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Title: East Lynne
Author: Wood, Henry, Mrs.
Language: English
As this book started as an ASCII text book there are no pictures available.


*** Start of this LibraryBlog Digital Book "East Lynne" ***


EAST LYNNE

by Mrs. Henry Wood



PREPARER’S NOTE

This text was prepared from an 1883 edition, New York: John B. Alden,
Publisher.



CONTENTS



EAST LYNNE



CHAPTER I.

CHAPTER II.

CHAPTER III.

CHAPTER IV.

CHAPTER V.

CHAPTER VI.

CHAPTER VII.

CHAPTER VIII.

CHAPTER IX.

CHAPTER X.

CHAPTER XI.

CHAPTER XII.

CHAPTER XIII.

CHAPTER XIV.

CHAPTER XV.

CHAPTER XVI.

CHAPTER XVII.

CHAPTER XVIII.

CHAPTER XIX.

CHAPTER XX.

CHAPTER XXI.

CHAPTER XXII.

CHAPTER XXIII.

CHAPTER XXIV.

CHAPTER XXV.

CHAPTER XXVI.

CHAPTER XXVII.

CHAPTER XXVIII.

CHAPTER XXIX.

CHAPTER XXX.

CHAPTER XXXI.

CHAPTER XXXII.

CHAPTER XXXIII.

CHAPTER XXXIV.

CHAPTER XXXV.

CHAPTER XXXVI.

CHAPTER XXXVII.

CHAPTER XXXVIII.

CHAPTER XXXIX.

CHAPTER XL.

CHAPTER XLI.

CHAPTER XLII.

CHAPTER XLIII.

CHAPTER XLIV.

CHAPTER XLV.

CHAPTER XLVI.

CHAPTER XLVII.



EAST LYNNE



CHAPTER I.

THE LADY ISABEL.

In an easy-chair of the spacious and handsome library of his town-house,
sat William, Earl of Mount Severn. His hair was gray, the smoothness of
his expansive brow was defaced by premature wrinkles, and his once
attractive face bore the pale, unmistakable look of dissipation. One of
his feet was cased in folds of linen, as it rested on the soft velvet
ottoman, speaking of gout as plainly as any foot ever spoke yet. It
would seem--to look at the man as he sat there--that he had grown old
before his time. And so he had. His years were barely nine and forty,
yet in all save years, he was an aged man.

A noted character had been the Earl of Mount Severn. Not that he had
been a renowned politician, or a great general, or an eminent statesman,
or even an active member in the Upper House; not for any of these had
the earl’s name been in the mouths of men. But for the most reckless
among the reckless, for the spendthrift among spendthrifts, for the
gamester above all gamesters, and for a gay man outstripping the gay--by
these characteristics did the world know Lord Mount Severn. It was said
his faults were those of his head; that a better heart or a more
generous spirit never beat in human form; and there was much truth in
this. It had been well for him had he lived and died plain William Vane.
Up to his five and twentieth year, he had been industrious and steady,
had kept his terms in the Temple, and studied late and early. The sober
application of William Vane had been a by word with the embryo
barristers around; Judge Vane, they ironically called him; and they
strove ineffectually to allure him away to idleness and pleasure. But
young Vane was ambitious, and he knew that on his own talents and
exertions must depend his own rising in the world. He was of excellent
family, but poor, counting a relative in the old Earl of Mount Severn.
The possibility of his succeeding to the earldom never occurred to him,
for three healthy lives, two of them young, stood between him and the
title. Yet those have died off, one of apoplexy, one of fever, in
Africa, the third boating at Oxford; and the young Temple student,
William Vane, suddenly found himself Earl of Mount Severn, and the
lawful possessor of sixty thousand a year.

His first idea was, that he should never be able to spend the money;
that such a sum, year by year, could not be spent. It was a wonder his
head was not turned by adulation at the onset, for he was courted,
flattered and caressed by all classes, from a royal duke downward. He
became the most attractive man of his day, the lion in society; for
independent of his newly-acquired wealth and title, he was of
distinguished appearance and fascinating manners. But unfortunately, the
prudence which had sustained William Vane, the poor law student, in his
solitary Temple chambers entirely forsook William Vane, the young Earl
of Mount Severn, and he commenced his career on a scale of speed so
great, that all staid people said he was going to ruin and the deuce
headlong.

But a peer of the realm, and one whose rent-roll is sixty thousand per
annum, does not go to ruin in a day. There sat the earl, in his library
now, in his nine-and-fortieth year, and ruin had not come yet--that is,
it had not overwhelmed him. But the embarrassments which had clung to
him, and been the destruction of his tranquility, the bane of his
existence, who shall describe them? The public knew them pretty well,
his private friends knew better, his creditors best; but none, save
himself knew, or could ever know, the worrying torment that was his
portion, wellnigh driving him to distraction. Years ago, by dint of
looking things steadily in the face, and by economizing, he might have
retrieved his position; but he had done what most people do in such
cases--put off the evil day sine die, and gone on increasing his
enormous list of debts. The hour of exposure and ruin was now advancing
fast.

Perhaps the earl himself was thinking so, as he sat there before an
enormous mass of papers which strewed the library table. His thoughts
were back in the past. That was a foolish match of his, that Gretna
Green match for love, foolish so far as prudence went; but the countess
had been an affectionate wife to him, had borne with his follies and his
neglect, had been an admirable mother to their only child. One child
alone had been theirs, and in her thirteenth year the countess had died.
If they had but been blessed with a son--the earl moaned over the long-
continued disappointment still--he might have seen a way out of his
difficulties. The boy, as soon as he was of age, would have joined with
him in cutting off the entail, and----

“My lord,” said a servant entering the room and interrupting the earl’s
castles in the air, “a gentleman is asking to see you.”

“Who?” cried the earl, sharply, not perceiving the card the man was
bringing. No unknown person, although wearing the externals of a foreign
ambassador, was ever admitted unceremoniously to the presence of Lord
Mount Severn. Years of duns had taught the servants caution.

“His card is here, my lord. It is Mr. Carlyle, of West Lynne.”

“Mr. Carlyle, of West Lynne,” groaned the earl, whose foot just then had
an awful twinge, “what does he want? Show him up.”

The servant did as he was bid, and introduced Mr. Carlyle. Look at the
visitor well, reader, for he will play his part in this history. He was
a very tall man of seven and twenty, of remarkably noble presence. He
was somewhat given to stooping his head when he spoke to any one shorter
than himself; it was a peculiar habit, almost to be called a bowing
habit, and his father had possessed it before him. When told of it he
would laugh, and say he was unconscious of doing it. His features were
good, his complexion was pale and clear, his hair dark, and his full
eyelids drooped over his deep gray eyes. Altogether it was a countenance
that both men and women liked to look upon--the index of an honorable,
sincere nature--not that it would have been called a handsome face, so
much as a pleasing and a distinguished one. Though but the son of a
country lawyer, and destined to be a lawyer himself, he had received the
training of a gentleman, had been educated at Rugby, and taken his
degree at Oxford. He advanced at once to the earl, in the
straightforward way of a man of business--of a man who has come on
business.

“Mr. Carlyle,” said the latter, holding out his hand--he was always
deemed the most affable peer of the age--“I am happy to see you. You
perceive I cannot rise, at least without great pain and inconvenience.
My enemy, the gout, has possession of me again. Take a seat. Are you
staying in town?”

“I have just arrived from West Lynne. The chief object of my journey was
to see your lordship.”

“What can I do for you?” asked the earl, uneasily; for a suspicion had
crossed his mind that Mr. Carlyle might be acting for some one of his
many troublesome creditors.

Mr. Carlyle drew his chair nearer to the earl, and spoke in a low tone,-
-

“A rumor came to my ears, my lord, that East Lynne was in the market.”

“A moment, sir,” exclaimed the earl, with reserve, not to say hauteur in
his tone, for his suspicions were gaining ground; “are we to converse
confidentially together, as men of honor, or is there something
concealed behind?”

“I do not understand you,” said Mr. Carlyle.

“In a word--excuse my speaking plainly, but I must feel my ground--are
you here on the part of some of my rascally creditors, to pump
information out of me, that otherwise they would not get?”

“My lord,” uttered the visitor, “I should be incapable of so
dishonorable an action. I know that a lawyer gets credit for possessing
but lax notions on the score of honor, but you can scarcely suspect that
I should be guilty of underhand work toward you. I never was guilty of a
mean trick in my life, to my recollection, and I do not think I ever
shall be.”

“Pardon me, Mr. Carlyle. If you knew half the tricks and ruses played
upon me, you would not wonder at my suspecting all the world. Proceed
with your business.”

“I heard that East Lynne was for private sale; your agent dropped half a
word to me in confidence. If so, I should wish to be the purchaser.”

“For whom?” inquired the earl.

“Myself.”

“You!” laughed the earl. “Egad! Lawyering can’t be such bad work,
Carlyle.”

“Nor is it,” rejoined Mr. Carlyle, “with an extensive, first-class
connection, such as ours. But you must remember that a good fortune was
left me by my uncle, and a large one by my father.”

“I know. The proceeds of lawyering also.”

“Not altogether. My mother brought a fortune on her marriage, and it
enabled my father to speculate successfully. I have been looking out for
an eligible property to invest my money upon, and East Lynne will suit
me well, provided I can have the refusal of it, and we can agree about
the terms.”

Lord Mount Severn mused for a few moments before he spoke. “Mr.
Carlyle,” he began, “my affairs are very bad, and ready money I must
find somewhere. Now East Lynne is not entailed, neither is it mortgaged
to anything like its value, though the latter fact, as you may imagine,
is not patent to the world. When I bought it at a bargain, eighteen
years ago, you were the lawyer on the other side, I remember.”

“My father,” smiled Mr. Carlyle. “I was a child at the time.”

“Of course, I ought to have said your father. By selling East Lynne, a
few thousands will come into my hands, after claims on it are settled; I
have no other means of raising the wind, and that is why I have resolved
to part with it. But now, understand, if it were known abroad that East
Lynne is going from me, I should have a hornet’s nest about my ears; so
that it must be disposed of privately. Do you comprehend?”

“Perfectly,” replied Mr. Carlyle.

“I would as soon you bought it as anyone else, if, as you say, we can
agree about terms.”

“What does your lordship expect for it--at a rough estimate?”

“For particulars I must refer you to my men of business, Warburton &
Ware. Not less than seventy thousand pounds.”

“Too much, my lord,” cried Mr. Carlyle, decisively.

“And that’s not its value,” returned the earl.

“These forced sales never do fetch their value,” answered the plain-
speaking lawyer. “Until this hint was given me by Beauchamp, I had
thought East Lynne was settled upon your lordship’s daughter.”

“There’s nothing settled on her,” rejoined the earl, the contraction on
his brow standing out more plainly. “That comes of your thoughtless
runaway marriages. I fell in love with General Conway’s daughter, and
she ran away with me, like a fool; that is, we were both fools together
for our pains. The general objected to me and said I must sow my wild
oats before he would give me Mary; so I took her to Gretna Green, and
she became Countess of Mount Severn, without a settlement. It was an
unfortunate affair, taking one thing with another. When her elopement
was made known to the general, it killed him.”

“Killed him!” interrupted Mr. Carlyle.

“It did. He had disease of the heart, and the excitement brought on the
crisis. My poor wife never was happy from that hour; she blamed herself
for her father’s death, and I believe it led to her own. She was ill for
years; the doctors called it consumption; but it was more like a wasting
insensibly away, and consumption never had been in her family. No luck
ever attends runaway marriages; I have noticed it since, in many, many
instances; something bad is sure to turn up from it.”

“There might have been a settlement executed after the marriage,”
 observed Mr. Carlyle, for the earl had stopped, and seemed lost in
thought.

“I know there might; but there was not. My wife had possessed no
fortune; I was already deep in my career of extravagance, and neither of
us thought of making provision for our future children; or, if we
thought of it, we did not do it. There is an old saying, Mr. Carlyle,
that what may be done at any time is never done.”

Mr. Carlyle bowed.

“So my child is portionless,” resumed the earl, with a suppressed sigh.
“The thought that it may be an embarrassing thing for her, were I to die
before she is settled in life, crosses my mind when I am in a serious
mood. That she will marry well, there is little doubt, for she possesses
beauty in a rare degree, and has been reared as an English girl should
be, not to frivolity and foppery. She was trained by her mother, who
save for the mad act she was persuaded into by me, was all goodness and
refinement, for the first twelve years of her life, and since then by an
admirable governess. No fear that she will be decamping to Gretna
Green.”

“She was a very lovely child,” observed the lawyer; “I remember that.”

“Ay; you have seen her at East Lynne, in her mother’s lifetime. But, to
return to business. If you become the purchaser of the East Lynne
estate, Mr. Carlyle, it must be under the rose. The money that it
brings, after paying off the mortgage, I must have, as I tell you, for
my private use; and you know I should not be able to touch a farthing of
it if the confounded public got an inkling of the transfer. In the eyes
of the world, the proprietor of East Lynne must be Lord Mount Severn--at
least for some little time afterwards. Perhaps you will not object to
that.”

Mr. Carlyle considered before replying; and then the conversation was
resumed, when it was decided that he should see Warburton and Ware the
first thing in the morning, and confer with them. It was growing late
when he rose to leave.

“Stay and dine with me,” said the earl.

Mr. Carlyle hesitated, and looked down at his dress--a plain,
gentlemanly, morning attire, but certainly not a dinner costume for a
peer’s table.

“Oh, that’s nothing,” said the earl; “we shall be quite alone, except my
daughter. Mrs. Vane, of Castle Marling, is staying with us. She came up
to present my child at the last drawing-room, but I think I heard
something about her dining out to-day. If not, we will have it by
ourselves here. Oblige me by touching the bell, Mr. Carlyle.”

The servant entered.

“Inquire whether Mrs. Vane dines at home,” said the earl.

“Mrs. Vane dines out, my lord,” was the man’s immediate reply. “The
carriage is at the door now.”

“Very well. Mr. Carlyle remains.”

At seven o’clock the dinner was announced, and the earl wheeled into the
adjoining room. As he and Mr. Carlyle entered it at one door, some one
else came in by the opposite one. Who--what--was it? Mr. Carlyle looked,
not quite sure whether it was a human being--he almost thought it more
like an angel.

A light, graceful, girlish form; a face of surpassing beauty, beauty
that is rarely seen, save from the imagination of a painter; dark
shining curls falling on her neck and shoulders, smooth as a child’s;
fair, delicate arms decorated with pearls, and a flowing dress of costly
white lace. Altogether the vision did indeed look to the lawyer as one
from a fairer world than this.

“My daughter, Mr. Carlyle, the Lady Isabel.”

They took their seats at the table, Lord Mount Severn at its head, in
spite of his gout and his footstool. And the young lady and Mr. Carlyle
opposite each other. Mr. Carlyle had not deemed himself a particular
admirer of women’s beauty, but the extraordinary loveliness of the young
girl before him nearly took away his senses and his self-possession. Yet
it was not so much the perfect contour or the exquisite features that
struck him, or the rich damask of the delicate cheek, or the luxuriant
falling hair; no, it was the sweet expression of the soft dark eyes.
Never in his life had he seen eyes so pleasing. He could not keep his
gaze from her, and he became conscious, as he grew more familiar with
her face, that there was in its character a sad, sorrowful look; only at
times was it to be noticed, when the features were at repose, and it lay
chiefly in the very eyes he was admiring. Never does this unconsciously
mournful expression exist, but it is a sure index of sorrow and
suffering; but Mr. Carlyle understood it not. And who could connect
sorrow with the anticipated brilliant future of Isabel Vane?

“Isabel,” observed the earl, “you are dressed.”

“Yes, papa. Not to keep old Mrs. Levison waiting tea. She likes to take
it early, and I know Mrs. Vane must have kept her waiting dinner. It was
half-past six when she drove from here.”

“I hope you will not be late to-night, Isabel.”

“It depends upon Mrs. Vane.”

“Then I am sure you will be. When the young ladies in this fashionable
world of ours turn night into day, it is a bad thing for their roses.
What say you, Mr. Carlyle?”

Mr. Carlyle glanced at the roses on the cheeks opposite to him; they
looked too fresh and bright to fade lightly.

At the conclusion of dinner a maid entered the room with a white
cashmere mantle, placing it over the shoulders of her young lady, as she
said the carriage was waiting.

Lady Isabel advanced to the earl. “Good-bye, papa.”

“Good-night, my love,” he answered, drawing her toward him, and kissing
her sweet face. “Tell Mrs. Vane I will not have you kept out till
morning hours. You are but a child yet. Mr. Carlyle, will you ring? I am
debarred from seeing my daughter to the carriage.”

“If your lordship will allow me--if Lady Isabel will pardon the
attendance of one little used to wait upon young ladies, I shall be
proud to see her to her carriage,” was the somewhat confused answer of
Mr. Carlyle as he touched the bell.

The earl thanked him, and the young lady smiled, and Mr. Carlyle
conducted her down the broad, lighted staircase and stood bareheaded by
the door of the luxurious chariot, and handed her in. She put out her
hand in her frank, pleasant manner, as she wished him good night. The
carriage rolled on its way, and Mr. Carlyle returned to the earl.

“Well, is she not a handsome girl?” he demanded.

“Handsome is not the word for beauty such as hers,” was Mr. Carlyle’s
reply, in a low, warm tone. “I never saw a face half so beautiful.”

“She caused quite a sensation at the drawing-room last week--as I hear.
This everlasting gout kept me indoors all day. And she is as good as she
is beautiful.”

The earl was not partial. Lady Isabel was wondrously gifted by nature,
not only in mind and person but in heart. She was as little like a
fashionable young lady as it was well possible to be, partly because she
had hitherto been secluded from the great world, partly from the care
bestowed upon her training. During the lifetime of her mother, she had
lived occasionally at East Lynne, but mostly at a larger seat of the
earl’s in Wales, Mount Severn; since her mother’s death, she had
remained entirely at Mount Severn, under the charge of a judicious
governess, a very small establishment being kept for them, and the earl
paying them impromptu and flying visits. Generous and benevolent she
was, timid and sensitive to a degree, gentle, and considerate to all. Do
not cavil at her being thus praised--admire and love her whilst you may,
she is worthy of it now, in her innocent girlhood; the time will come
when such praise would be misplaced. Could the fate that was to overtake
his child have been foreseen by the earl, he would have struck her down
to death, in his love, as she stood before him, rather than suffer her
to enter upon it.



CHAPTER II.

THE BROKEN CROSS.

Lady Isabel’s carriage continued its way, and deposited her at the
residence of Mrs. Levison. Mrs. Levison was nearly eighty years of age,
and very severe in speech and manner, or, as Mrs. Vane expressed it,
“crabbed.” She looked the image of impatience when Isabel entered, with
her cap pushed all awry, and pulling at the black satin gown, for Mrs.
Vane had kept her waiting dinner, and Isabel was keeping her from her
tea; and that does not agree with the aged, with their health or with
their temper.

“I fear I am late,” exclaimed Lady Isabel, as she advanced to Mrs.
Levison; “but a gentleman dined with papa to-day, and it made us rather
longer at table.”

“You are twenty-five minutes behind your time,” cried the old lady
sharply, “and I want my tea. Emma, order it in.”

Mrs. Vane rang the bell, and did as she was bid. She was a little woman
of six-and-twenty, very plain in face, but elegant in figure, very
accomplished, and vain to her fingers’ ends. Her mother, who was dead,
had been Mrs. Levison’s daughter, and her husband, Raymond Vane, was
presumptive heir to the earldom of Mount Severn.

“Won’t you take that tippet off, child?” asked Mrs. Levison, who knew
nothing of the new-fashioned names for such articles, mantles, burnous,
and all the string of them; and Isabel threw it off and sat down by her.

“The tea is not made, grandmamma!” exclaimed Mrs. Vane, in an accent of
astonishment, as the servant appeared with the tray and the silver urn.
“You surely do not have it made in the room.”

“Where should I have it made?” inquired Mrs. Levison.

“It is much more convenient to have it brought in, ready made,” said
Mrs. Vane. “I dislike the embarass of making it.”

“Indeed!” was the reply of the old lady; “and get it slopped over in the
saucers, and as cold as milk! You always were lazy, Emma--and given to
use those French words. I’d rather stick a printed label on my forehead,
for my part, ‘I speak French,’ and let the world know it in that way.”

“Who makes tea for you in general?” asked Mrs. Vane, telegraphing a
contemptuous glance to Isabel behind her grandmother.

But the eyes of Lady Isabel fell timidly and a blush rose to her cheeks.
She did not like to appear to differ from Mrs. Vane, her senior, and her
father’s guest, but her mind revolted at the bare idea of ingratitude or
ridicule cast on an aged parent.

“Harriet comes in and makes it for me,” replied Mrs. Levison; “aye, and
sits down and takes it with me when I am alone, which is pretty often.
What do you say to that, Madame Emma--you, with your fine notions?”

“Just as you please, of course, grandmamma.”

“And there’s the tea-caddy at your elbow, and the urn’s fizzing away,
and if we are to have any tea to-night, it had better be made.”

“I don’t know how much to put in,” grumbled Mrs. Vane, who had the
greatest horror of soiling her hands or her gloves; who, in short, had a
particular antipathy to doing anything useful.

“Shall I make it, dear Mrs. Levison?” said Isabel, rising with alacrity.
“I had used to make it quite as often as my governess at Mount Severn,
and I make it for papa.”

“Do, child,” replied the old lady. “You are worth ten of her.”

Isabel laughed merrily, drew off her gloves, and sat down to the table;
and at that moment a young and elegant man lounged into the room. He was
deemed handsome, with his clearly-cut features, his dark eyes, his raven
hair, and his white teeth; but to a keen observer those features had not
an attractive expression, and the dark eyes had a great knack of looking
away while he spoke to you. It was Francis, Captain Levison.

He was grandson to the old lady, and first cousin to Mrs. Vane. Few men
were so fascinating in manners, at times and seasons, in face and in
form, few men won so completely upon their hearers’ ears, and few were
so heartless in their hearts of hearts. The world courted him, and
society honored him; for, though he was a graceless spendthrift, and it
was known that he was, he was the presumptive heir to the old and rich
Sir Peter Levison.

The ancient lady spoke up, “Captain Levison, Lady Isabel Vane.” They
both acknowledged the introduction; and Isabel, a child yet in the ways
of the world, flushed crimson at the admiring looks cast upon her by the
young guardsman. Strange--strange that she should make the acquaintance
of these two men in the same day, almost in the same hour; the two, of
all the human race, who were to exercise so powerful an influence over
her future life!

“That’s a pretty cross, child,” cried Mrs. Levison as Isabel stood by
her when tea was over, and she and Mrs. Vane were about to depart on
their evening visit.

She alluded to a golden cross, set with seven emeralds, which Isabel
wore on her neck. It was of light, delicate texture, and was suspended
from a thin, short, gold chain.

“Is it not pretty?” answered Isabel. “It was given me by my dear mamma
just before she died. Stay, I will take it off for you. I only wear it
upon great occasions.”

This, her first appearance at the grand duke’s, seemed a very great
occasion to the simply-reared and inexperienced girl. She unclasped the
chain, and placed it with the cross in the hands of Mrs. Levison.

“Why, I declare you have nothing on but that cross and some rubbishing
pearl bracelets!” uttered Mrs. Vane to Isabel. “I did not look at you
before.”

“Mamma gave me both. The bracelets are those she used frequently to
wear.”

“You old-fashioned child! Because your mamma wore those bracelets, years
ago, is that a reason for your doing so?” retorted Mrs. Vane. “Why did
you not put on your diamonds?”

“I--did--put on my diamonds; but I--took them off again,” stammered
Isabel.

“What on earth for?”

“I did not like to look too fine,” answered Isabel, with a laugh and a
blush. “They glittered so! I feared it might be thought I had put them
on to look fine.”

“Ah! I see you mean to set up in that class of people who pretend to
despise ornaments,” scornfully remarked Mrs. Vane. “It is the refinement
of affectation, Lady Isabel.”

The sneer fell harmlessly on Lady Isabel’s ear. She only believed
something had put Mrs. Vane out of temper. It certainly had; and that
something, though Isabel little suspected it, was the evident admiration
Captain Levison evinced for her fresh, young beauty; it quite absorbed
him, and rendered him neglectful even of Mrs. Vane.

“Here, child, take your cross,” said the old lady. “It is very pretty;
prettier on your neck than diamonds would be. You don’t want
embellishing; never mind what Emma says.”

Francis Levison took the cross and chain from her hand to pass them to
Lady Isabel. Whether he was awkward, or whether her hands were full, for
she held her gloves, her handkerchief, and had just taken up her mantle,
certain it is that it fell; and the gentleman, in his too quick effort
to regain it, managed to set his foot upon it, and the cross was broken
in two.

“There! Now whose fault was that?” cried Mrs. Levison.

Isabel did not answer; her heart was very full. She took the broken
cross, and the tears dropped from her eyes; she could not help it.

“Why! You are never crying over a stupid bauble of a cross!” uttered
Mrs. Vane, interrupting Captain Levison’s expression of regret at his
awkwardness.

“You can have it mended, dear,” interposed Mrs. Levison.

Lady Isabel chased away the tears, and turned to Captain Levison with a
cheerful look. “Pray do not blame yourself,” she good-naturedly said;
“the fault was as much mine as yours; and, as Mrs. Levison says, I can
get it mended.”

She disengaged the upper part of the cross from the chain as she spoke,
and clasped the latter round her throat.

“You will not go with that thin string of gold on, and nothing else!”
 uttered Mrs. Vane.

“Why not?” returned Isabel. “If people say anything, I can tell them an
accident happened to the cross.”

Mrs. Vane burst into a laugh of mocking ridicule. “‘If people say
anything!’” she repeated, in a tone according with the laugh. “They are
not likely to ‘say anything,’ but they will deem Lord Mount Severn’s
daughter unfortunately short of jewellery.”

Isabel smiled and shook her head. “They saw my diamonds at the drawing-
room.”

“If you had done such an awkward thing for me, Frank Levison,” burst
forth the old lady, “my doors should have been closed against you for a
month. There, if you are to go, Emma, you had better go; dancing off to
begin an evening at ten o’clock at night! In my time we used to go at
seven; but it’s the custom now to turn night into day.”

“When George the Third dined at one o’clock upon boiled mutton and
turnips,” put in the graceless captain, who certainly held his
grandmother in no greater reverence than did Mrs. Vane.

He turned to Isabel as he spoke, to hand her downstairs. Thus she was
conducted to her carriage the second time that night by a stranger. Mrs.
Vane got down by herself, as she best could, and her temper was not
improved by the process.

“Good-night,” said she to the captain.

“I shall not say good-night. You will find me there almost as soon as
you.”

“You told me you were not coming. Some bachelor’s party in the way.”

“Yes, but I have changed my mind. Farewell for the present, Lady
Isabel.”

“What an object you will look, with nothing on your neck but a
schoolgirl’s chain!” began Mrs. Vane, returning to the grievance as the
carriage drove on.

“Oh, Mrs. Vane, what does it signify? I can only think of my broken
cross. I am sure it must be an evil omen.”

“An evil--what?”

“An evil omen. Mamma gave me that cross when she was dying. She told me
to let it be to me as a talisman, always to keep it safely; and when I
was in any distress, or in need of counsel, to look at it and strive to
recall what her advice would be, and to act accordingly. And now it is
broken--broken!”

A glaring gaslight flashed into the carriage, right into the face of
Isabel. “I declare,” uttered Mrs. Vane, “you are crying again! I tell
you what it is, Isabel, I am not going to chaperone red eyes to the
Duchess of Dartford’s, so if you can’t put a stop to this, I shall order
the carriage home, and go on alone.”

Isabel meekly dried her eyes, sighing deeply as she did so. “I can have
the pieces joined, I dare say; but it will never be the same cross to me
again.”

“What have you done with the pieces?” irascibly asked Mrs. Vane.

“I folded them in the thin paper Mrs. Levison gave me, and put it inside
my frock. Here it is,” touching the body. “I have no pocket on.”

Mrs. Vane gave vent to a groan. She never had been a girl herself--she
had been a woman at ten; and she complimented Isabel upon being little
better than an imbecile. “Put it inside my frock!” she uttered in a
torrent of scorn. “And you eighteen years of age! I fancied you left off
‘frocks’ when you left the nursery. For shame, Isabel!”

“I meant to say my dress,” corrected Isabel.

“Meant to say you are a baby idiot!” was the inward comment of Mrs.
Vane.

A few minutes and Isabel forgot her grievance. The brilliant rooms were
to her as an enchanting scene of dreamland, for her heart was in its
springtide of early freshness, and the satiety of experience had not
come. How could she remember trouble, even the broken cross, as she bent
to the homage offered her and drank in the honeyed words poured forth
into her ear?

“Halloo!” cried an Oxford student, with a long rent-roll in prospective,
who was screwing himself against the wall, not to be in the way of the
waltzers, “I thought you had given up coming to these places?”

“So I had,” replied the fast nobleman addressed, the son of a marquis.
“But I am on the lookout, so am forced into them again. I think a ball-
room the greatest bore in life.”

“On the lookout for what?”

“For a wife. My governor has stopped supplies, and has vowed by his
beard not to advance another shilling, or pay a debt, till I reform. As
a preliminary step toward it, he insists upon a wife, and I am trying to
choose one for I am deeper in debt than you imagine.”

“Take the new beauty, then.”

“Who is she?”

“Lady Isabel Vane.”

“Much obliged for the suggestion,” replied the earl. “But one likes a
respectable father-in-law, and Mount Severn is going to smash. He and I
are too much in the same line, and might clash, in the long run.”

“One can’t have everything; the girl’s beauty is beyond common. I saw
that rake, Levison, make up to her. He fancies he can carry all before
him, where women are concerned.”

“So he does, often,” was his quiet reply.

“I hate the fellow! He thinks so much of himself, with his curled hair
and shining teeth, and his white skin; and he’s as heartless as an owl.
What was that hushed-up business about Miss Charteris?”

“Who’s to know? Levison slipped out of the escapade like an eel, and the
woman protested that he was more sinned against than sinning. Three-
fourths of the world believed them.”

“And she went abroad and died; and Levison here he comes! And Mount
Severn’s daughter with him.”

They were approaching at that moment, Francis Levison and Lady Isabel.
He was expressing his regret at the untoward accident of the cross for
the tenth time that night. “I feel that it can never be atoned for,”
 whispered he; “that the heartfelt homage of my whole life would not be
sufficient compensation.”

He spoke in a tone of thrilling gentleness, gratifying to the ear but
dangerous to the heart. Lady Isabel glanced up and caught his eyes
gazing upon her with the deepest tenderness--a language hers had never
yet encountered. A vivid blush again arose to her cheek, her eyelids
fell, and her timid words died away in silence.

“Take care, take care, my young Lady Isabel,” murmured the Oxonian under
his breath, as they passed him, “that man is as false as he is fair.”

“I think he is a rascal,” remarked the earl.

“I know he is; I know a thing or two about him. He would ruin her heart
for the renown of the exploit, because she’s a beauty, and then fling it
away broken. He has none to give in return for the gift.”

“Just as much as my new race-horse has,” concluded the earl. “She is
very beautiful.”



CHAPTER III.

BARBARA HARE.

West Lynne was a town of some importance, particularly in its own eyes,
though being neither a manufacturing one nor a cathedral one, nor even
the chief town of the county, it was somewhat primitive in its manners
and customs. Passing out at the town, toward the east, you came upon
several detached gentleman’s houses, in the vicinity of which stood the
church of St. Jude, which was more aristocratic, in the matter of its
congregation, than the other churches of West Lynne. For about a mile
these houses were scattered, the church being situated at their
commencement, close to that busy part of the place, and about a mile
further on you came upon the beautiful estate which was called East
Lynne.

Between the gentlemen’s houses mentioned and East Lynne, the mile of
road was very solitary, being much overshadowed with trees. One house
alone stood there, and that was about three-quarters of a mile before
you came to East Lynne. It was on the left hand side, a square, ugly,
red brick house with a weathercock on the top, standing some little
distance from the road. A flat lawn extended before it, and close to the
palings, which divided it from the road, was a grove of trees, some
yards in depth. The lawn was divided by a narrow middle gravel path, to
which you gained access from the portico of the house. You entered upon
a large flagged hall with a reception room on either hand, and the
staircase, a wide one, facing you; by the side of the staircase you
passed on to the servants’ apartments and offices. That place was called
the Grove, and was the property and residence of Richard Hare, Esq.,
commonly called Mr. Justice Hare.

The room to the left hand, as you went in, was the general sitting-room;
the other was very much kept boxed up in lavender and brown Holland, to
be opened on state occasions. Justice and Mrs. Hare had three children,
a son and two daughters. Anne was the elder of the girls, and had
married young; Barbara, the younger was now nineteen, and Richard the
eldest--but we shall come to him hereafter.

In this sitting-room, on a chilly evening, early in May, a few days
subsequent to that which had witnessed the visit of Mr. Carlyle to the
Earl of Mount Severn, sat Mrs. Hare, a pale, delicate woman, buried in
shawls and cushions: but the day had been warm. At the window sat a
pretty girl, very fair, with blue eyes, light hair, a bright complexion,
and small aquiline features. She was listlessly turning over the leaves
of a book.

“Barbara, I am sure it must be tea-time now.”

“The time seems to move slowly with you, mamma. It is scarcely a quarter
of an hour since I told you it was but ten minutes past six.”

“I am so thirsty!” announced the poor invalid. “Do go and look at the
clock again, Barbara.”

Barbara Hare rose with a gesture of impatience, not suppressed, opened
the door, and glanced at the large clock in the hall. “It wants nine and
twenty minutes to seven, mamma. I wish you would put your watch on of a
day; four times you have sent me to look at that clock since dinner.”

“I am so thirsty!” repeated Mrs. Hare, with a sort of sob. “If seven
o’clock would but strike! I am dying for my tea.”

It may occur to the reader, that a lady in her own house, “dying for her
tea,” might surely order it brought in, although the customary hour had
not struck. Not so Mrs. Hare. Since her husband had first brought her
home to that house, four and twenty-years ago, she had never dared to
express a will in it; scarcely, on her own responsibility, to give an
order. Justice Hare was stern, imperative, obstinate, and self-
conceited; she, timid, gentle and submissive. She had loved him with all
her heart, and her life had been one long yielding of her will to his;
in fact, she had no will; his was all in all. Far was she from feeling
the servitude a yoke: some natures do not: and to do Mr. Hare justice,
his powerful will that must bear down all before it, was in fault: not
his kindness: he never meant to be unkind to his wife. Of his three
children, Barbara alone had inherited his will.

“Barbara,” began Mrs. Hare again, when she thought another quarter of an
hour at least must have elapsed.

“Well, mamma?”

“Ring, and tell them to be getting it in readiness so that when seven
strikes there may be no delay.”

“Goodness, mamma! You know they do always have it ready. And there’s no
such hurry, for papa may not be at home.” But she rose, and rang the
bell with a petulant motion, and when the man answered it, told him to
have tea in to its time.

“If you knew dear, how dry my throat is, how parched my mouth, you would
have more patience with me.”

Barbara closed her book with a listless air, and turned listlessly to
the window. She seemed tired, not with fatigue but with what the French
express by the word ennui. “Here comes papa,” she presently said.

“Oh, I am so glad!” cried poor Mrs. Hare. “Perhaps he will not mind
having the tea in at once, if I told him how thirsty I am.”

The justice came in. A middle sized man, with pompous features, and a
pompous walk, and a flaxen wig. In his aquiline nose, compressed lips,
and pointed chin, might be traced a resemblance to his daughter; though
he never could have been half so good-looking as was pretty Barbara.

“Richard,” spoke up Mrs. Hare from between her shawls, the instant he
opened the door.

“Well?”

“Would you please let me have tea in now? Would you very much mind
taking it a little earlier this evening? I am feverish again, and my
tongue is so parched I don’t know how to speak.”

“Oh, it’s near seven; you won’t have long to wait.”

With this exceedingly gracious answer to an invalid’s request, Mr. Hare
quitted the room again and banged the door. He had not spoken unkindly
or roughly, simply with indifference. But ere Mrs. Hare’s meek sigh of
disappointment was over, the door re-opened, and the flaxen wig was
thrust in again.

“I don’t mind if I do have it now. It will be a fine moonlight night and
I am going with Pinner as far as Beauchamp’s to smoke a pipe. Order it
in, Barbara.”

The tea was made and partaken of, and the justice departed for Mr.
Beauchamp’s, Squire Pinner calling for him at the gate. Mr. Beauchamp
was a gentleman who farmed a great deal of land, and who was also Lord
Mount Severn’s agent or steward for East Lynne. He lived higher up the
road some little distance beyond East Lynne.

“I am so cold, Barbara,” shivered Mrs. Hare, as she watched the justice
down the gravel path. “I wonder if your papa would say it was foolish of
me, if I told them to light a bit of fire?”

“Have it lighted if you like,” responded Barbara, ringing the bell.
“Papa will know nothing about it, one way or the other, for he won’t be
home till after bedtime. Jasper, mamma is cold, and would like a fire
lighted.”

“Plenty of sticks, Jasper, that it may burn up quickly,” said Mrs. Hare,
in a pleading voice, as if the sticks were Jasper’s and not hers.

Mrs. Hare got her fire, and she drew her chair in front, and put her
feet on the fender, to catch its warmth. Barbara, listless still, went
into the hall, took a woolen shawl from the stand there, threw it over
her shoulders, and went out. She strolled down the straight formal path,
and stood at the iron gate, looking over it into the public road. Not
very public in that spot, and at that hour, but as lonely as one could
wish. The night was calm and pleasant, though somewhat chilly for the
beginning of May, and the moon was getting high in the sky.

“When will he come home?” she murmured, as she leaned her head upon the
gate. “Oh, what would life be like without him? How miserable these few
days have been! I wonder what took him there! I wonder what is detaining
him! Corny said he was only gone for a day.”

The faint echo of footsteps in the distance stole upon her ear, and
Barbara drew a little back, and hid herself under the shelter of the
trees, not choosing to be seen by any stray passer-by. But, as they drew
near, a sudden change came over her; her eyes lighted up, her cheeks
were dyed with crimson, and her veins tingled with excess of rapture--
for she knew those footsteps, and loved them, only too well.

Cautiously peeping over the gate again, she looked down the road. A tall
form, whose very height and strength bore a grace of which its owner was
unconscious, was advancing rapidly toward her from the direction of West
Lynne. Again she shrank away; true love is ever timid; and whatever may
have been Barbara Hare’s other qualities, her love at least was true and
deep. But instead of the gate opening, with the firm quick motion
peculiar to the hand which guided it, the footsteps seemed to pass, and
not to have turned at all toward it. Barbara’s heart sank, and she stole
to the gate again, and looked out with a yearning look.

Yes, sure enough he was striding on, not thinking of her, not coming to
her; and she, in the disappointment and impulse of the moment, called to
him,--

“Archibald!”

Mr. Carlyle--it was no other--turned on his heel, and approached the
gate.

“Is it you, Barbara! Watching for thieves and poachers? How are you?”

“How are you?” she returned, holding the gate open for him to enter, as
he shook hands, and striving to calm down her agitation. “When did you
return?”

