have a definite object in
view. I may not know what the object is. Never mind! I wish you joy all
the same.”

Beaucourt was not unworthy of the friendship he had inspired. “I should
be ungrateful indeed,” he said, “if I didn’t tell you what my object is.
You know that I am poor?”

“The only poor friend of mine,” Dick remarked, “who has never borrowed
money of me.”

Beaucourt went on without noticing this. “I have three expensive
tastes,” he said. “I want to get into Parliament; I want to have a
yacht; I want to collect pictures. Add, if you like, the selfish luxury
of helping poverty and wretchedness, and hearing my conscience tell
me what an excellent man I am. I can’t do all this on five hundred a
year--but I can do it on forty times five hundred a year. Moral: marry
Miss Dulane.”

Listening attentively until the other had done, Dick showed a sardonic
side to his character never yet discovered in Beaucourt’s experience of
him.

“I suppose you have made the necessary arrangements,” he said. “When
the old lady releases you, she will leave consolation behind her in her
will.”

“That’s the first ill-natured thing I ever heard you say, Dick. When the
old lady dies, my sense of honor takes fright, and turns its back on
her will. It’s a condition on my side, that every farthing of her money
shall be left to her relations.”

“Don’t you call yourself one of them?”

“What a question! Am I her relation because the laws of society force
a mock marriage on us? How can I make use of her money unless I am her
husband? and how can she make use of my title unless she is my wife? As
long as she lives I stand honestly by my side of the bargain. But when
she dies the transaction is at an end, and the surviving partner returns
to his five hundred a year.”

Dick exhibited another surprising side to his character. The most
compliant of men now became as obstinate as the proverbial mule.

“All very well,” he said, “but it doesn’t explain why--if you must sell
yourself--you have sold yourself to an old lady. There are plenty of
young ones and pretty ones with fortunes to tempt you. It seems odd that
you haven’t tried your luck with one of them.”

“No, Dick. It would have been odd, and worse than odd, if I had tried my
luck with a young woman.”

“I don’t see that.”

“You shall see it directly. If I marry an old woman for her money, I
have no occasion to be a hypocrite; we both know that our marriage is a
mere matter of form. But if I make a young woman my wife because I want
her money, and if that young woman happens to be worth a straw, I must
deceive her and disgrace myself by shamming love. That, my boy, you may
depend upon it, I will never do.”

Dick’s face suddenly brightened with a mingled expression of relief and
triumph.

“Ha! my mercenary friend,” he burst out, “there’s something mixed up in
this business which is worthier of you than anything I have heard yet.
Stop! I’m going to be clever for the first time in my life. A man who
talks of love as you do, must have felt love himself. Where is the young
one and the pretty one? And what has she done, poor dear, to be deserted
for an old woman? Good God! how you look at me! I have hurt your
feelings--I have been a greater fool than ever--I am more ashamed of
myself than words can say!”

Beaucourt stopped him there, gently and firmly.

“You have made a very natural mistake,” he said. “There _was_ a young
lady. She has refused me--absolutely refused me. There is no more love
in my life. It’s a dark life and an empty life for the rest of my
days. I must see what money can do for me next. When I have thoroughly
hardened my heart I may not feel my misfortune as I feel it now. Pity me
or despise me. In either case let us say goodnight.”

He went out into the hall and took his hat. Dick went out into the hall
and took _his_ hat.

“Have your own way,” he answered, “I mean to have mine--I’ll go home
with you.”

The man was simply irresistible. Beaucourt sat down resignedly on the
nearest of the hall chairs. Dick asked him to return to the dining-room.
“No,” he said; “it’s not worth while. What I can tell you may be told in
two minutes.” Dick submitted, and took the next of the hall chairs. In
that inappropriate place the young lord’s unpremeditated confession
was forced out of him, by no more formidable exercise of power than the
kindness of his friend.

“When you hear where I met with her,” he began, “you will most likely
not want to hear any more. I saw her, for the first time, on the stage
of a music hall.”

He looked at Dick. Perfectly quiet and perfectly impenetrable, Dick only
said, “Go on.” Beaucourt continued in these words:

“She was singing Arne’s delicious setting of Ariel’s song in the
‘Tempest,’ with a taste and feeling completely thrown away on the
greater part of the audience. That she was beautiful--in my eyes at
least--I needn’t say. That she had descended to a sphere unworthy of her
and new to her, nobody could doubt. Her modest dress, her refinement
of manner, seemed rather to puzzle than to please most of the people
present; they applauded her, but not very warmly, when she retired. I
obtained an introduction through her music-master, who happened to be
acquainted professionally with some relatives of mine. He told me that
she was a young widow; and he assured me that the calamity through which
her family had lost their place in the world had brought no sort of
disgrace on them. If I wanted to know more, he referred me to the lady
herself. I found her very reserved. A long time passed before I could
win her confidence--and a longer time still before I ventured to confess
the feeling with which she had inspired me. You know the rest.”

“You mean, of course, that you offered her marriage?”

“Certainly.”

“And she refused you on account of your position in life.”

“No. I had foreseen that obstacle, and had followed the example of the
adventurous nobleman in the old story. Like him, I assumed a name, and
presented myself as belonging to her own respectable middle class of
life. You are too old a friend to suspect me of vanity if I tell you
that she had no objection to me, and no suspicion that I had approached
her (personally speaking) under a disguise.”

“What motive could she possibly have had for refusing you?” Dick asked.

“A motive associated with her dead husband,” Beaucourt answered. “He
had married her--mind, innocently married her--while his first wife was
living. The woman was an inveterate drunkard; they had been separated
for years. Her death had been publicly reported in the newspapers, among
the persons killed in a railway accident abroad. When she claimed her
unhappy husband he was in delicate health. The shock killed him. His
widow--I can’t, and won’t, speak of her misfortune as if it was her
fault--knew of no living friends who were in a position to help her.
Not a great artist with a wonderful voice, she could still trust to her
musical accomplishments to provide for the necessities of life. Plead as
I might with her to forget the past, I always got the same reply: ‘If
I was base enough to let myself be tempted by the happy future that you
offer, I should deserve the unmerited disgrace which has fallen on me.
Marry a woman whose reputation will bear inquiry, and forget me.’ I was
mad enough to press my suit once too often. When I visited her on the
next day she was gone. Every effort to trace her has failed. Lost, my
friend--irretrievably lost to me!”

He offered his hand and said good-night. Dick held him back on the
doorstep.

“Break off your mad engagement to Miss Dulane,” he said. “Be a man,
Howel; wait and hope! You are throwing away your life when happiness is
within your reach, if you will only be patient. That poor young creature
is worthy of you. Lost? Nonsense! In this narrow little world people
are never hopelessly lost till they are dead and underground. Help me
to recognize her by a description, and tell me her name. I’ll find her;
I’ll persuade her to come back to you--and, mark my words, you will live
to bless the day when you followed my advice.”

This well-meant remonstrance was completely thrown away. Beaucourt’s
despair was deaf to every entreaty that Dick had addressed to him.
“Thank you with all my heart,” he said. “You don’t know her as I do.
She is one of the very few women who mean No when they say No. Useless,
Dick--useless!”

Those were the last words he said to his friend in the character of a
single man.

Part II

PLATONIC MARRIAGE.

III.

“SEVEN months have passed, my dear Dick, since my ‘inhuman obstinacy’
(those were the words you used) made you one of the witnesses at my
marriage to Miss Dulane, sorely against your will. Do you remember your
parting prophecy when you were out of the bride’s hearing? ‘A miserable
life is before that woman’s husband--and, by Jupiter, he has deserved
it!’

“Never, my dear boy, attempt to forecast the future again. Viewed as a
prophet you are a complete failure. I have nothing to complain of in my
married life.

“But you must not mistake me. I am far from saying that I am a happy
man; I only declare myself to be a contented man. My old wife is a
marvel of good temper and good sense. She trusts me implicitly, and
I have given her no reason to regret it. We have our time for being
together, and our time for keeping apart. Within our inevitable limits
we understand each other and respect each other, and have a truer
feeling of regard on both sides than many people far better matched than
we are in point of age. But you shall judge for yourself. Come and dine
with us, when I return on Wednesday next from the trial trip of my new
yacht. In the meantime I have a service to ask of you.

“My wife’s niece has been her companion for years. She has left us to be
married to an officer, who has taken her to India; and we are utterly
at a loss how to fill her place. The good old lady doesn’t want much.
A nice-tempered refined girl, who can sing and play to her with some
little taste and feeling, and read to her now and then when her eyes are
weary--there is what we require; and there, it seems, is more than we
can get, after advertising for a week past. Of all the ‘companions’
who have presented themselves, not one has turned out to be the sort of
person whom Lady Howel wants.

“Can you help us? In any case, my wife sends you her kind remembrances;
and (true to the old times) I add my love.”

On the day which followed the receipt of this letter, Dick paid a
visit to Lady Howel Beaucourt.

“You seem to be excited,” she said. “Has anything remarkable happened?”

“Pardon me if I ask a question first,” Dick replied. “Do you object to a
young widow?”

“That depends on the widow.”

“Then I have found the very person you want. And, oddly enough, your
husband has had something to do with it.”

“Do you mean that my husband has recommended her?”

There was an undertone of jealousy in Lady Howel’s voice---jealousy
excited not altogether without a motive. She had left it to Beaucourt’s
sense of honor to own the truth, if there had been any love affair in
his past life which ought to make him hesitates before he married.
He had justified Miss Dulane’s confidence in him; acknowledging an
attachment to a young widow, and adding that she had positively refused
him. “We have not met since,” he said, “and we shall never meet again.”
 Under those circumstances, Miss Dulane had considerately abstained from
asking for any further details. She had not thought of the young widow
again, until Dick’s language had innocently inspired her first doubt.
Fortunately for both of them, he was an outspoken man; and he reassured
her unreservedly in these words: “Your husband knows nothing about it.”

“Now,” she said, “you may tell me how you came to hear of the lady.”

“Through my uncle’s library,” Dick replied. “His will has left me his
collection of books--in such a wretchedly neglected condition that
I asked Beaucourt (not being a reading man myself) if he knew of
any competent person who could advise me how to set things right. He
introduced me to Farleigh & Halford, the well-known publishers. The
second partner is a book collector himself, as well as a bookseller. He
kindly looks in now and then, to see how his instructions for mending
and binding are being carried out. When he called yesterday I thought of
you, and I found he could help us to a young lady employed in his office
at correcting proof sheets.”

“What is the lady’s name?”

“Mrs. Evelin.”

“Why does she leave her employment?”

“To save her eyes, poor soul. When the senior partner, Mr. Farleigh, met
with her, she was reduced by family misfortunes to earn her own living.
The publishers would have been only too glad to keep her in their
office, but for the oculist’s report. He declared that she would run the
risk of blindness, if she fatigued her weak eyes much longer. There is
the only objection to this otherwise invaluable person--she will not be
able to read to you.”

“Can she sing and play?”

“Exquisitely. Mr. Farleigh answers for her music.”

“And her character?”

“Mr. Halford answers for her character.”

“And her manners?”

“A perfect lady. I have seen her and spoken to her; I answer for her
manners, and I guarantee her personal appearance. Charming--charming!”

For a moment Lady Howel hesitated. After a little reflection, she
decided that it was her duty to trust her excellent husband. “I will
receive the charming widow,” she said, “to-morrow at twelve o’clock;
and, if she produces the right impression, I promise to overlook the
weakness of her eyes.”

IV.

BEAUCOURT had prolonged the period appointed for the trial trip of
his yacht by a whole week. His apology when he returned delighted the
kind-hearted old lady who had made him a present of the vessel.

“There isn’t such another yacht in the whole world,” he declared. “I
really hadn’t the heart to leave that beautiful vessel after only
three days experience of her.” He burst out with a torrent of technical
praises of the yacht, to which his wife listened as attentively as if
she really understood what he was talking about. When his breath and his
eloquence were exhausted alike, she said, “Now, my dear, it’s my turn. I
can match your perfect vessel with my perfect lady.”

“What! you have found a companion?”

“Yes.”

“Did Dick find her for you?”

“He did indeed. You shall see for yourself how grateful I ought to be to
your friend.”

She opened a door which led into the next room. “Mary, my dear, come and
be introduced to my husband.”

Beaucourt started when he heard the name, and instantly recovered
himself. He had forgotten how many Marys there are in the world.

Lady Howel returned, leading her favorite by the hand, and gayly
introduced her the moment they entered the room.

“Mrs. Evelin; Lord--”

She looked at her husband. The utterance of his name was instantly
suspended on her lips. Mrs. Evelin’s hand, turning cold at the same
moment in her hand, warned her to look round. The face of the woman more
than reflected the inconcealable agitation in the face of the man.

The wife’s first words, when she recovered herself, were addressed to
them both.

“Which of you can I trust,” she asked, “to tell me the truth?”

“You can trust both of us,” her husband answered.

The firmness of his tone irritated her. “I will judge of that for
myself,” she said. “Go back to the next room,” she added, turning to
Mrs. Evelin; “I will hear you separately.”

The companion, whose duty it was to obey--whose modesty and gentleness
had won her mistress’s heart--refused to retire.

“No,” she said; “I have been deceived too. I have _my_ right to hear
what Lord Howel has to say for himself.”

Beaucourt attempted to support the claim that she had advanced. His
wife sternly signed to him to be silent. “What do you mean?” she said,
addressing the question to Mrs. Evelin.

“I mean this. The person whom you speak of as a nobleman was presented
to me as ‘Mr. Vincent, an artist.’ But for that deception I should never
have set foot in your ladyship’s house.”

“Is this true, my lord?” Lady Howel asked, with a contemptuous emphasis
on the title of nobility.

“Quite true,” her husband answered. “I thought it possible that my rank
might prove an obstacle in the way of my hopes. The blame rests on me,
and on me alone. I ask Mrs. Evelin to pardon me for an act of deception
which I deeply regret.”

Lady Howel was a just woman. Under other circumstances she might
have shown herself to be a generous woman. That brighter side of her
character was incapable of revealing itself in the presence of Mrs.
Evelin, young and beautiful, and in possession of her husband’s heart.
She could say, “I beg your pardon, madam; I have not treated you
justly.” But no self-control was strong enough to restrain the next
bitter words from passing her lips. “At my age,” she said, “Lord Howel
will soon be free; you will not have long to wait for him.”

The young widow looked at her sadly--answered her sadly.

“Oh, my lady, your better nature will surely regret having said that!”

For a moment her eyes rested on Beaucourt, dim with rising tears. She
left the room--and left the house.

There was silence between the husband and wife. Beaucourt was the first
to speak again.

“After what you have just heard, do you persist in your jealousy of that
lady, and your jealousy of me?” he asked.

“I have behaved cruelly to her and to you. I am ashamed of myself,” was
all she said in reply. That expression of sorrow, so simple and so true,
did not appeal in vain to the gentler side of Beaucourt’s nature. He
kissed his wife’s hand; he tried to console her.

“You may forgive me,” she answered. “I cannot forgive myself. That poor
lady’s last words have made my heart ache. What I said to her in anger
I ought to have said generously. Why should she not wait for you? After
your life with me--a life of kindness, a life of self-sacrifice--you
deserve your reward. Promise me that you will marry the woman you
love--after my death has released you.”

“You distress me, and needlessly distress me,” he said. “What you are
thinking of, my dear, can never happen; no, not even if--” He left the
rest unsaid.

“Not even if you were free?” she asked.

“Not even then.”

She looked toward the next room. “Go in, Howel, and bring Mrs. Evelin
back; I have something to say to her.”

The discovery that she had left the house caused no fear that she had
taken to flight with the purpose of concealing herself. There was a
prospect before the poor lonely woman which might be trusted to preserve
her from despair, to say the least of it.

During her brief residence in Beaucourt’s house she had shown to Lady
Howel a letter received from a relation, who had emigrated to New
Zealand with her husband and her infant children some years since. They
had steadily prospered; they were living in comfort, and they wanted for
nothing but a trustworthy governess to teach their children. The
mother had accordingly written, asking if her relative in England could
recommend a competent person, and offering a liberal salary. In showing
the letter to Lady Howel, Mrs. Evelin had said: “If I had not been
so happy as to attract your notice, I might have offered to be the
governess myself.”

Assuming that it had now occurred to her to act on this idea, Lady Howel
felt assured that she would apply for advice either to the publishers
who had recommended her, or to Lord Howel’s old friend.

Beaucourt at once offered to make th e inquiries which might satisfy his
wife that she had not been mistaken. Readily accepting his proposal, she
asked at the same time for a few minutes of delay.

“I want to say to you,” she explained, “what I had in my mind to say to
Mrs. Evelin. Do you object to tell me why she refused to marry you? I
couldn’t have done it in her place.”

“You would have done it, my dear, as I think, if her misfortune had been
your misfortune.” With those prefatory words he told the miserable story
of Mrs. Evelin’s marriage.

Lady Howel’s sympathies, strongly excited, appeared to have led her to a
conclusion which she was not willing to communicate to her husband. She
asked him, rather abruptly, if he would leave it to her to find Mrs.
Evelin. “I promise,” she added, “to tell you what I am thinking of, when
I come back.”

In two minutes more she was ready to go out, and had hurriedly left the
house.

V.

AFTER a long absence Lady Howel returned, accompanied by Dick. His face
and manner betrayed unusual agitation; Beaucourt noticed it.

“I may well be excited,” Dick declared, “after what I have heard, and
after what we have done. Lady Howel, yours is the brain that thinks to
some purpose. Make our report--I wait for you.”

But my lady preferred waiting for Dick. He consented to speak first, for
the thoroughly characteristic reason that he could “get over it in no
time.”

“I shall try the old division,” he said, “into First, Second, and Third.
Don’t be afraid; I am not going to preach--quite the contrary; I am
going to be quick about it. First, then, Mrs. Evelin has decided, under
sound advice, to go to New Zealand. Second, I have telegraphed to her
relations at the other end of the world to tell them that she is coming.
Third, and last, Farleigh & Halford have sent to the office, and
secured a berth for her in the next ship that sails--date the day after
to-morrow. Done in half a minute. Now, Lady Howel!”

“I will begin and end in half a minute too,” she said, “if I can.
First,” she continued, turning to her husband, “I found Mrs. Evelin at
your friend’s house. She kindly let me say all that I could say for the
relief of my poor heart. Secondly--”

She hesitated, smiled uneasily, and came to a full stop.

“I can’t do it, Howel,” she confessed; “I speak to you as usual, or I
can never get on. Saying many things in few words--if the ladies
who assert our rights will forgive me for confessing it--is an
accomplishment in which we are completely beaten by the men. You must
have thought me rude, my dear, for leaving you very abruptly, without a
word of explanation. The truth is, I had an idea in my head, and I kept
it to myself (old people are proverbially cautious, you know) till I had
first found out whether it was worth mentioning. When you were speaking
of the wretched creature who had claimed Mrs. Evelin’s husband as her
own, you said she was an inveterate drunkard. A woman in that state of
degradation is capable, as I persist in thinking, of any wickedness.
I suppose this put it into my head to doubt her--no; I mean, to wonder
whether Mr. Evelin--do you know that she keeps her husband’s name by his
own entreaty addressed to her on his deathbed?--oh, I am losing myself
in a crowd of words of my own collecting! Say the rest of it for me, Sir
Richard!”