“Only now, by the eight o’clock train, which got in beyond its time,
having drawled unpardonably at the stations. They little thought they
had me in it, as their looks betrayed when I got out. I have not been
home yet.”

“No! What will Cornelia say?”

“I went to the office for five minutes. But I have a few words to say to
Beauchamp, and am going up at once. Thank you, I cannot come in now; I
intend to do so on my return.”

“Papa has gone up to Mr. Beauchamp’s.”

“Mr. Hare! Has he?”

“He and Squire Pinner,” continued Barbara. “They have gone to have a
smoking bout. And if you wait there with papa, it will be too late to
come in, for he is sure not to be home before eleven or twelve.”

Mr. Carlyle bent his head in deliberation. “Then I think it is of little
use my going on,” said he, “for my business with Beauchamp is private. I
must defer it until to-morrow.”

He took the gate out of her hand, closed it, and placed the hand within
his own arm, to walk with her to the house. It was done in a matter-of-
fact, real sort of way; nothing of romance or sentiment hallowed it; but
Barbara Hare felt that she was in Eden.

“And how have you all been, Barbara, these few days?”

“Oh, very well. What made you start off so suddenly? You never said you
were going, or came to wish us good-bye.”

“You have just expressed it, Barbara--‘suddenly.’ A matter of business
suddenly arose, and I suddenly went upon it.”

“Cornelia said you were only gone for a day.”

“Did she? When in London I find so many things to do! Is Mrs. Hare
better?”

“Just the same. I think mamma’s ailments are fancies, half of them; if
she would rouse herself she would be better. What is in that parcel?”

“You are not to inquire, Miss Barbara. It does not concern you. It only
concerns Mrs. Hare.”

“Is it something you have brought for mamma, Archibald?”

“Of course. A countryman’s visit to London entails buying presents for
his friends; at least, it used to be so, in the old-fashioned days.”

“When people made their wills before starting, and were a fortnight
doing the journey in a wagon,” laughed Barbara. “Grandpapa used to tell
us tales of that, when we were children. But is it really something for
mamma?”

“Don’t I tell you so? I have brought something for you.”

“Oh! What is it?” she uttered, her color rising, and wondering whether
he was in jest or earnest.

“There’s an impatient girl! ‘What is it?’ Wait a moment, and you shall
see what it is.”

He put the parcel or roll he was carrying upon a garden chair, and
proceeded to search his pockets. Every pocket was visited, apparently in
vain.

“Barbara, I think it is gone. I must have lost it somehow.”

Her heart beat as she stood there, silently looking up at him in the
moonlight. Was it lost? What had it been?

But, upon a second search, he came upon something in the pocket of his
coat-tail. “Here it is, I believe; what brought it there?” He opened a
small box, and taking out a long, gold chain, threw it around her neck.
A locket was attached to it.

Her cheeks’ crimson went and came; her heart beat more rapidly. She
could not speak a word of thanks; and Mr. Carlyle took up the roll, and
walked on into the presence of Mrs. Hare.

Barbara followed in a few minutes. Her mother was standing up, watching
with pleased expectation the movements of Mr. Carlyle. No candles were
in the room, but it was bright with firelight.

“Now, don’t laugh at me,” quoth he, untying the string of the parcel.
“It is not a roll of velvet for a dress, and it is not a roll of
parchment, conferring twenty thousand pounds a year. But it is--an air
cushion!”

It was what poor Mrs. Hare, so worn with sitting and lying, had often
longed for. She had heard such a luxury was to be bought in London, but
never remembered to have seen one. She took it almost with a greedy
hand, casting a grateful look at Mr. Carlyle.

“How am I to thank you for it?” she murmured through her tears.

“If you thank me at all, I will never bring you anything again,” cried
he, gaily. “I have been telling Barbara that a visit to London entails
bringing gifts for friends,” he continued. “Do you see how smart I have
made her?”

Barbara hastily took off the chain, and laid it before her mother.

“What a beautiful chain!” muttered Mrs. Hare, in surprise. “Archibald,
you are too good, too generous! This must have cost a great deal; this
is beyond a trifle.”

“Nonsense!” laughed Mr. Carlyle. “I’ll tell you both how I happened to
buy it. I went into a jeweller’s about my watch, which has taken to lose
lately in a most unceremonious fashion, and there I saw a whole display
of chains hanging up; some ponderous enough for a sheriff, some light
and elegant enough for Barbara. I dislike to see a thick chain on a
lady’s neck. They put me in mind of the chain she lost, the day she and
Cornelia went with me to Lynchborough, which loss Barbara persisted in
declaring was my fault, for dragging her through the town sight-seeing,
while Cornelia did her shopping--for it was then the chain was lost.”

“But I was only joking when I said so,” was the interruption of Barbara.
“Of course it would have happened had you not been with me; the links
were always snapping.”

“Well, these chains in the shop in London put me in mind of Barbara’s
misfortune, and I chose one. Then the shopman brought forth some
lockets, and enlarged upon their convenience for holding deceased
relatives’ hair, not to speak of sweethearts’, until I told him he might
attach one. I thought it might hold that piece of hair you prize,
Barbara,” he concluded, dropping his voice.

“What piece?” asked Mrs. Hare.

Mr. Carlyle glanced round the room, as if fearful the very walls might
hear his whisper. “Richard’s. Barbara showed it me one day when she was
turning out her desk, and said it was a curl taken off in that illness.”

Mrs. Hare sank back in her chair, and hid her face in her hands,
shivering visibly. The words evidently awoke some poignant source of
deep sorrow. “Oh, my boy! My boy!” she wailed--“my boy! My unhappy boy!
Mr. Hare wonders at my ill-health, Archibald; Barbara ridicules it; but
there lies the source of all my misery, mental and bodily. Oh, Richard!
Richard!”

There was a distressing pause, for the topic admitted of neither hope
nor consolation. “Put your chain on again, Barbara,” Mr. Carlyle said,
after a while, “and I wish you health to wear it out. Health and
reformation, young lady!”

Barbara smiled and glanced at him with her pretty blue eyes, so full of
love. “What have you brought for Cornelia?” she resumed.

“Something splendid,” he answered, with a mock serious face; “only I
hope I have not been taken in. I bought her a shawl. The venders vowed
it was true Parisian cashmere. I gave eighteen guineas for it.”

“That is a great deal,” observed Mrs. Hare. “It ought to be a very good
one. I never gave more than six guineas for a shawl in all my life.”

“And Cornelia, I dare say, never more than half six,” laughed Mr.
Carlyle. “Well, I shall wish you good evening, and go to her; for if she
knows I am back all this while, I shall be lectured.”

He shook hands with them both. Barbara, however, accompanied him to the
front door, and stepped outside with him.

“You will catch cold, Barbara. You have left your shawl indoors.”

“Oh, no, I shall not. How very soon you are leaving. You have scarcely
stayed ten minutes.”

“But you forget I have not been at home.”

“You were on your road to Beauchamp’s, and would not have been at home
for an hour or two in that case,” spoke Barbara, in a tone that savored
of resentment.

“That was different; that was upon business. But, Barbara, I think your
mother looks unusually ill.”

“You know she suffers a little thing to upset her; and last night she
had what she calls one of her dreams,” answered Barbara. “She says that
it is a warning that something bad is going to happen, and she has been
in the most unhappy, feverish state possible all day. Papa has been
quite angry over her being so weak and nervous, declaring that she ought
to rouse herself out of her ‘nerves.’ Of course we dare not tell him
about the dream.”

“It related to--the----”

Mr. Carlyle stopped, and Barbara glanced round with a shudder, and drew
closer to him as she whispered. He had not given her his arm this time.

“Yes, to the murder. You know mamma has always declared that Bethel had
something to do with it; she says her dreams would have convinced her of
it, if nothing else did; and she dreamt she saw him with--with--you
know.”

“Hallijohn?” whispered Mr. Carlyle.

“With Hallijohn,” assented Barbara, with a shiver. “He was standing over
him as he lay on the floor; just as he did lay on it. And that wretched
Afy was standing at the end of the kitchen, looking on.”

“But Mrs. Hare ought not to suffer dreams to disturb her peace by day,”
 remonstrated Mr. Carlyle. “It is not to be surprised at that she dreams
of the murder, because she is always dwelling upon it; but she should
strive and throw the feeling from her with the night.”

“You know what mamma is. Of course she ought to do so, but she does not.
Papa wonders what makes her get up so ill and trembling of a morning;
and mamma has to make all sorts of evasive excuses; for not a hint, as
you are aware, must be breathed to him about the murder.”

Mr. Carlyle gravely nodded.

“Mamma does so harp about Bethel. And I know that dream arose from
nothing in the world but because she saw him pass the gate yesterday.
Not that she thinks that it was he who did it; unfortunately, there is
no room for that; but she will persist that he had a hand in it in some
way, and he haunts her dreams.”

Mr. Carlyle walked on in silence; indeed there was no reply that he
could make. A cloud had fallen upon the house of Mr. Hare, and it was an
unhappy subject. Barbara continued,--

“But for mamma to have taken it into her head that ‘some evil is going
to happen,’ because she had this dream, and to make herself miserable
over it, is so absurd, that I have felt quite cross with her all day.
Such nonsense, you know, Archibald, to believe that dreams give signs of
what is going to happen, so far behind these enlightened days!”

“Your mamma’s trouble is great, Barbara; and she is not strong.”

“I think all our troubles have been great since--since that dark
evening,” responded Barbara.

“Have you heard from Anne?” inquired Mr. Carlyle, willing to change the
subject.

“Yes, she is very well. What do you think they are going to name the
baby? Anne; after her mamma. So very ugly a name! Anne!”

“I do not think so,” said Mr. Carlyle. “It is simple and unpretending, I
like it much. Look at the long, pretentious names of our family--
Archibald! Cornelia! And yours, too--Barbara! What a mouthful they all
are!”

Barbara contracted her eyebrows. It was equivalent to saying that he did
not like her name.

They reached the gate, and Mr. Carlyle was about to pass out of it when
Barbara laid her hand on his arm to detain him, and spoke in a timid
voice,--

“Archibald!”

“What is it?”

“I have not said a word of thanks to you for this,” she said, touching
the chain and locket; “my tongue seemed tied. Do not deem me
ungrateful.”

“You foolish girl! It is not worth them. There! Now I am paid. Good-
night, Barbara.”

He had bent down and kissed her cheek, swung through the gate, laughing,
and strode away. “Don’t say I never gave you anything,” he turned his
head round to say, “Good-night.”

All her veins were tingling, all her pulses beating; her heart was
throbbing with its sense of bliss. He had never kissed her, that she
could remember, since she was a child. And when she returned indoors,
her spirits were so extravagantly high that Mrs. Hare wondered.

“Ring for the lamp, Barbara, and you can get to your work. But don’t
have the shutters closed; I like to look out on these light nights.”

Barbara, however, did not get to her work; she also, perhaps, liked
“looking out on a light night,” for she sat down at the window. She was
living the last half hour over again. “‘Don’t say I never gave you
anything,’” she murmured; “did he allude to the chain or to the--kiss?
Oh, Archibald, why don’t you say that you love me?”

Mr. Carlyle had been all his life upon intimate terms with the Hare
family. His father’s first wife--for the late lawyer Carlyle had been
twice married--had been a cousin of Justice Hare’s, and this had caused
them to be much together. Archibald, the child of the second Mrs.
Carlyle, had alternately teased and petted Anne and Barbara Hare, boy
fashion. Sometimes he quarreled with the pretty little girls, sometimes
he caressed them, as he would have done had they been his sisters; and
he made no scruple of declaring publicly to the pair that Anne was his
favorite. A gentle, yielding girl she was, like her mother; whereas
Barbara displayed her own will, and it sometimes clashed with young
Carlyle’s.

The clock struck ten. Mrs. Hare took her customary sup of brandy and
water, a small tumbler three parts full. Without it she believed she
could never get to sleep; it deadened unhappy thought, she said.
Barbara, after making it, had turned again to the window, but she did
not resume her seat. She stood right in front of it, her forehead bent
forward against its middle pane. The lamp, casting a bright light, was
behind her, so that her figure might be distinctly observable from the
lawn, had any one been there to look upon it.

She stood there in the midst of dreamland, giving way to all its
enchanting and most delusive fascinations. She saw herself, in
anticipation, the wife of Mr. Carlyle, the envied, thrice envied, of all
West Lynne; for, like as he was the dearest on earth to her heart, so
was he the greatest match in the neighborhood around. Not a mother but
what coveted him for her child, and not a daughter but would have said,
“Yes, and thank you,” to an offer from the attractive Archibald Carlyle.
“I never was sure, quite sure of it till to-night,” murmured Barbara,
caressing the locket, and holding it to her cheek. “I always thought he
meant something, or he might mean nothing: but to give me this--to kiss
me--oh Archibald!”

A pause. Barbara’s eyes were fixed upon the moonlight.

“If he would but say he loved me! If he would but save the suspense of
my aching heart! But it must come; I know it will; and if that
cantankerous toad of a Corny--”

Barbara Hare stopped. What was that, at the far end of the lawn, just in
advance of the shade of the thick trees? Their leaves were not causing
the movement, for it was a still night. It had been there some minutes;
it was evidently a human form. What was it? Surely it was making signs
to her!

Or else it looked as though it was. That was certainly its arm moving,
and now it advanced a pace nearer, and raised something which it wore on
its head--a battered hat with a broad brim, a “wide-awake,” encircled
with a wisp of straw.

Barbara Hare’s heart leaped, as the saying runs, into her mouth, and her
face became deadly white in the moonlight. Her first thought was to
alarm the servants; her second, to be still; for she remembered the fear
and mystery that attached to the house. She went into the hall, shutting
her mamma in the parlor, and stood in the shade of the portico, gazing
still. But the figure evidently followed her movement with its sight,
and the hat was again taken off, and waved violently.

Barbara Hare turned sick with utter terror. She must fathom it; she must
see who, and what it was; for the servants she dared not call, and those
movements were imperative, and might not be disregarded. But she
possessed more innate courage than falls to the lot of some young
ladies.

“Mamma,” she said, returning to the parlor and catching up her shawl,
while striving to speak without emotion. “I shall just walk down the
path and see if papa is coming.”

Mrs. Hare did not reply. She was musing upon other things, in that
quiescent happy mood, which a small portion of spirits will impart to
one weak in body; and Barbara softly closed the door, and stole out
again to the portico. She stood a moment to rally her courage, and again
the hat was waved impatiently.

Barbara Hare commenced her walk towards it in dread unutterable, an
undefined sense of evil filling her sinking heart; mingling with which,
came, with a rush of terror, a fear of that other undefinable evil--the
evil Mrs. Hare had declared was foreboded by her dream.



CHAPTER IV.

THE MOONLIGHT INTERVIEW.

Cold and still looked the old house in the moonbeams. Never was the moon
brighter; it lighted the far-stretching garden, it illuminated even the
weathercock aloft, it shone upon the portico, and upon one who appeared
in it. Stealing to the portico from the house had come Barbara Hare, her
eyes strained in dread affright on the grove of trees at the foot of the
garden. What was it that had stepped out of that grove of trees, and
mysteriously beckoned to her as she stood at the window, turning her
heart to sickness as she gazed? Was it a human being, one to bring more
evil to the house, where so much evil had already fallen? Was it a
supernatural visitant, or was it but a delusion of her own eyesight? Not
the latter, certainly, for the figure was now emerging again, motioning
to her as before; and with a white face and shaking limbs, Barbara
clutched her shawl around her and went down that path in the moonlight.
The beckoning form retreated within the dark recess as she neared it,
and Barbara halted.

“Who and what are you?” she asked, under her breath. “What do you want?”

“Barbara,” was the whispered, eager answer, “don’t you recognize me?”

Too surely she did--the voice at any rate--and a cry escaped her,
telling more of sorrow than of joy, though betraying both. She
penetrated the trees, and burst into tears as one in the dress of a farm
laborer caught her in his arms. In spite of his smock-frock and his
straw-wisped hat, and his false whiskers, black as Erebus, she knew him
for her brother.

“Oh, Richard! Where have you come from? What brings you here?”

“Did you know me, Barbara?” was his rejoinder.

“How was it likely--in this disguise? A thought crossed my mind that it
might be some one from you, and even that made me sick with terror. How
could you run such a risk as to come here?” she added, wringing her
hands. “If you are discovered, it is certain death; death--upon--you
know!”

“Upon the gibbet,” returned Richard Hare. “I do know it, Barbara.”

“Then why risk it? Should mamma see you it will kill her outright.”

“I can’t live on as I am living,” he answered, gloomily. “I have been
working in London ever since--”

“In London!” interrupted Barbara.

“In London, and have never stirred out of it. But it is hard work for
me, and now I have an opportunity of doing better, if I can get a little
money. Perhaps my mother can let me have it; it is what I have come to
ask for.”

“How are you working? What at?”

“In a stable-yard.”

“A stable-yard!” she uttered, in a deeply shocked tone. “Richard!”

“Did you expect it would be as a merchant, or a banker, or perhaps as
secretary to one of her majesty’s ministers--or that I was a gentleman
at large, living on my fortune?” retorted Richard Hare, in a tone of
chafed anguish, painful to hear. “I get twelve shillings a week, and
that has to find me in everything!”

“Poor Richard, poor Richard!” she wailed, caressing his hand and weeping
over it. “Oh, what a miserable night’s work that was! Our only comfort
is, Richard, that you must have committed the deed in madness.”

“I did not commit it at all,” he replied.

“What!” she exclaimed.

“Barbara, I swear that I am innocent; I swear I was not present when the
man was murdered; I swear that from my own positive knowledge, my
eyesight, I know no more who did it than you. The guessing at it is
enough for me; and my guess is as sure and true a one as that the moon
is in the heavens.”

Barbara shivered as she drew close to him. It was a shivering subject.
“You surely do not mean to throw the guilt on Bethel?”

“Bethel!” lightly returned Richard Hare. “He had nothing to do with it.
He was after his gins and his snares, that night, though, poacher as he
is!”

“Bethel is no poacher, Richard.”

“Is he not?” rejoined Richard Hare, significantly. “The truth as to what
he is may come out, some time. Not that I wish it to come out; the man
has done no harm to me, and he may go on poaching with impunity till
doomsday for all I care. He and Locksley--”

“Richard,” interrupted his sister, in a hushed voice, “mamma entertains
one fixed idea, which she cannot put from her. She is certain that
Bethel had something to do with the murder.”

“Then she is wrong. Why should she think so?”

“How the conviction arose at first, I cannot tell you; I do not think
she knows herself. But you remember how weak and fanciful she is, and
since that dreadful night she is always having what she calls ‘dreams’--
meaning that she dreams of the murder. In all these dreams Bethel is
prominent; and she says she feels an absolute certainty that he was, in
some way or other, mixed up in it.”

“Barbara, he was no more mixed up in it than you.”

“And--you say that you were not?”

“I was not even at the cottage at the time; I swear it to you. The man
who did the deed was Thorn.”

“Thorn!” echoed Barbara, lifting her head. “Who is Thorn?”

“I don’t know who. I wish I did; I wish I could unearth him. He was a
friend of Afy’s.”

Barbara threw back her neck with a haughty gesture. “Richard!”

“What?”

“You forget yourself when you mention that name to me.”

“Well,” returned Richard. “It was not to discuss these things that I put
myself in jeopardy; and to assert my innocence can do no good; it cannot
set aside the coroner’s verdict of ‘Wilful murder against Richard Hare,
the younger.’ Is my father as bitter against me as ever?”

“Quite. He never mentions your name, or suffers it to be mentioned; he
gave his orders to the servants that it never was to be spoken in the
house again. Eliza could not, or would not remember, and she persisted
in calling your room ‘Mr. Richard’s.’ I think the woman did it
heedlessly, not maliciously, to provoke papa; she was a good servant,
and had been with us three years you know. The first time she
transgressed, papa warned her; the second, he thundered at her as I
believe nobody else in the world can thunder; and the third he turned
her from the doors, never allowing her to get her bonnet; one of the
others carrying her bonnet and shawl to the gate, and her boxes were
sent away the same day. Papa took an oath--did you hear of it?”

“What oath? He takes many.”

“This was a solemn one, Richard. After the delivery of the verdict, he
took an oath in the justice-room, in the presence of his brother
magistrates, that if he could find you he would deliver you up to
justice, and that he would do it, though you might not turn up for ten
years to come. You know his disposition, Richard, and therefore may be
sure he will keep it. Indeed, it is most dangerous for you to be here.”

“I know that he never treated me as he ought,” cried Richard, bitterly.
“If my health was delicate, causing my poor mother to indulge me, ought
that to have been a reason for his ridiculing me on every possible
occasion, public and private? Had my home been made happier I should not
have sought the society I did elsewhere. Barbara, I must be allowed an
interview with my mother.”

Barbara Hare reflected before she spoke. “I do not see how it can be
managed.”

“Why can’t she come out to me as you have done? Is she up, or in bed?”

“It is impossible to think of it to-night,” returned Barbara in an
alarmed tone. “Papa may be in at any moment; he is spending the evening
at Beauchamp’s.”

“It is hard to have been separated from her for eighteen months, and to
go back without seeing her,” returned Richard. “And about the money? It
is a hundred pounds that I want.”

“You must be here again to-morrow night, Richard; the money, no doubt,
can be yours, but I am not so sure about your seeing mamma. I am
terrified for your safety. But, if it is as you say, that you are
innocent,” she added, after a pause, “could it not be proved?”

“Who is to prove it? The evidence is strong against me; and Thorn, did I
mention him, would be as a myth to other people; nobody knew anything of
him.”

“Is he a myth?” said Barbara, in a low voice.

“Are you and I myths?” retorted Richard. “So, even you doubt me?”

“Richard,” she suddenly exclaimed, “why not tell the whole circumstances
to Archibald Carlyle? If any one can help you, or take measures to
establish your innocence, he can. And you know that he is true as
steel.”

“There’s no other man living should be trusted with the secret that I am
here, except Carlyle. Where is it they suppose that I am, Barbara?”

“Some think that you are dead; some that you are in Australia; the very
uncertainty has nearly killed mamma. A report arose that you had been
seen at Liverpool, in an Australian-bound ship, but we could not trace
it to any foundation.”

“It had none. I dodged my way to London, and there I have been.”

“Working in a stable-yard?”

“I could not do better. I was not brought up to anything, and I did
understand horses. Besides, a man that the police-runners were after
could be more safe in obscurity, considering that he was a gentleman,
than--”

Barbara turned suddenly, and placed her hand upon her brother’s mouth.
“Be silent for your life,” she whispered, “here’s papa.”

Voices were heard approaching the gate--those of Justice Hare and Squire
Pinner. The latter walked on; the former came in. The brother and sister
cowered together, scarcely daring to breathe; you might have heard
Barbara’s heart beating. Mr. Hare closed the gate and walked on up the
path.

“I must go, Richard,” said Barbara, hastily; “I dare not stay another
minute. Be here again to-morrow night, and meanwhile I will see what can
be done.”

She was speeding away, but Richard held her back. “You did not seem to
believe my assertion of innocence. Barbara, we are here alone in the
still night, with God above us; as truly as that you and I must sometime
meet Him face to face, I told you the truth. It was Thorn murdered
Hallijohn, and I had nothing whatever to do with it.”

Barbara broke out of the trees and flew along, but Mr. Hare was already
in, locking and barring the door. “Let me in, papa,” she called out.

The justice opened the door again, and thrusting forth his flaxen wig,
his aquiline nose, and his amazed eyes, gazed at Barbara.

“Halloo! What brings you out at this time of night, young lady?”

“I went down to the gate to look for you,” she panted, “and had--had--
strolled over to the side path. Did you not see me?”

Barbara was truthful by nature and habit; but in such a cause, how could
she avoid dissimulation?

“Thank you, papa,” she said, as she went in.

“You ought to have been in bed an hour ago,” angrily responded Mr.
Justice Hare.



CHAPTER V.

MR. CARLYLE’S OFFICE.

In the centre of West Lynne stood two houses adjoining each other, one
large, the other much smaller. The large one was the Carlyle residence,
and the small one was devoted to the Carlyle offices. The name of
Carlyle bore a lofty standing in the county; Carlyle and Davidson were
known as first-class practitioners; no pettifogging lawyers were they.
It was Carlyle & Davidson in the days gone by; now it was Archibald
Carlyle. The old firm were brothers-in-law--the first Mrs. Carlyle
having been Mr. Davidson’s sister. She had died and left one child. The
second Mrs. Carlyle died when her son was born--Archibald; and his half-
sister reared him, loved him and ruled him. She bore for him all the
authority of a mother; the boy had known no other, and, when a little
child he had called her Mamma Corny. Mamma Corny had done her duty by
him, that was undoubted; but Mamma Corny had never relaxed her rule;
with an iron hand she liked to rule him now, in great things as in
small, just as she had done in the days of his babyhood. And Archibald
generally submitted, for the force of habit is strong. She was a woman
of strong sense, but, in some things, weak of judgment; and the ruling
passions of her life were love of Archibald and love of saving money.
Mr. Davidson had died earlier than Mr. Carlyle, and his fortune--he had
never married--was left equally divided between Cornelia and Archibald.
Archibald was no blood relation to him, but he loved the open-hearted
boy better than his niece Cornelia. Of Mr. Carlyle’s property, a small
portion only was bequeathed to his daughter, the rest to his son; and in
this, perhaps there was justice, since the 20,000 pounds brought to Mr.
Carlyle by his second wife had been chiefly instrumental in the
accumulation of his large fortune.

Miss Carlyle, or, as she was called in town, Miss Corny, had never
married; it was pretty certain she never would; people thought that her
intense love of her young brother kept her single, for it was not likely
that the daughter of the rich Mr. Carlyle had wanted for offers. Other
maidens confess to soft and tender impressions. Not so Miss Carlyle. All
who had approached her with the lovelorn tale, she sent quickly to the
right-about.

Mr. Carlyle was seated in his own private room in his office the morning
after his return from town. His confidential clerk and manager stood
near him. It was Mr. Dill, a little, meek-looking man with a bald head.
He was on the rolls, had been admitted years and years ago, but he had
never set up for himself; perhaps he deemed the post of head manager in
the office of Carlyle & Davidson, with its substantial salary,
sufficient for his ambition; and manager he had been to them when the
present Mr. Carlyle was in long petticoats. He was a single man, and
occupied handsome apartments near.

Between the room of Mr. Carlyle and that of the clerks, was a small
square space or hall, having ingress also from the house passage;
another room opened from it, a narrow one, which was Mr. Dill’s own
peculiar sanctum. Here he saw clients when Mr. Carlyle was out or
engaged, and here he issued private orders. A little window, not larger
than a pane of glass, looked out from the clerk’s office; they called it
old Dill’s peep-hole and wished it anywhere else, for his spectacles
might be discerned at it more frequently than was agreeable. The old
gentleman had a desk, also, in their office, and there he frequently
sat. He was sitting there, in state, this same morning, keeping a sharp
lookout around him, when the door timidly opened, and the pretty face of
Barbara Hare appeared at it, rosy with blushes.

“Can I see Mr. Carlyle?”

Mr. Dill rose from his seat and shook hands with her. She drew him into
the passage and he closed the door. Perhaps he felt surprised, for it
was not the custom for ladies, young and single, to come there after Mr.
Carlyle.

“Presently, Miss Barbara. He is engaged just now. The justices are with
him.”

“The justices!” uttered Barbara, in alarm; “and papa one? Whatever shall
I do? He must not see me. I would not have him see me here for the
world.”

An ominous sound of talking; the justices were evidently coming forth.
Mr. Dill laid hold of Barbara, whisked her through the clerks’ room, not
daring to take her the other way, lest he should encounter them, and
shut her in his own. “What the plague brought papa here at this moment?”
 thought Barbara, whose face was crimson.

A few minutes and Mr. Dill opened the door again. “They are gone now,
and the coast’s clear, Miss Barbara.”

“I don’t know what opinion you must form of me, Mr. Dill,” she
whispered, “but I will tell you, in confidence, that I am here on some
private business for mamma, who was not well enough to come herself. It
is a little private matter that she does not wish papa to know of.”

“Child,” answered the manager, “a lawyer receives visits from many
people; and it is not the place of those about him to ‘think.’”

He opened the door as he spoke, ushered her into the presence of Mr.
Carlyle, and left her. The latter rose in astonishment.

“You must regard me as a client, and pardon my intrusion,” said Barbara,
with a forced laugh, to hide her agitation. “I am here on the part of
mamma--and I nearly met papa in your passage, which terrified me out of
my senses. Mr. Dill shut me into his room.”

Mr. Carlyle motioned to Barbara to seat herself, then resumed his own
seat, beside his table. Barbara could not help noticing how different
his manners were in his office from his evening manners when he was “off
duty.” Here he was the staid, calm man of business.

“I have a strange thing to tell you,” she began, in a whisper, “but--it
is impossible that any one can hear us,” she broke off, with a look of
dread. “It would be--it might be--death!”

“It is quite impossible,” calmly replied Mr. Carlyle. “The doors are
double doors; did you notice that they were?”

Nevertheless, she left her chair and stood close to Mr. Carlyle, resting
her hand upon the table. He rose, of course.

“Richard is here!”

“Richard!” repeated Mr. Carlyle. “At West Lynne!”

“He appeared at the house last night in disguise, and made signs to me
from the grove of trees. You may imagine my alarm. He has been in London
all this while, half starving, working--I feel ashamed to mention it to
you--in a stable-yard. And, oh, Archibald! He says he is innocent.”

Mr. Carlyle made no reply to this. He probably had no faith in the
assertion. “Sit down, Barbara,” he said drawing her chair closer.

Barbara sat down again, but her manner was hurried and nervous. “Is it
quite sure that no stranger will be coming in? It would look so peculiar
to see me here; but mamma was too unwell to come herself--or rather, she
feared papa’s questioning, if he found out that she came.”

“Be at ease,” replied Mr. Carlyle; “this room is sacred from the
intrusion of strangers. What of Richard?”

“He says that he was not in the cottage at the time the murder was
committed; that the person who really did it was a man of the name of
Thorn.”

“What Thorn?” asked Mr. Carlyle, suppressing all signs of incredulity.

“I don’t know; a friend of Afy’s, he said. Archibald, he swore to it in
the most solemn manner; and I believe, as truly as that I am now
repeating it to you, that he was speaking the truth. I want you to see
Richard, if possible; he is coming to the same place to-night. If he can
tell his own tale to you, perhaps you may find out a way by which his
innocence may be made manifest. You are so clever, you can do anything.”

Mr. Carlyle smiled. “Not quite anything, Barbara. Was this the purport
of Richard’s visit--to say this?”

“Oh, no! He thinks it is of no use to say it, for nobody would believe
him against the evidence. He came to ask for a hundred pounds; he says
he has an opportunity of doing better, if he can have that sum. Mamma
has sent me to you; she has not the money by her, and she dare not ask
papa for it, as it is for Richard. She bade me say that if you will
kindly oblige her with the money to-day, she will arrange with you about
the repayment.”

“Do you want it now?” asked Mr. Carlyle. “If so, I must send to the
bank. Dill never keeps much money in the house when I’m away.”

“Not until evening. Can you manage to see Richard?”

“It is hazardous,” mused Mr. Carlyle; “for him, I mean. Still, if he is
to be in the grove to-night, I may as well be there also. What disguise
is he in?”

“A farm laborer’s, the best he could adopt about here, with large black
whiskers. He is stopping about three miles off, he said, in some obscure
hiding-place. And now,” continued Barbara, “I want you to advise me; had
I better inform mamma that Richard is here, or not?”

Mr. Carlyle did not understand, and said so.

“I declare I am bewildered,” she exclaimed. “I should have premised that
I have not yet told mamma it is Richard himself who is here, but that he
has sent a messenger to beg for this money. Would it be advisable to
acquaint her?”

“Why should you not? I think you ought to do so.”

“Then I will; I was fearing the hazard for she is sure to insist upon
seeing him. Richard also wishes for an interview.”

“It is only natural. Mrs. Hare must be thankful to hear so far, that he
is safe.”

“I never saw anything like it,” returned Barbara; “the change is akin to
magic; she says it has put life into her anew. And now for the last
thing; how can we secure papa’s absence from home to-night? It must be
accomplished in some way. You know his temper: were I or mamma to
suggest to him, to go and see some friend, or to go to the club, he
would immediately stop at home. Can you devise any plan? You see I
appeal to you in all my troubles,” she added, “like I and Anne used to
do when we were children.”

It may be questioned if Mr. Carlyle heard the last remark. He had
dropped his eyelids in thought. “Have you told me all?” he asked
presently, lifting them.

“I think so.”

“Then I will consider it over, and--”

“I shall not like to come here again,” interrupted Barbara. “It--it
might excite suspicions; some one might see me, too, and mention it to
papa. Neither ought you to send to our house.”

“Well--contrive to be in the street at four this afternoon. Stay, that’s
your dinner hour; be walking up the street at three, three precisely; I
will meet you.”

He rose, shook hands, and escorted Barbara through the small hall, along
the passage to the house door; a courtesy probably not yet shown to any
client by Mr. Carlyle. The house door closed upon her, and Barbara had
taken one step from it, when something large loomed down upon her, like
a ship in full sail.

She must have been the tallest lady in the world--out of a caravan. A
fine woman in her day, but angular and bony now. Still, in spite of the
angles and the bones, there was majesty in the appearance of Miss
Carlyle.

“Why--what on earth!” began she, “have you been with Archibald for?”

Barbara Hare, wishing Miss Carlyle over in Asia, stammered out the
excuse she had given Mr. Dill.

“Your mamma sent you on business! I never heard of such a thing. Twice I
have been to see Archibald, and twice did Dill answer that he was
engaged and must not be interrupted. I shall make old Dill explain his
meaning for observing a mystery over it to me.”

“There is no mystery,” answered Barbara, feeling quite sick lest Miss
Carlyle should proclaim there was, before the clerks, or her father.
“Mamma wanted Mr. Carlyle’s opinion upon a little private business, and
not feeling well enough to come herself, she sent me.”

Miss Carlyle did not believe a word. “What business?” asked she
unceremoniously.

“It is nothing that could interest you. A trifling matter, relating to a
little money. It’s nothing, indeed.”

“Then, if it’s nothing, why were you closeted so long with Archibald?”

“He was asking the particulars,” replied Barbara, recovering her
equanimity.

Miss Carlyle sniffed, as she invariably did, when dissenting from a
problem. She was sure there was some mystery astir. She turned and
walked down the street with Barbara, but she was none the more likely to
get anything out of her.

Mr. Carlyle returned to his room, deliberated a few moments, and then
rang his bell. A clerk answered it.

“Go to the Buck’s Head. If Mr. Hare and the other magistrates are there,
ask them to step over to me.”

The young man did as he was bid, and came back with the noted justices
at his heels. They obeyed the summons with alacrity, for they believed
they had got themselves into a judicial scrape, and that Mr. Carlyle
alone could get them out of it.

“I will not request you to sit down,” began Mr. Carlyle, “for it is
barely a moment I shall detain you. The more I think about this man’s
having been put in prison, the less I like it; and I have been
considering that you had better all five, come and smoke your pipes at
my house this evening, when we shall have time to discuss what must be
done. Come at seven, not later, and you will find my father’s old jar
replenished with the best broadcut, and half a dozen churchwarden pipes.
Shall it be so?”

The whole five accepted the invitation eagerly. And they were filing out
when Mr. Carlyle laid his finger on the arm of Justice Hare.

“You will be sure to come, Hare,” he whispered. “We could not get on
without you; all heads,” with a slight inclination towards those going
out, “are not gifted with the clear good sense of yours.”

“Sure and certain,” responded the gratified justice; “fire and water
shouldn’t keep me away.”

Soon after Mr. Carlyle was left alone another clerk entered.

“Miss Carlyle is asking to see you, sir, and Colonel Bethel’s come
again.”

“Send in Miss Carlyle first,” was the answer. “What is it, Cornelia?”

“Ah! You may well ask what? Saying this morning that you could not dine
at six, as usual, and then marching off, and never fixing the hour. How
can I give my orders?”

“I thought business would have called me out, but I am not going now. We
will dine a little earlier, though, Cornelia, say a quarter before six.
I have invited--”

“What’s up, Archibald?” interrupted Miss Carlyle.

“Up! Nothing that I know of. I am very busy, Cornelia, and Colonel
Bethel is waiting; I will talk to you at dinner-time. I have invited a
party for to-night.”

“A party!” echoed Miss Carlyle.

“Four or five of the justices are coming in to smoke their pipes. You
must put out your father’s leaden tobacco-box, and--”

“They shan’t come!” screamed Miss Carlyle. “Do you think I’ll be
poisoned with tobacco smoke from a dozen pipes?”

“You need not sit in the room.”

“Nor they either. Clean curtains are just put up throughout the house,
and I’ll have no horrid pipes to blacken them.”

“I’ll buy you some new curtains, Cornelia, if their pipes spoil these,”
 he quietly replied. “And now, Cornelia, I really must beg you to leave
me.”

“When I have come to the bottom of this affair with Barbara Hare,”
 resolutely returned Miss Corny, dropping the point of the contest as to
the pipes. “You are very clever, Archie, but you can’t do me. I asked
Barbara what she came here for; business for mamma, touching money
matters, was her reply. I ask you: to hear your opinion about the scrape
the bench have got into, is yours. Now, it’s neither one nor the other;
and I tell you, Archibald, I’ll hear what it is. I should like to know
what you and Barbara do with a secret between you.”

Mr. Carlyle knew her and her resolute expression well, and he took his
course, to tell her the truth. She was, to borrow the words Barbara had
used to her brother with regard to him, true as steel. Confide to Miss
Carlyle a secret, and she was trustworthy and impervious as he could be;
but let her come to suspect that there was a secret which was being kept
from her, and she would set to work like a ferret, and never stop until
it was unearthed.

Mr. Carlyle bent forward and spoke in a whisper. “I will tell you, if
you wish, Cornelia, but it is not a pleasant thing to hear. Richard Hare
has returned.”

Miss Carlyle looked perfectly aghast. “Richard Hare! Is he mad?”

“It is not a very sane proceeding. He wants money from his mother, and
Mrs. Hare sent Barbara to ask me to manage it for her. No wonder poor
Barbara was flurried and nervous, for there’s danger on all sides.”

“Is he at their house?”

“How could he be there and his father in it? He is in hiding two or
three miles off, disguised as a laborer, and will be at the grove to-
night to receive this money. I have invited the justices to get Mr. Hare
safe away from his own house. If he saw Richard, he would undoubtedly
give him up to justice, and--putting graver considerations aside--that
would be pleasant for neither you nor for me. To have a connection
gibbeted for a willful murder would be an ugly blot on the Carlyle
escutcheon, Cornelia.”

Miss Carlyle sat in silence revolving the news, a contraction on her
ample brow.

“And now you know all, Cornelia, and I do beg you to leave me, for I am
overwhelmed with work to-day.”



CHAPTER VI.

RICHARD HARE, THE YOUNGER.