“No, Lady Howel. Not unless you call me ‘Dick.’”

“Then say it for me--Dick.”

“No, not yet, on reflection. Dick is too short, say ‘Dear Dick.’”

“Dear Dick--there!”

“Thank you, my lady. Now we had better remember that your husband
is present.” He turned to Beaucourt. “Lady Howel had the idea,” he
proceeded, “which ought to have presented itself to you and to me. It
was a serious misfortune (as she thought) that Mr. Evelin’s sufferings
in his last illness, and his wife’s anxiety while she was nursing him,
had left them unfit to act in their own defense. They might otherwise
not have submitted to the drunken wretch’s claim, without first making
sure that she had a right to advance it. Taking her character into due
consideration, are we quite certain that she was herself free to
marry, when Mr. Evelin unfortunately made her his wife? To that serious
question we now mean to find an answer. With Mrs. Evelin’s knowledge of
the affair to help us, we have discovered the woman’s address, to begin
with. She keeps a small tobacconist’s shop at the town of Grailey in the
north of England. The rest is in the hands of my lawyer. If we make the
discovery that we all hope for, we have your wife to thank for it.” He
paused, and looked at his watch. “I’ve got an appointment at the club.
The committee will blackball the best fellow that ever lived if I don’t
go and stop them. Good-by.”

The last day of Mrs. Evelin’s sojourn in England was memorable in more
ways than one.

On the first occasion in Beaucourt’s experience of his married life, his
wife wrote to him instead of speaking to him, although they were both in
the house at the time. It was a little note only containing these words:
“I thought you would like to say good-by to Mrs. Evelin. I have told
her to expect you in the library, and I will take care that you are not
disturbed.”

Waiting at the window of her sitting-room, on the upper floor, Lady
Howel perceived that the delicate generosity of her conduct had been
gratefully felt. The interview in the library barely lasted for five
minutes. She saw Mrs. Evelin leave the house with her veil down.
Immediately afterward, Beaucourt ascended to his wife’s room to thank
her. Carefully as he had endeavored to hide them, the traces of tears in
his eyes told her how cruelly the parting scene had tried him. It was a
bitter moment for his admirable wife. “Do you wish me dead?” she asked
with sad self-possession. “Live,” he said, “and live happily, if you
wish to make me happy too.” He drew her to him and kissed her forehead.
Lady Howel had her reward.

Part III.

NEWS FROM THE COLONY.

VI.

FURNISHED with elaborate instructions to guide him, which included
golden materials for bribery, a young Jew holding the place of third
clerk in the office of Dick’s lawyer was sent to the town of Grailey
to make discoveries. In the matter of successfully instituting private
inquiries, he was justly considered to be a match for any two Christians
who might try to put obstacles in his way. His name was Moses Jackling.

Entering the cigar-shop, the Jew discovered that he had presented
himself at a critical moment.

A girl and a man were standing behind the counter. The girl looked like
a maid-of-all-work: she was rubbing the tears out of her eyes with a
big red fist. The man, smart in manner and shabby in dress, received the
stranger with a peremptory eagerness to do business. “Now, then! what
for you?” Jackling bought the worst cigar he had ever smoked, in
the course of an enormous experience of bad tobacco, and tried a few
questions with this result. The girl had lost her place; the man was
in “possession”; and the stock and furniture had been seized for debt.
Jackling thereupon assumed the character of a creditor, and ask to speak
with the mistress.

“She’s too ill to see you, sir,” the girl said.

“Tell the truth, you fool,” cried the man in possession. He led the
way to a door with a glass in the upper part of it, which opened into
a parlor behind the shop. As soon as his back was turned, Jackling
whispered to the maid, “When I go, slip out after me; I’ve got something
for you.” The man lifted the curtain over the glass. “Look through,” he
said, “and see what’s the matter with her for yourself.”

Jackling discovered the mistress flat on her back on the floor,
helplessly drunk. That was enough for the clerk--so far. He took leave
of the man in possession, with the one joke which never wears out in the
estimation of Englishmen; the joke that foresees the drinker’s headache
in the morning. In a minute or two more the girl showed herself,
carrying an empty jug. She had been sent for the man’s beer, and she
was expected back directly. Jackling, having first overwhelmed her by a
present of five shillings, proposed another appointment in the evening.
The maid promised to be at the place of meeting; and in memory of the
five shillings she kept her word.

“What wages do you get?” was the first question that astonished her.

“Three pounds a year, sir,” the unfortunate creature replied.

“All paid?”

“Only one pound paid--and I say it’s a crying shame.”

“Say what you like, my dear, so long as you listen to me. I want to know
everything that your mistress says and does--first when she’s drunk, and
then when she’s sober. Wait a bit; I haven’t done yet. If you tell me
everything you can remember--mind _ everything_--I’ll pay the rest of
your wages.”

Madly excited by this golden prospect, the victim of domestic service
answered inarticulately with a scream. Jackling’s right hand and left
hand entered his pockets, and appeared again holding two sovereigns
separately between two fingers and thumbs. From that moment, he was at
liberty to empty the maid-of-all-work’s memory of every saying and doing
that it contained.

The sober moments of the mistress yielded little or nothing to
investigation. The report of her drunken moments produced something
worth hearing. There were two men whom it was her habit to
revile bitterly in her cups. One of them was Mr. Evelin, whom she
abused--sometimes for the small allowance that he made to her; sometimes
for dying before she could prosecute him for bigamy. Her drunken
remembrances of the other man were associated with two names. She
called him “Septimus”; she called him “Darts”; and she despised him
occasionally for being a “common sailor.” It was clearly demonstrated
that he was one man, and not two. Whether he was “Septimus,” or whether
he was “Darts,” he had always committed the same atrocities. He had
taken her money away from her; he had called her by an atrocious name;
and he had knocked her down on more than one occasion. Provided with
this information, Jackling rewarded the girl, and paid a visit to her
mistress the next day.

The miserable woman was exactly in the state of nervous prostration
(after the excess of the previous evening) which offered to the
clerk his best chance of gaining his end. He presented himself as the
representative of friends, bent on helping her, whose modest benevolence
had positively forbidden him to mention their names.

“What sum of money must you pay,” he asked, “to get rid of the man in
possession?”

Too completely bewildered to speak, her trembling hand offered to him a
slip of paper on which the amount of the debt and the expenses was set
forth: L51 12s. 10d.

With some difficulty the Jew preserved his gravity. “Very well,” he
resumed. “I will make it up to sixty pounds (to set you going again) on
two conditions.”

She suddenly recovered her power of speech. “Give me the money!” she
cried, with greedy impatience of delay.

“First condition,” he continued, without noticing the interruption:
“you are not to suffer, either in purse or person, if you give us the
information that we want.”

She interrupted him again. “Tell me what it is, and be quick about it.”

“Second condition,” he went on as impenetrably as ever; “you take me to
the place where I can find the certificate of your marriage to Septimus
Darts.”

Her eyes glared at him like the eyes of a wild animal. Furies,
hysterics, faintings, denials, threats--Jackling endured them all by
turns. It was enough for him that his desperate guess of the evening
before, had hit the mark on the morning after. When she had completely
exhausted herself he returned to the experiment which he had already
tried with the maid. Well aware of the advantage of exhibiting gold
instead of notes, when the object is to tempt poverty, he produced
the promised bribe in sovereigns, pouring them playfully backward and
forward from one big hand to the other.

The temptation was more than the woman could resist. In another
half-hour the two were traveling together to a town in one of the
midland counties.

The certificate was found in the church register, and duly copied.

It also appeared that one of the witnesses to the marriage was still
living. His name and address were duly noted in the clerk’s pocketbook.
Subsequent inquiry, at the office of the Customs Comptroller, discovered
the name of Septimus Darts on the captain’s official list of the crew
of an outward bound merchant vessel. With this information, and with a
photographic portrait to complete it, the man was discovered, alive and
hearty, on the return of the ship to her port.

His wife’s explanation of her conduct included the customary excuse that
she had every reason to believe her husband to be dead, and was followed
by a bold assertion that she had married Mr. Evelin for love. In Moses
Jackling’s opinion she lied when she said this, and lied again when she
threatened to prosecute Mr. Evelin for bigamy. “Take my word for it,”
 said this new representative of the unbelieving Jew, “she would have
extorted money from him if he had lived.” Delirium tremens left this
question unsettled, and closed the cigar shop soon afterward, under the
authority of death.

The good news, telegraphed to New Zealand, was followed by a letter
containing details.

At a later date, a telegram arrived from Mrs. Evelin. She had reached
her destination, and had received the dispatch which told her that she
had been lawfully married. A letter to Lady Howel was promised by the
next mail.

While the necessary term of delay was still unexpired, the newspapers
received the intelligence of a volcanic eruption in the northern island
of the New Zealand group. Later particulars, announcing a terrible
destruction of life and property, included the homestead in which Mrs.
Evelin was living. The farm had been overwhelmed, and every member of
the household had perished.

Part IV.

THE NIGHT NURSE.

VII.

_Indorsed as follows:_ “Reply from Sir Richard, addressed to Farleigh &
Halford.”

“Your courteous letter has been forwarded to my house in the country.

“I really regret that you should have thought it necessary to apologize
for troubling me. Your past kindness to the unhappy Mrs. Evelin gives
you a friendly claim on me which I gladly recognize--as you shall soon
see.

“‘The extraordinary story,’ as you very naturally call it, is
nevertheless true. I am the only person now at your disposal who can
speak as an eye-witness of the events.

“In the first place I must tell you that the dreadful intelligence,
received from New Zealand, had an effect on Lord Howel Beaucourt which
shocked his friends and inexpressibly distressed his admirable wife. I
can only describe him, at that time, as a man struck down in mind and
body alike.

“Lady Howel was unremitting in her efforts to console him. He was
thankful and gentle. It was true that no complaint could be made of him.
It was equally true that no change for the better rewarded the devotion
of his wife.

“The state of feeling which this implied imbittered the disappointment
that Lady Howel naturally felt. As some relief to her overburdened mind,
she associated herself with the work of mercy, carried on under the
superintendence of the rector of the parish. I thought he was wrong
in permitting a woman, at her advanced time of life, to run the risk
encountered in visiting the sick and suffering poor at their own
dwelling-places. Circumstances, however, failed to justify my dread
of the perilous influences of infection and foul air. The one untoward
event that happened, seemed to be too trifling to afford any cause for
anxiety. Lady Howel caught cold.

“Unhappily, she treated that apparently trivial accident with
indifference. Her husband tried in vain to persuade her to remain at
home. On one of her charitable visits she was overtaken by a heavy fall
of rain; and a shivering fit seized her on returning to the house. At
her age the results were serious. A bronchial attack followed. In a week
more, the dearest and best of women had left us nothing to love but the
memory of the dead.

“Her last words were faintly whispered to me in her husband’s presence:
‘Take care of him,’ the dying woman said, ‘when I am gone.’

“No effort of mine to be worthy of that sacred trust was left untried.
How could I hope to succeed where _she_ had failed? My house in London
and my house in the country were both open to Beaucourt; I entreated him
to live with me, or (if he preferred it) to be my guest for a short time
only, or (if he wished to be alone) to choose the place of abode which
he liked best for his solitary retreat. With sincere expressions of
gratitude, his inflexible despair refused my proposals.

“In one of the ancient ‘Inns,’ built centuries since for the legal
societies of London, he secluded himself from friends and acquaintances
alike. One by one, they were driven from his dreary chambers by a
reception which admitted them with patient resignation and held out
little encouragement to return. After an interval of no great length, I
was the last of his friends who intruded on his solitude.

“Poor Lady Howel’s will (excepting some special legacies) had left her
fortune to me in trust, on certain conditions with which it is needless
to trouble you. Beaucourt’s resolution not to touch a farthing of his
dead wife’s money laid a heavy responsibility on my shoulders; the
burden being ere long increased by forebodings which alarmed me on the
subject of his health.

“He devoted himself to the reading of old books, treating (as I was
told) of that branch of useless knowledge generally described as ‘occult
science.’ These unwholesome studies so absorbed him, that he remained
shut up in his badly ventilated chambers for weeks together, without
once breathing the outer air even for a few minutes. Such defiance of
the ordinary laws of nature as this could end but in one way; his health
steadily declined and feverish symptoms showed themselves. The doctor
said plainly, ‘There is no chance for him if he stays in this place.’

“Once more he refused to be removed to my London house. The development
of the fever, he reminded me, might lead to consequences dangerous to me
and to my household. He had heard of one of the great London hospitals,
which reserved certain rooms for the occupation of persons capable of
paying for the medical care bestowed on them. If he were to be removed
at all, to that hospital he would go. Many advantages, and no objections
of importance, were presented by this course of proceeding. We conveyed
him to the hospital without a moment’s loss of time.

“When I think of the dreadful illness that followed, and when I recall
the days of unrelieved suspense passed at the bedside, I have not
courage enough to dwell on this part of my story. Besides, you know
already that Beaucourt recovered--or, as I might more correctly describe
it, that he was snatched back to life when the grasp of death was on
him. Of this happier period of his illness I have something to say which
may surprise and interest you.

“On one of the earlier days of his convalescence my visit to him was
paid later than usual. A matter of importance, neglected while he was
in danger, had obliged me to leave town for a few days, after there was
nothing to be feared. Returning, I had missed the train which would have
brought me to London in better time.

“My appearance evidently produced in Beaucourt a keen feeling of
relief. He requested the day nurse, waiting in the room, to leave us by
ourselves.

“‘I was afraid you might not have come to me to-day,’ he said. ‘My last
moments would have been imbittered, my friend, by your absence.’

“‘Are you anticipating your death,’ I asked, ‘at the very time when the
doctors answer for your life?’

“‘The doctors have not seen her,’ he said; ‘I saw her last night.’

“‘Of whom are you speaking?’

“‘Of my lost angel, who perished miserably in New Zealand. Twice her
spirit has appeared to me. I shall see her for the third time, tonight;
I shall follow her to the better world.’

“Had the delirium of the worst time of the fever taken possession of him
again? In unutterable dread of a relapse, I took his hand. The skin was
cool. I laid my fingers on his pulse. It was beating calmly.

“‘You think I am wandering in my mind,’ he broke out. ‘Stay here
tonight--I command you, stay!--and see her as I have seen her.’

“I quieted him by promising to do what he had asked of me. He had still
one more condition to insist on.

“‘I won’t be laughed at,’ he said. ‘Promise that you will not repeat to
any living creature what I have just told you.’

“My promise satisfied him. He wearily closed his eyes. In a few minutes
more his poor weak body was in peaceful repose.

“The day-nurse returned, and remained with us later than usual. Twilight
melted into darkness. The room was obscurely lit by a shaded lamp,
placed behind a screen that kept the sun out of the sick man’s eyes in
the daytime.

“‘Are we alone?’ Beaucourt asked.

“‘Yes.’

“‘Watch the door.’

“‘Why?’

“‘You will see her on the threshold.’

“As he said those words the door slowly opened. In the dim light I could
only discern at first the figure of a woman. She slowly advanced toward
me. I saw the familiar face in shadow; the eyes were large and faintly
luminous--the eyes of Mrs. Evelin.

“The wild words spoken to me by Beaucourt, the stillness and the
obscurity in the room, had their effect, I suppose, on my imagination.
You will think me a poor creature when I confess it. For the moment I
did assuredly feel a thrill of superstitious terror.

“My delusion was dispelled by a change in her face. Its natural
expression of surprise, when she saw me, set my mind free to feel the
delight inspired by the discovery that she was a living woman. I should
have spoken to her if she had not stopped me by a gesture.

“Beaucourt’s voice broke the silence. ‘Ministering Spirit!’ he said,
‘free me from the life of earth. Take me with you to the life eternal.’

“She made no attempt to enlighten him. ‘Wait,’ she answered calmly,
‘wait and rest.’

“Silently obeying her, he turned his head on the pillow; we saw his face
no more.

“I have related the circumstances exactly as they happened: the ghost
story which report has carried to your ears has no other foundation than
this.

“Mrs. Evelin led the way to that further end of the room in which the
screen stood. Placing ourselves behind it, we could converse in whispers
without being heard. Her first words told me that she had been warned
by one of the hospital doctors to respect my friend’s delusion for the
present. His mind partook in some degree of the weakness of his body,
and he was not strong enough yet to bear the shock of discovering the
truth.

“She had been saved almost by a miracle.

“Released (in a state of insensibility) from the ruins of the house, she
had been laid with her dead relatives awaiting burial. Happily for her,
an English traveler visiting the island was among the first men who
volunteered to render help. He had been in practice as a medical man,
and he saved her from being buried alive. Nearly a month passed before
she was strong enough to bear removal to Wellington (the capital city)
and to be received into the hospital.

“I asked why she had not telegraphed or written to me.

“‘When I was strong enough to write,’ she said, ‘I was strong enough
to bear the sea-voyage to England. The expenses so nearly exhausted my
small savings that I had no money to spare for the telegraph.’

“On her arrival in London, only a few days since, she had called on me
at the time when I had left home on the business which I have already
mentioned. She had not heard of Lady Howel’s death, and had written
ignorantly to prepare that good friend for seeing her. The messenger
sent with the letter had found the house in the occupation of strangers,
and had been referred to the agent employed in letting it. She went
herself to this person, and so heard that Lord Howel Beaucourt had lost
his wife, and was reported to be dying in one of the London hospitals.

“‘If he had been in his usual state of health,’ she said, ‘it would
have been indelicate on my part--I mean it would have seemed like taking
a selfish advantage of the poor lady’s death--to have let him know that
my life had been saved, in any other way than by writing to him. But
when I heard he was dying, I forgot all customary considerations.
His name was so well-known in London that I easily discovered at what
hospital he had been received. There I heard that the report was false
and that he was out of danger. I ought to hav e been satisfied with
that--but oh, how could I be so near him and not long to see him? The
old doctor with whom I had been speaking discovered, I suppose, that
I was in trouble about something. He was so kind and fatherly, and he
seemed to take such interest in me, that I confessed everything to him.
After he had made me promise to be careful, he told the night-nurse to
let me take her place for a little while, when the dim light in the room
would not permit his patient to see me too plainly. He waited at the
door when we tried the experiment. Neither he nor I foresaw that Lord
Howel would put such a strange interpretation on my presence. The nurse
doesn’t approve of my coming back--even for a little while only--and
taking her place again to-night. She is right. I have had my little
glimpse of happiness, and with that little I must be content.’

“What I said in answer to this, and what I did as time advanced, it is
surely needless to tell you. You have read the newspapers which announce
their marriage, and their departure for Italy. What else is there left
for me to say?

“There is, perhaps, a word more still wanting.