The bench of justices did not fail to keep their appointment; at seven
o’clock they arrived at Miss Carlyle’s, one following closely upon the
heels of another. The reader may dissent from the expression “Miss
Carlyle’s,” but it is the correct one, for the house was hers, not her
brother’s; though it remained his home, as it had been in his father’s
time, the house was among the property bequeathed to Miss Carlyle.

Miss Carlyle chose to be present in spite of the pipes and the smoke,
and she was soon as deep in the discussion as the justices were. It was
said in the town, that she was as good a lawyer as her father had been;
she undoubtedly possessed sound judgment in legal matters, and quick
penetration. At eight o’clock a servant entered the room and addressed
his master.

“Mr. Dill is asking to see you, sir.”

Mr. Carlyle rose, and came back with an open note in his hand.

“I am sorry to find that I must leave you for half an hour; some
important business has arisen, but I will be back as soon as I can.”

“Who has sent for you;” immediately demanded Miss Corny.

He gave her a quiet look which she interpreted into a warning not to
question. “Mr. Dill is here, and will join you to talk the affair over,”
 he said to his guests. “He knows the law better than I do; but I will
not be long.”

He quitted his house, and walked with a rapid step toward the Grove. The
moon was bright as on the previous evening. After he had left the town
behind him, and was passing the scattered villas already mentioned, he
cast an involuntary glance at the wood, which rose behind them on his
left hand. It was called Abbey Wood, from the circumstance that in old
days an abbey had stood in its vicinity, all traces of which, save
tradition, had passed away. There was one small house, or cottage, just
within the wood, and in that cottage had occurred the murder for which
Richard Hare’s life was in jeopardy. It was no longer occupied, for
nobody would rent it or live in it.

Mr. Carlyle opened the gate of the Grove, and glanced at the trees on
either side of him, but he neither saw nor heard any signs of Richard’s
being concealed there. Barbara was at the window, looking out, and she
came herself and opened the door to Mr. Carlyle.

“Mamma is in the most excited state,” she whispered to him as he
entered. “I knew how it would be.”

“Has he come yet?”

“I have no doubt of it; but he has made no signal.”

Mrs. Hare, feverish and agitated, with a burning spot on her delicate
cheeks, stood by the chair, not occupying it. Mr. Carlyle placed a
pocket-book in her hands. “I have brought it chiefly in notes,” he said:
“they will be easier for him to carry than gold.”

Mrs. Hare answered only by a look of gratitude, and clasped Mr.
Carlyle’s hand in both hers. “Archibald, I must see my boy; how can it
be managed? Must I go into the garden to him, or may he come in here?”

“I think he might come in; you know how bad the night air is for you.
Are the servants astir this evening?”

“Things seem to have turned out quite kindly,” spoke up Barbara. “It
happens to be Anne’s birthday, so mamma sent me just now into the
kitchen with a cake and a bottle of wine, desiring them to drink her
health. I shut the door and told them to make themselves comfortable;
that if we wanted anything we would ring.”

“Then they are safe,” observed Mr. Carlyle, “and Richard may come in.”

“I will go and ascertain whether he is come,” said Barbara.

“Stay where you are, Barbara; I will go myself,” interposed Mr. Carlyle.
“Have the door open when you see us coming up the path.”

Barbara gave a faint cry, and, trembling, clutched the arm of Mr.
Carlyle. “There he is! See! Standing out from the trees, just opposite
this window.”

Mr. Carlyle turned to Mrs. Hare. “I shall not bring him in immediately;
for if I am to have an interview with him, it must be got over first,
that I may go back home to the justices, and keep Mr. Hare all safe.”

He proceeded on his way, gained the trees, and plunged into them; and,
leaning against one, stood Richard Hare. Apart from his disguise, and
the false and fierce black whiskers, he was a blue-eyed, fair, pleasant-
looking young man, slight, and of middle height, and quite as yielding
and gentle as his mother. In her, this mild yieldingness of disposition
was rather a graceful quality; in Richard it was regarded as a
contemptible misfortune. In his boyhood he had been nicknamed Leafy
Dick, and when a stranger inquired why, the answer was that, as a leaf
was swayed by the wind, so he was swayed by everybody about him, never
possessing a will of his own. In short, Richard Hare, though of an
amiable and loving nature, was not over-burdened with what the world
calls brains. Brains he certainly had, but they were not sharp ones.

“Is my mother coming out to me?” asked Richard, after a few interchanged
sentences with Mr. Carlyle.

“No. You are to go indoors. Your father is away, and the servants are
shut up in the kitchen and will not see you. Though if they did, they
could never recognize you in that trim. A fine pair of whiskers,
Richard.”

“Let us go in, then. I am all in a twitter till I get away. Am I to have
the money?”

“Yes, yes. But, Richard, your sister says you wish to disclose to me the
true history of that lamentable night. You had better speak while we are
here.”

“It was Barbara herself wanted you to hear it. I think it of little
moment. If the whole place heard the truth from me, it would do no good,
for I should get no belief--not even from you.”

“Try me, Richard, in as few words as possible.”

“Well, there was a row at home about my going so much to Hallijohn’s.
The governor and my mother thought I went after Afy; perhaps I did, and
perhaps I didn’t. Hallijohn had asked me to lend him my gun, and that
evening, when I went to see Af--when I went to see some one--never mind-
-”

“Richard,” interrupted Mr. Carlyle, “there’s an old saying, and it is
sound advice: ‘Tell the whole truth to your lawyer and your doctor.’ If
I am to judge whether anything can be attempted for you, you must tell
it to me; otherwise, I would rather hear nothing. It shall be sacred
trust.”

“Then, if I must, I must,” returned the yielding Richard. “I did love
the girl. I would have waited till I was my own master to make her my
wife, though it had been for years and years. I could not do it, you
know, in the face of my father’s opposition.”

“Your wife?” rejoined Mr. Carlyle, with some emphasis.

Richard looked surprised. “Why, you don’t suppose I meant anything else!
I wouldn’t have been such a blackguard.”

“Well, go on, Richard. Did she return your love?”

“I can’t be certain. Sometimes I thought she did, sometimes not; she
used to play and shuffle, and she liked too much to be with--him. I
would think her capricious--telling me I must not come this evening, and
I must not come the other; but I found out they were the evenings when
she was expecting him. We were never there together.”

“You forget that you have not indicted ‘him’ by any name, Richard. I am
at fault.”

Richard Hare bent forward till his black whiskers brushed Mr. Carlyle’s
shoulder. “It was that cursed Thorn.”

Mr. Carlyle remembered the name Barbara had mentioned. “Who was Thorn? I
never heard of him.”

“Neither had anybody else, I expect, in West Lynne. He took precious
good care of that. He lives some miles away, and used to come over in
secret.”

“Courting Afy?”

“Yes, he did come courting her,” returned Richard, in a savage tone.
“Distance was no barrier. He would come galloping over at dusk, tie his
horse to a tree in the wood, and pass an hour or two with Afy. In the
house, when her father was not at home; roaming about the woods with
her, when he was.”

“Come to the point, Richard--to the evening.”

“Hallijohn’s gun was out of order, and he requested the loan of mine. I
had made an appointment with Afy to be at her house that evening, and I
went down after dinner, carrying the gun with me. My father called after
me to know where I was going; I said, out with young Beauchamp, not
caring to meet his opposition; and the lie told against me at the
inquest. When I reached Hallijohn’s, going the back way along the
fields, and through the wood-path, as I generally did go, Afy came out,
all reserve, as she could be at times, and said she was unable to
receive me then, that I must go back home. We had a few words about it,
and as we were speaking, Locksley passed, and saw me with the gun in my
hand; but it ended in my giving way. She could do just what she liked
with me, for I loved the very ground she trod on. I gave her the gun,
telling her it was loaded, and she took it indoors, shutting me out. I
did not go away; I had a suspicion that she had got Thorn there, though
she denied it to me; and I hid myself in some trees near the house.
Again Locksley came in view and saw me there, and called out to know why
I was hiding. I shied further off, and did not answer him--what were my
private movements to him?--and that also told against me at the inquest.
Not long afterwards--twenty minutes, perhaps--I heard a shot, which
seemed to be in the direction of the cottage. ‘Somebody having a late
pop at the partridges,’ thought I; for the sun was then setting, and at
the moment I saw Bethel emerge from the trees, and run in the direction
of the cottage. That was the shot that killed Hallijohn.”

There was a pause. Mr. Carlyle looked keenly at Richard there in the
moonlight.

“Very soon, almost in the same moment, as it seemed, some one came
panting and tearing along the path leading from the cottage. It was
Thorn. His appearance startled me: I had never seen a man show more
utter terror. His face was livid, his eyes seemed starting, and his lips
were drawn back from his teeth. Had I been a strong man I should surely
have attacked him. I was mad with jealousy; for I then saw that Afy had
sent me away that she might entertain him.”

“I thought you said this Thorn never came but at dusk,” observed Mr.
Carlyle.

“I never knew him to do so until that evening. All I can say is, he was
there then. He flew along swiftly, and I afterwards heard the sound of
his horse’s hoofs galloping away. I wondered what was up that he should
look so scared, and scutter away as though the deuce was after him; I
wondered whether he had quarreled with Afy. I ran to the house, leaped
up the two steps, and--Carlyle--I fell over the prostrate body of
Hallijohn! He was lying just within, on the kitchen floor, dead. Blood
was round about him, and my gun, just discharged, was thrown near. He
had been shot in the side.”

Richard stopped for breath. Mr. Carlyle did not speak.

“I called to Afy. No one answered. No one was in the lower room; and it
seemed that no one was in the upper. A sort of panic came over me, a
fear. You know they always said at home I was a coward: I could not have
remained another minute with that dead man, had it been to save my own
life. I caught up the gun, and was making off, when--”

“Why did you catch up the gun?” interrupted Mr. Carlyle.

“Ideas pass through our minds quicker than we can speak them, especially
in these sorts of moments,” was the reply of Richard Hare. “Some vague
notion flashed on my brain that my gun ought not to be found near the
murdered body of Hallijohn. I was flying from the door, I say, when
Locksley emerged from the wood, full in view; and what possessed me I
can’t tell, but I did the worst thing I could do--flung the gun indoors
again, and got away, although Locksley called after me to stop.”

“Nothing told against you so much as that,” observed Mr. Carlyle.
“Locksley deposed that he had seen you leave the cottage, gun in hand,
apparently in great commotion; that the moment you saw him, you
hesitated, as from fear, flung back the gun, and escaped.”

Richard stamped his foot. “Aye; and all owing to my cursed cowardice.
They had better have made a woman of me, and brought me up in
petticoats. But let me go on. I came upon Bethel. He was standing in
that half-circle where the trees have been cut. Now I knew that Bethel,
if he had gone straight in the direction of the cottage, must have met
Thorn quitting it. ‘Did you encounter that hound?’ I asked him. ‘What
hound?’ returned Bethel. ‘That fine fellow, that Thorn, who comes after
Afy,’ I answered, for I did not mind mentioning her name in my passion.
‘I don’t know any Thorn,’ returned Bethel, ‘and I did not know anybody
was after Afy but yourself.’ ‘Did you hear a shot?’ I went on. ‘Yes, I
did,’ he replied; ‘I suppose it was Locksley, for he’s about this
evening,’ ‘And I saw you,’ I continued, ‘just at the moment the shot was
fired, turn round the corner in the direction of Hallijohn’s.’ ‘So I
did,’ he said, ‘but only to strike into the wood, a few paces up. What’s
your drift?’ ‘Did you not encounter Thorn, running from the cottage?’ I
persisted. ‘I have encountered no one,’ he said, ‘and I don’t believe
anybody’s about but ourselves and Locksley.’ I quitted him, and came
off,” concluded Richard Hare. “He evidently had not seen Thorn, and knew
nothing.”

“And you decamped the same night, Richard; it was a fatal step.”

“Yes, I was a fool. I thought I’d wait quiet, and see how things turned
out; but you don’t know all. Three or four hours later, I went to the
cottage again, and I managed to get a minute’s speech with Afy. I never
shall forget it; before I could say one syllable she flew out at me,
accusing me of being the murderer of her father, and she fell into
hysterics out there on the grass. The noise brought people from the
house--plenty were in it then--and I retreated. ‘If she can think me
guilty, the world will think me guilty,’ was my argument; and that night
I went right off, to stop in hiding for a day or two, till I saw my way
clear. It never came clear; the coroner’s inquest sat, and the verdict
floored me over. And Afy--but I won’t curse her--fanned the flame
against me by denying that any one had been there that night. ‘She had
been at home,’ she said, ‘and had strolled out at the back door, to the
path that led from West Lynne, and was lingering there when she heard a
shot. Five minutes afterward she returned to the house, and found
Locksley standing over her dead father.’”

Mr. Carlyle remained silent, rapidly running over in his mind the chief
points of Richard Hare’s communication. “Four of you, as I understand
it, were in the vicinity of the cottage that night, and from one or the
other the shot no doubt proceeded. You were at a distance, you say,
Richard; Bethel, also, could not have been--”

“It was not Bethel who did it,” interrupted Richard; “it was an
impossibility. I saw him, as I tell you, in the same moment that the gun
was fired.”

“But now, where was Locksley?”

“It is equally impossible that it could have been Locksley. He was
within my view at the same time, at right angles from me, deep in the
wood, away from the paths altogether. It was Thorn did the deed, beyond
all doubt, and the verdict ought to have been willful murder against
him. Carlyle, I see you don’t believe my story.”

“What you say has startled me, and I must take time to consider whether
I believe it or not,” said Mr. Carlyle, in his straightforward manner.
“The most singular thing is, if you witnessed this, Thorn’s running from
the cottage in the manner you describe, that you did not come forward
and denounce him.”

“I didn’t do it, because I was a fool, a weak coward, as I have been all
my life,” rejoined Richard. “I can’t help it; it was born with me, and
will go with me to my grave. What would my word have availed that it was
Thorn, when there was nobody to corroborate it? And the discharged gun,
mine, was a damnatory proof against me.”

“Another thing strikes me as curious,” cried Mr. Carlyle. “If this man,
Thorn, was in the habit of coming to West Lynne, evening after evening,
how was it that he never was observed? This is the first time I have
heard any stranger’s name mentioned in connection with the affair, or
with Afy.”

“Thorn chose by-roads, and he never came, save that once, but at dusk
and dark. It was evident to me at the time that he was striving to do it
on the secret. I told Afy so, and that it augured no good for her. You
are not attaching credit to what I say, and it is only as I expected;
nevertheless, I swear that I have related the facts. As surely as that
we--I, Thorn, Afy and Hallijohn, must one day meet together before our
Maker, I have told you the truth.”

The words were solemn, their tone earnest, and Mr. Carlyle remained
silent, his thoughts full.

“To what end, else, should I say this?” went on Richard. “It can do me
no service; all the assertion I could put forth would not go a jot
toward clearing me.”

“No, it would not,” assented Mr. Carlyle. “If ever you are cleared, it
must be by proofs. But--I will keep my thought on the matter, and should
anything arise----What sort of a man was this Thorn?”

“In age he might be three or four and twenty, tall and slender; an out-
and-out aristocrat.”

“And his connections? Where did he live?”

“I never knew. Afy, in her boasting way, would say he had come from
Swainson, a ten mile ride.”

“From Swainson?” quickly interrupted Mr. Carlyle.

“Could it be one of the Thorns of Swainson?”

“None of the Thorns that I know. He was a totally different sort of man,
with his perfumed hands, and his rings, and his dainty gloves. That he
was an aristocrat I believe, but of bad taste and style, displaying a
profusion of jewellery.”

A half smile flitted over Carlyle’s face.

“Was it real, Richard?”

“It was. He would wear diamond shirt-studs, diamond rings, diamond pins;
brilliants, all of the first water. My impression was, that he put them
on to dazzle Afy. She told me once that she could be a grander lady, if
she chose, than I could ever make her. ‘A lady on the cross,’ I
answered, ‘but never on the square.’ Thorn was not a man to entertain
honest intentions to one in the station of Afy Hallijohn; but girls are
simple as geese.”

“By your description, it could not have been one of the Thorns of
Swainson. Wealthy tradesmen, fathers of young families, short, stout,
and heavy as Dutchmen, staid and most respectable. Very unlikely men are
they, to run into an expedition of that sort.”

“What expedition?” questioned Richard. “The murder?”

“The riding after Afy. Richard, where is Afy?”

Richard Hare lifted his eyes in surprise. “How should I know? I was just
going to ask you.”

Mr. Carlyle paused. He thought Richard’s answer an evasive one. “She
disappeared immediately after the funeral; and it was thought--in short,
Richard, the neighborhood gave her credit for having gone after and
joined you.”

“No! did they? What a pack of idiots! I have never seen or heard of her,
Carlyle, since that unfortunate night. If she went after anybody, it was
after Thorn.”

“Was the man good-looking?”

“I suppose the world would call him so. Afy thought such an Adonis had
never been coined, out of fable. He had shiny black hair and whiskers,
dark eyes and handsome features. But his vain dandyism spoilt him; would
you believe that his handkerchiefs were soaked in scent? They were of
the finest cambric, silky as a hair, as fine as the one Barbara bought
at Lynneborough and gave a guinea for; only hers had a wreath of
embroidery around it.”

Mr. Carlyle could ascertain no more particulars, and it was time Richard
went indoors. They proceeded up the path. “What a blessing it is the
servants’ windows don’t look this way,” shivered Richard, treading on
Mr. Carlyle’s heels. “If they should be looking out upstairs!”

His apprehensions were groundless, and he entered unseen.

Mr. Carlyle’s part was over; he left the poor banned exile to his short
interview with his hysterical and tearful mother, Richard nearly as
hysterical as she, and made the best of his way home again, pondering
over what he had heard.

The magistrates made a good evening of it. Mr. Carlyle entertained them
to supper--mutton chops and bread and cheese. They took up their pipes
for another whiff when the meal was over, but Miss Carlyle retired to
bed; the smoke, to which she had not been accustomed since her father’s
death, had made her head ache and her eyes smart. About eleven they
wished Mr. Carlyle good-night, and departed, but Mr. Dill, in obedience
to a nod from his superior, remained.

“Sit down a moment, Dill; I want to ask you a question. You are intimate
with the Thorns, of Swainson; do they happen to have any relative, a
nephew or cousin, perhaps, a dandy young fellow?”

“I went over last Sunday fortnight to spend the day with young Jacob,”
 was the answer of Mr. Dill, one wider from the point than he generally
gave. Mr. Carlyle smiled.

“Young Jacob! He must be forty, I suppose.”

“About that. But you and I estimate age differently, Mr. Archibald. They
have no nephew; the old man never had but those two children, Jacob and
Edward. Neither have they any cousin. Rich men they are growing now.
Jacob has set up his carriage.”

Mr. Carlyle mused, but he expected the answer, for neither had he heard
of the brothers Thorn, tanners, curriers, and leather-dressers,
possessing a relative of the name. “Dill,” said he, “something has
arisen which, in my mind, casts a doubt upon Richard Hare’s guilt. I
question whether he had anything to do with the murder.”

Mr. Dill opened his eyes. “But his flight, Mr. Archibald, And his
stopping away?”

“Suspicious circumstances, I grant. Still, I have good cause to doubt.
At the time it happened, some dandy fellow used to come courting Afy
Hallijohn in secret; a tall, slender man, as he is described to me,
bearing the name of Thorn, and living at Swainson. Could it have been
one of the Thorn family?”

“Mr. Archibald!” remonstrated the old clerk; “as if those two respected
gentlemen, with their wives and babies, would come sneaking after that
flyaway Afy!”

“No reflection on them,” returned Mr. Carlyle. “This was a young man,
three or four and twenty, a head taller than either. I thought it might
be a relative.”

“I have repeatedly heard them say that they are alone in the world; that
they are the two last of the name. Depend upon it, it was nobody
connected with them;” and wishing Mr. Carlyle good-night, he departed.

The servant came in to remove the glasses and the obnoxious pipes. Mr.
Carlyle sat in a brown study; presently he looked round at the man.

“Is Joyce gone to bed?”

“No, sir. She is just going.”

“Send her here when you have taken away those things.”

Joyce came in--the upper servant at Miss Carlyle’s. She was of middle
height, and would never see five and thirty again; her forehead was
broad, her gray eyes were deeply set, and her face was pale. Altogether
she was plain, but sensible-looking. She was the half-sister of Afy
Hallijohn.

“Shut the door, Joyce.”

Joyce did as she was bid, came forward, and stood by the table.

“Have you ever heard from your sister, Joyce?” began Mr. Carlyle,
somewhat abruptly.

“No, sir,” was the reply; “I think it would be a wonder if I did hear.”

“Why so?”

“If she would go off after Richard Hare, who had sent her father into
his grave, she would be more likely to hide herself and her doings than
to proclaim them to me, sir.”

“Who was that other, that fine gentleman, who came after her?”

The color mantled in Joyce’s cheeks, and she dropped her voice.

“Sir! Did you hear of him?”

“Not at that time. Since. He came from Swainson, did he not?”

“I believe so, sir. Afy never would say much about him. We did not agree
upon the point. I said a person of his rank would do her no good; and
Afy flew out when I spoke against him.”

Mr. Carlyle caught her up. “His rank. What was his rank?”

“Afy bragged of his being next door to a lord; and he looked like it. I
only saw him once; I had gone home early, and there sat him and Afy. His
white hands were all glittering with rings, and his shirt was finished
off with shining stones where the buttons ought to be.”

“Have you seen him since?”

“Never since, never but once; and I don’t think I should know him if I
did see him. He got up, sir, as soon as I went into the parlor, shook
hands with Afy, and left. A fine, upright man he was, nearly as tall as
you, sir, but very slim. Those soldiers always carry themselves well.”

“How do you know he was a soldier?” quickly rejoined Mr. Carlyle.

“Afy told me so. ‘The Captain’ she used to call him; but she said he was
not a captain yet awhile--the next grade to it, a--a----”

“Lieutenant?” suggested Mr. Carlyle.

“Yes, sir, that was it--Lieutenant Thorn.”

“Joyce,” said Mr. Carlyle, “has it never struck you that Afy is more
likely to have followed Lieutenant Thorn than Richard Hare?”

“No, sir,” answered Joyce; “I have felt certain always that she is with
Richard Hare, and nothing can turn me from the belief. All West Lynne is
convinced of it.”

Mr. Carlyle did not attempt to “turn her from her belief.” He dismissed
her, and sat on still, revolving the case in all its bearings.

Richard Hare’s short interview with his mother had soon terminated. It
lasted but a quarter of an hour, both dreading interruptions from the
servants; and with a hundred pounds in his pocket, and desolation in his
heart, the ill-fated young man once more quitted his childhood’s home.
Mrs. Hare and Barbara watched him steal down the path in the telltale
moonlight, and gain the road, both feeling that those farewell kisses
they had pressed upon his lips would not be renewed for years, and might
not be forever.



CHAPTER VII.

MISS CARLYLE AT HOME.

The church clocks at West Lynne struck eight one lovely morning in July,
and then the bells chimed out, giving token that it was Sunday.

East Lynne had changed owners, and now it was the property of Mr.
Carlyle. He had bought it as it stood, furniture and all; but the
transfer had been conducted with secrecy, and was suspected by none,
save those engaged in the negotiations. Whether Lord Mount Severn
thought it might prevent any one getting on the scent, or whether he
wished to take farewell of a place he had formerly been fond of, certain
it is that he craved a week or two’s visit to it. Mr. Carlyle most
readily and graciously acquiesced; and the earl, his daughter, and
retinue had arrived the previous day.

West Lynne was in ecstacies. It called itself an aristocratic place, and
it indulged hopes that the earl might be intending to confer permanently
the light of his presence, by taking up his residence again at East
Lynne. The toilettes prepared to meet his admiring eyes were prodigious
and pretty Barbara Hare was not the only young lady who had thereby to
encounter the paternal storm.

Miss Carlyle was ready for church at the usual time, plainly, but well
dressed. As she and Archibald were leaving their house, they saw
something looming up the street, flashing and gleaming in the sun. A
pink parasol came first, a pink bonnet and feather came behind it, a
gray brocaded dress and white gloves.

“The vain little idiot!” ejaculated Miss Carlyle. But Barbara smiled up
the street toward them, unconscious of the apostrophe.

“Well done, Barbara!” was the salutation of Miss Carlyle. “The justice
might well call out--you are finer than a sunbeam!”

“Not half so fine as many another in the church will be to-day,”
 responded Barbara, as she lifted her shy blue eyes and blushing face to
answer the greetings of Mr. Carlyle. “West Lynne seems bent on out-
dressing the Lady Isabel. You should have been at the milliner’s
yesterday morning, Miss Carlyle.”

“Is all the finery coming out to-day?” gravely inquired Mr. Carlyle, as
Barbara turned with them toward the church, and he walked by her side
and his sister’s, for he had an objection, almost invincible as a
Frenchman’s, to give his arm to two ladies.

“Of course,” replied Barbara. “First impression is everything, you know,
and the earl and his daughter will be coming to church.”

“Suppose she should not be in peacock’s plumes?” cried Miss Carlyle,
with an imperturbable face.

“Oh! But she is sure to be--if you mean richly dressed,” cried Barbara,
hastily.

“Or, suppose they should not come to church?” laughed Mr. Carlyle. “What
a disappointment to the bonnets and feathers!”

“After all, Barbara, what are they to us, or we to them?” resumed Miss
Carlyle. “We may never meet. We insignificant West Lynne gentry shall
not obtrude ourselves into East Lynne. It would scarcely be fitting--or
be deemed so by the earl and Lady Isabel.”

“That’s just how papa went on,” grumbled Barbara. “He caught sight of
this bonnet yesterday; and when, by way of excuse, I said I had it to
call on them, he asked whether I thought the obscure West Lynne families
would venture to thrust their calls on Lord Mount Severn, as though they
were of the county aristocracy. It was the feather that put him out.”

“It is a very long one,” remarked Miss Carlyle, grimly surveying it.

Barbara was to sit in the Carlyle pew that day, for she thought the
farther she was from the justice the better; there was no knowing but he
might take a sly revengeful cut at the feather in the middle of service,
and so dock its beauty. Scarcely were they seated when some strangers
came quietly up the aisle--a gentleman who limped as he walked, with a
furrowed brow and gray hair; and a young lady. Barbara looked round with
eagerness, but looked away again; they could not be the expected
strangers, the young lady’s dress was too plain--a clear-looking muslin
dress for a hot summer’s day. But the old beadle in his many-caped coat,
was walking before them sideways with his marshalling baton, and he
marshaled them into the East Lynne pew, unoccupied for so many years.

“Who in the world can they be?” whispered Barbara to Miss Carlyle. “That
old stupid is always making a mistake and putting people into the wrong
places.”

“The earl and Lady Isabel.”

The color flushed into Barbara’s face, and she stared at Miss Corny.
“Why, she has no silks, and no feathers, and no anything!” cried
Barbara. “She’s plainer than anybody in the church!”

“Plainer than any of the fine ones--than you, for instance. The earl is
much altered, but I should have known them both anywhere. I should have
known her from the likeness to her poor mother--just the same eyes and
sweet expression.”

Aye, those brown eyes, so full of sweetness and melancholy; few who had
once seen could mistake or forget them; and Barbara Hare, forgetting
where she was, looked at them much that day.

“She is very lovely,” thought Barbara, “and her dress is certainly that
of a lady. I wish I had not had this streaming pink feather. What fine
jackdaws she must deem us all!”

The earl’s carriage, an open barouche, was waiting at the gate, at the
conclusion of the service. He handed his daughter in, and was putting
his gouty foot upon the step to follow her, when he observed Mr.
Carlyle. The earl turned and held out his hand. A man who could purchase
East Lynne was worthy of being received as an equal, though he was but a
country lawyer.

Mr. Carlyle shook hands with the earl, approached the carriage and
raised his hat to Lady Isabel. She bent forward with her pleasant smile,
and put her hand into his.

“I have many things to say to you,” said the earl. “I wish you would go
home with us. If you have nothing better to do, be East Lynne’s guest
for the remainder of the day.”

He smiled peculiarly as he spoke, and Mr. Carlyle echoed it. East
Lynne’s guest! That is what the earl was at present. Mr. Carlyle turned
aside to tell his sister.

“Cornelia, I shall not be home to dinner; I am going with Lord Mount
Severn. Good-day, Barbara.”

Mr. Carlyle stepped into the carriage, was followed by the earl, and it
drove away. The sun shone still, but the day’s brightness had gone out
for Barbara Hare.

“How does he know the earl so well? How does he know Lady Isabel?” she
reiterated in her astonishment.

“Archibald knows something of most people,” replied Miss Corny. “He saw
the earl frequently, when he was in town in the spring, and Lady Isabel
once or twice. What a lovely face hers is!”

Barbara made no reply. She returned home with Miss Carlyle, but her
manner was as absent as her heart, and that had run away to East Lynne.



CHAPTER VIII.

MR. KANE’S CONCERT.

Before Lord Mount Severn had completed the fortnight of his proposed
stay, the gout came on seriously. It was impossible for him to move away
from East Lynne. Mr. Carlyle assured him he was only too pleased that he
should remain as long as might be convenient, and the earl expressed his
acknowledgments; he hoped soon to be re-established on his legs.

But he was not. The gout came, and the gout went--not positively laying
him up in bed, but rendering him unable to leave his rooms; and this
continued until October, when he grew much better. The county families
had been neighborly, calling on the invalid earl, and occasionally
carrying off Lady Isabel, but his chief and constant visitor had been
Mr. Carlyle. The earl had grown to like him in no common degree, and was
disappointed if Mr. Carlyle spent an evening away from him, so that he
became, as it were, quite domesticated with the earl and Isabel. “I am
not quite equal to general society,” he observed to his daughter, “and
it is considerate and kind of Carlyle to come here and cheer my
loneliness.”

“Extremely kind,” said Isabel. “I like him very much, papa.”

“I don’t know anybody that I like half as well,” was the rejoinder of
the earl.

Mr. Carlyle went up as usual the same evening, and, in the course of it,
the earl asked Isabel to sing.

“I will if you wish, papa,” was the reply, “but the piano is so much out
of tune that it is not pleasant to sing to it. Is there any one in West
Lynne who could come here and tune my piano, Mr. Carlyle?” she added,
turning to him.

“Certainly there is. Kane would do it. Shall I send him to-morrow?”

“I should be glad, if it would not be giving you too much trouble. Not
that tuning will benefit it greatly, old thing that it is. Were we to be
much at East Lynne, I should get papa to exchange it for a good one.”

Little thought Lady Isabel that that very piano was Mr. Carlyle’s, and
not hers. The earl coughed, and exchanged a smile and a glance with his
guest.

Mr. Kane was the organist of St. Jude’s church, a man of embarrassment
and sorrow, who had long had a sore fight with the world. When he
arrived at East Lynne, the following day, dispatched by Mr. Carlyle,
Lady Isabel happened to be playing, and she stood by, and watched him
begin his work. She was courteous and affable--she was so to every one--
and the poor music master took courage to speak of his own affairs, and
to prefer a humble request--that she and Lord Mount Severn would
patronize and personally attend a concert he was about to give the
following week. A scarlet blush came into his thin cheeks as he
confessed that he was very poor, could scarcely live, and he was getting
up this concert in his desperate need. If it succeeded well, he could
then go on again; if not, he should be turned out of his home, and his
furniture sold for the two years’ rent he owed--and he had seven
children.

Isabel, all her sympathies awakened, sought the earl. “Oh, papa! I have
to ask you the greatest favor. Will you grant it?”

“Ay, child, you don’t ask them often. What is it?”

“I want you to take me to a concert at West Lynne.”

The earl fell back in surprise, and stared at Isabel. “A concert at West
Lynne!” he laughed. “To hear the rustics scraping the fiddle! My dear
Isabel!”

She poured out what she had just heard, with her own comments and
additions. “Seven children, papa! And if the concert does not succeed he
must give up his home, and turn out into the streets with them--it is,
you see, almost a matter of life or death with him. He is very poor.”

“I am poor myself,” said the earl.

“I was so sorry for him when he was speaking. He kept turning red and
white, and catching up his breath in agitation; it was painful to him to
tell of his embarrassments. I am sure he is a gentleman.”

“Well, you may take a pound’s worth of tickets, Isabel, and give them to
the upper servants. A village concert!”

“Oh, papa, it is not--can’t you see it is not? If we, you and I, will
promise to be present, all the families round West Lynne will attend,
and he will have the room full. They will go because we do--he said so.
Make a sacrifice for once, dearest papa, and go, if it be only for an
hour. I shall enjoy it if there’s nothing but a fiddle and a
tambourine.”

“You gipsy! You are as bad as a professional beggar. There--go and tell
the fellow we will look in for half an hour.”

She flew back to Mr. Kane, her eyes dancing. She spoke quietly, as she
always did, but her own satisfaction gladdened her voice.

“I am happy to tell you that papa has consented. He will take four
tickets and we will attend the concert.”

The tears rushed into Mr. Kane’s eyes; Isabel was not sure but they were
in her own. He was a tall, thin, delicate-looking man, with long, white
fingers, and a long neck. He faltered forth his thanks with an inquiry
whether he might be allowed to state openly that they would be present.

“Tell everybody,” said she, eagerly. “Everybody you come across, if, as
you think, it will be the means of inducing people to attend. I shall
tell all friends who call upon me, and ask them to go.”

When Mr. Carlyle came up in the evening, the earl was temporarily absent
from the room. Isabel began to speak of the concert.

“It is a hazardous venture for Mr. Kane,” observed Mr. Carlyle. “I fear
he will only lose money, and add to his embarrassments.”

“Why do you fear that?” she asked.

“Because, Lady Isabel, nothing gets patronized at West Lynne--nothing
native; and people have heard so long of poor Kane’s necessities, that
they think little of them.”

“Is he so very poor?”

“Very. He is starved half his time.”

“Starved!” repeated Isabel, an expression of perplexity arising to her
face as she looked at Mr. Carlyle, for she scarcely understood him. “Do
you mean that he does not have enough to eat?”

“Of bread he may, but not much better nourishment. His salary, as
organist, is thirty pounds, and he gets a little stray teaching. But he
has his wife and children to keep, and no doubt serves them before
himself. I dare say he scarcely knows what it is to taste meat.”

The words brought a bitter pang to Lady Isabel.

“Not enough to eat! Never to taste meat!” And she, in her carelessness,
her ignorance, her indifference--she scarcely knew what term to give it-
-had not thought to order him a meal in their house of plenty! He had
walked from West Lynne, occupied himself an hour with her piano, and set
off to walk back again, battling with his hunger. A word from her, and a
repast had been set before him out of their superfluities such as he
never sat down to, and that word she had not spoken.

“You are looking grave, Lady Isabel.”

“I’m taking contrition to myself. Never mind, it cannot now be helped,
but it will always be a dark spot on my memory.”

“What is it?”

She lifted her repentant face to his and smiled. “Never mind, I say, Mr.
Carlyle; what is past cannot be recalled. He looks like a gentleman.”

“Who? Kane? A gentleman bred; his father was a clergyman. Kane’s ruin
was his love of music--it prevented his settling to any better paid
profession; his early marriage also was a drawback and kept him down. He
is young still.”

“Mr. Carlyle I would not be one of your West Lynne people for the world.
Here is a young gentleman struggling with adversity, and you won’t put
out your hand to help him!”

He smiled at her warmth. “Some of us will take tickets--I, for one; but
I don’t know about attending the concert. I fear few would do that.”

“Because that’s just the thing that would serve him? If one went,
another would. Well, I shall try and show West Lynne that I don’t take a
lesson from their book; I shall be there before it begins, and never
come out till the last song’s over. I am not too grand to go, if West
Lynne is.”

“You surely do not think of going?”

“I surely do think of it; and papa goes with me--I persuaded him; and I
have given Mr. Kane the promise.”

Mr. Carlyle paused. “I am glad to hear it; it will be a perfect boon to
Kane. If it once gets abroad that Lord Mount Severn and Lady Isabel
intend to honor the concert, there won’t be standing room.”

She danced round with a little gleeful step. “What high and mighty
personages Lord Mount Severn and Lady Isabel seem to be! If you had any
goodness of heart, Mr. Carlyle, you would enlist yourself in the cause
also.”

“I think I will,” he smiled.

“Papa says you hold sway at West Lynne. If you proclaim that you mean to
go, you will induce others.”

“I will proclaim that you do,” he answered; “that will be all
sufficient. But, Lady Isabel, you must not expect much gratification
from the performance.”

“A tambourine will be quite enough for me; I told papa so, I shan’t
think of music; I shall think of poor Mr. Kane. Mr. Carlyle I know you
can be kind if you like; I know you would rather be kind than otherwise-
-it is to be read in your face. Try and do what you can for him.”

“Yes, I will,” he warmly answered.

Mr. Carlyle sold no end of tickets the following day, or rather caused
them to be sold. He praised up the concert far and wide, and proclaimed
that Lord Mount Severn and his daughter would not think of missing it.
Mr. Kane’s house was besieged for tickets, faster than he could write
his signature in their corner; and when Mr. Carlyle went home to
luncheon at midday, which he did not often do, he laid down two at Miss
Corny’s elbow.

“What’s this? Concert tickets! Archibald, you have never gone and bought
these!”

What would she have said had she known that the two were not the extent
of his investment?

“Ten shillings to throw away upon two paltry bits of cardboard!” chafed
Miss Carlyle. “You always were a noodle in money matters, Archibald, and
always will be. I wish I had the keeping of your purse!”

“What I have given will not hurt me, Cornelia, and Kane is badly off.
Think of his troop of children.”

“Oh, dear!” said Miss Corny. “I imagine he should think of them. I
suppose it was his own fault they came. That’s always it. Poor folks get
a heap of children about them, and then ask for pity. I should say it
would be more just if they asked for blame.”

“Well, there the tickets are, bought and paid for, so they may as well
be used. You will go with me, Cornelia.”

“And stick ourselves there upon empty benches, like two geese, and sit
staring and counting the candles! A pleasant evening?”

“You need not fear empty benches. The Mount Severns are going, and West
Lynne is in a fever, racing after tickets. I suppose you have got a--a
cap,” looking at the nondescript article decorating his sister’s head,
“that will be suitable to go in, Cornelia; if not you had better order
one.”

This suggestion put up Miss Carlyle. “Hadn’t you better have your hair
curled, and your coat tails lined with white satin, and a gold opera-
glass, and a cocked hat?” retorted she. “My gracious me! A fine new cap
to go to their mess of a concert in, after paying ten shillings for the
tickets! The world’s coming to something.”

Mr. Carlyle left her and her grumbling to return to the office. Lord
Mount Severn’s carriage was passing at the moment, and Isabel Vane was
within it. She caused it to stop when she saw Mr. Carlyle, and he
advanced to her.

“I have been to Mr. Kane’s myself for the tickets,” said she, with a
beaming look. “I came into West Lynne on purpose. I told the coachman to
find out where he lived, and he did. I thought if the people saw me and
the carriage there, they would guess what I wanted. I do hope he will
have a full concert.”

“I am sure he will,” replied Mr. Carlyle, as he released her hand. And
Lady Isabel signed to the carriage to drive on.