“Obstinate Lord Howel persisted in refusing to take the fortune that was
waiting for him. In this difficulty, the conditions under which I was
acting permitted me to appeal to the bride. When she too said No, I was
not to be trifled with. I showed her poor Lady’s Howel’s will. After
reading the terms in which my dear old friend alluded to her she burst
out crying. I interpreted those grateful tears as an expression of
repentance for the ill-considered reply which I had just received. As
yet, I have not been told that I was wrong.”



MR. POLICEMAN AND THE COOK.

A FIRST WORD FOR MYSELF.

BEFORE the doctor left me one evening, I asked him how much longer I was
likely to live. He answered: “It’s not easy to say; you may die before
I can get back to you in the morning, or you may live to the end of the
month.”

I was alive enough on the next morning to think of the needs of my
soul, and (being a member of the Roman Catholic Church) to send for the
priest.

The history of my sins, related in confession, included blameworthy
neglect of a duty which I owed to the laws of my country. In the
priest’s opinion--and I agreed with him--I was bound to make public
acknowledgment of my fault, as an act of penance becoming to a Catholic
Englishman. We concluded, thereupon, to try a division of labor. I
related the circumstances, while his reverence took the pen and put the
matter into shape.

Here follows what came of it:

I.

WHEN I was a young man of five-and-twenty, I became a member of the
London police force. After nearly two years’ ordinary experience of
the responsible and ill-paid duties of that vocation, I found
myself employed on my first serious and terrible case of official
inquiry--relating to nothing less than the crime of Murder.

The circumstances were these:

I was then attached to a station in the northern district of
London--which I beg permission not to mention more particularly. On a
certain Monday in the week, I took my turn of night duty. Up to four in
the morning, nothing occurred at the station-house out of the ordinary
way. It was then springtime, and, between the gas and the fire, the room
became rather hot. I went to the door to get a breath of fresh air--much
to the surprise of our Inspector on duty, who was constitutionally a
chilly man. There was a fine rain falling; and a nasty damp in the air
sent me back to the fireside. I don’t suppose I had sat down for more
than a minute when the swinging-door was violently pushed open.
A frantic woman ran in with a scream, and said: “Is this the
station-house?”

Our Inspector (otherwise an excellent officer) had, by some perversity
of nature, a hot temper in his chilly constitution. “Why, bless the
woman, can’t you see it is?” he says. “What’s the matter now?”

“Murder’s the matter!” she burst out. “For God’s sake, come back with
me. It’s at Mrs. Crosscapel’s lodging-house, number 14 Lehigh Street.
A young woman has murdered her husband in the night! With a knife, sir.
She says she thinks she did it in her sleep.”

I confess I was startled by this; and the third man on duty (a sergeant)
seemed to feel it too. She was a nice-looking young woman, even in
her terrified condition, just out of bed, with her clothes huddled on
anyhow. I was partial in those days to a tall figure--and she was, as
they say, my style. I put a chair for her; and the sergeant poked the
fire. As for the Inspector, nothing ever upset _him_. He questioned her
as coolly as if it had been a case of petty larceny.

“Have you seen the murdered man?” he asked.

“No, sir.”

“Or the wife?”

“No, sir. I didn’t dare go into the room; I only heard about it!”

“Oh? And who are You? One of the lodgers?”

“No, sir. I’m the cook.”

“Isn’t there a master in the house?”

“Yes, sir. He’s frightened out of his wits. And the housemaid’s gone for
the doctor. It all falls on the poor servants, of course. Oh, why did I
ever set foot in that horrible house?”

The poor soul burst out crying, and shivered from head to foot. The
Inspector made a note of her statement, and then asked her to read it,
and sign it with her name. The object of this proceeding was to get her
to come near enough to give him the opportunity of smelling her breath.
“When people make extraordinary statements,” he afterward said to me,
“it sometimes saves trouble to satisfy yourself that they are not drunk.
I’ve known them to be mad--but not often. You will generally find _that_
in their eyes.”

She roused herself and signed her name--“Priscilla Thurlby.” The
Inspector’s own test proved her to be sober; and her eyes--a nice light
blue color, mild and pleasant, no doubt, when they were not staring with
fear, and red with crying--satisfied him (as I supposed) that she was
not mad. He turned the case over to me, in the first instance. I saw
that he didn’t believe in it, even yet.

“Go back with her to the house,” he says. “This may be a stupid hoax,
or a quarrel exaggerated. See to it yourself, and hear what the doctor
says. If it is serious, send word back here directly, and let nobody
enter the place or leave it till we come. Stop! You know the form if any
statement is volunteered?”

“Yes, sir. I am to caution the persons that whatever they say will be
taken down, and may be used against them.”

“Quite right. You’ll be an Inspector yourself one of these days. Now,
miss!” With that he dismissed her, under my care.

Lehigh Street was not very far off--about twenty minutes’ walk from
the station. I confess I thought the Inspector had been rather hard
on Priscilla. She was herself naturally angry with him. “What does he
mean,” she says, “by talking of a hoax? I wish he was as frightened as
I am. This is the first time I have been out at service, sir--and I did
think I had found a respectable place.”

I said very little to her--feeling, if the truth must be told, rather
anxious about the duty committed to me. On reaching the house the door
was opened from within, before I could knock. A gentleman stepped out,
who proved to be the doctor. He stopped the moment he saw me.

“You must be careful, policeman,” he says. “I found the man lying on his
back, in bed, dead--with the knife that had killed him left sticking in
the wound.”

Hearing this, I felt the necessity of sending at once to the station.
Where could I find a trustworthy messenger? I took the liberty of asking
the doctor if he would repeat to the police what he had already said to
me. The station was not much out of his way home. He kindly granted my
request.

The landlady (Mrs. Crosscapel) joined us while we were talking. She was
still a young woman; not easily frightened, as far as I could see, even
by a murder in the house. Her husband was in the passage behind her. He
looked old enough to be her father; and he so trembled with terror that
some people might have taken him for the guilty person. I removed the
key from the street door, after locking it; and I said to the landlady:
“Nobody must leave the house, or enter the house, till the Inspector
comes. I must examine the premises to see if any on e has broken in.”

“There is the key of the area gate,” she said, in answer to me. “It’s
always kept locked. Come downstairs and see for yourself.” Priscilla
went with us. Her mistress set her to work to light the kitchen fire.
“Some of us,” says Mrs. Crosscapel, “may be the better for a cup of
tea.” I remarked that she took things easy, under the circumstances. She
answered that the landlady of a London lodging-house could not afford to
lose her wits, no matter what might happen.

I found the gate locked, and the shutters of the kitchen window
fastened. The back kitchen and back door were secured in the same way.
No person was concealed anywhere. Returning upstairs, I examined the
front parlor window. There, again, the barred shutters answered for the
security of that room. A cracked voice spoke through the door of the
back parlor. “The policeman can come in,” it said, “if he will promise
not to look at me.” I turned to the landlady for information. “It’s my
parlor lodger, Miss Mybus,” she said, “a most respectable lady.” Going
into the room, I saw something rolled up perpendicularly in the bed
curtains. Miss Mybus had made herself modestly invisible in that way.
Having now satisfied my mind about the security of the lower part of
the house, and having the keys safe in my pocket, I was ready to go
upstairs.

On our way to the upper regions I asked if there had been any visitors
on the previous day. There had been only two visitors, friends of the
lodgers--and Mrs. Crosscapel herself had let them both out. My next
inquiry related to the lodgers themselves. On the ground floor there was
Miss Mybus. On the first floor (occupying both rooms) Mr. Barfield, an
old bachelor, employed in a merchant’s office. On the second floor, in
the front room, Mr. John Zebedee, the murdered man, and his wife. In the
back room, Mr. Deluc; described as a cigar agent, and supposed to be
a Creole gentleman from Martinique. In the front garret, Mr. and Mrs.
Crosscapel. In the back garret, the cook and the housemaid. These were
the inhabitants, regularly accounted for. I asked about the servants.
“Both excellent characters,” says the landlady, “or they would not be in
my service.”

We reached the second floor, and found the housemaid on the watch
outside the door of the front room. Not as nice a woman, personally, as
the cook, and sadly frightened of course. Her mistress had posted
her, to give the alarm in the case of an outbreak on the part of Mrs.
Zebedee, kept locked up in the room. My arrival relieved the housemaid
of further responsibility. She ran downstairs to her fellow-servant in
the kitchen.

I asked Mrs. Crosscapel how and when the alarm of the murder had been
given.

“Soon after three this morning,” says she, “I was woke by the screams
of Mrs. Zebedee. I found her out here on the landing, and Mr. Deluc, in
great alarm, trying to quiet her. Sleeping in the next room he had only
to open his door, when her screams woke him. ‘My dear John’s murdered!
I am the miserable wretch--I did it in my sleep!’ She repeated these
frantic words over and over again, until she dropped in a swoon. Mr.
Deluc and I carried her back into the bedroom. We both thought the poor
creature had been driven distracted by some dreadful dream. But when we
got to the bedside--don’t ask me what we saw; the doctor has told you
about it already. I was once a nurse in a hospital, and accustomed, as
such, to horrid sights. It turned me cold and giddy, notwithstanding. As
for Mr. Deluc, I thought _he_ would have had a fainting fit next.”

Hearing this, I inquired if Mrs. Zebedee had said or done any strange
things since she had been Mrs. Crosscapel’s lodger.

“You think she’s mad?” says the landlady. “And anybody would be of
your mind, when a woman accuses herself of murdering her husband in
her sleep. All I can say is that, up to this morning, a more quiet,
sensible, well-behaved little person than Mrs. Zebedee I never met with.
Only just married, mind, and as fond of her unfortunate husband as a
woman could be. I should have called them a pattern couple, in their own
line of life.”