As Mr. Carlyle turned away, he met Otway Bethel, a nephew of Colonel
Bethel’s, who was tolerated in the colonel’s house because he had no
other home, and appeared incapable to making himself one. Some persons
persisted in calling him a gentleman--as he was by birth--others a
mauvais sujet. The two are united sometimes. He was dressed in a
velveteen suit, and had a gun in his hand. Indeed, he was rarely seen
without a gun, being inordinately fond of sport; but, if all tales
whispered were true, he supplied himself with game in other ways than by
shooting, which had the credit of going up to London dealers. For the
last six months or near upon it, he had been away from West Lynne.

“Why, where have you been hiding yourself?” exclaimed Mr. Carlyle. “The
colonel has been inconsolable.”

“Come, no gammon, Carlyle. I have been on the tramp through France and
Germany. Man likes a change sometimes. As to the revered colonel, he
would not be inconsolable if he saw me nailed up in a six-foot box, and
carried out feet foremost.”

“Bethel, I have a question to ask you,” continued Mr. Carlyle, dropping
his light manner and his voice together. “Take your thoughts back to the
night of Hallijohn’s murder.”

“I wish you may get it,” cried Mr. Bethel. “The reminiscence is not
attractive.”

“You’ll do it,” quietly said Mr. Carlyle. “It has been told me, though
it did not appear at the inquest, that Richard Hare held a conversation
with you in the wood a few minutes after the deed was done. Now--”

“Who told you that?” interrupted Bethel.

“That is not the question. My authority is indisputable.”

“It is true that he did. I said nothing about it, for I did not want to
make the case worse against Dick Hare than it already was. He certainly
did accost me, like a man flurried out of his life.”

“Asking if you had seen a certain lover of Afy’s fly from the cottage.
One Thorn.”

“That was the purport. Thorn, Thorn--I think Thorn was the name he
mentioned. My opinion was, that Dick was either wild or acting a part.”

“Now, Bethel, I want you to answer me truly. The question cannot affect
you either way, but I must know whether you did see this Thorn leave the
cottage.”

Bethel shook his head. “I know nothing whatever about any Thorn, and I
saw nobody but Dick Hare. Not but what a dozen Thorns might have run
from the cottage without my seeing them.”

“You heard the shot fired?”

“Yes; but I never gave a thought to mischief. I knew Locksley was in the
wood, and supposed it came from him. I ran across the path, bearing
toward the cottage, and struck into the wood on the other side. By and
by, Dick Hare pitched upon me, like one startled out of his seven
senses, and asked if I had seen Thorn leave the cottage. Thorn--that was
the name.”

“And you had not?”

“I had seen nobody but Dick, excepting Locksley. My impression was, that
nobody else was about; I think so still.”

“But Richard--”

“Now look you here, Carlyle, I won’t do Dick Hare an injury, even by a
single word, if I can help it; and it is of no use setting me on to it.”

“I should be the last to set you on to injure any one, especially
Richard Hare,” rejoined Mr. Carlyle; “and my motive is to do Richard
Hare good, not harm. I hold a suspicion, no matter whence gathered, that
it was not Richard Hare who committed the murder, but another. Can you
throw any light upon the subject?”

“No, I can’t. I have always thought poor wavering Dick was nobody’s
enemy but his own; but, as to throwing any light on that night’s work, I
can’t do it. Cords should not have dragged me to the inquest to give
evidence against Dick, and for that reason I was glad Locksley never let
out that I was on the spot. How the deuce it got about afterward that I
was, I can’t tell; but that was no matter; my evidence did not help on
the verdict. And talking of that, Carlyle, how has it come to your
knowledge that Richard Hare accosted me? I have not opened my lips upon
it to mortal man.”

“It is of no consequence now,” repeated Mr. Carlyle; “I do know it, and
that is sufficient. I was in hopes you had really seen this man Thorn
leave the cottage.”

Otway Bethel shook his head. “I should not lay too much stress upon any
Thorns having been there, were I you, Carlyle. Dick Hare was as one
crazy that night, and might see shapes and forms where there were none.”



CHAPTER IX.

THE SONG AND THE DIRGE.

The concert was to take place on Thursday, and on the following Saturday
Lord Mount Severn intended finally to quit East Lynne. The necessary
preparations for departure were in progress, but when Thursday morning
dawned, it appeared a question whether they would not once more be
rendered nugatory. The house was roused betimes, and Mr. Wainwright, the
surgeon from West Lynne, summoned to the earl’s bedside; he had
experienced another and a violent attack. The peer was exceedingly
annoyed and vexed, and very irritable.

“I may be kept here a week--a month--a fortnight--a month longer, now!”
 he uttered fretfully to Isabel.

“I am very sorry, papa. I dare say you do find East Lynne dull.”

“Dull! That’s not it; I have other reasons for wishing East Lynne to be
quit of us. And now you can’t go to the concert.”

Isabel’s face flushed. “Not go, papa?”

“Why, who is to take you. I can’t get out of bed.”

“Oh, papa, I must be there. Otherwise it would like almost as though--as
though we had announced what we did not mean to perform. You know it was
arranged that we should join the Ducies; the carriage can still take me
to the concert room, and I can go in with them.”

“Just as you please. I thought you would have jumped at any plea for
staying away.”

“Not at all,” laughed Isabel. “I should like West Lynne to see that I
don’t despise Mr. Kane and his concert.”

Later in the day the earl grew alarmingly worse; his paroxysms of pain
were awful. Isabel, who was kept from the room, knew nothing of the
danger, and the earl’s groans did not penetrate to her ears. She dressed
herself in a gleeful mode, full of laughing willfulness, Marvel, her
maid, superintending in stiff displeasure, for the attire chosen did not
meet her approbation. When ready, she went into the earl’s room.

“Shall I do, papa?”

Lord Mount Severn raised his swollen eyelids and drew the clothes from
his flushed face. A shining vision was standing before him, a beauteous
queen, a gleaming fairy; he hardly knew what she looked like. She had
put on a white lace hat and her diamonds; the dress was rich, and the
jewels gleamed from her delicate arms: and her cheeks were flushed and
her curls were flowing.

The earl stared at her in amazement. “How could you dress yourself off
like that for a concert? You are out of yours senses, Isabel.”

“Marvel thinks so, too,” was the gay answer; “she has had a cross face
since I told her what to put on. But I did it on purpose, papa; I
thought I would show those West Lynne people that I think the poor man’s
moment worth going to, and worth dressing for.”

“You will have the whole room gaping at you.”

“I don’t mind. I’ll bring you word all about it. Let them gape.”

“You vain child! You have so dressed yourself to please your vanity.
But, Isabel, you--oooh!”

Isabel started as she stood; the earl’s groan of pain was dreadful.

“An awful twinge, child. There, go along; talking makes me worse.”

“Papa, shall I stay at home with you?” she gravely asked. “Every
consideration should give way to illness. If you would like me to
remain, or if I can do any good, pray let me.”

“Quite the contrary; I had rather you were away. You can do no earthly
good, for I could not have you in the room. Good-bye, darling. If you
see Carlyle, tell him I shall hope to see him to-morrow.”

The room was partly full when Mrs. Ducie, her two daughters, and Lady
Isabel entered, and were conducted to seats by Mr. Kane--seats he had
reserved for them at the upper end, near the orchestra. The same
dazzling vision which had burst on the sight of Lord Mount Severn fell
on that of the audience, in Isabel, with her rich, white dress, her
glittering diamonds, her flowing curls, and her wondrous beauty. The
Misses Ducie, plain girls, in brown silks, turned up their noses worse
than nature had done it for them, and Mrs. Ducie heaved an audible sigh.

“The poor motherless girl is to be pitied, my dears,” she whispered;
“she has nobody to point out to her suitable attire. This ridiculous
decking out must have been Marvel’s doings.”

But she looked like a lily among poppies and sunflowers whether the
“decking out” was ridiculous or not. Was Lord Mount Severn right, when
he accused her of dressing so in self-gratification? Very likely, for
has not the great preacher said that childhood and youth are vanity?

Miss Carlyle, the justice, and Barbara also had seats near the
orchestra; for Miss Carlyle, in West Lynne, was a person to be
considered, and not hidden behind others. Mr. Carlyle, however,
preferred to join the gentlemen who congregated and stood round about
the door inside and out. There was scarcely standing room in the place;
Mr. Kane had, as was anticipated, got a bumper, and the poor man could
have worshipped Lady Isabel, for he knew he owed it to her.

It was very long--country concerts generally are--and was about three
parts over when a powdered head, larger than any cauliflower ever grown,
was discerned ascending the stairs, behind the group of gentlemen; which
head, when it brought its body in full view, was discovered to belong to
one of the footmen of Lord Mount Severn. The calves alone, cased in
their silk stockings, were a sight to be seen; and these calves betook
themselves inside the concert room, with a deprecatory bow for
permission to the gentlemen they had to steer through--and there they
came to a standstill, the cauliflower extending forward and turning
itself about from right to left.

“Well, I’ll be jiffled!” cried an astonished old fox-hunter, who had
been elbowed by the footman; “the cheek these fellows have!”

The fellow in question did not appear, however, to be enjoying any great
amount of cheek just at that moment, for he looked perplexed, humble and
uneasy. Suddenly his eye fell upon Mr. Carlyle, and it lighted up.

“Beg pardon, sir; could you happen to inform me where-abouts my young
lady is sitting?”

“At the other end of the room, near the orchestra.”

“I’m sure I don’t know however I am to get to her, then,” returned the
man more in self-soliloquy than to Mr. Carlyle. “The room is choke full,
and I don’t like crushing by. My lord is taken alarmingly worse, sir,”
 he explained in an awe-stricken tone; “it is feared he is dying.”

Mr. Carlyle was painfully startled.

“His screams of pain were awful, sir. Mr. Wainwright and another doctor
from West Lynne are with him, and an express has gone to Lynneboro’ for
physicians. Mrs. Mason said we were to fetch my young lady right home,
and not lose a moment; and we brought the carriage, sir, Wells galloping
his horses all the way.”

“I will bring Lady Isabel,” said Mr. Carlyle.

“I am sure, sir, I should be under everlasting obligations if you
would,” returned the man.

He worked his way through the concert room--he was tall and slender--
many looking daggers at him, for a pathetic song was just then being
given by a London lady. He disregarded all, and stood before Isabel.

“I thought you were not coming to speak to me to-night. Is it not a
famous room? I am so pleased!”

“More than famous, Lady Isabel,” choosing his words, that they might not
alarm her, “Lord Mount Severn does not find himself so well, and he has
sent the carriage for you.”

“Papa not so well!” she quickly exclaimed.

“Not quite. At any rate, he wishes you to go home. Will you allow me to
pilot you through the room?”

“Oh, my dear, considerate papa!” she laughed. “He fears I shall be
weary, and would emancipate me before the time. Thank you, Mr. Carlyle,
but I will wait till the conclusion.”

“No, no, Lady Isabel, it is not that. Lord Mount Severn is indeed
worse.”

Her countenance changed to seriousness; but she was not alarmed. “Very
well. When the song is over--not to disturb the room.”

“I think you had better lose no time,” he urged. “Never mind the song
and the room.”

She rose instantly, and put her arm within Mr. Carlyle’s. A hasty word
of explanation to Mrs. Ducie, and he led her away, the room, in its
surprise, making for them what space it might. Many an eye followed
them, but none more curiously and eagerly than Barbara Hare’s. “Where is
he going to take her to?” involuntarily uttered Barbara.

“How should I know?” returned Miss Corny. “Barbara, you have done
nothing but fidget all the night; what’s the matter with you? Folks come
to a concert to listen, not to talk and fidget.”

Isabel’s mantle was procured from the ante-room where it had been left,
and she descended the stairs with Mr. Carlyle. The carriage was drawn up
close to the entrance, and the coachman had his reins gathered, ready to
start. The footman--not the one who had gone upstairs--threw open the
carriage door as he saw her. He was new in the service, a simple country
native, just engaged. She withdrew her arm from Mr. Carlyle’s, and stood
a moment before stepping in, looking at the man.

“Is papa much worse?”

“Oh, yes, my lady; he was screaming shocking. But they think he’ll live
till morning.”

With a sharp cry, she seized the arm of Mr. Carlyle--seized it for
support in her shock of agony. Mr. Carlyle rudely thrust the man away;
he would willingly have flung him at full length on the pavement.

“Oh, Mr. Carlyle, why did you not tell me?” she shivered.

“My dear Lady Isabel, I am grieved that you are told now. But take
comfort; you know how ill he frequently is, and this may be but an
ordinary attack. Step in. I trust we shall find it nothing more.”

“Are you going home with me?”

“Certainly; I shall not leave you to go alone.”

She moved to the other side of the chariot, making room for him.

“Thank you. I will sit outside.”

“But the night is cold.”

“Oh, no.” He closed the door, and took his seat by the coachman; the
footman got up behind, and the carriage sped away. Isabel gathered
herself into her corner, and moaned aloud in her suspense and
helplessness.

The coachman drove rapidly, and soon whipped his horses through the
lodge-gates.

The housekeeper, Mrs. Mason, waited at the hall-door to receive Lady
Isabel. Mr. Carlyle helped her out of the carriage, and gave her his arm
up the steps. She scarcely dared to inquire.

“Is he better? May I go to his room?” she panted.

Yes, the earl was better--better, in so far as that he was quiet and
senseless. She moved hastily toward his chamber. Mr. Carlyle drew the
housekeeper aside.

“Is there any hope?”

“Not the slightest, sir. He is dying.”

The earl knew no one; pain was gone for the present, and he lay on his
bed, calm; but his face, which had death in it all too plainly, startled
Isabel. She did not scream or cry; she was perfectly quiet, save that
she had a fit of shivering.

“Will he soon be better?” she whispered to Mr. Wainwright, who stood
there.

The surgeon coughed. “Well, he--he--we must hope it, my lady.”

“But why does his face look like that? It is pale--gray; I never saw
anybody else look so.”

“He has been in great pain, my lady, and pain leaves its traces on the
countenance.”

Mr. Carlyle, who had come, and was standing by the surgeon, touched his
arm to draw him from the room. He noticed the look on the earl’s face,
and did not like it; he wished to question the surgeon. Lady Isabel saw
that Mr. Carlyle was about to quit the room, and beckoned to him.

“Do not leave the house, Mr. Carlyle. When he wakes up, it may cheer him
to see you here; he liked you very much.”

“I will not leave it, Lady Isabel. I did not think of doing so.”

In time--it seemed an age--the medical men arrived from Lynneborough--
three of them--the groom had thought he could not summon too many. It
was a strange scene they entered upon: the ghastly peer, growing
restless again now, battling with his departing spirit, and the gala
robes, the sparkling gems adorning the young girl watching at his side.
They comprehended the case without difficulty; that she had been
suddenly called from some scene of gayety.

They stooped to look at the earl, and felt his pulse, and touched his
heart, and exchanged a few murmured words with Mr. Wainwright. Isabel
had stood back to give them place, but her anxious eyes followed their
every movement. They did not seem to notice her, and she stepped
forward.

“Can you do anything for him? Will he recover?”

They all turned at the address, and looked at her. One spoke; it was an
evasive answer.

“Tell me the truth!” she implored, with feverish impatience: “you must
not trifle with me. Do you not know me? I am his only child, and I am
here alone.”

The first thing was to get her away from the room, for the great change
was approaching, and the parting struggle between the body and the
spirit might be one of warfare--no sight for her. But in answer to their
suggestion that she should go, she only leaned her head upon the pillow
by her father and moaned in despair.

“She must be got out of the room,” cried one of the physicians, almost
angrily. “Ma’am,” turning suddenly upon Mrs. Mason, “are there no
reserves in the house--no one who can exert influence over the young
lady?”

“She has scarcely any relatives in the world,” replied the housekeeper;
“no near ones; and we happen to be, just now, quite alone.”

But Mr. Carlyle, seeing the urgency of the case, for the earl, with
every minute, grew more excited, approached and whispered her: “You are
as anxious as we can be for your father’s recovery?”

“As anxious!” she uttered reproachfully.

“You know what I would imply. Of course our anxiety can be as nothing to
yours.”

“As nothing--as nothing. I think my heart will break.”

“Then--forgive me--you should not oppose the wishes of his medical
attendants. They wish to be alone with him, and time is being lost.”

She rose up; she placed her hands on her brow, as if to collect the
sense of the words, and then she addressed the doctors,--

“Is it really necessary that I should leave the room--necessary for
him?”

“It is necessary, my lady--absolutely essential.”

She broke into a passion of tears and sobs as Mr. Carlyle lead her to
another apartment.

“He is my dear father; I have but him in the wide world!” she exclaimed.

“I know--I know; I feel for you all that you are feeling. Twenty times
this night I have wished--forgive me the thought--that you were my
sister, so that I might express my sympathy more freely and comfort
you.”

“Tell me the truth, then, why I am kept away. If you can show me
sufficient cause, I will be reasonable and obey; but do not say again I
should be disturbing him, for it is not true.”

“He is too ill for you to see him--his symptoms are too painful. In
fact, it would not be proper; and were you to go in in defiance of
advice, you would regret it all your after life.”

“Is he dying?”

Mr. Carlyle hesitated. Ought he to dissemble with her as the doctors had
done? A strong feeling was upon him that he ought not.

“I trust to you not to deceive me,” she simply said.

“I fear he is--I believe he is.”

She rose up--she grasped his arm in the sudden fear that flashed over
her.

“You are deceiving me, and he is dead!”

“I am not deceiving you, Lady Isabel. He is not dead, but--it may be
very near.”

She laid her face down upon the soft pillow.

“Going forever from me--going forever? Oh, Mr. Carlyle, let me see him
for a minute--just one farewell! Will you not try for me!”

He knew how hopeless it was, but he turned to leave the room.

“I will go and see. But you will remain here quietly--you will not
come.”

She bowed her head in acquiescence, and he closed the door. Had she
indeed been his sister, he would probably have turned the key upon her.
He entered the earl’s chamber, but not many seconds did he remain in it.

“It is over,” he whispered to Mrs. Mason, whom he met in the corridor,
“and Mr. Wainwright is asking for you.”

“You are soon back,” cried Isabel, lifting her head. “May I go?”

He sat down and took her hand, shrinking from his task.

“I wish I could comfort you!” he exclaimed, in a tone of deep emotion.

Her face turned of a ghastly whiteness--as white as another’s not far
away.

“Tell me the worst,” she breathed.

“I have nothing to tell you but the worst. May God support you, dear
Lady Isabel!”

She turned to hide her face and its misery away from him, and a low wail
of anguish broke from her, telling its own tale of despair.

The gray dawn of morning was breaking over the world, advent of another
bustling day in life’s history; but the spirit of William Vane, Earl of
Mount Severn, had soared away from it forever.



CHAPTER X.

THE KEEPERS OF THE DEAD.

Events, between the death of Lord Mount Severn and his interment,
occurred quickly; and to one of them the reader may feel inclined to
demur, as believing that it could have no foundation in fact, in the
actions of real life, but must be a wild creation of the author’s brain.
He would be wrong. The author is no more fond of wild creations than the
reader. The circumstance did take place.

The earl died on Friday morning at daylight. The news spread rapidly. It
generally does on the death of a peer, if he has been of note, whether
good or bad, in the world, and was known in London before the day was
over--the consequence of which was, that by Saturday morning, early, a
shoal of what the late peer would have called harpies, had arrived, to
surround East Lynne. There were creditors of all sorts; for small sums
and for great, for five or ten pounds up to five or ten thousand. Some
were civil, some impatient, some loud and rough and angry; some came to
put in executions on the effects, and some--to arrest the body!

This last act was accomplished cleverly. Two men, each with a remarkably
hooked nose, stole away from the hubbub of the clamorous, and peering
cunningly about, made their way to the side or tradesman’s entrance. A
kitchen-maid answered their gentle appeal at the bell.

“Is the coffin come yet?” said they.

“Coffin--no!” was the girl’s reply. “The shell ain’t here yet. Mr. Jones
didn’t promise that till nine o’clock, and it haven’t gone eight.”

“It won’t be long,” quoth they; “its on its road. We’ll go up to his
lordship’s room, please, and be getting ready for it.”

The girl called the butler. “Two men from Jones’, the undertaker’s,
sir,” announced she. “The shell’s coming on and they want to go up and
make ready for it.”

The butler marshaled them upstairs himself, and introduced them to the
room. “That will do,” said they, as he was about to enter with them, “we
won’t trouble you to wait.” And closing the door upon the unsuspicious
butler, they took up their station on either side of the dead, like a
couple of ill-omened mutes. They had placed an arrest upon the corpse;
it was theirs until their claim was satisfied, and they sat down to thus
watch and secure it. Pleasant occupation!

It may have been an hour later that Lady Isabel, leaving her own
chamber, opened noiselessly that of the dead. She had been in it several
times during the previous day; at first with the housekeeper; afterward,
when the nameless dread was somewhat effaced, alone. But she felt
nervous again this morning, and had gained the bed before she ventured
to lift her eyes from the carpet and encounter the sight. Then she
started, for there sat two strange-looking men--and not attractive men
either.

It darted through her mind that they must be people from the
neighborhood, come to gratify an idle and unpardonable curiosity. Her
first impulse was to summon the butler; her second, to speak to them
herself.

“Do you want anything here?” she quietly said.

“Much obleeged for the inquiry, miss. We are all right.”

The words and tone struck her as being singular in the extreme; and they
kept their seats, too, as though they had a right to be there.

“Why are you here?” she repeated. “What are you doing?”

“Well, miss, I don’t mind telling you, for I suppose you are his
daughter”--pointing his left thumb over his shoulder at the late peer--
“and we hear he have got no other relative anigh him. We have been
obleeged, miss, to perform an unpleasant dooty and secure him.”

The words were like Greek to her, and the men saw that they were.

“He unfortunately owed a slight amount of money, miss--as you, perhaps,
be aware on, and our employers is in, deep. So, as soon as they heard
what had happened, they sent us down to arrest the dead corpse, and we
have done it.”

Amazement, horror, fear, struggled together in the shocked mind of Lady
Isabel. Arrest the dead. She had never heard of a like calamity: nor
could she have believed in such. Arrest it for what purpose? What to do?
To disfigure it?--to sell it? With a panting heart and ashy lips, she
turned from the room. Mrs. Mason happened to be passing near the stairs,
and Isabel flew to her, laying hold of her with both hands, in her
terror, as she burst into a fit of nervous tears.

“Those men--in there!” she gasped.

“What men, my lady?” returned Mrs. Mason, surprised.

“I don’t know; I don’t know. I think they are going to stop there; they
say they have taken papa.”

After a pause of bewildered astonishment, the housekeeper left her
standing where she was, and went to the earl’s chamber, to see if she
could fathom the mystery of the words. Isabel leaned against the
balustrades; partly for support, partly that she seemed afraid to stir
from them; and the ominous disturbances downstairs reached her ears.
Strangers, interlopers, appeared to be in the hall, talking vehemently,
and complaining in bitter tones. More and more terrified, she held her
breath to listen.

“Where’s the good of your seeing the young lady?” cried the butler, in a
tone of remonstrance. “She knows nothing about the earl’s affairs; she
is in grief enough just now, without any other worry.”

“I will see her,” returned a dogged voice. “If she’s too start-up and
mighty to come down and answer a question or two, why I’ll find my way
on to her. Here we are a shameful crowd of us, swindled out of our own,
told there’s nobody we can speak to; nobody here but the young lady, and
she must not be troubled. She didn’t find it trouble to help to spend
our money. She has got no honor and feelings of a lady, if she don’t
come and speak to us. There.”

Repressing her rebellious emotions, Lady Isabel glided partly down the
staircase, and softy called to the butler. “What is all this?” she
asked. “I must know.”

“Oh, my lady, don’t go amongst those rough men! You can’t do any good;
pray go back before they see you. I have sent for Mr. Carlyle, and
expect him here momentarily.”

“Did Papa owe them all money?” she said, shivering.

“I’m afraid he did, my lady.”

She went swiftly on; and passing through the few stragglers in the hall,
entered the dining-room, where the chief mass had congregated, and the
hubbub was loudest. All anger, at least external anger, was hushed at
her sight. She looked so young, so innocent, so childlike in her pretty
morning dress of peach-colored muslin, her fair face shaded by its
falling curls, so little fit to combat with, or understand their
business, that instead of pouring forth complaints, they hushed them
into silence.

“I heard some one calling out that I ought to see you,” she began, her
agitation causing the words to come forth in a jerking manner. “What did
you want with me?”

Then they poured forth their complaints, but not angrily, and she
listened till she grew sick. There were many and formidable claims;
promissory notes and I O Us, overdue bills and underdue bills; heavy
outstanding debts of all sorts, and trifles, comparatively speaking, for
housekeeping, servants’ liveries, out-door servants’ wages, bread and
meat.

What was Isabel Vane to answer? What excuse to offer? What hope or
promise to give? She stood in bewilderment, unable to speak, turning
from one to the other, her sweet eyes full of pity and contrition.

“The fact is, young lady,” spoke up one who bore the exterior of a
gentleman, “we should not have come down troubling you--at least, I can
answer for myself--but his lordship’s men of business, Warburton & Ware,
to whom many of us hastened last evening, told us there would not be a
shilling for anybody unless it could be got from furniture. When it
comes to that, it is ‘first come, first served,’ and I got down by
morning light, and levied an execution.”

“Which was levied before you came,” put in a man who might be brother to
the two upstairs, to judge by his nose. “But what’s such furniture as
this to our claims--if you come to combine ‘em? No more than a bucket of
water is to the Thames.”

“What can I do?” shivered Lady Isabel. “What is it you wish me to do? I
have no money to give you, I--”

“No, miss,” broke in a quiet, pale man; “if report tells me, you are
worse wronged than we are, for you won’t have a roof to put your head
under, or a guinea to call your own.”

“He has been a scoundrel to everybody,” interrupted an intemperate
voice; “he has ruined thousands.”

The speech was hissed down; even they were not men gratuitously to
insult a delicate young lady.

“Perhaps you’ll just answer us a question, miss,” persisted the voice,
in spite of the hisses. “Is there any ready money that can--”

But another person had entered the room--Mr. Carlyle. He caught sight of
the white face and trembling hands of Isabel, and interrupted the last
speaker with scant ceremony.

“What is the meaning of this?” he demanded, in a tone of authority.
“What do you want?”

“If you are a friend of the late peer’s, you ought to know what we
want,” was the response. “We want our debts paid.”

“But this is not the place to come to,” returned Mr. Carlyle; “your
coming here flocking in this extraordinary manner, will do no good. You
must go to Warburton & Ware.”

“We have been to them and received their answer--a cool assurance that
there’ll be nothing for anybody.”

“At any rate, you’ll get nothing here,” observed Mr. Carlyle, to the
assembly, collectively. “Allow me to request that you leave the house at
once.”

It was little likely that they would for him, and they said it.

“Then I warn you of the consequences of a refusal,” quietly said Mr.
Carlyle; “you are trespassing upon a stranger’s property. This house is
not Lord Mount Severn’s; he sold it some time back.”

They knew better. Some laughed, and said these tricks were stale.

“Listen, gentlemen,” rejoined Mr. Carlyle, in the plain, straightforward
manner that carried its own truth. “To make an assertion that could be
disproved when the earl’s affairs come to be investigated, would be
simply foolish. I give you my word of honor as a gentleman--nay, as a
fellow-man--that this estate, with the house and all it contains, passed
months ago, from the hands of Lord Mount Severn; and, during his recent
sojourn here, he was a visitor in it. Go and ask his men of business.”

“Who purchased it?” was the inquiry.

“Mr. Carlyle, of West Lynne. Some of you may possibly know him by
reputation.”

Some of them did.

“A cute young lawyer,” observed a voice; “as his father was before him.”

“I am he,” proceeded Mr. Carlyle; “and, being a ‘cute lawyer,’ as you do
me the honor to decide, you cannot suppose I should risk my money upon
any sale not perfectly safe and legal. I was not an agent in the affair;
I employed agents; for it was my own money that I invested, and East
Lynne is mine.”

“Is the purchase money paid over?” inquired more than one.

“It was paid over at the time--last June.”

“What did Lord Mount Severn do with the money?”

“I do not know,” replied Mr. Carlyle. “I am not cognizant of Lord Mount
Severn’s private affairs.”

Significant murmurs arose. “Strange that the earl should stop two or
three months at a place that wasn’t his.”

“It may appear so to you, but allow me to explain,” returned Mr.
Carlyle. “The earl expressed a wish to pay East Lynne a few days’ visit,
by way of farewell, and I acceded. Before the few days were over, he was
taken ill, and remained, from that time, too ill to quit it. This very
day--this day, gentlemen, as we stand here, was at length fixed for his
departure.”

“And you tell us you bought the furniture?”

“Everything as it stands. You need not doubt my word, for the proofs
will be forthcoming. East Lynne was in the market for sale; I heard of
it, and became the purchaser--just as I might have bought an estate from
any of you. And now, as this is my house, and you have no claim upon me,
I shall be obliged to you to withdraw.”

“Perhaps you’ll claim the horses and carriages next, sir,” cried the man
with the hooked nose.

Mr. Carlyle raised his head haughtily. “What is mine is mine, legally
purchased and paid for--a fair, just price. The carriages and horses I
have nothing to do with; Lord Mount Severn brought them down with him.”

“And I have got a safe watcher over them in the out premises, to see as
they don’t run away,” nodded the man, complacently; “and if I don’t
mistake, there’s a safe watcher over something else upstairs.”

“What a cursed scoundrel Mount Severn was.”

“Whatever he may have been, it does not give you the right to outrage
the feelings of his daughter,” warmly interrupted Mr. Carlyle; “and I
should have thought that men, calling themselves Englishmen, would have
disdained the shame. Allow me, Lady Isabel,” he added, imperatively
taking her hand to lead her from the room. “I will remain and deal with
this business.”

But she hesitated and stopped. The injury her father had done these men
was telling painfully on her sense of right, and she essayed to speak a
word of apology, of sorrow; she thought she ought to do so; she did not
like them to deem her quite heartless. But it was a painful task, and
the color went and came in her pale face, and her breath was labored
with the excess of her tribulation.

“I am very sorry,” she stammered; and with the effort of speaking,
emotion quite got the better of her, and she burst into tears. “I did
not know anything of all this; my father’s affairs were not spoken of
before me. I believe I have not anything; if I had, I would divide it
amongst you as equally as I could. But, should the means ever be in my
power--should money ever be mine, I will thankfully pay all your
claims.”

All your claims! Lady Isabel little thought what that “all” would
comprise. However, such promises, made at such a moment, fell heedlessly
upon the ear. Scarcely one present but felt sympathy and sorrow for her,
and Mr. Carlyle drew her from the room. He closed the door upon the
noisy crew, and then sobs came forth hysterically.

“I am so grieved, Lady Isabel! Had I foreseen this annoyance, you should
have been spared it. Can you go upstairs alone, or shall I call Mrs.
Mason?”

“Oh, yes! I can go alone; I am not ill, only frightened and sick. This
is not the worst,” she shivered. “There are two men up--up--with papa.”

“Up with papa.” Mr. Carlyle was puzzled. He saw that she was shaking
from head to foot, as she stood before him.

“I cannot understand it, and it terrifies me,” she continued, attempting
an explanation. “They are sitting in the room, close to him: they have
taken him, they say.”

A blank, thunderstruck pause. Mr. Carlyle looked at her--he did not
speak; and then he turned and looked at the butler, who was standing
near. But the man only responded by giving his head a half shake, and
Mr. Carlyle saw that it was an ominous one.

“I will clear the house of these,” he said to Lady Isabel, pointing back
to the dining-room, “and then join you upstairs.”

“Two ruffians, sir, and they have got possession of the body,” whispered
the butler in Mr. Carlyle’s ear, as Lady Isabel departed. “They obtained
entrance to the chamber by a sly, deceitful trick, saying they were the
undertaker’s men, and that he can’t be buried unless their claims are
paid, if it’s for a month to come. It has upset all our stomachs, sir;
Mrs. Mason while telling me--for she was the first one to know it--was
as sick as she could be.”

At present Mr. Carlyle returned to the dining-room, and bore the brunt
of the anger of those savage, and it may be said, ill-used men. Not that
it was vented upon him--quite the contrary--but on the memory of the
unhappy peer, who lay overhead. A few had taken the precaution to insure
the earl’s life, and they were the best off. They left the house after a
short space of time; for Mr. Carlyle’s statement was indisputable, and
they knew the law better than to remain, trespassers on his property.

But the custodians of the dead could not be got rid of. Mr. Carlyle
proceeded to the death-chamber, and examined their authority. A similar
case had never occurred under his own observation, though it had under
his father’s, and Mr. Carlyle remembered hearing of it. The body of a
church dignitary, who had died deeply in debt, was arrested as it was
being carried through the cloisters to its grave in the cathedral. These
men, sitting over Lord Mount Severn, enforced heavy claims; and there
they must sit until the arrival of Mr. Vane from Castle Marling--now the
Earl of Mount Severn.

On the following morning, Sunday, Mr. Carlyle proceeded again to East
Lynne, and found, to his surprise, that there was no arrival. Isabel sat
in the breakfast-room alone, the meal on the table untouched, and she
shivering--as it seemed--on a low ottoman before the fire. She looked so
ill that Mr. Carlyle could not forbear remarking upon it.

“I have not slept, and I am very cold,” she answered. “I did not close
my eyes all night, I was so terrified.”

“Terrified at what?” he asked.

“At those men,” she whispered. “It is strange that Mr. Vane has not
come.”

“Is the post in?”

“I don’t know,” she apathetically replied. “I have received nothing.”

She had scarcely spoke when the butler entered with his salver full of
letters, most of them bearing condolence with Lady Isabel. She singled
out one and hastened to open it, for it bore the Castle Marling post-
mark. “It is Mrs. Vane’s handwriting,” she remarked to Mr. Carlyle.

CASTLE MARLING, Saturday.

“MY DEAR ISABEL--I am dreadfully grieved and shocked at the news
conveyed in Mr. Carlyle’s letter to my husband, for he has gone cruising
in his yacht, and I opened it. Goodness knows where he may be, round the
coast somewhere, but he said he should be home for Sunday, and as he is
pretty punctual in keeping his word, I expect him. Be assured he will
not lose a moment in hastening to East Lynne.

“I cannot express what I feel for you, and am too bouleversee to write
more. Try and keep up your spirits, and believe me, dear Isabel, with
sincere sympathy and regret, faithfully yours,

“EMMA MOUNT SEVERN.”

The color came into Isabel’s pale cheek when she read the signature. She
thought, had she been the writer, she should, in that first, early
letter, have still signed herself Emma Vane. Isabel handed the note to
Mr. Carlyle. “It is very unfortunate,” she sighed.

Mr. Carlyle glanced over it as quickly as Mrs. Vane’s illegible writing
allowed him, and drew in his lips in a peculiar manner when he came to
the signature. Perhaps at the same thought which had struck Isabel.

“Had Mrs. Vane been worth a rush, she would have come herself, knowing
your lonely situation,” he uttered, impulsively.

Isabel leaned her head upon her hand. All the difficulties and
embarrassments of her position came crowding on her mind. No orders had
been given in preparation for the funeral, and she felt that she had no
right to give any. The earls of Mount Severn were buried at Mount
Severn; but to take her father thither would involve great expense;
would the present earl sanction that? Since the previous morning, she
seemed to have grown old in the world’s experience; her ideas were
changed, the bent of her thoughts had been violently turned from its
course. Instead of being a young lady of high position, of wealth and
rank, she appeared to herself more in the light of an unfortunate pauper
and interloper in the house she was inhabiting. It has been the custom
in romance to present young ladies, especially if they be handsome and
interesting, as being entirely oblivious of matter-of-fact cares and
necessities, supremely indifferent to future prospects of poverty--
poverty that brings hunger and thirst and cold and nakedness; but, be
assured, this apathy never existed in real life. Isabel Vane’s grief for
her father--whom, whatever may have been the aspect he wore for others,
she had deeply loved and reverenced--was sharply poignant; but in the
midst of that grief, and of the singular troubles his death had brought
forth, she could not shut her eyes to her own future. Its blank
uncertainty, its shadowed-forth embarrassments did obtrude themselves
and the words of that plain-speaking creditor kept ringing in her ears:
“You won’t have a roof to put your head under, or a guinea to call your
own.” Where was she to go? With whom to live? She was in Mr. Carlyle’s
house now. And how was she to pay the servants? Money was owing to them
all.

“Mr. Carlyle, how long has this house been yours?” she asked, breaking
the silence.

“It was in June that the purchase was completed. Did Lord Mount Severn
never tell you he had sold it to me?”

“No, never. All these things are yours?” glancing round the room.

“The furniture was sold with the house. Not these sort of things,” he
added, his eye falling on the silver on the breakfast table; “not the
plate and linen.”

“Not the plate and linen! Then those poor men who were here yesterday
have a right to them,” she quickly cried.

“I scarcely know. I believe the plate goes with the entail--and the
jewels go also. The linen cannot be of consequence either way.”

“Are my clothes my own?”

He smiled as he looked at her; smiled at her simplicity, and assured her
that they were nobody’s else.

“I did not know,” she sighed; “I did not understand. So many strange
things have happened in the last day or two, that I seem to understand
nothing.”

Indeed, she could not understand. She had no definite ideas on the
subject of this transfer of East Lynne to Mr. Carlyle; plenty of
indefinite ones, and they were haunting her. Fears of debt to him, and
of the house and its contents being handed over to him in liquidation,
perhaps only partial, were working in her brain.

“Does my father owe you any money?” she breathed in a timid tone.

“Not any,” he replied. “Lord Mount Severn was never indebted to me in
his life.”

“Yet you purchased East Lynne?”

“As any one else might have done,” he answered, discerning the drift of
her thoughts. “I was in search of an eligible estate to invest money in,
and East Lynne suited me.”

“I feel my position, Mr. Carlyle,” she resumed, the rebellious tears
forcing themselves to her eyes; “thus to be intruding upon you for a
shelter. And I cannot help myself.”

“You can help grieving me,” he gently answered, “which you do much when
you talk of obligation. The obligation is on my side, Lady Isabel; and
when I express a hope that you will continue at East Lynne while it can
be of service, however prolonged that period may be, I assure you, I say
it in all sincerity.”

“You are very kind,” she faltered; “and for a few days; until I can
think; until--Oh, Mr. Carlyle, are papa’s affairs really so bad as they
said yesterday?” she broke off, her perplexities recurring to her with
vehement force. “Is there nothing left?”

Now Mr. Carlyle might have given the evasive assurance that there would
be plenty left, just to tranquilize her. But to have used deceit with
her would have pricked against every feeling of his nature; and he saw
how implicitly she relied upon his truth.

“I fear things are not very bright,” he answered. “That is, so far as we
can see at present. But there may have been some settlement effected for
you that you do not know of. Warburton & Ware--”

“No,” she interrupted: “I never heard of a settlement, and I am sure
there is none. I see the worst plainly. I have no home, no home and no
money. This house is yours; the town house and Mount Severn go to Mr.
Vane; and I have nothing.”

“But surely Mr. Vane will be delighted to welcome you to your old home.
The houses pass to him--it almost seems as though you had the greater
right in them, than he or Mrs. Vane.”

“My home with them!” she retorted, as if the words had stung her. “What
are you saying, Mr. Carlyle?”

“I beg your pardon, Lady Isabel. I should not have presumed to touch
upon these points myself, but--”

“Nay, I think I ought to beg yours,” she interrupted, more calmly. “I am
only grateful for the interest you take in them--the kindness you have
shown. But I could not make my home with Mrs. Vane.”

Mr. Carlyle rose. He could do no good by remaining, and did not think it
well to intrude longer. He suggested that it might be more pleasant if
Isabel had a friend with her; Mrs. Ducie would no doubt be willing to
come, and she was a kind, motherly woman.

Isabel shook her head with a passing shudder. “Have strangers, here,
with--all--that--in papa’s chamber!” she uttered. “Mrs. Ducie drove over
yesterday, perhaps to remain--I don’t know; but I was afraid of
questions, and would not see her. When I think of--that--I feel thankful
that I am alone.”

The housekeeper stopped Mr. Carlyle as he was going out.

“Sir, what is the news from Castle Marling? Pound said there was a
letter. Is Mr. Vane coming?”

“He was out yachting. Mrs. Vane expected him home yesterday, so it is to
be hoped he will be here to-day.”

“Whatever will be done if he does not come?” she breathed. “The leaden
coffin ought to be soldered down, for you know, sir, the state he was in
when he died.”

“It can be soldered down without Mr. Vane.”

“Of course--without Mr. Vane. It’s not that, sir. Will those men allow
it to be done? The undertakers were here this morning at daybreak, and
those men intimated that they were not going to lose sight of the dead.
The words sounded significant to us, but we asked them no questions.
Have they a right to prevent it, sir?”

“Upon my word I cannot tell,” replied Mr. Carlyle. “The proceeding is so
rare a one, that I know little what right of law they have or have not.
Do not mention this to Lady Isabel. And when Mr. Va--when Lord Mount
Severn arrives, send down to apprise me of it.”



CHAPTER XI.

THE NEW PEER--THE BANK-NOTE

A post-chaise was discerned thundering up the avenue that Sunday
afternoon. It contained the new peer, Lord Mount Severn. The more direct
line of rail from Castle Marling, brought him only to within five miles
of West Lynne, and thence he had travelled in a hired chaise. Mr.
Carlyle soon joined him, and almost at the same time Mr. Warburton
arrived from London. Absence from town at the period of the earl’s death
had prevented Mr. Warburton’s earlier attendance. Business was entered
upon immediately.

The present earl knew that his predecessor had been an embarrassed man,
but he had no conception of the extent of the evil; they had not been
intimate, and rarely came in contact. As the various items of news were
now detailed to him--the wasteful expenditure, the disastrous ruin, the
total absence of provision for Isabel--he stood petrified and aghast. He
was a tall stout man, of three-and-forty years, his nature honorable,
his manner cold, and his countenance severe.

“It is the most iniquitous piece of business I ever heard of!” he
exclaimed to the two lawyers. “Of all the reckless fools, Mount Severn
must have been the worst!”

“Unpardonably improvident as regards his daughter,” was the assenting
remark.

“Improvident! It must have been rank madness!” retorted the earl. “No
man in his senses could leave a child to the mercy of the world, as he
has left her. She has not a shilling--literally, not a shilling in her
possession. I put the question to her, what money there was in the house
when the earl died. Twenty or twenty-five pounds, she answered, which
she had given to Mason, who required it for housekeeping purposes. If
the girl wants a yard of ribbon for herself, she has not the pence to
pay for it! Can you realize such a case to the mind?” continued the
excited peer. “I will stake my veracity that such a one never occurred
yet.”

“No money for her own personal wants!” exclaimed Mr. Carlyle.

“Not a halfpenny in the world. And there are no funds, and will be none,
that I can see, for her to draw upon.”

“Quite correct, my lord,” nodded Mr. Warburton. “The entailed estates go
to you, and what trifling matter of personal property may be left the
creditors will take care of.”

“I understand East Lynne is yours,” cried the earl, turning sharply upon
Mr. Carlyle; “Isabel has just said so.”

“It is,” was the reply. “It became mine last June. I believe his
lordship kept the fact a close secret.”

“He was obliged to keep it a secret,” interposed Mr. Warburton,
addressing Lord Mount Severn, “for not a stiver of the purchase money
could he have fingered had it got wind. Except ourselves and Mr.
Carlyle’s agents, the fact was made known to none.”

“It is strange, sir, that you could not urge the claims of his child
upon the earl,” rejoined the new peer to Mr. Warburton, his tone one of
harsh reproof. “You were in his confidence; you knew the state of his
affairs; it was in your line of duty to do it.”

“Knowing the state of his affairs, my lord, we knew how useless the
urging it would be,” returned Mr. Warburton. “Your lordship has but a
faint idea of the burdens Lord Mount Severn had upon him. The interest
alone upon his debts was frightful--and the deuce’s own work it was to
get it. Not to speak of the kites he let loose; he would fly them, and
nothing could stop him; and they had to be provided for.”

“Oh, I know,” replied the earl, with a gesture of contempt. “Drawing one
bill to cover another; that was his system.”

“Draw!” echoed Mr. Warburton. “He would have drawn a bill on Aldgate
pump. It was a downright mania with him.”

“Urged to it by his necessities, I conclude,” put in Mr. Carlyle.

“He had no business to have such necessities, sir,” cried the earl,
wrathfully. “But let us proceed to business. What money is there lying
at his banker’s, Mr. Warburton? Do you know?”

“None,” was the blank reply. “We overdrew the account ourselves, a
fortnight ago, to meet one of his pressing liabilities. We hold a
little; and, had he lived a week or two longer, the autumn rents would
have been paid in--though they must have been as quickly paid out
again.”

“I’m glad there’s something. What is the amount?”

“My lord,” answered Mr. Warburton, shaking his head in a self-condoling
manner, “I am sorry to tell you that what we hold will not half satisfy
our own claims; money actually paid out of our pockets.”

“Then where on earth is the money to come from, sir? For the funeral--
for the servants’ wages--for everything, in fact?”

“There is none to come from anywhere,” was the reply of Mr. Warburton.

Lord Mount Severn strode the carpet more fiercely. “Wicked improvidence!
Shameful profligacy; callous-hearted man! To live a rogue and die a
beggar--leaving his daughter to the charity of strangers!”

“Her case presents the worst feature of the whole,” remarked Mr.
Carlyle. “What will she do for a home?”

“She must, of course, find it with me,” replied his lordship; “and, I
should hope, a better one than this. With all these debts and duns at
his elbow, Mount Severn’s house could not have been a bower of roses.”

“I fancy she knew nothing of the state of affairs; had seen little, if
anything, of the embarrassments,” returned Mr. Carlyle.

“Nonsense!” said the peer.

“Mr. Carlyle is right, my lord,” observed Mr. Warburton, looking over
his spectacles. “Lady Isabel was in safety at Mount Severn till the
spring, and the purchase money from East Lynne--what the earl could
touch of it--was a stop-gap for many things, and made matters easy for
the moment. However, his imprudences are at an end now.”

“No, they are not at an end,” returned Lord Mount Severn; “they leave
their effects behind them. I hear there was a fine scene yesterday
morning; some of the unfortunate wretches he has taken in made their
appearance here, all the way from town.”

“Oh, they are Jews half of them,” slightingly spoke Mr. Warburton. “If
they do lose a little, it will be an agreeable novelty to them.”

“Jews have as much right to their own as we have, Mr. Warburton,” was
the peer’s angry reprimand. “And if they were Turks and infidels, it
would not excuse Mount Severn’s practices. Isabel says it was you, Mr.
Carlyle, who contrived to get rid of them.”

“By convincing them that East Lynne and its furniture belonged to me.
But there are those two men upstairs, in possession of--of him; I could
not get rid of them.”

The earl looked at him. “I do not understand you.”

“Did you not know that they have seized the corpse?” asked Mr. Carlyle,
dropping his voice. “Two men have been posted over it, like sentinels,
since yesterday morning. And there’s a third in the house, I hear, who
relieves each other by turn, that they may go down in the hall and take
their meals.”

The earl had halted in his walk and drawn near to Mr. Carlyle, his mouth
open, his face a marvel of consternation. “By George!” was all Mr.
Warburton uttered, and snatched off his glasses.

“Mr. Carlyle, do I understand you aright--that the body of the late earl
has been seized for a debt?” demanded the peer, solemnly. “Seize a dead
body! Am I awake or dreaming?”

“It is what they have done. They got into the room by stratagem.”

“Is it possible that transactions so infamous are permitted by our law?”
 ejaculated the earl. “Arrest a dead man! I never heard of such a thing.
I am shocked beyond expression. Isabel said something about two men, I
remember; but she was so full of grief and agitation altogether, that I
but half comprehended what she did say upon the subject. Why, what will
be done? Can’t we bury him?”

“I fancy not. The housekeeper told me, this morning, she feared they
would not even suffer the coffin to be closed down. And that ought to be
done with all convenient speed.”

“It is perfectly horrible!” uttered the earl.

“Who has done it--do you know?” inquired Mr. Warburton.

“Somebody of the name of Anstey,” replied Mr. Carlyle. “In the absence
of any member of the family, I took upon myself to pay the chamber a
visit and examine into the men’s authority. The claim is about three
thousand pounds.”

“If it’s Anstey who has done it it is a personal debt of the earl’s,
really owing, every pound of it,” observed Mr. Warburton. “A sharp man,
though, that Anstey, to hit upon such a scheme.”

“And a shameless and a scandalous man,” added Lord Mount Severn. “Well,
this is a pretty thing. What’s to be done?”

While they consult, let us look for a moment at Lady Isabel. She sat
alone, in great perplexity, indulging the deepest grief. Lord Mount
Severn had intimated to her, kindly and affectionately, that henceforth
she must find her home with him and his wife. Isabel returned a faint
“Thank you” and as soon as he left her, burst into a paroxysm of
rebellious tears. “Have her home with Mrs. Vane!” she uttered to her own
heart; “No, never; rather would she die--rather would she eat a crust
and drink water!” and so on, and so on. Young demoiselles are somewhat
prone to indulge in these flights of fancy; but they are in most cases
impracticable and foolish--exceedingly so in that of Lady Isabel Vane.
Work for their living? It may appear very feasible in theory; but theory
and practice are as opposite as light and dark. The plain fact was, that
Isabel had no alternative whatever, save that of accepting a home with
Lady Mount Severn; and the conviction that it must be so stole over her
spirit, even while her hasty lips were protesting that she would not.

Two mourners only attended the funeral--the earl and Mr. Carlyle. The
latter was no relative of the deceased, and but a very recent friend;
but the earl had invited him, probably not liking the parading, solus,
his trappings of woe. Some of the county aristocracy were pallbearers,
and many private carriages followed.

All was bustle on the following morning. The earl was to depart, and
Isabel was to depart, but not together. In the course of the day the
domestics would disperse. The earl was speeding to London, and the
chaise to convey him to the railway station at West Lynne was already at
the door when Mr. Carlyle arrived.

“I was getting fidgety fearing you would not be here, for I have barely
five minutes to spare,” observed the earl, as he shook hands. “You are
sure you fully understood about the tombstone?”

“Perfectly,” replied Mr. Carlyle. “How is Lady Isabel?”

“Very down-hearted, I fear, poor child, for she did not breakfast with
me,” replied the earl. “Mason privately told me that she was in a
convulsion of grief. A bad man, a bad man, was Mount Severn,” he
emphatically added, as he rose and rang the bell.

“Let Lady Isabel be informed that I am ready to depart, and that I wait
to see her,” he said to the servant who answered it. “And while she is
coming, Mr. Carlyle,” he added, “allow me to express my obligations to
you. How I should have got along in this worrying business without you,
I cannot divine. You have promised, mind, to pay me a visit, and I shall
expect it speedily.”

“Promised conditionally--that I find myself in your neighborhood,”
 smiled Mr. Carlyle. “Should--”

Isabel entered, dressed also, and ready, for she was to depart
immediately after the earl. Her crape veil was over her face, but she
threw it back.

“My time is up, Isabel, and I must go. Is there anything you wish to say
to me?”

She opened her lips to speak, but glanced at Mr. Carlyle and hesitated.
He was standing at the window, his back towards them.

“I suppose not,” said the earl, answering himself, for he was in a fever
of hurry to be off, like many others are when starting on a journey.
“You will have no trouble whatever, my dear; only mind you get some
refreshments in the middle of the day, for you won’t be at Castle
Marling before dinner-time. Tell Mrs. Va--tell Lady Mount Severn that I
had no time to write, but will do so from town.”

But Isabel stood before him in an attitude of uncertainty--of
expectancy, it may be said, her color varying.

“What is it, you wish to say something?”

She certainly did wish to say something, but she did not know how. It
was a moment of embarrassment to her, intensely painful, and the
presence of Mr. Carlyle did not tend to lessen it. The latter had no
idea his absence was wished for.

“Bless me, Isabel! I declare I forgot all about it,” cried the earl, in
a tone of vexation. “Not being accustomed to--this aspect of affairs is
so new--” He broke off his disjointed sentences, unbuttoned his coat,
drew out his purse, and paused over its contents.

“Isabel, I have run myself very short, and have but little beyond what
will take me to town. You must make three pounds do for now, my dear.
Once at Castle Marling--Pound has the funds for the journey--Lady Mount
Severn will supply you; but you must tell her, or she will not know.”

He shot some gold out of his purse as he spoke, and left two sovereigns
and two half sovereigns on the table. “Farewell, my dear; make yourself
happy at Castle Marling. I shall be home soon.”

Passing from the room with Mr. Carlyle, he stood talking with that
gentleman a minute, his foot on the step of the chaise, and the next was
being whisked away. Mr. Carlyle returned to the breakfast-room, where
Isabel, an ashy whiteness having replaced the crimson on her cheeks, was
picking up the gold.

“Will you do me a favor, Mr. Carlyle?”

“I will do anything I can for you.”

She pushed a sovereign and a half toward him. “It is for Mr. Kane. I
told Marvel to send in and pay him, but it seems she forgot it, or put
it off, and he is not paid. The tickets were a sovereign; the rest is
for tuning the piano. Will you kindly give it him? If I trust one of the
servants it may be forgotten again in the hurry of their departure.”

“Kane’s charge for tuning a piano is five shillings,” remarked Mr.
Carlyle.

“But he was a long time occupied with it, and did something with the
leathers. It is not too much; besides I never ordered him anything to
eat. He wants money even worse than I do,” she added, with a poor
attempt at a smile. “But for thinking of him I should not have mustered
the courage to beg of Lord Mount Severn, as you have just heard me do.
In that case do you know what I should have done?”

“What should you have done?” he smiled.

“I should have asked you to pay him for me, and I would have repaid you
as soon as I had any money. I had a great mind to ask you, do you know;
it would have been less painful than being obliged to beg of Lord Mount
Severn.”

“I hope it would,” he answered, in a low, earnest tone. “What else can I
do for you?”

She was about to answer “Nothing--that he had done enough,” but at that
moment their attention was attracted by a bustle outside, and they moved
to the window.

It was the carriage coming round for Lady Isabel--the late earl’s
chariot, which was to convey her to the railway station six or seven
miles off. It had four post-horses to it, the number having been
designated by Lord Mount Severn, who appeared to wish Isabel to leave
the neighborhood in as much state as she had entered it. The carriage
was packed, and Marvel was perched outside.

“All is ready,” she said, “and the time is come for me to go. Mr.
Carlyle I am going to leave you a legacy--those pretty gold and silver
fish that I bought a few weeks back.”

“But why do you not take them?”

“Take them to Lady Mount Severn! No, I would rather leave them with you.
Throw a few crumbs into the globe now and then.”

Her face was wet with tears, and he knew that she was talking hurriedly
to cover her emotion.

“Sit down a few minutes,” he said.

“No--no. I had better go at once.”

He took her hand to conduct her to the carriage. The servants were
gathered in the hall, waiting for her. Some had grown gray in her
father’s service. She put out her hand, she strove to say a word of
thanks and of farewell, and she thought she would choke at the effort of
keeping down the sobs. At length it was over; a kind look around, a
yearning wave of the hand, and she passed on with Mr. Carlyle.

Pound had ascended to his place by Marvel, and the postboys were
awaiting the signal to start, but Mr. Carlyle had the carriage door open
again, and was bending in holding her hand.

“I have not said a word of thanks to you for all your kindness, Mr.
Carlyle,” she cried, her breath very labored. “I am sure you have seen
that I could not.”

“I wish I could have done more; I wish I could have shielded you from
the annoyances you have been obliged to endure!” he answered. “Should we
never meet again--”

“Oh, but we shall meet again,” she interrupted. “You promised Lord Mount
Severn.”

“True; we may so meet casually--once in a way; but our ordinary paths in
life lie far and wide apart. God forever bless you, dear Lady Isabel!”

The postboys touched their horses, and the carriage sped on. She drew
down the blinds and leaned back in an agony of tears--tears for the
house she was leaving, for the father she had lost. Her last thoughts
had been of gratitude to Mr. Carlyle: but she had more cause to be
grateful to him than she yet knew of. Emotion soon spent itself, and, as
her eyes cleared, she saw a bit of crumpled paper lying on her lap,
which appeared to have fallen from her hand. Mechanically she took it up
and opened it; it was a bank-note for one hundred pounds.

Ah, reader! You will say that this is a romance of fiction, and a far-
fetched one, but it is verily and indeed true. Mr. Carlyle had taken it
with him to East Lynne, that morning, with its destined purpose.

Lady Isabel strained her eyes, and gazed at the note--gazed and gazed
again. Where could it have come from? What had brought it there?
Suddenly the undoubted truth flashed upon her; Mr. Carlyle had left it
in her hand.

Her cheeks burned, her fingers trembled, her angry spirit rose up in
arms. In that first moment of discovery, she was ready to resent it as
an insult; but when she came to remember the sober facts of the last few
days, her anger subsided into admiration of his wondrous kindness. Did
he not know that she was without a home to call her own, without money--
absolutely without money, save what would be given her in charity?

When Lord Mount Severn reached London, and the hotel which the Vanes
were in the habit of using, the first object his eyes lighted on was his
own wife, whom he had believed to be safe at Castle Marling. He inquired
the cause.

Lady Mount Severn gave herself little trouble to explain. She had been
up a day or two--could order her mourning so much better in person--and
William did not seem well, so she brought him up for a change.

“I am sorry you came to town, Emma,” remarked the earl, after listening.
“Isabel is gone to-day to Castle Marling.”

Lady Mount Severn quickly lifted her head, “What’s she gone there for?”

“It is the most disgraceful piece of business altogether,” returned the
earl, without replying to the immediate question. “Mount Severn has
died, worse than a beggar, and there’s not a shilling for Isabel.”

“It never was expected there would be much.”

“But there’s nothing--not a penny; nothing for her own personal
expenses. I gave her a pound or two to-day, for she was completely
destitute!”

The countess opened her eyes. “Where will she live? What will become of
her?”

“She must live with us. She--”

“With us!” interrupted Lady Mount Severn, her voice almost reaching a
scream. “That she never shall.”

“She must, Emma. There is nowhere else for her to live. I have been
obliged to decide it so; and she is gone, as I tell you, to Castle
Marling to-day.”

Lady Mount Severn grew pale with anger. She rose from her seat and
confronted her husband, the table being between them. “Listen, Raymond;
I will not have Isabel Vane under my roof. I hate her. How could you be
cajoled into sanctioning such a thing?”

“I was not cajoled, and my sanction was not asked,” he mildly replied.
“I proposed it. Where else is she to be?”

“I don’t care where,” was the obstinate retort. “Never with us.”

“She is at Castle Marling now--gone to it as her home,” resumed the
earl; “and even you, when you return, will scarcely venture to turn her
out again into the road, or to the workhouse. She will not trouble you
long,” carelessly continued the earl. “One so lovely as Isabel will be
sure to marry early; and she appears as gentle and sweet-tempered a girl
as I ever saw; so whence can arise your dislike to her, I don’t pretend
to guess. Many a man will be ready to forget her want of fortune for the
sake of her face.”

“She shall marry the first who asks her,” snapped the angry lady; “I’ll
take care of that.”



CHAPTER XII.

LIFE AT CASTLE MARLING.

Isabel had been in her new home about ten days, when Lord and Lady Mount
Severn arrived at Castle Marling, which was not a castle, you may as
well be told, but only the name of a town, nearly contiguous to which
was their residence, a small estate. Lord Mount Severn welcomed Isabel;
Lady Mount Severn also, after a fashion; but her manner was so
repellant, so insolently patronizing, that it brought the indignant
crimson to the cheeks of Lady Isabel. And if this was the case at the
first meeting, what do you suppose it must have been as time went on?
Galling slights, petty vexations, chilling annoyances were put upon her,
trying her powers of endurance to the very length of their tether; she
would wring her hands when alone, and passionately wish that she could
find another refuge.

The earl and countess had two children, both boys, and in February the
younger one, always a delicate child, died. This somewhat altered their
plans. Instead of proceeding to London after Easter, as had been decided
upon, they would not go till May. The earl had passed part of the winter
at Mount Severn, looking after the repairs and renovations that were
being made there. In March he went to Paris, full of grief for the loss
of his boy--far greater grief than was experienced by Lady Mount Severn.

April approached and with it Easter. To the unconcealed dismay of Lady
Mount Severn, her grandmother, Mrs. Levison, wrote her word that she
required change, and should pass Easter with her at Castle Marling. Lady
Mount Severn would have given her diamonds to have got out of it, but
there was no escape--diamonds that were once Isabel’s--at least, that
Isabel had worn. On the Monday in Passion Week the old lady arrived, and
with her Francis Levison. They had no other guests. Things went on
pretty smoothly till Good Friday.

On Good Friday afternoon, Isabel strolled out with little William Vane;
Captain Levison joined them, and they never came in till nearly dinner-
time, when the three entered together, Lady Mount Severn doing penance
all the time, and nursing her rage against Isabel, for Mrs. Levison kept
her indoors. There was barely time to dress for dinner, and Isabel went
straight to her room. Her dress was off, her dressing-gown on. Marvel
was busy with her hair, and William chattering at her knee, when the
door was flung open, and my lady entered.

“Where have you been?” demanded she, shaking with passion. Isabel knew
the signs.

“Strolling about in the shrubberies and grounds,” answered Isabel.

“How dare you so disgrace yourself!”

“I do not understand you,” said Isabel, her heart beginning to beat
unpleasantly. “Marvel, you are pulling my hair.”

When women liable to intemperate fits of passion give the reins to them,
they neither know nor care what they say. Lady Mount Severn broke into a
torrent of reproach and abuses, most degrading and unjustifiable.

“Is it not sufficient that you are allowed an asylum in my house, but
you must also disgrace it! Three hours have you been hiding yourself
with Francis Levison! You have done nothing but flirt with him from the
moment he came; you did nothing else at Christmas.”

The attack was longer and broader, but that was the substance of it, and
Isabel was goaded to resistance, to anger little less great than that of
the countess. This!--and before her attendant! She, an earl’s daughter,
so much better born than Emma Mount Severn, to be thus insultingly
accused in the other’s mad jealousy. Isabel tossed her hair from the
hands of Marvel, rose up and confronted the countess, constraining her
voice to calmness.

“I do not flirt!” she said; “I have never flirted. I leave that”--and
she could not wholly suppress in tone the scorn she felt--“to married
women; though it seems to me that it is a fault less venial in them than
in single ones. There is but one inmate of this house who flirts, so far
as I have seen since I have lived in it; is it you or I, Lady Mount
Severn?”

The home truth told on her ladyship. She turned white with rage, forgot
her manners, and, raising her right hand, struck Isabel a stinging blow
upon the left cheek. Confused and terrified, Isabel stood in pain, and
before she could speak or act, my lady’s left hand was raised to the
other cheek, and a blow left on that. Lady Isabel shivered as with a
sudden chill, and cried out--a sharp, quick cry--covered her outraged
face, and sank down upon the dressing chair. Marvel threw up her hands
in dismay, and William Vane could not have burst into a louder roar had
he been beaten himself. The boy--he was of a sensitive nature--was
frightened.

My good reader, are you one of the inexperienced ones who borrow notions
of “fashionable life” from the novels got in a library, taking their
high-flown contents for gospel, and religiously believing that lords and
ladies live upon stilts, speak, eat, move, breathe, by the rules of
good-breeding only? Are you under the delusion--too many are--that the
days of dukes and duchesses are spent discussing “pictures, tastes,
Shakespeare, and the musical glasses?”--that they are strung on polite
wires of silver, and can’t get off the hinges, never giving vent to
angry tempers, to words unorthodox, as commonplace mortals do? That will
come to pass when the Great Creator shall see fit to send men into the
world free from baneful tempers, evil passions, from the sins bequeathed
from the fall of Adam.

Lady Mount Severn finished up the scene by boxing William for his noise,
jerked him out of the room, and told him he was a monkey.

Isabel Vane lived through the livelong night, weeping tears of anguish
and indignation. She would not remain at Castle Marling--who would,
after so great an outrage? Yet where was she to go? Fifty times in the
course of the night did she wish that she was laid beside her father,
for her feelings obtained the mastery of her reason; in her calm moments
she would have shrunk from the idea of death as the young and healthy
must do.

She rose on the Saturday morning weak and languid, the effects of the
night of grief, and Marvel brought her breakfast up. William Vane stole
into her room afterward; he was attached to her in a remarkable degree.

“Mamma’s going out,” he exclaimed, in the course of the morning. “Look,
Isabel.”

Isabel went to the window. Lady Mount Severn was in the pony carriage,
Francis Levison driving.

“We can go down now, Isabel, nobody will be there.”

She assented, and went down with William; but scarcely were they in the
drawing-room when a servant entered with a card on a salver.

“A gentleman, my lady, wishes to see you.”

“To see me!” returned Isabel, in surprise, “or Lady Mount Severn?”

“He asked for you, my lady.”

She took up the card. “Mr. Carlyle.” “Oh!” she uttered, in a tone of
joyful surprise, “show him in.”

It is curious, nay, appalling, to trace the thread in a human life; how
the most trivial occurrences lead to the great events of existence,
bringing forth happiness or misery, weal or woe. A client of Mr.
Carlyle’s, travelling from one part of England to the other, was
arrested by illness at Castle Marling--grave illness, it appeared to be,
inducing fears of death. He had not, as the phrase goes, settled his
affairs, and Mr. Carlyle was telegraphed for in haste, to make his will,
and for other private matters. A very simple occurrence it appeared to
Mr. Carlyle, this journey, and yet it was destined to lead to events
that would end only with his own life.

Mr. Carlyle entered, unaffected and gentlemanly as ever, with his noble
form, his attractive face, and his drooping eyelids. She advanced to
meet him, holding out her hand, her countenance betraying her pleasure.

“This is indeed unexpected,” she exclaimed. “How very pleased I am to
see you.”

“Business brought me yesterday to Castle Marling. I could not leave it
again without calling on you. I hear that Lord Mount Severn is absent.”

“He is in France,” she rejoined. “I said we should be sure to meet
again; do you remember, Mr. Carlyle? You----”

Isabel suddenly stopped; for with the word “remember,” she also
remembered something--the hundred pound note--and what she was saying
faltered on her tongue. Confused, indeed, grew she: for, alas! she had
changed and partly spent it. How was it possible to ask Lady Mount
Severn for money? And the earl was nearly always away. Mr. Carlyle saw
her embarrassment, though he may not have detected its cause.

“What a fine boy!” exclaimed he, looking at the child.

“It is Lord Vane,” said Isabel.

“A truthful, earnest spirit, I am sure,” he continued, gazing at his
open countenance. “How old are you, my little man?”

“I am six, sir; and my brother was four.”

Isabel bent over the child--an excuse to cover her perplexity. “You do
not know this gentleman, William. It is Mr. Carlyle, and he has been
very kind to me.”

The little lord had turned his thoughtful eyes on Mr. Carlyle,
apparently studying his countenance. “I shall like you, sir, if you are
kind to Isabel. Are you kind to her?”

“Very, very kind,” murmured Lady Isabel, leaving William, and turning to
Mr. Carlyle, but not looking at him. “I don’t know what to say; I ought
to thank you. I did not intend to use the--to use it; but I--I--”

“Hush!” he interrupted, laughing at her confusion. “I do not know what
you are talking of. I have a great misfortune to break to you, Lady
Isabel.”

She lifted her eyes and her glowing cheeks, somewhat aroused from her
own thoughts.

“Two of your fish are dead. The gold ones.”

“Are they?”

“I believe it was the frost killed them; I don’t know what else it could
have been. You may remember those bitter days we had in January; they
died then.”

“You are very good to take care of them all this while. How is East
Lynne looking? Dear East Lynne! Is it occupied?”

“Not yet. I have spent some money upon it, and it repays the outlay.”

The excitement of his arrival had worn off, and she was looking herself
again, pale and sad; he could not help observing that she was changed.

“I cannot expect to look so well at Castle Marling as I did at East
Lynne,” she answered.

“I trust it is a happy home to you?” said Mr. Carlyle, speaking upon
impulse.

She glanced up at him a look that he would never forget; it certainly
told of despair. “No,” she said, shaking her head, “it is a miserable
home, and I cannot remain in it. I have been awake all night, thinking
where I can go, but I cannot tell; I have not a friend in the wide
world.”

Never let people talk secrets before children, for be assured that they
comprehend a vast deal more than is expedient; the saying “that little
pitchers have great ears” is wonderfully true. Lord Vane held up his
hand to Mr. Carlyle,--

“Isabel told me this morning that she should go away from us. Shall I
tell you why? Mamma beat her yesterday when she was angry.”

“Be quiet, William!” interrupted Lady Isabel, her face in a flame.

“Two great slaps upon her cheeks,” continued the young viscount; “and
Isabel cried so, and I screamed, and then mamma hit me. But boys are
made to be hit; nurse says so. Marvel came into the nursery when we were
at tea, and told nurse about it. She says Isabel’s too good-looking, and
that’s why mamma--”

Isabel stopped the child’s tongue, rang a peal on the bell, and marched
him to the door, dispatching him to the nursery by the servant who
answered it.

Mr. Carlyle’s eyes were full of indignant sympathy. “Can this be true?”
 he asked, in a low tone when she returned to him. “You do, indeed, want
a friend.”

“I must bear my lot,” she replied, obeying the impulse which prompted
her to confide in Mr. Carlyle; “at least till Lord Mount Severn
returns.”

“And then?”

“I really do not know,” she said, the rebellious tears rising faster
than she could choke them down. “He has no other home to offer me; but
with Lady Mount Severn I cannot and will not remain. She would break my
heart, as she has already well-nigh broken my spirit. I have not
deserved it of her, Mr. Carlyle.”

“No, I am sure you have not,” he warmly answered. “I wish I could help
you! What can I do?”

“You can do nothing,” she said. “What can any one do?”

“I wish, I wish I could help you!” he repeated. “East Lynne was not,
take it for all in all, a pleasant home to you, but it seems you changed
for the worse when you left.”

“Not a pleasant home?” she echoed, its reminiscences appearing
delightful in that moment, for it must be remembered that all things are
estimated by comparison. “Indeed it was; I may never have so pleasant a
one again. Mr. Carlyle, do not disparage East Lynne to me! Would I could
awake and find the last few months but a hideous dream!--that I could
find my dear father alive again!--that we were still living peacefully
at East Lynne. It would be a very Eden to me now.”

What was Mr. Carlyle about to say? What emotion was it that agitated his
countenance, impeded his breath, and dyed his face blood-red? His better
genius was surely not watching over him, or those words had never been
spoken.

“There is but one way,” he began, taking her hand and nervously playing
with it, probably unconscious that he did so; “only one way in which you
could return to East Lynne. And that way--I may not presume, perhaps, to
point it out.”

She looked at him and waited for an explanation.

“If my words offend you, Lady Isabel, check them, as their presumption
deserves, and pardon me. May I--dare I--offer you to return to East
Lynne as its mistress?”

She did not comprehend him in the slightest degree: the drift of his
meaning never dawned upon her. “Return to East Lynne as its mistress?”
 she repeated, in bewilderment.

“And as my wife?”

No possibility of misunderstanding him now, and the shock and surprise
were great. She had stood there by Mr. Carlyle’s side conversing
confidentially with him, esteeming him greatly, feeling as if he were
her truest friend on earth, clinging to him in her heart as to a
powerful haven of refuge, loving him almost as she would a brother,
suffering her hand to remain in his. But to be his wife! the idea had
never presented itself to her in any shape until this moment, and her
mind’s first emotion was one of entire opposition, her first movement to
express it, as she essayed to withdraw herself and her hand away from
him.

But not so; Mr. Carlyle did not suffer it. He not only retained that
hand, but took the other also, and spoke, now the ice was broken,
eloquent words of love. Not unmeaning phrases of rhapsody, about hearts
and darts and dying for her, such as somebody else might have given
utterance to, but earnest-hearted words of deep tenderness, calculated
to win upon the mind’s good sense, as well as upon the ear and heart;
and it may be that, had her imagination not been filled up with that
“somebody else,” she would have said “Yes,” there and then.

They were suddenly interrupted. Lady Mount Severn entered, and took in
the scene at a glance; Mr. Carlyle’s bent attitude of devotion, his
imprisonment of the hands, and Isabel’s perplexed and blushing
countenance. She threw up her head and her little inquisitive nose, and
stopped short on the carpet; her freezing looks demanded an explanation,
as plainly as looks can do it. Mr. Carlyle turned to her, and by way of
sparing Isabel, proceeded to introduce himself. Isabel had just presence
of mind left to name her: “Lady Mount Severn.”

“I am sorry that Lord Mount Severn should be absent, to whom I have the
honor of being known,” he said. “I am Mr. Carlyle.”

“I have heard of you,” replied her ladyship, scanning his good looks,
and feeling cross that his homage should be given where she saw it was
given, “but I had not heard that you and Lady Isabel Vane were on the
extraordinary terms of intimacy that--that----”

“Madam,” he interrupted as he handed a chair to her ladyship and took
another himself, “we have never yet been on terms of extraordinary
intimacy. I was begging the Lady Isabel to grant that we may be; I was
asking her to become my wife.”

The avowal was as a shower of incense to the countess, and her ill humor
melted into sunshine. It was a solution to her great difficulty, a
loophole by which she might get rid of her bete noire, the hated Isabel.
A flush of gratification lighted her face, and she became full of
graciousness to Mr. Carlyle.

“How very grateful Isabel must feel to you,” quoth she. “I speak openly,
Mr. Carlyle, because I know that you were cognizant of the unprotected
state in which she was left by the earl’s improvidence, putting marriage
for her, at any rate, a high marriage, nearly out of the question. East
Lynne is a beautiful place, I have heard.”

“For its size; it is not large,” replied Mr. Carlyle, as he rose for
Isabel had also risen and was coming forward.

“And pray what is Lady Isabel’s answer?” quickly asked the countess,
turning to her.

Not to her did Isabel condescend to give an answer, but she approached
Mr. Carlyle, and spoke in a low tone.

“Will you give me a few hours for consideration?”

“I am only too happy that you should accord it consideration, for it
speaks to me of hope,” was his reply, as he opened the door for her to
pass out. “I will be here again this afternoon.”

It was a perplexing debate that Lady Isabel held with herself in the
solitude of her chamber, whilst Mr. Carlyle touched upon ways and means
to Lady Mount Severn. Isabel was little more than a child, and as a
child she reasoned, looking neither far nor deep: the shallow palpable
aspect of affairs alone presenting itself to her view. That Mr. Carlyle
was not of rank equal to her own, she scarcely remembered; East Lynne
seemed a very fair settlement in life, and in point of size, beauty and
importance, it was far superior to the house she was now in. She forgot
that her position in East Lynne as Mr. Carlyle’s wife would not be what
it had been as Lord Mount Severn’s daughter; she forgot that she would
be tied to a quiet house, shut out from the great world, the pomps and
vanities to which she was born. She liked Mr. Carlyle much; she
experienced pleasure in conversing with him; she liked to be with him;
in short, but for that other ill-omened fancy which had crept over her,
there would have been danger of her falling in love with Mr. Carlyle.
And oh! to be removed forever from the bitter dependence on Lady Mount
Severn--East Lynne would in truth, after that, seem what she had called
it: Eden.

“So far it looks favorable,” mentally exclaimed poor Isabel, “but there
is the other side of the question. It is not only that I do not love Mr.
Carlyle, but I fear I do love, or very nearly love, Francis Levison. I
wish he would ask me to be his wife!--or that I had never seen him.”

Isabel’s soliloquy was interrupted by the entrance of Mrs. Levison and
the countess. What the latter had said to the old lady to win her to the
cause, was best known to herself, but she was eloquent in it. They both
used every possible argument to induce her to accept Mr. Carlyle: the
old lady declaring that she had never been introduced to any one she was
so much taken with, and Mrs. Levison was incapable of asserting what was
not true; that he was worth a dozen empty-headed men of the great world.

Isabel listened, now swayed one way, now the other, and when afternoon
came, her head was aching with perplexity. The stumbling block that she
could not get over was Francis Levison. She saw Mr. Carlyle approach
from her window, and went down to the drawing-room, not in the least
knowing what her answer was to be; a shadowy idea was presenting itself,
that she would ask him for longer time, and write her answer.

In the drawing-room was Francis Levison, and her heart beat wildly;
which said beating might have convinced her that she ought not to marry
another.

“Where have you been hiding yourself?” cried he. “Did you hear of our
mishap with the pony carriage?”

“No,” was her answer.

“I was driving Emma into town. The pony took fright, kicked, plunged and
went down upon his knees; she took fright in turn, got out, and walked
back. So I gave the brute some chastisement and a race, and brought him
to the stables, getting home in time to be introduced to Mr. Carlyle. He
seems an out-and-out good fellow, Isabel, and I congratulate you.”

“What!” she uttered.

“Don’t start. We are all in the family, and my lady told; I won’t betray
it abroad. She says East Lynne is a place to be coveted; I wish you
happiness, Isabel.”

“Thank you,” she returned in a sarcastic tone, though her throat beat
and her lips quivered. “You are premature in your congratulations,
Captain Levison.”

“Am I? Keep my good wishes, then, till the right man comes. I am beyond
the pale myself, and dare not think of entering the happy state,” he
added, in a pointed tone. “I have indulged dreams of it, like others,
but I cannot afford to indulge them seriously; a poor man, with
uncertain prospects can only play the butterfly, perhaps to his life’s
end.”

He quitted the room as he spoke. It was impossible for Isabel to
misunderstand him, but a feeling shot across her mind, for the first
time, that he was false and heartless. One of the servants appeared,
showing in Mr. Carlyle; nothing false or heartless about him. He closed
the door, and approached her, but she did not speak, and her lips were
white and trembling. Mr. Carlyle waited.

“Well,” he said at length, in a gentle tone, “have you decided to grant
my prayer?”

“Yes. But--” She could not go on. What with one agitation and another,
she had difficulty in conquering her emotion. “But--I was going to tell
you----”

“Presently,” he whispered, leading her to a sofa, “we can both afford to
wait now. Oh, Isabel, you have made me very happy!”