There was no more to be said on the landing. We unlocked the door and
went into the room.

II.

HE lay in bed on his back as the doctor had described him. On the left
side of his nightgown, just over his heart, the blood on the linen told
its terrible tale. As well as one could judge, looking unwillingly at
a dead face, he must have been a handsome young man in his lifetime. It
was a sight to sadden anybody--but I think the most painful sensation
was when my eyes fell next on his miserable wife.

She was down on the floor, crouched up in a corner--a dark little woman,
smartly dressed in gay colors. Her black hair and her big brown eyes
made the horrid paleness of her face look even more deadly white than
perhaps it really was. She stared straight at us without appearing to
see us. We spoke to her, and she never answered a word. She might have
been dead--like her husband--except that she perpetually picked at her
fingers, and shuddered every now and then as if she was cold. I went to
her and tried to lift her up. She shrank back with a cry that well-nigh
frightened me--not because it was loud, but because it was more like the
cry of some animal than of a human being. However quietly she might have
behaved in the landlady’s previous experience of her, she was beside
herself now. I might have been moved by a natural pity for her, or I
might have been completely upset in my mind--I only know this, I could
not persuade myself that she was guilty. I even said to Mrs. Crosscapel,
“I don’t believe she did it.”

While I spoke there was a knock at the door. I went downstairs at once,
and admitted (to my great relief) the Inspector, accompanied by one of
our men.

He waited downstairs to hear my report, and he approved of what I had
done. “It looks as if the murder had been committed by somebody in the
house.” Saying this, he left the man below, and went up with me to the
second floor.

Before he had been a minute in the room, he discovered an object which
had escaped my observation.

It was the knife that had done the deed.

The doctor had found it left in the body--had withdrawn it to probe the
wound--and had laid it on the bedside table. It was one of those useful
knives which contain a saw, a corkscrew, and other like implements.
The big blade fastened back, when open, with a spring. Except where the
blood was on it, it was as bright as when it had been purchased. A small
metal plate was fastened to the horn handle, containing an inscription,
only partly engraved, which ran thus: “To John Zebedee, from--” There it
stopped, strangely enough.

Who or what had interrupted the engraver’s work? It was impossible even
to guess. Nevertheless, the Inspector was encouraged.

“This ought to help us,” he said--and then he gave an attentive ear
(looking all the while at the poor creature in the corner) to what Mrs.
Crosscapel had to tell him.

The landlady having done, he said he must now see the lodger who slept
in the next bed-chamber.

Mr. Deluc made his appearance, standing at the door of the room, and
turning away his head with horror from the sight inside.

He was wrapped in a splendid blue dressing-gown, with a golden girdle
and trimmings. His scanty brownish hair curled (whether artificially or
not, I am unable to say) in little ringlets. His complexion was yellow;
his greenish-brown eyes were of the sort called “goggle”--they looked as
if they might drop out of his face, if you held a spoon under them. His
mustache and goat’s beard were beautifully oiled; and, to complete his
equipment, he had a long black cigar in his mouth.

“It isn’t insensibility to this terrible tragedy,” he explained. “My
nerves have been shattered, Mr. Policeman, and I can only repair the
mischief in this way. Be pleased to excuse and feel for me.”

The Inspector questioned this witness sharply and closely. He was not
a man to be misled by appearances; but I could see that he was far from
liking, or even trusting, Mr. Deluc. Nothing came of the examination,
except what Mrs. Crosscapel had in substance already mentioned to me.
Mr. Deluc returned to his room.

“How long has he been lodging with you?” the Inspector asked, as soon as
his back was turned.

“Nearly a year,” the landlady answered.

“Did he give you a reference?”

“As good a reference as I could wish for.” Thereupon, she mentioned the
names of a well-known firm of cigar merchants in the city. The Inspector
noted the information in his pocketbook.

I would rather not relate in detail what happened next: it is too
distressing to be dwelt on. Let me only say that the poor demented woman
was taken away in a cab to the station-house. The Inspector possessed
himself of the knife, and of a book found on the floor, called “The
World of Sleep.” The portmanteau containing the luggage was locked--and
then the door of the room was secured, the keys in both cases being left
in my charge. My instructions were to remain in the house, and allow
nobody to leave it, until I heard again shortly from the Inspector.

III.

THE coroner’s inquest was adjourned; and the examination before the
magistrate ended in a remand--Mrs. Zebedee being in no condition to
understand the proceedings in either case. The surgeon reported her to
be completely prostrated by a terrible nervous shock. When he was asked
if he considered her to have been a sane woman before the murder took
place, he refused to answer positively at that time.

A week passed. The murdered man was buried; his old father attending the
funeral. I occasionally saw Mrs. Crosscapel, and the two servants,
for the purpose of getting such further information as was thought
desirable. Both the cook and the housemaid had given their month’s
notice to quit; declining, in the interest of their characters, to
remain in a house which had been the scene of a murder. Mr. Deluc’s
nerves led also to his removal; his rest was now disturbed by frightful
dreams. He paid the necessary forfeit-money, and left without notice.
The first-floor lodger, Mr. Barfield, kept his rooms, but obtained leave
of absence from his employers, and took refuge with some friends in
the country. Miss Mybus alone remained in the parlors. “When I am
comfortable,” the old lady said, “nothing moves me, at my age. A murder
up two pairs of stairs is nearly the same thing as a murder in the next
house. Distance, you see, makes all the difference.”

It mattered little to the police what the lodgers did. We had men in
plain clothes watching the house night and day. Everybody who went away
was privately followed; and the police in the district to which they
retired were warned to keep an eye on them, after that. As long as we
failed to put Mrs. Zebedee’s extraordinary statement to any sort of
test--to say nothing of having proved unsuccessful, thus far, in tracing
the knife to its purchaser--we were bound to let no person living under
Mr. Crosscapel’s roof, on the night of the murder, slip through our
fingers.

IV.

IN a fortnight more, Mrs. Zebedee had sufficiently recovered to make the
necessary statement--after the preliminary caution addressed to persons
in such cases. The surgeon had no hesitation, now, in reporting her to
be a sane woman.

Her station in life had been domestic service. She had lived for four
years in her last place as lady’s-maid, with a family residing in
Dorsetshire. The one objection to her had been the occasional infirmity
of sleep-walking, which made it necessary that one of the other female
servants should sleep in the same room, with the door locked and the key
under her pillow. In all other respects the lady’s-maid was described by
her mistress as “a perfect treasure.”

In the last six months of her service, a young man named John Zebedee
entered the house (with a written character) as a footman. He soon fell
in love with the nice little lady’s-maid, and she heartily returned
the feeling. They might have waited for years before they were in a
pecuniary position to marry, but for the death of Zebedee’s uncle, who
left him a little fortune of two thousand pounds. They were now, for
persons in their station, rich enough to please themselves; and they
were married from the house in which they had served together, the
little daughters of the family showing their affection for Mrs. Zebedee
by acting as her bridesmaids.

The young husband was a careful man. He decided to employ his small
capital to the best advantage, by sheep-farming in Australia. His wife
made no objection; she was ready to go wherever John went.

Accordingly they spent their short honeymoon in London, so as to see for
themselves the vessel in which their passage was to be taken. They went
to Mrs. Crosscapel’s lodging-house because Zebedee’s uncle had always
stayed there when in London. Ten days were to pass before the day of
embarkation arrived. This gave the young couple a welcome holiday, and a
prospect of amusing themselves to their heart’s content among the sights
and shows of the great city.

On their first evening in London they went to the theater. They were
both accustomed to the fresh air of the country, and they felt half
stifled by the heat and the gas. However, they were so pleased with an
amusement which was new to them that they went to another theater on
the next evening. On this second occasion, John Zebedee found the heat
unendurable. They left the theater, and got back to their lodgings
toward ten o’clock.

Let the rest be told in the words used by Mrs. Zebedee herself. She
said:

“We sat talking for a little while in our room, and John’s headache got
worse and worse. I persuaded him to go to bed, and I put out the candle
(the fire giving sufficient light to undress by), so that he might the
sooner fall asleep. But he was too restless to sleep. He asked me to
read him something. Books always made him drowsy at the best of times.

“I had not myself begun to undress. So I lit the candle again, and I
opened the only book I had. John had noticed it at the railway bookstall
by the name of ‘The World of Sleep.’ He used to joke with me about
my being a sleepwalker; and he said, ‘Here’s something that’s sure to
interest you’--and he made me a present of the book.

“Before I had read to him for more than half an hour he was fast asleep.
Not feeling that way inclined, I went on reading to myself.

“The book did indeed interest me. There was one terrible story which
took a hold on my mind--the story of a man who stabbed his own wife in
a sleep-walking dream. I thought of putting down my book after that, and
then changed my mind again and went on. The next chapters were not so
interesting; they were full of learned accounts of why we fall asleep,
and what our brains do in that state, and such like. It ended in my
falling asleep, too, in my armchair by the fireside.

“I don’t know what o’clock it was when I went to sleep. I don’t know how
long I slept, or whether I dreamed or not. The candle and the fire had
both burned out, and it was pitch dark when I woke. I can’t even say why
I woke--unless it was the coldness of the room.

“There was a spare candle on the chimney-piece. I found the matchbox,
and got a light. Then for the first time, I turned round toward the bed;
and I saw--”

She had seen the dead body of her husband, murdered while she was
unconsciously at his side--and she fainted, poor creature, at the bare
remembrance of it.