“I ought to tell you, I must tell you,” she began again, in the midst of
hysterical tears. “Though I have said ‘yes’ to your proposal, I do not--
yet----It has come upon me by surprise,” she stammered. “I like you very
much; I esteem and respect you; but I do not love you.”

“I should wonder if you did. But you will let me earn your love,
Isabel?”

“Oh, yes,” she earnestly answered. “I hope so.”

He drew her closer to him, bent his face, and took from her lips his
first kiss. Isabel was passive; she supposed he had gained the right to
do so. “My dearest! It is all I ask.”



CHAPTER XIII.

A MOONLIGHT WALK.

The sensations of Mr. Carlyle, when he returned to West Lynne, were much
like those of an Eton boy, who knows he has been in mischief, and dreads
detection. Always open as to his own affairs--for he had nothing to
conceal--he yet deemed it expedient to dissemble now. He felt that his
sister would be bitter at the prospect of his marrying; instinct had
taught him that, years past; and he believed that, of all women, the
most objectionable to her would be Lady Isabel, for Miss Carlyle looked
to the useful, and had neither sympathy nor admiration for the
beautiful. He was not sure but she might be capable of endeavoring to
frustrate the marriage should news of it reach her ears, and her
indomitable will had caused many strange things in her life; therefore,
you will not blame Mr. Carlyle for observing entire reticence as to his
future plans.

A family of the name of Carew had been about taking East Lynne; they
wished to rent it, furnished, for three years. Upon some of the minor
arrangements they and Mr. Carlyle were opposed, but the latter declined
to give way. During his absence at Castle Marling, news had arrived from
them--they had acceded to all his terms, and would enter upon East Lynne
as soon as it was convenient. Miss Carlyle was full of congratulations;
it was off their hands, she said; but the first letter Mr. Carlyle wrote
was--to decline them. He did not tell this to Miss Carlyle. The final
touches to the house were given, preparatory to the reception of its
inhabitants, and three maids and two men servants hired and sent there,
upon board wages, until the family should arrive.

One evening three weeks subsequent to Mr. Carlyle’s visit to Castle
Marling, Barbara Hare called at Miss Carlyle’s, and found them going to
tea much earlier than usual.

“We dined earlier,” said Miss Corny, “and I ordered tea as soon as the
dinner went away. Otherwise, Archibald would have taken none.”

“I am as well without tea. And I have a mass of business to get through
yet.”

“You are not as well without it,” cried Miss Corny, “and I don’t choose
you should go without it. Take off your bonnet, Barbara. He does things
like nobody else; he is off to Castle Marling to-morrow, and never could
open his lips till just now that he was going.”

“Is that invalid--Brewster, or whatever his name is--laid up at Castle
Marling, still?” exclaimed Barbara.

“He is still there,” said Mr. Carlyle.

Barbara sprang up the moment tea was over.

“Dill is waiting for me in the office, and I have some hours’ work
before me. However, I suppose you won’t care to put up with Peter’s
attendance, so make haste with your bonnet, Barbara.”

She took his arm, and they walked on, Mr. Carlyle striking the hedge and
the grass with her parasol. Another minute, and the handle was in two.

“I thought you would do it,” said Barbara, while he was regarding the
parasol with ludicrous dismay. “Never mind, it is an old one.”

“I will bring you another to replace it. What is the color? Brown. I
won’t forget. Hold the relics a minute, Barbara.”

He put the pieces in her hand, and taking out a note case, made a note
in pencil.

“What’s that for?” she inquired.

He held it close to her eyes, that she might discern what he had
written: “Brown parasol. B. H.”

“A reminder for me, Barbara, in case I forget.”

Barbara’s eyes detected another item or two already entered in the note
case: “piano,” “plate.”

“I jot down the things as they occur to me, that I must get in London,”
 he explained. “Otherwise I should forget half.”

“In London? I thought you were going in an opposite direction--to Castle
Marling?”

It was a slip of the tongue, but Mr. Carlyle repaired it.

“I may probably have to visit London as well as Castle Marling. How
bright the moon looks rising there, Barbara!”

“So bright--that or the sky--that I saw your secret,” answered she.
“Piano! Plate! What can you want with either, Archibald?”

“They are for East Lynne,” he quietly replied.

“Oh, for the Carews.” And Barbara’s interest in the item was gone.

They turned into the road just below the grove, and reached it. Mr.
Carlyle held the gate open for Barbara.

“You will come in and say good-night to mamma. She was saying to-day
what a stranger you have made of yourself lately.”

“I have been busy; and I really have not the time to-night. You must
remember me to her instead.” And cordially shaking her by the hand, he
closed the gate.

It was two or three mornings after the departure of Mr. Carlyle that Mr.
Dill appeared before Miss Carlyle, bearing a letter. She was busy
regarding the effect of some new muslin curtains, just put up, and did
not pay attention to him.

“Will you please take the letter, Miss Cornelia? The postman left it in
the office with ours. It is from Mr. Archibald.”

“Why, what has he got to write to me about?” retorted Miss Corny. “Does
he say when he is coming home?”

“You had better see, Miss Cornelia. Mine does not.”

“CASTLE MARLING, May 1st.

“MY DEAR CORNELIA--I was married this morning to Lady Isabel Vane, and
hasten briefly to acquaint you with the fact. I will write you more
fully to-morrow or the next day, and explain all things.

“Your ever affectionate brother,

“ARCHIBALD CARLYLE.”

“It is a hoax,” was the first gutteral sound that escaped from Miss
Carlyle’s throat when speech came to her.

Mr. Dill only stood like a stone image.

“It is a hoax, I say,” raved Miss Carlyle. “What are you standing there
for, like a gander on one leg?” she reiterated, venting her anger upon
the unoffending man. “Is it a hoax or not?”

“I am overdone with amazement, Miss Corny. It is not a hoax; I have had
a letter, too.”

“It can’t be true--it can’t be true. He had no more thought of being
married when he left here, three days ago, than I have.”

“How can we tell that, Miss Corny? How are we to know he did not go to
be married? I fancy he did.”

“Go to be married!” shrieked Miss Corny, in a passion. “He would not be
such a fool. And to that fine lady-child! No--no.”

“He has sent this to be put in the county journals,” said Mr. Dill,
holding forth a scrap of paper. “They are married, safe enough.”

Miss Carlyle took it and held it before her: her hand was cold as ice,
and shook as if with palsy.

“MARRIED.--On the 1st inst., at Castle Marling, by the chaplain to the
Earl of Mount Severn, Archibald Carlyle, Esquire, of East Lynne, to the
Lady Isabel Mary Vane, only child of William, late Earl of Mount
Severn.”

Miss Carlyle tore the paper to atoms and scattered it. Mr. Dill
afterward made copies from memory, and sent them to the journal offices.
But let that pass.

“I will never forgive him,” she deliberately uttered, “and I will never
forgive or tolerate her.”



CHAPTER XIV.

THE EARL’S ASTONISHMENT.

The announcement of the marriage in the newspapers was the first
intimation of it Lord Mount Severn received. He was little less
thunderstruck than Miss Corny, and came steaming to England the same
day, thereby missing his wife’s letter, which gave her version of the
affair. He met Mr. Carlyle and Lady Isabel in London, where they were
staying at one of the west-end hotels--only for a day or two, however,
for they were going further. Isabel was alone when the earl was
announced.

“What is the meaning of this, Isabel?” began he, without the
circumlocution of greeting. “You are married?”

“Yes,” she answered, with her pretty, innocent blush. “Some time ago.”

“And to Carlyle, the lawyer! How did it come about?”

Isabel began to think how it did come about, sufficiently to give a
clear answer. “He asked me,” she said, “and I accepted him. He came to
Castle Marling at Easter, and asked me then. I was very much surprised.”

The earl looked at her attentively. “Why was I kept in ignorance of
this, Isabel?”

“I did not know you were kept in ignorance of it. Mr. Carlyle wrote to
you, as did Lady Mount Severn.”

Lord Mount Severn was a man in the dark, and looked like it. “I suppose
this comes,” soliloquized he, aloud, “of your father’s having allowed
the gentleman to dance daily attendance at East Lynne. And so you fell
in love with him.”

“Indeed, no!” answered she, in an amused tone. “I never thought of such
a thing as falling in love with Mr. Carlyle.”

“Then don’t you love him?” abruptly asked the earl.

“No!” she whispered, timidly; “but I like him much--oh, very much! And
he is so good to me!”

The earl stroked his chin and mused. Isabel had destroyed the only
reasonable conclusion he had been able to come to as to the motives for
the hasty marriage. “If you do not love Mr. Carlyle, how comes it that
you are so wise in the distinction between ‘liking’ and ‘love?’ It
cannot be that you love anybody else?”

The question turned home, and Isabel turned crimson. “I shall love my
husband in time,” was all she answered, as she bent her head, and played
nervously with her watch chain.

“My poor child!” involuntarily exclaimed the earl. But he was one who
liked to fathom the depth of everything. “Who has been staying at Castle
Marling since I left?” he asked sharply.

“Mrs. Levison came down.”

“I alluded to gentlemen--young men.”

“Only Francis Levison,” she replied.

“Francis Levison! You have never been so foolish as to fall in love with
him?”

The question was so pointed, so abrupt, and Isabel’s self-consciousness,
moreover, so great, that she betrayed lamentable confusion, and the earl
had no further need to ask. Pity stole into his hard eyes as they fixed
themselves on her downcast, glowing face.

“Isabel,” he gravely began, “Captain Levison is not a good man; if ever
you were inclined to think him one, dispossess your mind of the idea,
and hold him at arm’s distance. Drop his acquaintance--encourage no
intimacy with him.”

“I have already dropped it,” said Isabel, “and I shall not take it up
again. But Lady Mount Severn must think well of him, or she would not
have him there.”

“She thinks none too well of him; none can of Francis Levison,” returned
the earl significantly.

Before Isabel could reply, Mr. Carlyle entered. He held out his hand to
the earl; the earl did not appear to see it.

“Isabel,” said he, “I am sorry to turn you out, but I suppose you have
but this one sitting-room. I wish to say a few words to Mr. Carlyle.”

She quitted them, and the earl wheeled round and faced Mr. Carlyle,
speaking in a stern, haughty tone.

“How came this marriage about, sir? Do you possess so little honor,
that, taking advantage of my absence, you must intrude yourself into my
family, and clandestinely espouse Lady Isabel Vane?”

Mr. Carlyle stood confounded, and confused. He drew himself up to his
full height, looking every whit as fearless and far more noble than the
peer. “My lord, I do not understand you.”

“Yet I speak plainly. What is it but a clandestine procedure to take
advantage of a guardian’s absence and beguile a young girl into a
marriage beneath her?”

“There has been nothing clandestine in my conduct toward Lady Isabel
Vane; there shall be nothing but honor in my conduct toward Lady Isabel
Carlyle. Your lordship has been misinformed.”

“I have not been informed at all,” retorted the earl. “I was allowed to
learn this from the public papers--I, the only relative of Lady Isabel.”

“When I proposed for Lady Isabel--”

“But a month ago,” sarcastically interrupted the earl.

“But a month ago,” calmly repeated Mr. Carlyle, “my first action, after
Isabel accepted me, was to write to you. But that I imagine you may not
have received the letter, by stating you first heard of our marriage
through the papers, I should say, the want of courtesy lay on your
lordship’s side for having vouchsafed me no reply to it.”

“What were the contents of the letter?”

“I stated what had occurred, mentioning what I was able to do in the way
of settlements, and also that both Isabel and myself wished the ceremony
to take place as soon as might be.”

“And pray where did you address the letter?”

“Lady Mount Severn could not give me the address. She said if I would
intrust the letter to her, she would forward it with the rest she wrote,
for she expected daily to hear from you. I did give her the letter, and
I heard no more of the matter, except that her ladyship sent me a
message when Isabel was writing to me, that as you had returned no
reply, you of course approved.”

“Is this the fact?” cried the earl.

“My lord,” coldly replied Mr. Carlyle, “whatever may be my defects in
your eyes, I am at least a man of truth. Until this moment, the
suspicion that you were in ignorance of the contemplated marriage never
occurred to me.”

“So far, then, I beg your pardon, Mr. Carlyle. But how came the marriage
about at all--how came it to be hurried over in this unseemly fashion?
You made the offer at Easter, Isabel tells me, and you married her three
weeks after it.”

“And I would have married her and brought her away with me the day I did
make it, had it been practicable,” returned Mr. Carlyle. “I have acted
throughout for her comfort and happiness.”

“Oh, indeed!” exclaimed the earl, returning to his disagreeable tone.
“Perhaps you will put me in possession of the facts, and of your
motives.”

“I warn you that the facts to you will not bear a pleasant sound, Lord
Mount Severn.”

“Allow me to be the judge of that,” said the earl.

“Business took me to Castle Marling on Good Friday. On the following day
I called at your house; after your own and Isabel’s invitation, it was
natural I should; in fact, it would have been a breach of good feeling
not to do so, I found Isabel ill-treated and miserable; far from
enjoying a happy home in your house--”

“What, sir?” interrupted the earl. “Ill-treated and miserable?”

“Ill-treated even to blows, my lord.”

The earl stood as one petrified, staring at Mr. Carlyle.

“I learnt it, I must premise, through the chattering revelations of your
little son; Isabel, of course, would not have mentioned it to me; but
when the child had spoken, she did not deny it. In short she was too
broken-hearted, too completely bowed in spirit to deny it. It aroused
all my feelings of indignation--it excited in me an irresistible desire
to emancipate her from this cruel life, and take her where she would
find affection, and I hope happiness. There was only one way which I
could do this, and I risked it. I asked her to become my wife, and to
return to her home at East Lynne.”

The earl was slowly recovering from his petrifaction. “Then, am I to
understand, that when you called that day at my house, you carried no
intention with you of proposing to Isabel?”

“Not any. It was an impromptu step, the circumstances under which I
found her calling it forth.”

The earl paced the room, perplexed still, and evidently disturbed. “May
I inquire if you love her?” he abruptly said.

Mr. Carlyle paused ere he spoke, and a red flush dyed his face. “Those
sort of feelings man rarely acknowledges to man, Lord Mount Severn, but
I will answer you. I do love her, passionately and sincerely; I learnt
to love her at East Lynne; but I could have carried my love silently
within me to the end of my life and never betrayed it; and probably
should have done so, but for the unexpected visit to Castle Marling. If
the idea of making her my wife had never previously occurred to me as
practicable, it was that I deemed her rank incompatible with my own.”

“As it was,” said the earl.

“Country solicitors have married peers’ daughters before now,” remarked
Mr. Carlyle. “I only add another to the list.”

“But you cannot keep her as a peer’s daughter, I presume?”

“East Lynne will be her home. Our establishment will be small and quiet,
as compared with her father’s. I explained to Isabel how quiet at the
first, and she might have retracted had she wished. I explained also in
full to Lady Mount Severn. East Lynne will descend to our eldest son,
should we have children. My profession is most lucrative, my income
good; were I to die to-morrow, Isabel would enjoy East Lynne and about
three thousand pounds per annum. I gave these details in the letter,
which appears to have miscarried.”

The earl made no immediate reply; he was absorbed in thought.

“Your lordship perceives, I hope, that there has been nothing
‘clandestine’ in my conduct to Lady Isabel.”

Lord Mount Severn held out his hand. “I refused my hand when you came
in, Mr. Carlyle, as you may have observed, perhaps you will refuse yours
now, though I should be proud to shake it. When I find myself in the
wrong, I am not above acknowledging the fact; and I must state my
opinion that you have behaved most kindly and honorably.”

Mr. Carlyle smiled and put his hand into the earl’s. The latter retained
it, while he spoke in a whisper.

“Of course I cannot be ignorant that, in speaking of Isabel’s ill-
treatment, you alluded to my wife. Has it transpired beyond yourselves?”

“You may be sure that neither Isabel nor myself would mention it; we
shall dismiss it from among our reminiscences. Let it be as though you
had never heard it; it is past and done with.”

“Isabel,” said the earl, as he was departing that evening, for he
remained to spend the day with them, “I came here this morning almost
prepared to strike your husband, and I go away honoring him. Be a good
and faithful wife to him, for he deserves it.”

“Of course I shall,” she answered, in surprise.

Lord Mount Severn steamed on to Castle Marling, and there he had a
stormy interview with his wife--so stormy that the sounds penetrated to
the ears of the domestics. He left again the same day, in anger, and
proceeded to Mount Severn.

“He will have time to cool down, before we meet in London,” was the
comment of my lady.



CHAPTER XV.

COMING HOME.

Miss Carlyle, having resolved upon her course, quitted her own house,
and removed to East Lynne with Peter and her handmaidens. In spite of
Mr. Dill’s grieved remonstrances, she discharged the servants whom Mr.
Carlyle had engaged, all save one man.

On a Friday night, about a month after the wedding, Mr. Carlyle and his
wife came home. They were expected, and Miss Carlyle went through the
hall to receive them, and stood on the upper steps, between the pillars
of the portico. An elegant chariot with four post-horses was drawing up.
Miss Carlyle compressed her lips as she scanned it. She was attired in a
handsome dark silk dress and a new cap; her anger had had time to cool
down in the last month, and her strong common sense told her that the
wiser plan would be to make the best of it. Mr. Carlyle came up the
steps with Isabel.

“You here, Cornelia! That was kind. How are you? Isabel, this is my
sister.”

Lady Isabel put forth her hand, and Miss Carlyle condescended to touch
the tips of her fingers. “I hope you are well, ma’am,” she jerked out.

Mr. Carlyle left them together, and went back to search for some trifles
which had been left in the carriage. Miss Carlyle led the way to a
sitting-room, where the supper-tray was laid. “You would like to go
upstairs and take your things off before upper, ma’am?” she said, in the
same jerking tone to Lady Isabel.

“Thank you. I will go to my rooms, but I do not require supper. We have
dined.”

“Then what would you like to take?” asked Miss Corny.

“Some tea, if you please, I am very thirsty.”

“Tea!” ejaculated Miss Corny. “So late as this! I don’t know that they
have boiling water. You’d never sleep a wink all night, ma’am, if you
took tea at eleven o’clock.”

“Oh, then, never mind,” replied Lady Isabel. “It is of no consequence.
Do not let me give trouble.”

Miss Carlyle whisked out of the room; upon what errand was best known to
herself; and in the hall she and Marvel came to an encounter. No words
passed, but each eyed the other grimly. Marvel was very stylish, with
five flounces to her dress, a veil, and a parasol. Meanwhile, Lady
Isabel sat down and burst into bitter tears and sobs. A chill had come
over her; it did not seem like coming to East Lynne. Mr. Carlyle entered
and witnessed the grief.

“Isabel!” he uttered in amazement, as he hastened up to her. “My
darling, what ails you?”

“I am tired, I think,” she gently answered; “and coming into the house
again made me think of papa. I should like to go to my rooms, Archibald,
but I don’t know which they are.”

Neither did Mr. Carlyle know, but Miss Carlyle came whisking in again,
and said: “The best rooms; those next the library. Should she go up with
my lady?”

Mr. Carlyle preferred to go himself, and he held out his arm to Isabel.
She drew her veil over her face as she passed Miss Carlyle.

The branches were not lighted, and the room looked cold and comfortless.
“Things seem all sixes and sevens in the house,” remarked Mr. Carlyle.
“I fancy the servants must have misunderstood my letter, and not have
expected us until to-morrow night.”

On returning to the sitting-room Mr. Carlyle inquired the cause of the
servants’ negligence.

“I sent them away because they were superfluous encumbrances,” hastily
replied Miss Carlyle. “We have four in the house, and my lady has
brought a fine maid, I see, making five. I have come up here to live.”

Mr. Carlyle felt checkmated. He had always bowed to the will of Miss
Corny, but he had an idea that he and his wife should be better without
her. “And your house?” he exclaimed.

“I have let it furnished; the people enter to-day. So you cannot turn me
out of East Lynne into the road, or to furnished lodgings, Archibald.
There’ll be enough expense without our keeping on two houses; and most
people in your place would jump at the prospect of my living here. Your
wife will be mistress. I do not intend to take her honors from her; but
I will save her a world of trouble in management--be as useful to her as
a housekeeper. She will be glad of that, inexperienced as she is. I dare
say she never gave a domestic order in her life.”

This was a view of the case, to Mr. Carlyle, so plausibly put, that he
began to think it might be all for the best. He had great reverence for
his sister’s judgment; force of habit is strong upon all of us. Still he
did not know.

“Did you buy that fine piano which has arrived?” angrily asked Miss
Carlyle.

“It was my present to Isabel.”

Miss Corny groaned. “What did it cost?”

“The cost is of no consequence. The old piano here was a bad one, and I
bought a better.”

“What did it cost?” repeated Miss Carlyle.

“A hundred and twenty guineas,” he answered. Obedience to her will was
yet powerful within him.

Miss Corny threw up her hands and eyes. But at that moment Peter entered
with some hot water which his master had rung for. Mr. Carlyle rose and
looked on the side-board.

“Where is the wine, Peter?”

The servant put it out, port and sherry. Mr. Carlyle drank a glass, and
then proceeded to mix some wine and water. “Shall I mix some for you,
Cornelia?” he asked.

“I’ll mix for myself if I want any. Who’s that for?”

“Isabel.”

He quitted the room, carrying the wine and water, and entered his
wife’s. She was sitting half buried, it seemed, in the arm-chair, her
face muffled up. As she raised it, he saw that it was flushed and
agitated; that her eyes were bright, and her frame was trembling.

“What is the matter?” he hastily asked.

“I got nervous after Marvel went,” she whispered, laying hold of him, as
if for protection from terror. “I came back to the chair and covered my
head over, hoping some one would come up.”

“I have been talking to Cornelia. But what made you nervous?”

“Oh! I was very foolish. I kept thinking of frightful things. They would
come into my mind. Do not blame me, Archibald. This is the room papa
died in.”

“Blame you, my darling,” he uttered with deep feeling.

“I thought of a dreadful story about the bats, that the servants told--I
dare say you never heard it; and I kept thinking. ‘Suppose they were at
the windows now, behind the blinds.’ And then I was afraid to look at
the bed; I fancied I might see--you are laughing!”

Yes, he was smiling; for he knew that these moments of nervous fear are
best met jestingly. He made her drink the wine and water, and then he
showed her where the bell was, ringing it as he did so. Its position had
been changed in some late alterations to the house.

“Your rooms shall be changed to-morrow, Isabel.”

“No, let us remain in these. I shall like to feel that papa was once
their occupant. I won’t get nervous again.”

But, even as she spoke, her actions belied her words. Mr. Carlyle had
gone to the door and opened it, and she flew close up to him, cowering
behind him.

“Shall you be gone very long, Archibald?” she whispered.

“Not more than an hour,” he answered. But he hastily put back one of his
hands, and held her tightly in his protecting grasp. Marvel was coming
along the corridor in answer to the ring.

“Have the goodness to let Miss Carlyle know that I am not coming down
again to-night,” he said.

“Yes, sir.”

Mr. Carlyle shut the door, and then looked at his wife and laughed. “He
is very kind to me,” thought Isabel.

With the morning began the perplexities of Lady Isabel Carlyle. But,
first of all, just fancy the group at breakfast. Miss Carlyle descended
in the startling costume the reader has seen, took her seat at the
breakfast-table, and there sat bolt upright. Mr. Carlyle came down next;
and then Lady Isabel entered, in an elegant half-mourning dress, with
flowing black ribbons.

“Good morning, ma’am. I hope you slept well,” was Miss Carlyle’s
salutation.

“Quite well, thank you,” she answered, as she took her seat opposite
Miss Carlyle. Miss Carlyle pointed to the top of the table.

“That is your place, ma’am; but I will pour out the coffee, and save you
the trouble, if you wish it.”

“I should be glad if you would,” answered Lady Isabel.

So Miss Carlyle proceeded to her duties, very stern and grim. The meal
was nearly over, when Peter came in, and said the butcher had come up
for orders. Miss Carlyle looked at Lady Isabel, waiting, of course, for
her to give them. Isabel was silent with perplexity; she had never given
such an order in her life. Totally ignorant was she of the requirements
of a household; and did not know whether to suggest a few pounds of meat
or a whole cow. It was the presence of that grim Miss Corny which put
her out. Alone with her husband she would have said, “What ought I to
order, Archibald? Tell me.” Peter waited.

“A----Something to roast and boil, if you please,” stammered Lady
Isabel.

She spoke in a low tone. Embarrassment makes cowards of us; and Mr.
Carlyle repeated it after her. He knew no more about housekeeping than
she did.

“Something to roast and boil, tell the man, Peter.”

Up started Miss Corny; she could not stand that. “Are you aware, Lady
Isabel, that an order such as that would only puzzle the butcher? Shall
I give the necessary orders for to-day? The fishmonger will be here
presently!”

“Oh, I wish you would!” cried the relieved Lady Isabel. “I have not been
accustomed to it, but I must learn. I don’t think I know anything about
housekeeping.”

Miss Corny’s answer was to stalk from the room. Isabel rose from her
chair, like a bird released from its cage, and stood by his side. “Have
you finished, Archibald?”

“I think I have, dear. Oh! Here’s my coffee. There; I have finished
now.”

“Let us go around the grounds.”

He rose, laid his hands playfully on her slender waist, and looked at
her. “You may as well ask me to take a journey to the moon. It is past
nine, and I have not been to the office for a month.”

The tears rose in her eyes. “I wish you would be always with me! East
Lynne will not be East Lynne without you.”

“I will be with you as much as ever I can, my dearest,” he whispered.
“Come and walk with me through the park.”

She ran for her bonnet, gloves and parasol. Mr. Carlyle waited for her
in the hall, and they went out together.

He thought it a good opportunity to speak about his sister. “She wishes
to remain with us,” he said. “I do not know what to decide. On the one
hand I think she might save you the worry of household management; on
the other, I fancy we shall be happier by ourselves.”

Isabel’s heart sank within her at the idea of that stern Miss Corny,
mounted over her as resident guard; but, refined and sensitive, almost
painfully considerate of the feelings of others, she raised no word of
objection. “As you and Miss Carlyle please,” she answered.

“Isabel,” he said, “I wish it to be as you please; I wish matters to be
arranged as may best please you: and I will have them so arranged. My
chief object in life now is your happiness.”

He spoke in all the sincerity of truth, and Isabel knew it: and the
thought came across her that with him by her side, her loving protector,
Miss Carlyle could not mar her life’s peace. “Let her stay, Archibald;
she will not incommode us.”

“At any rate it can be tried for a month or two, and we shall see how it
works,” he musingly observed.

They reached the park gates. “I wish I could go with you and be your
clerk,” she cried, unwilling to release his hand. “I should not have all
that long way to go back by myself.”

He laughed and shook his head, telling her that she wanted to bribe him
into taking her back, but it could not be. And away he went, after
saying farewell.



CHAPTER XVI.

DOMESTIC TROUBLES.

Isabel wandered back, and then wandered through the rooms; they looked
lonely; not as they had seemed to look in her father’s time. In her
dressing-room knelt Marvel, unpacking. She rose when Lady Isabel
entered.

“Can I speak to you a moment, if you please my lady?”

“What is it?”

Then Marvel poured forth her tale. That she feared so small an
establishment would not suit her, and if my lady pleased, she would like
to leave at once--that day. Anticipating it, she had not unpacked her
things.

“There has been some mistake about the servants, Marvel, but it will be
remedied as soon as possible. And I told you before I married that Mr.
Carlyle’s establishment would be a limited one.”

“My lady perhaps I could put up with that; but I never could stop in the
house with--” “that female Guy” had been on the tip of Marvel’s tongue,
but she remembered in time of whom she was speaking--“with Miss Carlyle.
I fear, my lady, we have both got tempers that would slash, and might be
flying at each other. I could not stop, my lady, for untold gold. And if
you please to make me forfeit my running month’s salary, why I must do
it. So when I have set your ladyship’s things to rights, I hope you’ll
allow me to go.”

Lady Isabel would not condescend to ask her to remain, but she wondered
how she should manage the inconvenience. She drew her desk toward her.
“What is the amount due to you?” she inquired, as she unlocked it.

“Up to the end of the quarter, my lady?” cried Marvel, in a brisk tone.

“No,” coldly answered Lady Isabel. “Up to to-day.”

“I have not had time to reckon, my lady.”

Lady Isabel took a pencil and paper, made out the account, and laid it
down in gold and silver on the table. “It is more than you deserve,
Marvel,” she remarked, “and more than you would get in most places. You
ought to have given me proper notice.”

Marvel melted into tears, and began a string of excuses. “She should
never have wished to leave so kind a lady, but for attendant ill-
conveniences, and she hoped my lady would not object to testify to her
character.”

Lady Isabel quitted the room in the midst of it; and in the course of
the day Marvel took her departure, Joyce telling her that she ought to
be ashamed of herself.

“I couldn’t help myself,” retorted Marvel, “and I am sorry to leave her,
for she’s a pleasant young lady to serve.”

“Well, I know I’d have helped myself,” was Joyce’s remark. “I would not
go off in this unhandsome way from a good mistress.”

“Perhaps you wouldn’t,” loftily returned Marvel, “but my inside feelings
are delicate and can’t bear to be trampled upon. The same house is not
going to hold me and that tall female image, who’s more fit to be
carried about at a foreign carnival than some that they do carry.”

So Marvel left. And when Lady Isabel went to her room to dress for
dinner, Joyce entered it.

“I am not much accustomed to a lady’s maid’s duties,” began she, “but
Miss Carlyle has sent me, my lady, to do what I can for you, if you will
allow me.”

Isabel thought it was kind of Miss Carlyle.

“And if you please to trust me with the keys of your things, I will take
charge of them for you, my lady, until you are suited with a maid,”
 Joyce resumed.

“I don’t know anything about the keys,” answered Isabel; “I never keep
them.”

Joyce did her best, and Lady Isabel went down. It was nearly six
o’clock, the dinner hour, and she strolled to the park gates, hoping to
meet Mr. Carlyle. Taking a few steps out, she looked down the road, but
could not see him coming; so she turned in again, and sat down under a
shady tree out of view of the road. It was remarkably warm weather for
the closing days of May.

Half an hour, and then Mr. Carlyle came pelting up, passed the gates,
and turned on to the grass. There he saw his wife. She had fallen
asleep, her head leaning against the trunk of a tree. Her bonnet and
parasol lay at her feet, her scarf had dropped, and she looked like a
lovely child, her lips partly open, her cheeks flushed, and her
beautiful hair falling around. It was an exquisite picture, and his
heart beat quicker within him as he felt that it was all his own. A
smile stole to his lips as he stood looking at her. She opened her eyes,
and for a minute could not remember where she was. Then she started up.

“Oh, Archibald! Have I been asleep?”

“Ay; and might have been stolen and carried off. I could not afford
that, Isabel.”

“I don’t know how it came about. I was listening for you.”

“What have you been doing all day?” he asked, as he drew her arm within
his, and they walked on.

“Oh, I hardly know,” she sighed. “Trying the new piano, and looking at
my watch, wishing the time would go quicker, that you might come home.
The ponies and carriage have arrived, Archibald.”

“I know they have, my dear. Have you been out of doors much?”

“No, I waited for you.” And then she told him about Marvel. He felt
vexed, saying she must replace her with all speed. Isabel said she knew
of one, a young woman who had left Lady Mount Severn while she, Isabel,
was at Castle Marling; her health was delicate, and Lady Mount Severn’s
place too hard for her. She might suit.

“Write to her,” said Mr. Carlyle.

The carriage came round--a beautiful little equipage--and Isabel was
ready. As Mr. Carlyle drove slowly down the dusty road, they came upon
Miss Corny, striding along in the sun with a great umbrella over her
head. She would not turn to look at them.

Once more, as in the year gone by, St. Jude’s Church was in a flutter of
expectation. It expected to see a whole paraphernalia of bridal finery,
and again it was doomed to disappointment, for Isabel had not put off
the mourning for her father. She was in black--a thin gauze dress--and
her white bonnet had small black flowers inside and out. For the first
time in his life, Mr. Carlyle took possession of the pew belonging to
East Lynne, filling the place where the poor earl used to sit. Not so
Miss Corny--she sat in her own.

Barbara was there with the Justice and Mrs. Hare. Her face wore a gray,
dusky hue, of which she was only too conscious, but could not subdue.
Her covetous eyes would wander to that other face, with its singular
loveliness and its sweetly earnest eyes, sheltered under the protection
of him for whose sheltering protection she had so long yearned. Poor
Barbara did not benefit much by the services that day.

Afterward they went across the churchyard to the west corner, where
stood the tomb of Lord Mount Severn. Isabel looked at the inscription,
her veil shading her face.

“Not here, and now, my darling,” he whispered, pressing her arm to his
side, for he felt her silent sobs. “Strive for calmness.”

“It seems but the other day he was at church with me, and now--here!”

Mr. Carlyle suddenly changed their places, so that they stood with their
backs to the hedge, and to any staring stragglers who might be lingering
on the road.

“There ought to be railings round the tomb,” she presently said, after a
successful battle with her emotion.

“I thought so, and I suggested it to Lord Mount Severn but he appeared
to think differently. I will have it done.”

“I put you to great expense,” she said, “taking one thing with another.”

Mr. Carlyle glanced quickly at her, a dim fear penetrating his mind that
his sister might have been talking in her hearing. “An expense I would
not be without for the whole world. You know it, Isabel.”

“And I have nothing to repay you with,” she sighed.

He looked expressively amused, and, gazing into her face, the expression
of his eyes made her smile. “Here is John with the carriage,” she
exclaimed. “Let us go, Archibald.”

Standing outside the gates, talking to the rector’s family, were several
ladies, one of them Barbara Hare. She watched Mr. Carlyle place his wife
in the carriage; she watched him drive away. Barbara’s lips were white,
as she bowed in return to his greeting.

“The heat is so great!” murmured Barbara, when those around noticed her
paleness.

“Ah! You ought to have gone in the phaeton, with Mr. and Mrs. Hare as
they desired you.”

“I wished to walk,” returned the unhappy Barbara.

“What a pretty girl that is!” uttered Lady Isabel to her husband. “What
is her name?”

“Barbara Hare.”



CHAPTER XVII.

VISIT OF THE HARE FAMILY.

The county carriages began to pour to East Lynne, to pay the wedding
visit, as it is called, to Mr. and Lady Isabel Carlyle. Of course they
displayed themselves in their most courtly state. Mr. Carlyle, always a
popular man, had gained double his former importance by his marriage
with the daughter of the late Earl of Mount Severn. Among the earliest
visitors went Justice and Mrs. Hare, with Barbara.

Isabel was in her dressing-gown, attended by Joyce, whom she was just
asking to take the place of her late maid, if Miss Carlyle would consent
to the transfer.

Joyce’s face lighted up with pleasure at the proposal. “Oh, my lady, you
are very kind! I should so like it! I would serve you faithfully to the
best of my ability.”

Isabel laughed. “But Miss Carlyle may not be inclined to transfer you.”

“I think she would be, my lady. She said a day or two ago, that I
appeared to suit you, and you might have me altogether if you wished,
provided I could still make her gowns. I make them to please her, you
see, my lady.”

“Do you make her caps also?” demurely asked Lady Isabel.

Joyce smiled. “Yes, my lady; but I am allowed to make them only
according to her own pattern.”

“Joyce, if you become my maid, you must wear smarter caps yourself. I do
not wish you to be fine like Marvel.”

“Oh, my lady! I shall never be fine,” shuddered Joyce. And Joyce
believed she had cause to shudder at finery.

She was about to speak further, when a knock came to the dressing-room
door. Joyce went to open it, and saw one of the housemaids, a girl who
had recently been engaged, a native of West Lynne. Isabel heard the
colloquy,--

“Is my lady there?”

“Yes.”

“Some visitors. Pete ordered me to come and tell you. I say, Joyce, it’s
the Hares. And she’s with them. I watched her get out of the carriage.”

“Who?” sharply returned Joyce.

“Why, Miss Barbara. Only fancy her coming to pay the wedding visit here.
My lady had better take care that she don’t get a bowl of poison mixed
for her. Master’s out or else I’d have given a shilling to see the
interview between the three.”

Joyce sent the girl away, shut the door, and turned to her mistress,
quite unconscious that the half-whispered conversation had been audible.

“Some visitors are in the drawing-room, my lady, Susan says. Mr. Justice
Hare and Mrs. Hare and Miss Barbara.”

Isabel descended, her mind full of the mysterious words spoken by Susan.
The justice was in a new flaxen wig, obstinate-looking and pompous; Mrs.
Hare, pale, delicate, and lady-like; Barbara beautiful; such was the
impression they made upon Isabel.

They paid rather a long visit, Isabel quite falling in love with the
gentle and suffering Mrs. Hare, and had risen to leave when Miss Carlyle
entered. She wished them to remain longer--had something, she said, to
show Barbara. The justice declined; he had a brother justice coming to
dine with him at five, and it was then half-past four. Barbara might
stop if she liked.

Barbara’s faced turned crimson; but nevertheless she accepted the
invitation, immediately proffered her by Miss Carlyle to remain at East
Lynne for the rest of the day.

Dinner time approached, and Isabel went to dress for it. Joyce was
waiting, and entered upon the subject of the service.

“My lady, I have spoken to Miss Carlyle, and she is willing that I
should be transferred to you, but she says I ought first to acquaint you
with certain unpleasant facts in my history, and the same thought had
occurred to me. Miss Carlyle is not over pleasant in manner, my lady,
but she is very upright and just.”

“What facts?” asked Lady Isabel, sitting down to have her hair brushed.

“My lady, I’ll tell you as shortly as it can. My father was a clerk in
Mr. Carlyle’s office--of course I mean the late Mr. Carlyle. My mother
died when I was eight years old, and my father afterwards married again,
a sister of Mr. Kane’s wife--”

“Mr. Kane, the music master?”

“Yes, my lady. She and Mrs. Kane were quite ladies; had been
governesses. People said she lowered herself greatly in marrying my
father. However, they did marry, and at the end of the year my little
sister Afy was born. We lived in a pretty cottage in the wood and were
happy. But in twelve months more my step-mother died, and an aunt of
hers adopted Afy. I lived with my father, going to school, then to learn
dressmaking, and finally going out to work to ladies’ houses. After many
years, Afy came home. Her aunt had died and her income with her, but not
the vanity and love of finery that Afy had acquired. She did nothing but
dress herself and read novels. My father was angry; he said no good
could come of it. She had several admirers, Mr. Richard Hare, Miss
Barbara’s own brother,” continued Joyce, lowering her voice, “and she
flirted with them all. My father used to go out to shoot on fine
evenings after office, or to his duties as secretary to the library, and
so Afy was generally all alone until I came home at nine o’clock; and
was free to flirt with her beaux.”

“Had she any she favored particularly, was it thought?” asked Lady
Isabel.

“The chief one, my lady, was Richard Hare. She got acquainted with
somebody else, a stranger, who used to ride over from a distance to see
her; but I fancy there was nothing in it--Richard was the one. And it
went on till--till--he killed her father.”

“Who?” uttered the startled Isabel.