The proceedings were adjourned. She received every possible care
and attention; the chaplain looking after her welfare as well as the
surgeon.

I have said nothing of the evidence of the landlady and servants. It was
taken as a mere formality. What little they knew proved nothing against
Mrs. Zebedee. The police made no discoveries that supported her first
frantic accusation of herself. Her master and mistress, where she had
been last in service, spoke of her in the highest terms. We were at a
complete deadlock.

It had been thought best not to surprise Mr. Deluc, as yet, by citing
him as a witness. The action of the law was, however, hurried in this
case by a private communication received from the chaplain.

After twice seeing, and speaking with, Mrs. Zebedee, the reverend
gentleman was persuaded that she had no more to do than himself with
the murder of her husband. He did not consider that he was justified in
repeating a confidential communication--he would only recommend that Mr.
Deluc should be summoned to appear at the next examination. This advice
was followed.

The police had no evidence against Mrs. Zebedee when the inquiry
was resumed. To assist the ends of justice she was now put into the
witness-box. The discovery of her murdered husband, when she woke in the
small hours of the morning, was passed over as rapidly as possible. Only
three questions of importance were put to her.

First, the knife was produced. Had she ever seen it in her husband’s
possession? Never. Did she know anything about it? Nothing whatever.

Secondly: Did she, or did her husband, lock the bedroom door when they
returned from the theater? No. Did she afterward lock the door herself?
No.

Thirdly: Had she any sort of reason to give for supposing that she had
murdered her husband in a sleep-walking dream? No reason, except that
she was beside herself at the time, and the book put the thought into
her head.

After this the other witnesses were sent out of court The motive for
the chaplain’s communication now appeared. Mrs. Zebedee was asked if
anything unpleasant had occurred between Mr. Deluc and herself.

Yes. He had caught her alone on the stairs at the lodging-house; had
presumed to make love to her; and had carried the insult still farther
by attempting to kiss her. She had slapped his face, and had declared
that her husband should know of it, if his misconduct was repeated. He
was in a furious rage at having his face slapped; and he said to her:
“Madam, you may live to regret this.”

After consultation, and at the request of our Inspector, it was decided
to keep Mr. Deluc in ignorance of Mrs. Zebedee’s statement for the
present. When the witnesses were recalled, he gave the same evidence
which he had already given to the Inspector--and he was then asked if he
knew anything of the knife. He looked at it without any guilty signs
in his face, and swore that he had never seen it until that moment. The
resumed inquiry ended, and still nothing had been discovered.

But we kept an eye on Mr. Deluc. Our next effort was to try if we could
associate him with the purchase of the knife.

Here again (there really did seem to be a sort of fatality in this
case) we reached no useful result. It was easy enough to find out the
wholesale cutlers, who had manufactured the knife at Sheffield, by the
mark on the blade. But they made tens of thousands of such knives,
and disposed of them to retail dealers all over Great Britain--to say
nothing of foreign parts. As to finding out the person who had engraved
the imperfect inscription (without knowing where, or by whom, the knife
had been purchased) we might as well have looked for the proverbial
needle in the bundle of hay. Our last resource was to have the knife
photographed, with the inscribed side uppermost, and to send copies to
every police-station in the kingdom.

At the same time we reckoned up Mr. Deluc--I mean that we made
investigations into his past life--on the chance that he and the
murdered man might have known each other, and might have had a quarrel,
or a rivalry about a woman, on some former occasion. No such discovery
rewarded us.

We found Deluc to have led a dissipated life, and to have mixed with
very bad company. But he had kept out of reach of the law. A man may be
a profligate vagabond; may insult a lady; may say threatening things to
her, in the first stinging sensation of having his face slapped--but it
doesn’t follow from these blots on his character that he has murdered
her husband in the dead of the night.

Once more, then, when we were called upon to report ourselves, we had no
evidence to produce. The photographs failed to discover the owner of the
knife, and to explain its interrupted inscription. Poor Mrs. Zebedee was
allowed to go back to her friends, on entering into her own recognizance
to appear again if called upon. Articles in the newspapers began to
inquire how many more murderers would succeed in baffling the police.
The authorities at the Treasury offered a reward of a hundred pounds for
the necessary information. And the weeks passed and nobody claimed the
reward.

Our Inspector was not a man to be easily beaten. More inquiries and
examinations followed. It is needless to say anything about them. We
were defeated--and there, so far as the police and the public were
concerned, was an end of it.

The assassination of the poor young husband soon passed out of notice,
like other undiscovered murders. One obscure person only was foolish
enough, in his leisure hours, to persist in trying to solve the problem
of Who Killed Zebedee? He felt that he might rise to the highest
position in the police force if he succeeded where his elders and
betters had failed--and he held to his own little ambition, though
everybody laughed at him. In plain English, I was the man.

V.

WITHOUT meaning it, I have told my story ungratefully.

There were two persons who saw nothing ridiculous in my resolution to
continue the investigation, single-handed. One of them was Miss Mybus;
and the other was the cook, Priscilla Thurlby.

Mentioning the lady first, Miss Mybus was indignant at the resigned
manner in which the police accepted their defeat. She was a little
bright-eyed wiry woman; and she spoke her mind freely.

“This comes home to me,” she said. “Just look back for a year or two. I
can call to mind two cases of persons found murdered in London--and the
assassins have never been traced. I am a person, too; and I ask myself
if my turn is not coming next. You’re a nice-looking fellow and I like
your pluck and perseverance. Come here as often as you think right; and
say you are my visitor, if they make any difficulty about letting you
in. One thing more! I have nothing particular to do, and I am no fool.
Here, in the parlors, I see everybody who comes into the house or goes
out of the house. Leave me your address--I may get some information for
you yet.”

With the best intentions, Miss Mybus found no opportunity of helping me.
Of the two, Priscilla Thurlby seemed more likely to be of use.

In the first place, she was sharp and active, and (not having succeeded
in getting another situation as yet) was mistress of her own movements.

In the second place, she was a woman I could trust. Before she left home
to try domestic service in London, the parson of her native parish gave
her a written testimonial, of which I append a copy. Thus it ran:


“I gladly recommend Priscilla Thurlby for any respectable employment
which she may be competent to undertake. Her father and mother are
infirm old people, who have lately suffered a diminution of their
income; and they have a younger daughter to maintain. Rather than be
a burden on her parents, Priscilla goes to London to find domestic
employment, and to devote her earnings to the assistance of her father
and mother. This circumstance speaks for itself. I have known the family
many years; and I only regret that I have no vacant place in my own
household which I can offer to this good girl,

(Signed) “HENRY DEERINGTON, Rector of Roth.”


After reading those words, I could safely ask Priscilla to help me in
reopening the mysterious murder case to some good purpose.

My notion was that the proceedings of the persons in Mrs. Crosscapel’s
house had not been closely enough inquired into yet. By way of
continuing the investigation, I asked Priscilla if she could tell
me anything which associated the housemaid with Mr. Deluc. She was
unwilling to answer. “I may be casting suspicion on an innocent person,”
 she said. “Besides, I was for so short a time the housemaid’s fellow
servant--”

“You slept in the same room with her,” I remarked; “and you had
opportunities of observing her conduct toward the lodgers. If they had
asked you, at the examination, what I now ask, you would have answered
as an honest woman.”

To this argument she yielded. I heard from her certain particulars,
which threw a new light on Mr. Deluc, and on the case generally. On that
information I acted. It was slow work, owing to the claims on me of my
regular duties; but with Priscilla’s help, I steadily advanced toward
the end I had in view.

Besides this, I owed another obligation to Mrs. Crosscapel’s
nice-looking cook. The confession must be made sooner or later--and
I may as well make it now. I first knew what love was, thanks to
Priscilla. I had delicious kisses, thanks to Priscilla. And, when I
asked if she would marry me, she didn’t say No. She looked, I must own,
a little sadly, and she said: “How can two such poor people as we are
ever hope to marry?” To this I answered: “It won’t be long before I lay
my hand on the clew which my Inspector has failed to find. I shall be in
a position to marry you, my dear, when that time comes.”

At our next meeting we spoke of her parents. I was now her promised
husband. Judging by what I had heard of the proceedings of other people
in my position, it seemed to be only right that I should be made known
to her father and mother. She entirely agreed with me; and she wrote
home that day to tell them to expect us at the end of the week.

I took my turn of night-duty, and so gained my liberty for the greater
part of the next day. I dressed myself in plain clothes, and we took our
tickets on the railway for Yateland, being the nearest station to the
village in which Priscilla’s parents lived.

VI.

THE train stopped, as usual, at the big town of Waterbank. Supporting
herself by her needle, while she was still unprovided with a situation,
Priscilla had been at work late in the night--she was tired and thirsty.
I left the carriage to get her some soda-water. The stupid girl in the
refreshment room failed to pull the cork out of the bottle, and refused
to let me help her. She took a corkscrew, and used it crookedly. I lost
all patience, and snatched the bottle out of her hand. Just as I drew
the cork, the bell rang on the platform. I only waited to pour the
soda-water into a glass--but the train was moving as I left the
refreshment room. The porters stopped me when I tried to jump on to the
step of the carriage. I was left behind.

As soon as I had recovered my temper, I looked at the time-table. We had
reached Waterbank at five minutes past one. By good luck, the next train
was due at forty-four minutes past one, and arrived at Yateland (the
next station) ten minutes afterward. I could only hope that Priscilla
would look at the time-table too, and wait for me. If I had attempted
to walk the distance between the two places, I should have lost time
instead of saving it. The interval before me was not very long; I
occupied it in looking over the town.

Speaking with all due respect to the inhabitants, Waterbank (to other
people) is a dull place. I went up one street and down another--and
stopped to look at a shop which struck me; not from anything in itself,
but because it was the only shop in the street with the shutters closed.

A bill was posted on the shutters, announcing that the place was to let.
The outgoing tradesman’s name and business, announced in the customary
painted letters, ran thus: _James Wycomb, Cutler, etc._

For the first time, it occurred to me that we had forgotten an obstacle
in our way, when we distributed our photographs of the knife. We had
none of us remembered that a certain proportion of cutlers might be
placed, by circumstances, out of our reach--either by retiring from
business or by becoming bankrupt. I always carried a copy of the
photograph about me; and I thought to myself, “Here is the ghost of a
chance of tracing the knife to Mr. Deluc!”

The shop door was opened, after I had twice rung the bell, by an old
man, very dirty and very deaf. He said “You had better go upstairs, and
speak to Mr. Scorrier--top of the house.”

I put my lips to the old fellow’s ear-trumpet, and asked who Mr.
Scorrier was.

“Brother-in-law to Mr. Wycomb. Mr. Wycomb’s dead. If you want to buy the
business apply to Mr. Scorrier.”

Receiving that reply, I went upstairs, and found Mr. Scorrier engaged
in engraving a brass door-plate. He was a middle-aged man, with a
cadaverous face and dim eyes After the necessary apologies, I produced
my photograph.

“May I ask, sir, if you know anything of the inscription on that knife?”
 I said.

He took his magnifying glass to look at it.

“This is curious,” he remarked quietly. “I remember the queer
name--Zebedee. Yes, sir; I did the engraving, as far as it goes. I
wonder what prevented me from finishing it?”

The name of Zebedee, and the unfinished inscription on the knife, had
appeared in every English newspaper. He took the matter so coolly that
I was doubtful how to interpret his answer. Was it possible that he
had not seen the account of the murder? Or was he an accomplice with
prodigious powers of self-control?

“Excuse me,” I said, “do you read the newspapers?”

“Never! My eyesight is failing me. I abstain from reading, in the
interests of my occupation.”

“Have you not heard the name of Zebedee mentioned--particularly by
people who do read the newspapers?”

“Very likely; but I didn’t attend to it. When the day’s work is done, I
take my walk. Then I have my supper, my drop of grog, and my pipe. Then
I go to bed. A dull existence you think, I daresay! I had a miserable
life, sir, when I was young. A bare subsistence, and a little rest,
before the last perfect rest in the grave--that is all I want. The world
has gone by me long ago. So much the better.”

The poor man spoke honestly. I was ashamed of having doubted him. I
returned to the subject of the knife.

“Do you know where it was purchased, and by whom?” I asked.

“My memory is not so good as it was,” he said; “but I have got something
by me that helps it.”

He took from a cupboard a dirty old scrapbook. Strips of paper, with
writing on them, were pasted on the pages, as well as I could see. He
turned to an index, or table of contents, and opened a page. Something
like a flash of life showed itself on his dismal face.

“Ha! now I remember,” he said. “The knife was bought of my late
brother-in-law, in the shop downstairs. It all comes back to me, sir. A
person in a state of frenzy burst into this very room, and snatched the
knife away from me, when I was only half way through the inscription!”

I felt that I was now close on discovery. “May I see what it is that has
assisted your memory?” I asked.

“Oh yes. You must know, sir, I live by engraving inscriptions and
addresses, and I paste in this book the manuscript instructions which I
receive, with marks of my own on the margin. For one thing, they
serve as a reference to new customers. And for another thing, they do
certainly help my memory.”

He turned the book toward me, and pointed to a slip of paper which
occupied the lower half of a page.

I read the complete inscription, intended for the knife that killed
Zebedee, and written as follows:

“To John Zebedee. From Priscilla Thurlby.”

VII.

I DECLARE that it is impossible for me to describe what I felt when
Priscilla’s name confronted me like a written confession of guilt. How
long it was before I recovered myself in some degree, I cannot say. The
only thing I can clearly call to mind is, that I frightened the poor
engraver.

My first desire was to get possession of the manuscript inscription.
I told him I was a policeman, and summoned him to assist me in the
discovery of a crime. I even offered him money. He drew back from my
hand. “You shall have it for nothing,” he said, “if you will only go
away and never come here again.” He tried to cut it out of the page--but
his trembling hands were helpless. I cut it out myself, and attempted
to thank him. He wouldn’t hear me. “Go away!” he said, “I don’t like the
look of you.”

It may be here objected that I ought not to have felt so sure as I did
of the woman’s guilt, until I had got more evidence against her. The
knife might have been stolen from her, supposing she was the person
who had snatched it out of the engraver’s hands, and might have been
afterward used by the thief to commit the murder. All very true. But I
never had a moment’s doubt in my own mind, from the time when I read the
damnable line in the engraver’s book.

I went back to the railway without any plan in my head. The train by
which I had proposed to follow her had left Waterbank. The next train
that arrived was for London. I took my place in it--still without any
plan in my head.

At Charing Cross a friend met me. He said, “You’re looking miserably
ill. Come and have a drink.”

I went with him. The liquor was what I really wanted; it strung me up,
and cleared my head. He went his way, and I went mine. In a little while
more, I determined what I would do.

In the first place, I decided to resign my situation in the police, from
a motive which will presently appear. In the second place, I took a bed
at a public-house. She would no doubt return to London, and she would go
to my lodgings to find out why I had broken my appointment. To bring to
justice the one woman whom I had dearly loved was too cruel a duty for
a poor creature like me. I preferred leaving the police force. On
the other hand, if she and I met before time had helped me to control
myself, I had a horrid fear that I might turn murderer next, and kill
her then and there. The wretch had not only all but misled me into
marrying her, but also into charging the innocent housemaid with being
concerned in the murder.

The same night I hit on a way of clearing up such doubts as still
harassed my mind. I wrote to the rector of Roth, informing him that
I was engaged to marry her, and asking if he would tell me (in
consideration of my position) what her former relations might have been
with the person named John Zebedee.

By return of post I got this reply:


“SIR--Under the circumstances, I think I am bound to tell you
confidentially what the friends and well-wishers of Priscilla have kept
secret, for her sake.

“Zebedee was in service in this neighborhood. I am sorry to say it, of a
man who has come to such a miserable end--but his behavior to Priscilla
proves him to have been a vicious and heartless wretch. They were
engaged--and, I add with indignation, he tried to seduce her under a
promise of marriage. Her virtue resisted him, and he pretended to be
ashamed of himself. The banns were published in my church. On the next
day Zebedee disappeared, and cruelly deserted her. He was a capable
servant; and I believe he got another place. I leave you to imagine
what the poor girl suffered under the outrage inflicted on her. Going
to London, with my recommendation, she answered the first advertisement
that she saw, and was unfortunate enough to begin her career in domestic
service in the very lodging-house to which (as I gather from the
newspaper report of the murder) the man Zebedee took the person whom
he married, after deserting Priscilla. Be assured that you are about to
unite yourself to an excellent girl, and accept my best wishes for your
happiness.”


It was plain from this that neither the rector nor the parents and
friends knew anything of the purchase of the knife. The one miserable
man who knew the truth was the man who had asked her to be his wife.

I owed it to myself--at least so it seemed to me--not to let it be
supposed that I, too, had meanly deserted her. Dreadful as the prospect
was, I felt that I must see her once more, and for the last time.

She was at work when I went into her room. As I opened the door she
started to her feet. Her cheeks reddened, and her eyes flashed with
anger. I stepped forward--and she saw my face. My face silenced her.

I spoke in the fewest words I could find.

“I have been to the cutler’s shop at Waterbank,” I said. “There is the
unfinished inscription on the knife, complete in your handwriting. I
could hang you by a word. God forgive me--I can’t say the word.”

Her bright complexion turned to a dreadful clay-color. Her eyes were
fixed and staring, like the eyes of a person in a fit. She stood before
me, still and silent. Without saying more, I dropped the inscription
into the fire. Without saying more, I left her.

I never saw her again.

VIII.

BUT I heard from her a few days later. The letter has long since been
burned. I wish I could have forgotten it as well. It sticks to my
memory. If I die with my senses about me, Priscilla’s letter will be my
last recollection on earth.

In substance it repeated what the rector had already told me. Further,
it informed me that she had bought the knife as a keepsake for Zebedee,
in place of a similar knife which he had lost. On the Saturday, she made
the purchase, and left it to be engraved. On the Sunday, the banns were
put up. On the Monday, she was deserted; and she snatched the knife from
the table while the engraver was at work.

She only knew that Zebedee had added a new sting to the insult inflicted
on her when he arrived at the lodgings with his wife. Her duties as cook
kept her in the kitchen--and Zebedee never discovered that she was in
the house. I still remember the last lines of her confession:

“The devil entered into me when I tried their door, on my way up to bed,
and found it unlocked, and listened a while, and peeped in. I saw them
by the dying light of the candle--one asleep on the bed, the other
asleep by the fireside. I had the knife in my hand, and the thought came
to me to do it, so that they might hang _her_ for the murder. I couldn’t
take the knife out again, when I had done it. Mind this! I did really
like you--I didn’t say Yes, because you could hardly hang your own wife,
if you found out who killed Zebedee.”


Since the past time I have never heard again of Priscilla Thurlby;
I don’t know whether she is living or dead. Many people may think I
deserve to be hanged myself for not having given her up to the gallows.
They may, perhaps, be disappointed when they see this confession, and
hear that I have died decently in my bed. I don’t blame them. I am a
penitent sinner. I wish all merciful Christians good-by forever.





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