“Richard Hare, my lady. Father had told Afy that Mr. Richard should not
come there any longer, for when gentlemen go in secret after poor girls,
it’s well known they have not got marriage in their thoughts; father
would have interfered more than he did, but that he judged well of Mr.
Richard, and did not think he was one to do Afy real harm,--but he did
not know how flighty she was. However, one day he heard people talk
about it in West Lynne, coupling her name and Mr. Richard’s offensively
together, and at night he told Afy, before me, that it should not go on
any longer, and she must not encourage him. My lady, the next night
Richard Hare shot my father.”

“How very dreadful!”

“Whether it was done on purpose, or that they had a scuffle, and the gun
went off accidentally and killed my father, no one can tell. Afy said
she had been in the woods at the back of the house, and when she came
in, father lay dead, and Mr. Locksley was standing over him. He said he
had heard the shot, and come up just in time to see Richard fly from the
house, his shoes covered with blood. He has never been heard of since;
but there is a judgment of murder out against him; and the fear and
shame is killing his mother by inches.”

“And Afy?”

“The worst is to come my lady. Afy followed him directly after the
inquest, and nothing has been known since of either of them. I was taken
ill, after all these shocks, with nervous fever, and Miss Carlyle took
care of me, and I have remained with her ever since. This was what I had
to tell you, my lady, before you decided to take me into service; it is
not every lady who would like to engage one whose sister has turned out
so badly.”

Lady Isabel did not see that it could make any difference, or that it
ought to. She said so; and then leaned back in her chair and mused.

“What dress, my lady?”

“Joyce, what was that I heard you and Susan gossiping over at the door?”
 Lady Isabel suddenly asked. “About Miss Hare giving me a bowl of poison.
Something in the dramatic line that would be. You should tell Susan not
to make her whispers so loud.”

“It was only a bit of nonsense, my lady. These ignorant servants will
talk; and every one at West Lynne knew Miss Barbara was in love with Mr.
Carlyle. But I don’t fancy she would have been the one to make him happy
with all her love.”

A hot flush passed over the brow of Lady Isabel; a sensation very like
jealousy flew to her heart. No woman likes to hear of another’s being,
or having been attached to her husband: a doubt always arises whether
the feeling may not have been reciprocated.

Lady Isabel descended. She wore a costly black lace dress, its low body
and sleeves trimmed with as costly white; and ornaments of jet. She
looked inexpressibly beautiful, and Barbara turned from her with a
feeling of sinking jealousy, from her beauty, from her attire, even from
the fine, soft handkerchief, which displayed the badge of her rank--the
coronet of an earl’s daughter. Barbara looked well, too; she was in a
light blue silk robe, and her pretty cheeks were damask with her mind’s
excitement. On her neck she wore the gold chain given her by Mr.
Carlyle--strange that she had not discarded that.

They stood together at the window, looking at Mr. Carlyle as he came up
the avenue. He saw them, and nodded. Lady Isabel watched the damask
cheeks turn to crimson at sight of him.

“How do you do, Barbara?” he cried, as he shook hands. “Come to pay us a
visit at last? You have been rather tardy over it. And how are you, my
darling?” he whispered over his wife; but she missed his kiss of
greeting. Well, would she have had him give it her in public? No; but
she was in the mood to notice the omission.

Dinner over, Miss Carlyle beguiled Barbara out of doors. Barbara would
far rather have remained in his presence. Of course they discussed Lady
Isabel.

“How do you like her?” abruptly asked Barbara, alluding to Lady Isabel.

“Better than I thought I should,” acknowledged Miss Carlyle. “I had
expected airs and graces and pretence, and I must say she is free from
them. She seems quite wrapped up in Archibald and watches for his coming
home like a cat watches for a mouse. She is dull without him.”

Barbara compelled her manner to indifference. “I suppose it is natural.”

“I suppose it is absurd,” was the retort of Miss Carlyle. “I give them
little of my company, especially in an evening. They go strolling out
together, or she sings to him, he hanging over her as if she were of
gold: to judge by appearances, she is more precious to him than any gold
that was ever coined into money. I’ll tell you what I saw last night.
Archibald had what he is not often subject to, a severe headache, and he
went into the next room after dinner, and lay on the sofa. She carried a
cup of tea to him, and never came back, leaving her own on the table
till it was perfectly cold. I pushed open the door to tell her so. There
was my lady’s cambric handkerchief, soaked in eau-de-Cologne, lying on
his forehead; and there was my lady herself, kneeling down and looking
at him, he with his arm thrown around her there. Now I just ask you,
Barbara, whether there’s any sense in fadding with a man like that? If
ever he did have a headache before he was married, I used to mix him up
a good dose of salts and senna, and tell him to go to bed early and
sleep the pain off.”

Barbara made no reply, but she turned her face from Miss Carlyle.

On Barbara’s return to the house, she found that Mr. Carlyle and Lady
Isabel were in the adjoining room, at the piano, and Barbara had an
opportunity of hearing that sweet voice. She did, as Miss Carlyle
confessed to have done, pushed open the door between the two rooms, and
looked in. It was the twilight hour, almost too dusk to see; but she
could distinguish Isabel seated at the piano, and Mr. Carlyle standing
behind her. She was singing one of the ballads from the opera of the
“Bohemian Girl,” “When other Lips.”

“Why do you like that song so much, Archibald?” she asked when she had
finished it.

“I don’t know. I never liked it so much until I heard it from you.”

“I wonder if they are come in. Shall we go into the next room?”

“Just this one first--this translation from the German--’ ‘Twere vain to
tell thee all I feel.’ There’s real music in that song.”

“Yes, there is. Do you know, Archibald, your taste is just like papa’s.
He liked all these quiet, imaginative songs, and so do you. And so do
I,” she laughingly added, “if I must speak the truth.”

She ceased and began the song, singing it exquisitely, in a low, sweet,
earnest tone, the chords of the accompaniment, at its conclusion, dying
off gradually into silence.

“There, Archibald, I am sure I have sung you ten songs at least,” she
said, leaning her head back against him, and looking at him from her
upturned face. “You ought to pay me.”

He did pay her: holding the dear face to him, and taking from it some
impassioned kisses. Barbara turned to the window, a low moan of pain
escaping her, as she pressed her forehead on one of its panes, and
looked forth at the dusky night. Isabel came in on her husband’s arm.

“Are you here alone, Miss Hare? I really beg your pardon. I supposed you
were with Miss Carlyle.”

“Where is Cornelia, Barbara?”

“I have just come in,” was Barbara’s reply. “I dare say she is following
me.”

So she was, for she entered a moment after, her voice raised in anger at
the gardener, who had disobeyed her orders, and obeyed the wishes of
Lady Isabel.

The evening wore on to ten, and as the time-piece struck the hour,
Barbara rose from her chair in amazement.

“I did not think it was so late. Surely some one must have come for me.”

“I will inquire,” was Lady Isabel’s answer, and Mr. Carlyle touched the
bell. No one had come for Miss Hare.

“Then I fear I must trouble Peter,” cried Barbara. “Mamma may be gone to
rest, tired, and papa must have forgotten me. It would never do for me
to get locked out,” she gaily added.

“As you were one night before,” said Mr. Carlyle, significantly.

He alluded to the night when Barbara was in the grove of trees with her
unfortunate brother, and Mr. Hare was on the point, unconsciously, of
locking her out. She had given Mr. Carlyle the history, but its
recollection now called up a smart pain, and a change passed over her
face.

“Oh! Don’t, Archibald,” she uttered, in the impulse of the moment;
“don’t recall it.”

Isabel wondered.

“Can Peter take me?” continued Barbara.

“I had better take you,” said Mr. Carlyle. “It is late.”

Barbara’s heart beat at the words; beat as she put her things on--as she
said good-night to Lady Isabel and Miss Carlyle; it beat to throbbing as
she went out with him, and took his arm. All just as it used to be--only
now that he was the husband of another. Only!

It was a warm, lovely June night, not moonlight, but bright with its
summer twilight. They went down the park into the road, which they
crossed, and soon came to a stile. From that stile there led a path
through the fields which would pass the back of Justice Hare’s. Barbara
stopped at it.

“Would you choose the field way to-night, Barbara? The grass will be
damp, and this is the longest way.”

“But we shall escape the dust of the road.”

“Oh, very well, if you prefer it. It will not make three minutes’
difference.”

“He is very anxious to get home to her!” mentally exclaimed Barbara. “I
shall fly out upon him, presently, or my heart will burst.”

Mr. Carlyle crossed the stile, helped over Barbara, and then gave her
his arm again. He had taken her parasol, as he had taken it the last
night they had walked together--an elegant little parasol, this, of blue
silk and white lace, and he did not switch the hedges with it. That
night was present to Barbara now, with all its words and its delusive
hopes; terribly present to her was their bitter ending.

There are women of warm, impulsive temperaments who can scarcely help,
in certain moments of highly wrought excitement, over-stepping the
bounds of nature and decorum, and giving the reins to temper, tongue,
and imagination--making a scene, in short. Barbara had been working
herself into this state during the whole evening. The affection of
Isabel for her husband, her voice, his caresses--seen through the half
open doors--had maddened her. She felt it impossible to restrain her
excitement.

Mr. Carlyle walked on, utterly unconscious that a storm was brewing.
More than that, he was unconscious of having given cause for one, and
dashed into an indifferent, common place topic in the most provoking
manner.

“When does the justice begin haymaking, Barbara?”

There was no reply. Barbara was swelling and panting, and trying to keep
her emotion down. Mr. Carlyle tried again,--

“Barbara, I asked you which day your papa cut his hay.”

Still no reply. Barbara was literally incapable of making one. The steam
of excitement was on, nearly to its highest pitch. Her throat was
working, the muscles of her mouth began to twitch, and a convulsive sob,
or what sounded like it, broke from her. Mr. Carlyle turned his head
hastily.

“Barbara! are you ill? What is it?”

On it came, passion, temper, wrongs, and nervousness, all boiling over
together. She shrieked, she sobbed, she was in strong hysterics. Mr.
Carlyle half-carried, half-dragged her to the second stile, and placed
her against it, his arm supporting her; and an old cow and two calves,
wondering what the disturbance could mean at that sober time of night,
walked up and stared at them.

Barbara struggled with her emotion--struggled manfully--and the sobs and
shrieks subsided; not the excitement or the passion. She put away his
arm, and stood with her back to the stile, leaning against it. Mr.
Carlyle felt inclined to fly to the pond for water, but he had nothing
but his hat to get it in.

“Are you better, Barbara? What can have caused it?”

“What can have caused it?” she burst forth, giving full swing to the
reins, and forgetting everything. “You can ask me that?”

Mr. Carlyle was struck dumb; but by some inexplicable laws of sympathy,
a dim and very unpleasant consciousness of the truth began to steal over
him.

“I don’t understand you, Barbara. If I have offended you in any way, I
am truly sorry.”

“Truly sorry, no doubt!” was the retort, the sobs and the shrieks
alarmingly near. “What do you care for me? If I go under the sod to-
morrow,” stamping it with her foot, “you have your wife to care for;
what am I?”

“Hush!” he interposed, glancing round, more mindful for her than she was
for herself.

“Hush, yes! You would like me to hush; what is my misery to you? I would
rather be in my grave, Archibald Carlyle, than endure the life I have
led since you married her. My pain is greater than I well know how to
bear.”

“I cannot affect to misunderstand you,” he said, feeling more at a
nonplus than he had felt for many a day, and heartily wishing the whole
female creation, save Isabel, somewhere. “But my dear Barbara. I never
gave you cause to think I--that I--cared for you more than I did.”

“Never gave me cause!” she gasped. “When you have been coming to our
house constantly, almost like my shadow; when you gave me this” dashing
open her mantle, and holding up the locket to his view; “when you have
been more intimate with me than a brother.”

“Stay, Barbara. There it is--a brother. I have been nothing else; it
never occurred to me to be anything else,” he added, in his
straightforward truth.

“Ay, as a brother, nothing else!” and her voice rose once more with her
excitement; it seemed that she would not long control it. “What cared
you for my feelings? What recked you that you gained my love?”

“Barbara, hush!” he implored: “do be calm and reasonable. If I ever gave
you cause to think I regarded you with deeper feelings, I can only
express to you my deep regret, my repentance, and assure you it was done
unconsciously.”

She was growing calmer. The passion was fading, leaving her face still
and white. She lifted it toward Mr. Carlyle.

“You treated me ill in showing signs of love, if you felt it not. Why
did you kiss me?”

“I kissed you as I might kiss a sister. Or perhaps as a pretty girl; man
likes to do so. The close terms on which our families have lived,
excused, if it did not justify, a degree of familiarity that might have
been unseemly in--”

“You need not tell me that,” hotly interrupted Barbara. “Had it been a
stranger who had won my love and then thrown me from him, do you suppose
I would have reproached him as I am now reproaching you? No; I would
have died, rather than that he should have suspected it. If she had not
come between us, should you have loved me?”

“Do not pursue this unthankful topic,” he besought, almost wishing the
staring cow would run away with her.

“I ask you, should you have loved me?” persisted Barbara, passing her
handkerchief over her ashy lips.

“I don’t know. How can I know? Do I not say to you, Barbara, that I only
thought of you as a friend, a sister? I cannot tell what might have
been.”

“I could bear it better, but that it was known,” she murmured. “All West
Lynne had coupled us together in their prying gossip, and they have only
pity to cast on me now. I would far rather you have killed me,
Archibald.”

“I can but express to you my deep regret,” he repeated. “I can only hope
you will soon forget it all. Let the remembrance of this conversation
pass away with to-night; let us still be to each other as friends--as
brother and sister. Believe me,” he concluded, in a deeper tone, “the
confession has not lessened you in my estimation.”

He made a movement as though he would get over the stile, but Barbara
did not stir; the tears were silently coursing down her pallid face. At
that moment there was an interruption.

“Is that you, Miss Barbara?”

Barbara started as if she had been shot. On the other side of the stile
stood Wilson, their upper maid. How long might she have been there? She
began to explain that Mr. Hare had sent Jasper out, and Mrs. Hare had
thought it better to wait no longer for the man’s return, so had
dispatched her, Wilson, for Miss Barbara. Mr. Carlyle got over the
stile, and handed over Miss Barbara.

“You need not come any further now,” she said to him in a low tone.

“I should see you home,” was his reply, and he held out his arm. Barbara
took it.

They walked in silence. Arrived at the back gate of the grove, which
gave entrance to the kitchen garden, Wilson went forward. Mr. Carlyle
took both Barbara’s hands in his.

“Good-night, Barbara. God bless you.”

She had had time for reflection, and the excitement gone, she saw her
outbreak in all its shame and folly. Mr. Carlyle noticed how subdued and
white she looked.

“I think I have been mad,” she groaned. “I must have been mad to say
what I did. Forget that it was uttered.”

“I told you I would.”

“You will not betray me to--to--your wife?” she panted.

“Barbara!”

“Thank you. Good-night.”

But he still retained her hands. “In a short time, Barbara, I trust you
will find one more worthy to receive your love than I have been.”

“Never!” she impulsively answered. “I do not love and forget so lightly.
In the years to come, in my old age, I shall still be nothing but
Barbara Hare.”

Mr. Carlyle walked away in a fit of musing. The revelation had given him
pain, and possibly a little bit of flattery into the bargain, for he was
fond of pretty Barbara. Fond in his way--not hers--not with the sort of
fondness he felt for his wife. He asked his conscience whether his
manner to her in the past days had been a tinge warmer than we bestow
upon a sister, and he decided that it might have been, but he most
certainly never cast a suspicion to the mischief it was doing.

“I heartily hope she’ll soon find somebody to her liking and forget me,”
 was his concluding thought. “As to living and dying Barbara Hare, that’s
all moonshine, and sentimental rubbish that girls like to--”

“Archibald!”

He was passing the very last tree in the park, the nearest to his house,
and the interruption came from a dark form standing under it.

“Is it you, my dearest?”

“I came out to meet you. Have you not been very long?”

“I think I have,” he answered, as he drew his wife to his side, and
walked on with her.

“We met one of the servants at the second stile, but I went on all the
way.”

“You have been intimate with the Hares?”

“Quite so. Cornelia is related to them.”

“Do you think Barbara pretty?”

“Very.”

“Then--intimate as you were--I wonder you never fell in love with her.”

Mr. Carlyle laughed; a very conscious laugh, considering the recent
interview.

“Did you, Archibald?”

The words were spoken in a low tone, almost, or he fancied it, a tone of
emotion, and he looked at her in amazement. “Did I what, Isabel?”

“You never loved Barbara Hare?”

“Loved her! What is your head running on, Isabel? I never loved but one;
and that one I made my own, my cherished wife.”



CHAPTER XVIII.

MISS CARLYLE--ISABEL UNHAPPY.

Another year came in. Isabel would have been altogether happy but for
Miss Carlyle; that lady still inflicted her presence upon East Lynne,
and made it the bane of its household. She deferred outwardly to Lady
Isabel as the mistress; but the real mistress was herself. Isabel was
little more than an automaton. Her impulses were checked, her wishes
frustrated, her actions tacitly condemned by the imperiously-willed Miss
Carlyle. Poor Isabel, with her refined manners and her timid and
sensitive temperament, had no chance against the strong-minded woman,
and she was in a state of galling subjection in her own house.

Not a day passed but Miss Carlyle, by dint of hints and innuendoes,
contrived to impress upon Lady Isabel the unfortunate blow to his own
interests that Mr. Carlyle’s marriage had been, the ruinous expense she
had entailed upon the family. It struck a complete chill to Isabel’s
heart, and she became painfully impressed with the incubus she must be
to Mr. Carlyle--so far as his pocket was concerned. Lord Mount Severn,
with his little son, had paid them a short visit at Christmas and Isabel
had asked him, apparently with unconcern, whether Mr. Carlyle had put
himself very much out to the way to marry her; whether it had entailed
on him an expense and a style of living he would not otherwise have
deemed himself justified in affording. Lord Mount Severn’s reply was an
unfortunate one: his opinion was, that it had, he said; and that Isabel
ought to feel grateful to him for his generosity. She sighed as she
listened, and from thenceforth determined to put up with Miss Carlyle.

More timid and sensitive by nature than many would believe or can
imagine, reared in seclusion more simply and quietly than falls to the
general lot of peers’ daughters, completely inexperienced, Isabel was
unfit to battle with the world--totally unfit to battle with Miss
Carlyle. The penniless state in which she was left at her father’s
death, the want of a home save that accorded her at Castle Marling, even
the hundred-pound note left in her hand by Mr. Carlyle, all had imbued
her with a deep consciousness of humiliation, and, far from rebelling at
or despising the small establishment, comparatively speaking, provided
for her by Mr. Carlyle, she felt thankful to him for it. But to be told
continuously that this was more than he could afford, that she was in
fact a blight upon his prospects, was enough to turn her heart to
bitterness. Oh, that she had had the courage to speak out openly to her
husband, that he might, by a single word of earnest love and assurance,
have taken the weight from her heart, and rejoiced it with the truth--
that all these miserable complaints were but the phantoms of his narrow-
minded sister! But Isabel never did; when Miss Corny lapsed into her
grumbling mood, she would hear in silence, or gently bend her aching
forehead in her hands, never retorting.

Never before Mr. Carlyle was the lady’s temper vented upon her; plenty
fell to his own share, when he and his sister were alone; and he had
become so accustomed to the sort of thing all his life--had got used to
it, like the eels do to skinning--that it went, as the saying runs, in
at one ear and out at the other, making no impression. He never dreamt
that Isabel also received her portion.

It was a morning early in April. Joyce sat, in its gray dawn, over a
large fire in the dressing-room of Lady Isabel Carlyle, her hands
clasped to pain, and the tears coursing down her cheeks. Joyce was
frightened; she had had some experience in illness; but illness of this
nature she had never witnessed, and she was fervently hoping never to
witness it again. In the adjoining room lay Lady Isabel, sick nearly
unto death.

The door from the corridor slowly opened, and Miss Carlyle slowly
entered. She had probably never walked with so gentle a step in all her
life, and she had got a thick-wadded mantle over her head and ears. Down
she sat in a chair quite meekly, and Joyce saw that her face looked as
gray as the early dawn.

“Joyce,” whispered she, “is there any danger?”

“Oh, ma’am, I trust not! But it’s hard to witness, and it must be awful
to bear.”

“It is our common curse, Joyce. You and I may congratulate ourselves
that we have not chosen to encounter it. Joyce,” she added, after a
pause, “I trust there’s no danger; I should not like her to die.”

Miss Carlyle spoke in a low, dread tone. Was she fearing that, if her
poor young sister-in-law did die, a weight would rest on her own
conscience for all time--a heavy, ever-present weight, whispering that
she might have rendered her short year of marriage more happy, had she
chosen; and that she had not so chosen, but had deliberately steeled
every crevice of her heart against her? Very probably; she looked
anxious and apprehensive in the morning’s twilight.

“If there’s any danger, Joyce--”

“Why, do you think there’s danger, ma’am?” interrupted Joyce. “Are other
people not as ill as this?”

“It is to be hoped they are not,” rejoined Miss Carlyle. “And why is the
express gone to Lynneborough for Dr. Martin?”

Up started Joyce, awe struck. “An express for Dr. Martin! Oh, ma’am! Who
sent it? When did it go?”

“All I know is, that’s its gone. Mr. Wainwright went to your master, and
he came out of his room and sent John galloping to the telegraph office
at West Lynne; where could your ears have been, not to hear the horse
tearing off? I heard it, I know that, and a nice fright it put me in. I
went to Mr. Carlyle’s room to ask what was amiss, and he said he did not
know himself--nothing, he hoped. And then he shut his door again in my
face, instead of stopping to speak to me as any other Christian would.”

Joyce did not answer; she was faint with apprehension; and there was a
silence, broken only by the sounds from the next room. Miss Carlyle
rose, and a fanciful person might have thought she was shivering.

“I can’t stand this, Joyce; I shall go. If they want coffee, or anything
of that, it can be sent here. Ask.”

“I will presently, in a few minutes,” answered Joyce, with a real
shiver. “You are not going in, are you, ma’am?” she uttered, in
apprehension, as Miss Carlyle began to steal on tip-toe to the inner-
door, and Joyce had a lively consciousness that her sight would not be
an agreeable one to Lady Isabel. “They want the room free; they sent me
out.”

“Not I,” answered Miss Corny. “I could do no good; and those who cannot,
are better away.”

“Just what Mr. Wainwright said when he dismissed me,” murmured Joyce.
And Miss Carlyle finally passed into the corridor and withdrew.

Joyce sat on; it seemed to her an interminable time. And then she heard
the arrival of Dr. Martin; heard him go into the next room. By and by
Mr. Wainwright came out of it, into the room where Joyce was sitting.
Her tongue clove to the roof of her mouth, and before she could bring
out the ominous words, “Is there any danger?” he had passed through it.

Mr. Wainwright was on his way to the apartment where he expected to find
Mr. Carlyle. The latter was pacing it; he had so paced it all the night.
His pale face flushed as the surgeon entered.

“You have little mercy on my suspense, Wainwright. Dr. Martin has been
here this twenty minutes. What does he say?”

“Well, he cannot say any more than I did. The symptoms are critical, but
he hopes she will do well. There’s nothing for it but patience.”

Mr. Carlyle resumed his weary walk.

“I come now to suggest that you should send for Little. In these
protracted cases--”

The speech was interrupted by a cry from Mr. Carlyle, half horror, half
despair. For the Rev. Mr. Little was the incumbent of St. Jude’s, and
his apprehensions had flown--he hardly knew to what they had flown.

“Not for your wife,” hastily rejoined the surgeon--“what good should a
clergyman do to her? I spoke on the score of the child. Should it not
live, it may be satisfactory to you and Lady Isabel to know that it was
baptized.”

“I thank you--I thank you,” said Mr. Carlyle grasping his hand, in his
inexpressible relief. “Little shall be sent for.”

“You jumped to the conclusion that your wife’s soul was flitting. Please
God, she may yet live to bear you other children, if this one does die.”

“Please God!” was the inward aspiration of Mr. Carlyle.

“Carlyle,” added the surgeon, in a musing sort of tone, as he laid his
hand on Mr. Carlyle’s shoulder, which his own head scarcely reached, “I
am sometimes at death-beds where the clergyman is sent for in this
desperate need to the fleeting spirit, and I am tempted to ask myself
what good another man, priest though he be, can do at the twelfth hour,
where accounts have not been made up previously?”

It was hard upon midday. The Rev. Mr. Little, Mr. Carlyle, and Miss
Carlyle were gathered in the dressing-room, round a table, on which
stood a rich china bowl, containing water for the baptism. Joyce, her
pale face working with emotion, came into the room, carrying what looked
like a bundle of flannel. Little cared Mr. Carlyle for the bundle, in
comparison with his care for his wife.

“Joyce,” he whispered, “is it well still?”

“I believe so, sir.”

The services commenced. The clergyman took the child. “What name?” he
asked.

Mr. Carlyle had never thought about the name. But he replied, pretty
promptly.

“William;” for he knew it was a name revered and loved by Lady Isabel.

The minister dipped his fingers in the water. Joyce interrupted in much
confusion, looking at her master.

“It is a little girl, sir. I beg your pardon, I’m sure I thought I had
said so; but I’m so flurried as I never was before.”

There was a pause, and then the minister spoke again. “Name the child.”

“Isabel Lucy,” said Mr. Carlyle. Upon which a strange sort of resentful
sniff was heard from Miss Corny. She had probably thought to hear him
mention her own; but he had named it after his wife and his mother.

Mr. Carlyle was not allowed to see his wife until evening. His eyelashes
glistened, as he looked down at her. She detected his emotion, and a
faint smile parted her lips.

“I fear I bore it badly, Archibald; but let us be thankful that it is
over. How thankful, none can know, save those who have gone through it.”

“I think they can,” he murmured. “I never knew what thankfulness was
until this day.”

“That the baby is safe?”

“That you are safe, my darling; safe and spared to me, Isabel,” he
whispered, hiding his face upon hers. “I never, until to-day, knew what
prayer was--the prayer of a heart in its sore need.”

“Have you written to Lord Mount Severn?” she asked after a while.

“This afternoon,” he replied.

“Why did you give baby my name--Isabel?”

“Do you think I could have given it a prettier one? I don’t.”

“Why do you not bring a chair, and sit down by me?”

He smiled and shook his head. “I wish I might. But they limited my stay
with you to four minutes, and Wainwright has posted himself outside the
door, with his watch in his hand.”

Quite true. There stood the careful surgeon, and the short interview was
over almost as soon as it had begun.

The baby lived, and appeared likely to live, and of course the next
thing was to look out for a maid for it. Isabel did not get strong very
quickly. Fever and weakness had a struggle with each other and with her.
One day, when she was dressing and sitting in her easy chair, Miss
Carlyle entered.

“Of all the servants in the neighborhood, who should you suppose is come
up after the place of nurse?”

“Indeed, I cannot guess.”

“Why, Wilson, Mrs. Hare’s maid. Three years and five months she has been
with them, and now leaves in consequence of a fall out with Barbara.
Will you see her?”

“Is she likely to suit? Is she a good servant?”

“She’s not a bad servant, as servants go,” responded Miss Carlyle.
“She’s steady and respectable; but she has got a tongue as long as from
here to Lynneborough.”

“That won’t hurt baby,” said Lady Isabel. “But if she has lived as
lady’s maid, she probably does not understand the care of infants.”

“Yes she does. She was upper servant at Squire Pinner’s before going to
Mrs. Hare’s. Five years she lived there.”

“I will see her,” said Lady Isabel.

Miss Carlyle left the room to send the servant in, but came back first
alone.

“Mind, Lady Isabel, don’t you engage her. If she is likely to suit you,
let her come again for the answer, and meanwhile I will go down to Mrs.
Hare’s and learn the ins and outs of her leaving. It is all very
plausible for her to put upon Barbara, but that is only one side of the
question. Before engaging her, it may be well to hear the other.”

Of course this was but right. Isabel acquiesced, and the servant was
introduced; a tall, pleasant-looking woman, with black eyes. Lady Isabel
inquired why she was leaving Mrs. Hare’s.

“My lady, it is through Miss Barbara’s temper. Latterly--oh, for this
year past, nothing has pleased her; she had grown nearly as imperious as
the justice himself. I have threatened many times to leave, and last
evening we came to another outbreak, and I left this morning.”

“Left entirely?”

“Yes, my lady. Miss Barbara provoked me so, that I said last night I
would leave as soon as breakfast was over. And I did so. I should be
very glad to take your situation, my lady, if you would please to try
me.”

“You have been the upper maid at Mrs. Hare’s?”

“Oh, yes, my lady.”

“Then possibly this situation might not suit you so well as you imagine.
Joyce is the upper servant here, and you would, in a manner, be under
her. I have great confidence in Joyce; and in case of my illness or
absence, Joyce would superintend the nursery.”

“I should not mind that,” was the applicant’s answer. “We all like
Joyce, my lady.”

A few more questions, and then the girl was told to come again in the
evening for her answer. Miss Carlyle went to the Grove for the “ins and
outs” of the affair, where Mrs. Hare frankly stated that she had nothing
to urge against Wilson, save her hasty manner of leaving, and believed
the chief blame to be due to Barbara. Wilson, therefore, was engaged,
and was to enter upon her new service the following morning.

In the afternoon succeeding to it, Isabel was lying on the sofa in her
bedroom, asleep, as was supposed. In point of fact, she was in that
state, half asleep, half wakeful delirium, which those who suffer from
weakness and fever know only too well. Suddenly she was aroused from it
by hearing her own name mentioned in the adjoining room, where sat Joyce
and Wilson, the latter holding the sleeping infant on her knee, the
former sewing, the door between the rooms being ajar.

“How ill she does look,” observed Wilson.

“Who?” asked Joyce.

“Her ladyship. She looks just as if she’d never get over it.”

“She is getting over it quickly, now,” returned Joyce. “If you had seen
her but a week ago, you would not say she was looking ill now, speaking
in comparison.”

“My goodness! Would not somebody’s hopes be up again if anything should
happen?”

“Nonsense!” crossly rejoined Joyce.

“You may cry out ‘nonsense’ forever, Joyce, but they would,” went on
Wilson. “And she would snap him up to a dead certainty; she’d never let
him escape her a second time. She is as much in love with him as she
ever was!”

“It was all talk and fancy,” said Joyce. “West Lynne must be busy. Mr.
Carlyle never cared for her.”

“That’s more than you know. I have seen a little, Joyce; I have seen him
kiss her.”

“A pack of rubbish!” remarked Joyce. “That tells nothing.”

“I don’t say it does. There’s not a young man living but what’s fond of
a sly kiss in the dark, if he can get it. He gave her that locket and
chain she wears.”

“Who wears?” retorted Joyce, determined not graciously to countenance
the subject. “I don’t want to hear anything about it.”

“‘Who,’ now! Why, Miss Barbara. She has hardly had it off her neck
since, my belief is she wears it in her sleep.”

“More simpleton she,” returned Joyce.

“The night before he left West Lynne to marry Lady Isabel--and didn’t
the news come upon us like a thunderclap!--Miss Barbara had been at Miss
Carlyle’s and he brought her home. A lovely night it was, the moon
rising, and nearly as light as day. He somehow broke her parasol in
coming home, and when they got to our gate there was a love scene.”

“Were you a third in it?” sarcastically demanded Joyce.

“Yes--without meaning to be. It was a regular love scene; I could hear
enough for that. If ever anybody thought to be Mrs. Carlyle, Barbara did
that night.”

“Why, you great baby! You have just said it was the night before he went
to get married!”

“I don’t care, she did. After he was gone, I saw her lift up her hands
and her face in ecstacy, and say he would never know how much she loved
him until she was his wife. Be you very sure, Joyce, many a love-passage
had passed between them two; but I suppose when my lady was thrown in
his way he couldn’t resist her rank and her beauty, and the old love was
cast over. It is in the nature of man to be fickle, specially those that
can boast of their own good looks, like Mr. Carlyle.”

“Mr. Carlyle’s not fickle.”

“I can tell you more yet. Two or three days after that, Miss Corny came
up to our house with the news of his marriage. I was in mistress’s
bedroom, and they were in the room underneath, the windows open, and I
heard Miss Corny tell the tale, for I was leaning out. Up came Miss
Barbara upon an excuse and flew into her room, and I went into the
corridor. A few moments and I heard a noise--it was a sort of wail, or
groan--and I opened the door softly, fearing she might be fainting.
Joyce, if my heart never ached for anybody before, it ached then. She
was lying upon the floor, her hands writhed together, and her poor face
all white, like one in mortal agony. I’d have given a quarter’s wages to
be able to say a word of comfort to her; but I didn’t dare interfere
with such sorrow as that. I came out again and shut the door without her
seeing me.”

“How thoroughly stupid she must have been!” uttered Joyce, “to go caring
for one who did not care for her.”

“I tell you, Joyce, you don’t know that he did not care. You are as
obstinate as the justice, and I wish to goodness you wouldn’t interrupt
me. They came up here to pay the wedding visit--master, mistress, and
she, came in state in the grand chariot, with the coachman and Jasper.
If you have got any memory at all, you can’t fail to recollect it. Miss
Barbara remained behind at East Lynne to spend the rest of the day.”

“I remember it.”

“I was sent to fetch her home in the evening, Jasper being out. I came
the field way; for the dust by the road was enough to smother one, and
by the last stile but one, what do you think I came upon?”

Joyce lifted her eyes. “A snake perhaps.”

“I came upon Miss Barbara and Mr. Carlyle. What had passed, nobody knows
but themselves. She was leaning back against the stile, crying; low,
soft sobs breaking from her, like one might expect to hear from a
breaking heart. It seemed as if she had been reproaching him, as if some
explanation had passed, and I heard him say that from henceforth they
could only be brother and sister. I spoke soon, for fear they should see
me, and Mr. Carlyle got over the stile. Miss Barbara said to him that he
need not come any further, but he held out his arm, and came with her to
our back gate. I went on then to open the door, and I saw him with his
head bent down to her, and her two hands held in his. We don’t know how
it is between them, I tell you.”

“At any rate, she is a downright fool to suffer herself to love him
still!” uttered Joyce, indignantly.

“So she is, but she does do it. She’ll often steal out to the gate about
the time she knows he’ll be passing, and watch him by, not letting him
see her. It is nothing but her unhappiness, her jealousy of Lady Isabel,
that makes her cross. I assure you, Joyce, in this past year she had so
changed that she’s not like the same person. If Mr. Carlyle should ever
get tired of my lady, and--”

“Wilson,” harshly interrupted Joyce, “have the goodness to recollect
yourself.”

“What have I said now? Nothing but truth. Men are shamefully fickle,
husbands worse than sweethearts, and I’m sure I’m not thinking of
anything wrong. But to go back to the argument that we began with--I say
that if anything happened to my lady, Miss Barbara, as sure as fate,
would step into her shoes.”

“Nothing is going to happen to her,” continued Joyce, with composure.

“I hope it is not, now or later--for the sake of this dear little
innocent thing upon my lap,” went on the undaunted Wilson. “She would
not make a very kind stepmother, for it is certain that where the first
wife had been hated, her children won’t be loved. She would turn Mr.
Carlyle against them--”

“I tell you what it is, Wilson,” interrupted Joyce, in a firm,
unmistakable tone, “if you think to pursue those sort of topics at East
Lynne, I shall inform my lady that you are unsuitable for the
situation.”

“I dare say!”

“And you know that when I make up my mind to a thing I do it,” continued
Joyce. “Miss Carlyle may well say you have the longest tongue in West
Lynne; but you might have the grace to know that this subject is one
more unsuitable to it than another, whether you are eating Mr. Hare’s
bread, or whether you are eating Mr. Carlyle’s. Another word, Wilson; it
appears to me that you have been carrying on a prying system in Mrs.
Hare’s house--do not attempt such a thing in this.”

“You were always one of the straight-laced sort, Joyce,” cried Wilson,
laughing good-humoredly. “But now that I have had my say out, I shall
stop; and you need not fear I shall be such a simpleton as to go
prattling of this kind of thing to the servants.”

Now just fancy this conversation penetrating to Lady Isabel! She heard
every word. It is all very well to oppose the argument, “Who attends to
the gossip of the servants?” Let me tell you it depends upon what the
subject may be, whether the gossip is attended to or not. It might not,
and indeed would not, have made so great an impression upon her had she
been in strong health, but she was weak, feverish, and in a state of
partial delirium; and she hastily took up the idea that Archibald
Carlyle had never loved her, that he had admired her and made her his
wife in his ambition, but that his heart had been given to Barbara Hare.

A pretty state of excitement she worked herself into as she lay there,
jealousy and fever, ay, and love too, playing pranks with her brain. It
was near the dinner hour, and when Mr. Carlyle entered, he was startled
to see her; her pallid cheeks were burning with a red hectic glow, and
her eyes glistened with fever.

“Isabel, you are worse!” he uttered, as he approached her with a quick
step.

She partially rose from the sofa, and clasped hold of him in her
emotion. “Oh, Archibald! Archibald!” she uttered, “don’t marry her! I
could not rest in my grave.”

Mr. Carlyle, in his puzzled astonishment, believed her to be laboring
under some temporary hallucination, the result of weakness. He set
himself to soothe her, but it seemed that she could not be soothed. She
burst into a storm of tears and began again--wild words.

“She would ill-treat my child; she would draw your love from it, and
from my memory. Archibald, you must not marry her!”

“You must be speaking from the influence of a dream, Isabel,” he
soothingly said; “you have been asleep and are not yet awake. Be still,
and recollection will return to you. There, love; rest upon me.”

“To think of her as your wife brings pain enough to kill me,” she
continued to reiterate. “Promise me that you will not marry her;
Archibald, promise it!”

“I will promise you anything in reason,” he replied, bewildered with her
words, “but I do not know what you mean. There is no possibility of my
marrying any one, Isabel; you are my wife.”

“But if I die? I may--you know I may; and many think I shall--do not let
her usurp my place.”

“Indeed she shall not--whoever you may be talking of. What have you been
dreaming? Who is it that has been troubling your mind?”

“Archibald, do you need to ask? Did you love no one before you married
me? Perhaps you have loved her since--perhaps you love her still?”

Mr. Carlyle began to discern “method in her madness.” He changed his
cheering tone to one of grave earnestness. “Of whom to you speak,
Isabel?”

“Of Barbara Hare.”

He knitted his brow; he was both annoyed and vexed. Whatever had put
this bygone nonsense into his wife’s head? He quitted the sofa where he
had been supporting her, and stood upright before her, calm, dignified,
almost solemn in his seriousness.

“Isabel, what notion can you possibly have picked up about myself and
Barbara Hare; I never entertained the faintest shadow of love for her,
either before my marriage or since. You must tell me what has given rise
to this idea in your mind.”

“But she loved you.”

A moment’s hesitation; for, of course, Mr. Carlyle was conscious that
she had; but, taking all the circumstances into consideration, more
especially how he learnt the fact, he could not, in honor, acknowledge
it to his wife. “If it was so, Isabel, she was more reprehensibly
foolish than I should have given Barbara’s good sense could be; for a
woman may almost as well lose herself as to suffer herself to love
unsought. If she did give her love to me, I can only say, I was entirely
unconscious of it. Believe me, you have as much cause to be jealous of
Cornelia as you have of Barbara Hare.”

An impulse rose within her that she would tell him all; the few words
dropped by Susan and Joyce, twelve months before, the conversation she
had just overheard; but in that moment of renewed confidence, it did
appear to her that she must have been very foolish to attach importance
to it--that a sort of humiliation, in listening to the converse of
servants, was reflected on her, and she remained silent.

There never was a passion in this world--there never will be one--so
fantastic, so delusive, so powerful as jealousy. Mr. Carlyle dismissed
the episode from his thoughts; he believed his wife’s emotion to have
been simply from a feverish dream, and never supposed but that, with the
dream, its recollection would pass away from her. Not so. Implicitly
relying upon her husband’s words at the moment, feeling quite ashamed at
her own suspicion, Lady Isabel afterward suffered the unhappy fear to
regain its influence; the ill-starred revelations of Wilson reasserted
their power, overmastering the denial of Mr. Carlyle. Shakspeare calls
jealousy yellow and green; I think it may be called black and white for
it most assuredly views white as black, and black as white. The most
fanciful surmises wear the aspect of truth, the greatest improbabilities
appear as consistent realities. Not another word said Isabel to her
husband; and the feeling--you will understand this if you have ever been
foolish enough to sun yourself in its delights--only caused her to grow
more attached to him, to be more eager for his love. But certain it is
that Barbara Hare dwelt on her heart like an incubus.



CHAPTER XIX.

CAPTAIN THORN AT WEST LYNNE.

“Barbara, how fine the day seems!”

“It is a beautiful day mamma.”

“I do think I should be all the better for going out.”

“I am sure you would, mamma,” was Barbara’s answer. “If you went out
more, you would find the benefit. Every fine day you ought to do so. I
will go and ask papa if he can spare Benjamin and the carriage.” She
waltzed gaily out of the room, but returned in a moment.

“Mamma, it is all right. Benjamin is gone to get the carriage ready. You
would like a bit of luncheon before you go--I will order the tray.”

“Anything you please, dear,” said the sweet-tempered gentlewoman. “I
don’t know why, but I feel glad to go out to-day; perhaps because it is
lovely.”

Benjamin made ready his carriage and himself, and drove out of the yard
at the back, and brought the carriage round to the front gate.

The carriage--or phaeton as it was often called--was a somewhat old
fashioned concern, as many country things are apt to be. A small box in
front for the driver, and a wide seat with a head behind, accommodating
Barbara well between them when Mr. and Mrs. Hare both sat in.

Benjamin drew the rug carefully over his mistress’s knees--the servants
did not like Mr. Hare, but would have laid down their lives for her--
ascended to his box, and drove them to their destination, the linen
draper’s. It was an excellent shop, situated a little beyond the office
of Mr. Carlyle, and Mrs. Hare and Barbara were soon engaged in that
occupation said to possess for all women a fascination. They had been in
about an hour, when Mrs. Hare discovered that her bag was missing.

“I must have left it in the carriage, Barbara. Go and bring it, will
you, my dear? The pattern of that silk is in it.”

Barbara went out. The carriage and Benjamin and the sleek old horse were
all waiting drowsily together. Barbara could not see the bag, and she
appealed to the servant.

“Find mamma’s bag, Benjamin. It must be somewhere in the carriage.”

Benjamin got off his box and began to search. Barbara waited, gazing
listlessly down the street. The sun was shining brilliantly, and its
rays fell upon the large cable chain of a gentleman who was sauntering
idly up the pavement, making its gold links and its drooping seal and
key glitter, as they crossed his waistcoat. It shone also upon the
enameled gold studs of his shirt front, making them glitter; and as he
suddenly raised his ungloved hand to stroke his moustache--by which
action you know a vain man--a diamond ring he wore gleamed with a light
that was positively dazzling. Involuntarily Barbara thought of the
description her brother Richard had given of certain dazzling jewels
worn by another.

She watched him advance! He was a handsome man of, perhaps, seven or
eight and twenty, tall, slender and well made, his eyes and hair black.
A very pleasant expression sat upon his countenance; and on the left
hand he wore a light buff kid glove, and was swinging its fellow by the
fingers. But for the light cast at that moment by the sun, Barbara might
not have noticed the jewellery, or connected it in her mind with the
other jewellery in that unhappy secret.

“Hallo, Thorn, is that you? Just step over here.”

The speaker was Otway Bethel, who was on the opposite side of the
street; the spoken to, the gentleman with the jewellery. But the latter
was in a brown study, and did not hear. Bethel called out again, louder.

“Captain Thorn!”

That was heard. Captain Thorn nodded, and turned short off across the
street. Barbara stood like one in a dream, her brain, her mind, her
fancy all in a confused mass together.

“Here’s the bag, Miss Barbara. It had got among the folds of the rug.”

Benjamin held it out to her, but she took no notice; she was unconscious
of all external things save one. That she beheld the real murderer of
Hallijohn, she entertained no manner of doubt. In every particular he
tallied with the description given by Richard; tall, dark, vain,
handsome, delicate hands, jewellery, and--Captain Thorn! Barbara’s
cheeks grew white and her heart turned sick.

“The bag, Miss Barbara.”

Away tore Barbara, leaving Benjamin and the bag in wonder. She had
caught sight of Mr. Wainwright, the surgeon, at a little distance, and
sped toward him.

“Mr. Wainwright,” began she, forgetting ceremony in her agitation, “you
see that gentleman talking to Otway Bethel--who is he?”

Mr. Wainwright had to put his glasses across the bridge of his nose
before he could answer, for he was short-sighted. “That? Oh, it is a
Captain Thorn. He is visiting the Herberts, I believe.”

“Where does he come from? Where does he live?” reiterated Barbara in her
eagerness.

“I don’t know anything about him. I saw him this morning with young
Smith, and he told me he was a friend of the Herberts. You are not
looking well, Miss Barbara.”

She made no answer. Captain Thorn and Mr. Bethel came walking down the
street, and the latter saluted her, but she was too much confused to
respond to it. Mr. Wainwright then wished her good day, and Barbara
walked slowly back. Mrs. Hare was appearing at the shop door.

“My dear, how long you are! Cannot the bag be found?”

“I went to speak to Mr. Wainwright,” answered Barbara, mechanically
taking the bag from Benjamin and giving it to her mother, her whole
heart and eyes still absorbed with that one object moving away in the
distance.

“You look pale, child. Are you well?”

“Oh, yes, quite. Let us get our shopping over, mamma.”

She moved on to their places at the counter as she spoke, eager to “get
it over” and be at home, that she might have time for thought. Mrs. Hare
wondered what had come to her; the pleased interest displayed in their
purchases previously was now gone, and she sat inattentive and absorbed.

“Now, my dear, it is only waiting for you to choose. Which of the two
silks will you have?”

“Either--any. Take which you like, mamma.”

“Barbara, what has come to you?”

“I believe I am tired,” said Barbara, with a forced laugh, as she
compelled herself to pay some sort of attention. “I don’t like the
green; I will take the other.”

They arrived at home. Barbara got just five minutes alone in her chamber
before the dinner was on the table. All the conclusion she could come to
was, she could do nothing save tell the facts to Archibald Carlyle.

How could she contrive to see him? The business might admit of no delay.
She supposed she must go to East Lynne that evening; but where would be
her excuse for it at home? Puzzling over it, she went down to dinner.
During the meal, Mrs. Hare began talking of some silk she had purchased
for a mantle. She should have it made like Miss Carlyle’s new one. When
Miss Carlyle was at the grove, the other day, about Wilson’s character,
she offered her the pattern, and she, Mrs. Hare, would send one of the
servants up for it after dinner.

“Oh, mamma, let me go!” burst forth Barbara, and so vehemently spoke
she, that the justice paused in carving, and demanded what ailed her.
Barbara made some timid excuse.

“Her eagerness is natural, Richard,” smiled Mrs. Hare. “Barbara thinks
she shall get a peep at the baby, I expect. All young folks are fond of
babies.”

Barbara’s face flushed crimson, but she did not contradict the opinion.
She could not eat her dinner--she was too full of poor Richard; she
played with it, and then sent away her plate nearly untouched.

“That’s through the finery she’s been buying,” pronounced Justice Hare.
“Her head is stuffed up with it.”

No opposition was offered to Barbara’s going to East Lynne. She reached
it just as their dinner was over. It was for Miss Carlyle she asked.

“Miss Carlyle is not at home, miss. She is spending the day out; and my
lady does not receive visitors yet.”

It was a sort of checkmate. Barbara was compelled to say she would see
Mr. Carlyle. Peter ushered her into the drawing-room, and Mr. Carlyle
came to her.

“I am so very sorry to disturb you--to have asked for you,” began
Barbara, with a burning face, for, somehow, a certain evening interview
of hers with him, twelve months before, was disagreeably present to her.
Never, since that evening of agitation, had Barbara suffered herself to
betray emotion to Mr. Carlyle; her manner to him had been calm,
courteous, and indifferent. And she now more frequently called him “Mr.
Carlyle” than “Archibald.”

“Take a seat--take a seat, Barbara.”

“I asked for Miss Carlyle,” she continued, “for mamma is in want of a
pattern that she promised to lend her. You remember the Lieutenant Thorn
whom Richard spoke of as being the real criminal?”

“Yes.”

“I think he is at West Lynne.”

Mr. Carlyle was aroused to eager interest.

“He! The same Thorn?”

“It can be no other. Mamma and I were shopping to-day, and I went out
for her bag, which she left in the carriage. While Benjamin was getting
it, I saw a stranger coming up the street--a tall, good-looking, dark-
haired man, with a conspicuous gold chain and studs. The sun was full
upon him, causing the ornaments to shine, especially a diamond ring
which he wore, for he had one hand raised to his face. The thought
flashed over me, ‘That is just like the description Richard gave of the
man Thorn.’ Why the idea should have occurred to me in that strange
manner, I do not know, but it most assuredly did occur, though I did not
really suppose him to be the same. Just then I heard him spoken to by
some one on the other side of the street; it was Otway Bethel, and he
called him Captain Thorn.”

“This is curious, indeed, Barbara. I did not know any stranger was at
West Lynne.”

“I saw Mr. Wainwright, and asked him who it was. He said a Captain
Thorn, a friend of the Herberts. A Lieutenant Thorn four or five years
ago would probably be Captain Thorn now.”

Mr. Carlyle nodded, and there was a pause.

“What can be done?” asked Barbara.

Mr. Carlyle was passing one hand over his brow; it was a habit of his
when in deep thought.

“It is hard to say what is to be done, Barbara. The description you gave
of this man certainly tallies with that given by Richard. Did he look
like a gentleman?”

“Very much so. A remarkably aristocratic looking man, as it struck me.”

Mr. Carlyle again nodded assentingly. He remembered Richard’s words,
when describing the other: “an out-and-out aristocrat.” “Of course,
Barbara, the first thing must be to try and ascertain whether it is the
same,” he observed. “If we find it is, then we must deliberate upon
future measures. I will see what I can pick up and let you know.”

Barbara rose. Mr. Carlyle escorted her across the hall, and then
strolled down the park by her side, deep in the subject, and quite
unconscious that Lady Isabel’s jealous eyes were watching them from her
dressing-room window.

“You say he seemed intimate with Otway Bethel?”

“As to being intimate, I cannot say. Otway Bethel spoke as though he
knew him.”

“This must have caused excitement to Mrs. Hare.”

“You forget, Archibald, that mamma was not told anything about Thorn,”
 was the answer of Barbara. “The uncertainty would have worried her to
death. All Richard said to her was, that he was innocent, that it was a
stranger who did the deed, and she asked for no particulars; she had
implicit faith in Richard’s truth.”

“True; I did forget,” replied Mr. Carlyle. “I wish we could find out
some one who knew the other Thorn; to ascertain that they were the same
would be a great point gained.”

He went as far as the park gates with Barbara, shook hands and wished
her good evening. Scarcely had she departed when Mr. Carlyle saw two
gentlemen advancing from the opposite direction, in one of whom he
recognized Tom Herbert, and the other--instinct told him--was Captain
Thorn. He waited till they came up.

“If this isn’t lucky, seeing you,” cried Mr. Tom Herbert, who was a
free-and-easy sort of a gentleman, the second son of a brother justice
of Mr. Hare. “I wish to goodness you’d give us a draught of your cider,
Carlyle. We went up to Beauchamp’s for a stroll, but found them all out,
and I’m awful thirsty. Captain Thorn, Carlyle.”

Mr. Carlyle invited them to his house and ordered in refreshments. Young
Herbert coolly threw himself into an arm-chair and lit a cigar. “Come,
Thorn,” cried he, “here’s a weed for you.”

Captain Thorn glanced toward Mr. Carlyle; he appeared of a far more
gentlemanly nature than Tom Herbert.

“You’ll have one too, Carlyle,” said Herbert, holding out his cigar-
case. “Oh, I forgot--you are a muff; don’t smoke one twice a year. I say
how’s Lady Isabel?”

“Very ill still.”

“By Jove! Is she, though? Tell her I am sorry to hear it, will you,
Carlyle? But--I say! Will she smell the smoke?” asked he, with a mixture
of alarm and concern in his face.

Mr. Carlyle reassured him upon the point, and turned to Captain Thorn.

“Are you acquainted with this neighborhood?”

Captain Thorn smiled. “I only reached West Lynne yesterday.”

“You were never here before then?” continued Mr. Carlyle, setting down
the last as a probably evasive answer.

“No.”

“He and my brother Jack, you know, are in the same regiment,” put in
Tom, with scanty ceremony. “Jack had invited him down for some fishing
and that, and Thorn arrives. But he never sent word he was coming, you
see; Jack had given him up, and is off on some Irish expedition, the
deuce knows where. Precious unlucky that it should have happened so.
Thorn says he shall cut short his stay, and go again.”

The conversation turned upon fishing, and in the heat of the argument,
the stranger mentioned a certain pond and its famous eels--the “Low
Pond.” Mr. Carlyle looked at him, speaking, however in a careless
manner.

“Which do you mean? We have two ponds not far apart, each called the
‘Low Pond’.”

“I mean the one on an estate about three miles from here--Squire
Thorpe’s, unless I am mistaken.”

Mr. Carlyle smiled. “I think you must have been in the neighborhood
before, Captain Thorn. Squire Thorpe is dead and the property has passed
to his daughter’s husband, and that Low Pond was filled up three years
ago.”

“I have heard a friend mention it,” was Captain Thorn’s reply, spoken in
an indifferent tone, though he evidently wished not to pursue the
subject.

Mr. Carlyle, by easy degrees, turned the conversation upon Swainson, the
place where Richard Hare’s Captain Thorn was suspected to have come. The
present Captain Thorn said he knew it “a little,” he had once been
“staying there a short time.” Mr. Carlyle became nearly convinced that
Barbara’s suspicions were correct. The description certainly agreed, so
far as he could judge, in the most minute particulars. The man before
him wore two rings, a diamond--and a very beautiful diamond too--on the
one hand; a seal ring on the other; his hands were delicate to a degree,
and his handkerchief, a cambric one of unusually fine texture, was not
entirely guiltless of scent. Mr. Carlyle quitted the room for a moment
and summoned Joyce to him.

“My lady has been asking for you,” said Joyce.

“Tell her I will be up the moment these gentlemen leave, Joyce,” he
added, “find an excuse to come into the room presently; you can bring
something or other in; I want you to look at this stranger who is with
young Mr. Herbert. Notice him well; I fancy you may have seen him
before.”

Mr. Carlyle returned to the room, leaving Joyce surprised. However, she
presently followed, taking in some water, and lingered a few minutes,
apparently placing the things on the table in better order.

When the two departed Mr. Carlyle called Joyce, before proceeding to his
wife’s room. “Well,” he questioned, “did you recognize him?”

“Not at all, sir. He seemed quite strange to me.”

“Cast your thoughts back, Joyce. Did you never see him in days gone by?”

Joyce looked puzzled, and she replied in the negative.

“Is he the man, think you, who used to ride from Swainson to see Afy?”

Joyce’s face flushed crimson. “Oh, sir!” was all she uttered.

“The name is the same--Thorn; I thought it possible the men might be,”
 observed Mr. Carlyle.

“Sir, I cannot say. I never saw that Captain Thorn but once, and I don’t
know, I don’t know--” Joyce spoke slowly and with consideration--“that I
should at all know him again. I did not think of him when I looked at
this gentleman; but, at any rate, no appearance in this one struck upon
my memory as being familiar.”

So from Joyce Mr. Carlyle obtained no clue, one way or the other. The
following day he sought out Otway Bethel.

“Are you intimate with that Captain Thorn who is staying with the
Herberts?” asked he.

“Yes,” answered Bethel, decisively, “if passing a couple of hours in his
company can constitute intimacy. That’s all I have seen of Thorn.”

“Are you sure,” pursued Mr. Carlyle.

“Sure!” returned Bethel; “why, what are you driving at now? I called in
at Herbert’s the night before last, and Tom asked me to stay the
evening. Thorn had just come. A jolly bout we had; cigars and cold
punch.”

“Bethel,” said Mr. Carlyle, dashing to the point, “is it the Thorn who
used to go after Afy Hallijohn? Come, you can tell if you like.”

Bethel remained dumb for a moment, apparently with amazement. “What a
confounded lie!” uttered he at length. “Why it’s no more that than--What
Thorn?” he broke off abruptly.

“You are equivocating, Bethel. The Thorn who is mixed up--or said to be-
-in the Hallijohn affair. Is this the same man?”

“You are a fool, Carlyle, which is what I never took you to be yet,” was
Mr. Bethel’s rejoinder, spoken in a savage tone. “I have told you that I
never knew there was any Thorn mixed up with Afy, and I should like to
know why my word is not to be believed? I never saw Thorn in my life
till I saw him the other night at the Herberts’, and that I would take
my oath to, if put to it.”

Bethel quitted Mr. Carlyle with the last word, and the latter gazed
after him, revolving points in his brain. The mention of Thorn’s name,
the one spoken of by Richard Hare, appeared to excite some feeling in
Bethel’s mind, arousing it to irritation. Mr. Carlyle remembered that it
had done so previously and now it had done so again, and yet Bethel was
an easy-natured man in general, far better tempered than principled.
That there was something hidden, some mystery connected with the affair,
Mr. Carlyle felt sure; but he could not attempt so much as a guess at
what it might be. And this interview with Bethel brought him no nearer
the point he wished to find out--whether this Thorn was the same man. In
walking back to his office he met Mr. Tom Herbert.

“Does Captain Thorn purpose making a long stay with you?” he stopped him
to inquire.

“He’s gone; I have just seen him off by the train,” was the reply of Tom
Herbert. “It seemed rather slow with him without Jack, so he docked his
visit, and says he’ll pay us one when Jack’s to the fore.”

As Mr. Carlyle went home to dinner that evening, he entered the grove,
ostensibly to make a short call on Mrs. Hare. Barbara, on the
tenterhooks of impatience, accompanied him outside when he departed, and
walked down the path.

“What have you learnt?” she eagerly asked.

“Nothing satisfactory,” was the reply of Mr. Carlyle. “And the man has
left again.”

“Left?” uttered Barbara.

Mr. Carlyle explained. He told her how they had come to his house the
previous evening after Barbara’s departure, and his encounter with Tom
Herbert that day; he mentioned, also, his interview with Bethel.

“Can he have gone on purpose, fearing consequences?” wondered Barbara.

“Scarcely; or why should he have come?”

“You did not suffer any word to escape you last night causing him to
suspect for a moment that he was hounded?”

“Not any. You would make a bad lawyer, Barbara.”

“Who or what is he?”

“An officer in her majesty’s service, in John Herbert’s regiment. I
ascertained no more. Tom said he was of good family. But I cannot help
suspecting it is the same man.”

“Can nothing more be done?”

“Nothing in the present stage of the affair,” continued Mr. Carlyle, as
he passed through the gate to continue his way. “We can only wait on
again with what patience we may, hoping that time will bring about its
own elucidation.”

Barbara pressed her forehead down on the cold iron of the gate as his
footsteps died away. “Aye, to wait on,” she murmured, “to wait on in
dreary pain; to wait on, perhaps, for years, perhaps forever! And poor
Richard--wearing out his days in poverty and exile!”



CHAPTER XX.

GOING FROM HOME.

“I should recommend a complete change of scene altogether, Mr. Carlyle.
Say some place on the French or Belgian coast. Sea bathing might do
wonders.”

“Should you think it well for her to go so far from home?”

“I should. In these cases of protracted weakness, where you can do
nothing but try to coax the strength back again, change of air and scene
are of immense benefit.”

“I will propose it to her,” said Mr. Carlyle.

“I have just done so,” replied Dr. Martin, who was the other speaker.
“She met it with objection, which I expected, for invalids naturally
feel a disinclination to move from home. But it is necessary that she
should go.”

The object of their conversation was Lady Isabel. Years had gone on, and
there were three children now at East Lynne--Isabel, William, and
Archibald--the latter twelve months old. Lady Isabel had, a month or two
back, been attacked with illness; she recovered from the disorder; but
it had left her in an alarming state of weakness; she seemed to get
worse instead of better, and Dr. Martin was summoned from Lynneborough.
The best thing he could recommend--as you have seen--was change of air.

Lady Isabel was unwilling to take the advice; more especially to go so
far as the “French coast.” And but for a circumstance that seemed to
have happened purposely to induce her to decide, would probably never
have gone. Mrs. Ducie--the reader may not have forgotten her name--had,
in conjunction with her husband, the honorable Augustus, somewhat run
out at the elbows, and found it convenient to enter for a time on the
less expensive life of the Continent. For eighteen months she had been
staying in Paris, the education of her younger daughters being the plea
put forth, and a very convenient plea it is, and serves hundreds. Isabel
had two or three letters from her during her absence, and she now
received another, saying they were going to spend a month or two at
Boulogne-sur-Mer. Mr. Carlyle, Mr. Wainwright, and Dr. Martin--in short,
everybody--declared this must remove all Lady Isabel’s unwillingness to
go from home, for Mrs. Ducie’s society would do away with the loneliness
she had anticipated, which had been the ostensible score of her
objection.

“Boulogne-sur-Mer, of all places, in the world!” remonstrated Lady
Isabel. “It is spoken of as being crowded and vulgar.”

“The more amusing for you, my lady,” cried Dr. Martin, while Mr. Carlyle
laughed at her. And finding she had no chance against them all, she
consented to go, and plans were hastily decided upon.

“Joyce,” said Lady Isabel to her waiting maid, “I shall leave you at
home; I must take Wilson instead.”

“Oh, my lady! What have I done?”

“You have done all that you ought, Joyce, but you must stay with the
children. If I may not take them, the next best thing will be to leave
them in your charge, not Miss Carlyle’s,” she said, shaking her voice;
“if it were Wilson who remained, I could not do that.”

“My lady, I must do whatever you think best. I wish I could attend you
and stay with them, but of course I cannot do both.”

“I am sent away to get health and strength, but it may be that I shall
die, Joyce. If I never come back, will you promise to remain with my
children?”

Joyce felt a creeping sensation in her veins, the sobs rose in her
throat, but she swallowed them down and constrained her voice to
calmness. “My lady, I hope you will come back to us as well as you used
to be. I trust you will hope so too, my lady, and not give way to low
spirits.”

“I sincerely hope and trust I shall,” answered Lady Isabel, fervently.
“Still, there’s no telling, for I am very ill. Joyce, give me your
promise. In case of the worst, you will remain with the children.”

“I will, my lady--as long as I am permitted.”

“And be kind to them and love them, and shield them from--from--any
unkindness that may be put upon them,” she added, her head full of Miss
Carlyle, “and talk to them sometimes of their poor mother, who is gone?”

“I will, I will--oh my lady, I will!” And Joyce sat down in the rocking-
chair as Lady Isabel quitted her, and burst into tears.

Mr. Carlyle and Lady Isabel, with Wilson and Peter in attendance,
arrived at Boulogne, and proceeded to the Hotel des Bains. It may be as
well to mention that Peter had been transferred from Miss Carlyle’s
service to theirs, when the establishment was first formed at East
Lynne. Upon entering the hotel they inquired for Mrs. Ducie, and then a
disappointment awaited them. A letter was handed them which had arrived
that morning from Mrs. Ducie, expressing her regret that certain family
arrangements prevented her visiting Boulogne; she was proceeding to some
of the baths in Germany instead.

“I might almost have known it,” remarked Isabel. “She was always the
most changeable of women.”

Mr. Carlyle went out in search of lodgings, Isabel objecting to remain
in the bustling hotel. He succeeded in finding some very desirable ones,
situated in the Rue de l’Ecu, near the port, and they moved into them.
He thought the journey had done her good, for she looked better, and
said she already felt stronger. Mr. Carlyle remained with her three
days; he had promised only one, but he was pleased with everything
around him, pleased with Isabel’s returning glimpses of health, and
amused with the scenes of the busy town.

The tide served at eight o’clock the following morning, and Mr. Carlyle
left by the Folkestone boat. Wilson made his breakfast, and after
swallowing it in haste, he returned to his wife’s room to say farewell.

“Good-bye, my love,” he said, stooping to kiss her, “take care of
yourself.”

“Give my dear love to the darlings, Archibald. And--and----”

“And what?” he asked. “I have not a moment to lose.”

“Do not get making love to Barbara Hare while I am away.”

She spoke in a tone half jest, half serious--could he but have seen how
her heart was breaking! Mr. Carlyle took it wholly as a jest, and went
away laughing. Had he believed she was serious, he could have been
little more surprised had she charged him not to go about the country on
a dromedary.

Isabel rose later, and lingered over her breakfast, listless enough. She
was wondering how she would make the next few weeks pass; what she
should do with her time. She had taken two sea baths since her arrival,
but they had appeared not to agree with her, leaving her low and
shivering afterwards, so it was not deemed advisable that she should
attempt more. It was a lovely morning, and she determined to venture on
to the pier, to where they had sat on the previous evening. She had not
Mr. Carlyle’s arm, but it was not far, and she could take a good rest at
the end of it.

She went, attended by Peter, took her seat, and told him to come for her
in an hour. She watched the strollers on the pier as they had done the
previous evening; not in crowds now, but stragglers, coming on at
intervals. There came a gouty man, in a list shoe, there came three
young ladies and their governess, there came two fast puppies in
shooting jackets and eye-glasses, which they turned with a broad stare
on Lady Isabel; but there was something about her which caused them to
drop their glasses and their ill manners together. After an interval,
there appeared another, a tall, handsome, gentlemanly man. Her eyes fell
upon him; and--what was it that caused every nerve in her frame to
vibrate, every pulse to quicken? Whose form was it that was thus
advancing and changing the monotony of her mind into tumult? It was that
of one whom she was soon to find had never been entirely forgotten.

Captain Levison came slowly on, approaching the pier where she sat. He
glanced at her; not with the hardihood displayed by the two young men,
but with quite sufficiently evident admiration.

“What a lovely girl!” thought he to himself. “Who can she be, sitting
there alone?”

All at once a recollection flashed into his mind; he raised his hat and
extended his hand, his fascinating smile in full play.

“I certainly cannot be mistaken. Have I the honor of once more meeting
Lady Isabel Vane?”

She rose from the seat, and allowed him to take her hand, answering a
few words at random, for her wits seemed wool-gathering.

“I beg your pardon--I should have said Lady Isabel Carlyle. Time has
elapsed since we parted, and in the pleasure of seeing you again so
unexpectedly, I thought of you as you were then.”

She sat down again, the brilliant flush of emotion dying away upon her
cheeks. It was the loveliest face Francis Levison had seen since he saw
hers, and he thought so as he gazed at it.

“What can have brought you to this place?” he inquired, taking a seat
beside her.

“I have been ill,” she explained, “and am ordered to the sea-side. We
should not have come here but for Mrs. Ducie; we expected to meet her.
Mr. Carlyle only left me this morning.”

“Mrs. Ducie is off to Ems. I see them occasionally. They have been
fixtures in Paris for some time. You do indeed look ill,” he abruptly
added, in a tone of sympathy, “alarmingly ill. Is there anything I can
do for you?”

She was aware that she looked unusually ill at that moment, for the
agitation and surprise of meeting him were fading away, leaving her face
an ashy whiteness. Exceedingly vexed and angry with herself did she feel
that the meeting should have power to call forth emotion. Until that
moment she was unconscious that she retained any sort of feeling for
Captain Levison.

“Perhaps I have ventured out too early,” she said, in a tone that would
seem to apologize for her looks: “I think I will return. I shall meet my
servant, no doubt. Good-morning, Captain Levison.”

“But indeed you do not appear fit to walk alone,” he remonstrated. “You
must allow me to see you safely home.”

Drawing her hand within his own quite as a matter of course, as he had
done many a time in days gone by, he proceeded to assist her down the
pier. Lady Isabel, conscious of her own feelings, felt that it was not
quite the thing to walk thus familiarly with him, but he was a sort of
relation of the family--a connection, at any rate--and she could find no
ready excuse for declining.

“Have you seen Lady Mount Severn lately?” he inquired.

“I saw her when I was in London this spring with Mr. Carlyle. The first
time we have met since my marriage; and we do not correspond. Lord Mount
Severn had paid us two or three visits at East Lynne. They are in town
yet, I believe.”

“For all I know; I have not seen them, or England either, for ten
months. I have been staying in Paris, and got here yesterday.”

“A long leave of absence,” she observed.

“Oh, I have left the army. I sold out. The truth is, Lady Isabel--for I
don’t mind telling you--things are rather down with me at present. My
old uncle has behaved shamefully; he has married again.”

“I heard that Sir Peter had married.”

“He is seventy-three--the old simpleton! Of course this materially
alters my prospects, for it is just possible he may have a son of his
own now; and my creditors all came down upon me. They allowed me to run
into debt with complacency when I was heir to the title and estates, but
as soon as Sir Peter’s marriage appeared in the papers, myself and my
consequence dropped a hundred per cent; credit was stopped, and I dunned
for payment. So I thought I’d cut it altogether, and I sold out and came
abroad.”

“Leaving your creditors?”

“What else could I do? My uncle would not pay them, or increase my
allowance.”

“What are your prospects then?” resumed Lady Isabel.

“Prospects! Do you see that little ragged boy throwing stones into the
harbor?--it is well the police don’t drop upon him,--ask him what his
prospects are, and he will stare you in the face, and say, ‘None.’ Mine
are on a like par.”

“You may succeed Sir Peter yet.”

“I may, but I may not. When those old idiots get a young wife--”

“Have you quarreled with Sir Peter?” interrupted Lady Isabel.

“I should quarrel with him as he deserves, if it would do any good, but
I might get my allowance stopped. Self interest, you see, Lady Isabel,
is the order of the day with most of us.”

“Do you propose staying in Boulogne long?”

“I don’t know. As I may find amusement. Paris is a fast capital, with
its heated rooms and its late hours, and I came down for the refreshment
of a few sea dips. Am I walking too fast for you?”

“You increased your pace alarmingly when you spoke of Sir Peter’s
marriage. And I am not sorry for it,” she added, good-naturedly, “for it
has proved to me how strong I am getting. A week ago I could not have
walked half so fast.”

He interrupted with eager apologies, and soon they reached her home.
Captain Levison entered with her--uninvited. He probably deemed between
connections great ceremonies might be dispensed with, and he sat a
quarter of an hour, chatting to amuse her. When he rose, he inquired
what she meant to do with herself in the afternoon.

“To lie down,” replied Isabel. “I am not strong enough to sit up all
day.”

“Should you be going out afterwards, you must allow me to take care of
you,” he observed. “I am glad that I happened to be here, for I am sure
you are not fit to wander out without an arm, and only followed by a
servant. When Mr. Carlyle comes, he will thank me for my pains.”

What was she to urge in objection? Simply nothing. He spoke, let us not
doubt, from a genuine wish to serve her, in a plain, easy tone, as any
acquaintance might speak. Lady Isabel schooled herself severely. If
those old feelings were not quite dead within her, why, she must smother
them down again as effectually as if they were; the very fact of
recognizing such to her own heart, brought a glow of shame to her brow.
She would meet Captain Levison, and suffer his companionship, as she
would that of the most indifferent stranger.

It was just the wrong way for her to go to work, though.

As the days passed on, Lady Isabel improved wonderfully. She was soon
able to go to the sands in the morning and sit there to enjoy the sea
air, watching the waves come up to recede with the tide. She made no
acquaintance whatever in the place, and when she had a companion it was
Captain Levison. He would frequently join her there, sometimes take her,
almost always give her his arm home. Of all things, she disliked the
having to take his arm, would a thousand times over rather have taken
good old Peter’s. A secret prick of the conscience whispered it might be
better if she did not. One day she said, in a joking sort of manner--she
would not say it in any other--that now she was strong, she had no need
of his arm and his escort. He demanded, in evident astonishment, what
had arisen that he might not still afford it, seeing her husband was not
with her to give her his. She had no answer in reply to this, no excuse
to urge, and, in default of one, took his arm, as usual. In the evening
he would be ready to take her to the pier, but they sat apart, mixing
not with the bustling crowd--he lending to his manner, as he conversed
with her, all that he would call up of fascination--and fascination,
such as Francis Levison’s, might be dangerous to any ear, in the sweet
evening twilight. The walk over, he left her at her own door; she never
asked him in in the evening, and he did not intrude without, as he
sometimes would of a morning.

Now, where was the help for this? You may say that she should have
remained indoors, and not have subjected herself to his companionship.
But the remaining indoors would not have brought her health, and it was
health that she was staying in Boulogne to acquire, and the sooner it
came the better pleased she would be, for she wanted to be at home with
her husband and children.

In a fortnight from the period of his departure, Mr. Carlyle was
expected in Boulogne. But what a marvellous change had this fortnight
wrought in Lady Isabel! She did not dare to analyze her feelings, but
she was conscious that all the fresh emotions of her youth had come
again. The blue sky seemed as of the sweetest sapphire, the green fields
and waving trees were of an emerald brightness, the perfume of the
flowers was more fragrant than any perfume had yet seemed. She knew that
the sky, that the grassy plains, the leafy trees, the brilliant flowers,
were but as they ever had been; she knew that the sunny atmosphere
possessed no more of loveliness or power of imparting delight than of
old; and she knew that the change, the sensation of ecstacy, was in her
own heart. No wonder that she shrank from self-examination.

The change from listless languor to her present feeling brought the hue
and contour of health to her face far sooner than anything else could
have done. She went down with Captain Levison to meet Mr. Carlyle, the
evening he came in, and when Mr. Carlyle saw her behind the cords, as he
was going to the custom-house, he scarcely knew her. Her features had
lost their sharpness, her cheeks wore a rosy flush, and the light of
pleasure at meeting him again shone in her eyes.

“What can you have been doing to yourself, my darling?” he uttered in
delight as he emerged from the custom-house and took her hands in his.
“You look almost well.”

“Yes, I am much better, Archibald, but I am warm now and flushed. We
have waited here some time, and the setting sun was full upon us. How
long the boat was in coming in!”

“The wind was against us,” replied Mr. Carlyle, wondering who the
exquisite was at his wife’s side. He thought he remembered his face.

“Captain Levison,” said Lady Isabel. “I wrote you word in one of my
letters that he was here. Have you forgotten it?” Yes, it had slipped
from his memory.

“And I am happy that it happened so,” said that gentleman, interposing,
“for it has enabled me to attend Lady Isabel in some of her walks. She
is stronger now, but at first she was unfit to venture alone.”

“I feel much indebted to you,” said Mr. Carlyle, warmly.

The following day was Sunday, and Francis Levison was asked to dine with
them--the first meal he had been invited to in the house. After dinner,
when Lady Isabel left them, he grew confidential over his claret to Mr.
Carlyle, laying open all his intricate affairs and his cargo of
troubles.

“This compulsory exile abroad is becoming intolerable,” he concluded;
“and a Paris life plays the very deuce with one. Do you see any chance
of my getting back to England?”

“Not the least,” was the candid answer, “unless you can manage to
satisfy or partially satisfy those claims you have been telling me of.
Will not Sir Peter assist you?”

“I believe he would, were the case fairly represented to him; but how am
I to get over to do it? I have written several letters to him lately,
and for some time I got no reply. Then came an epistle from Lady
Levison; not short and sweet, but short and sour. It was to the effect
that Sir Peter was ill, and could not at present be troubled with
business matters.”

“He cannot be very ill,” remarked Mr. Carlyle; “he passed through West
Lynne, in his open carriage, a week ago.”

“He ought to help me,” grumbled Captain Levison. “I am his heir, so long
as Lady Levison does not give him one. I do not hear that she has
expectations.”

“You should contrive to see him.”

“I know I should; but it is not possible under present circumstances.
With these thunder-clouds hanging over me, I dare not set foot in
England, and run the risk to be dropped upon. I can stand a few things,
but I shudder at the bare idea of a prison. Something peculiar in my
idiosyncrasy, I take it, for those who have tried it, say that it’s
nothing when you’re used to it.”

“Some one might see him for you.”

“Some one--who? I have quarreled with my lawyers, Sharp & Steel, of
Lincoln’s Inn.”

“Keen practitioners,” put in Mr. Carlyle.

“Too keen for me. I’d send them over the herring-pond if I could. They
have used me shamefully since my uncle’s marriage. If ever I do come
into the Levison estates they’ll be ready to eat their ears off; they
would like a finger in a pie with such property as that.”

“Shall I see Sir Peter Levison for you?”

“Will you?” returned Captain Levison, his dark eyes lighting up.

“If you like as your friend, you understand; not as your solicitor; that
I decline. I have a slight knowledge of Sir Peter; my father was well
acquainted with him; and if I can render you any little service, I shall
be happy, in return for your kind attention to my wife. I cannot promise
to see him for those two or three weeks, though,” resumed Mr. Carlyle,
“for we are terribly busy. I never was so driven; but for being so I
should stay here with my wife.”

Francis Levison expressed his gratitude, and the prospect, however
remote, of being enabled to return to England increased his spirits to
exultation. Whilst they continued to converse, Lady Isabel sat at the
window in the adjoining room, listlessly looking out on the crowds of
French who were crowding to and from the port in their Sunday holiday
attire. Looking at them with her eyes, not with her senses--her senses
were holding commune with herself, and it was not altogether
satisfactory--she was aware that a sensation all too warm, a feeling of
attraction toward Francis Levison, was working within her. Not a
voluntary one; she could no more repress it than she could repress her
own sense of being; and, mixed with it, was the stern voice of
conscience, overwhelming her with the most lively terror. She would have
given all she possessed to be able to overcome it. She would have given
half the years of her future life to separate herself at once and
forever from the man.

But do not mistake the word terror, or suppose that Lady Isabel Carlyle
applied it here in the vulgar acceptation of the term. She did not fear
for herself; none could be more conscious of self-rectitude of principle
and conduct; and she would have believed it as impossible for her ever
to forsake her duty as a wife, a gentlewoman, and a Christian, as for
the sun to turn round from west to east. That was not the fear which
possessed her; it had never presented itself to her mind; what she did
fear was, that further companionship with Francis Levison might augment
the sentiments she entertained for him to a height that her life, for
perhaps years to come, would be one of unhappiness, a sort of
concealment; and, more than all, she shrank from the consciousness of
the bitter wrong that these sentiments cast upon her husband.

“Archibald, I have a favor to ask you,” she said, after Captain
Levison’s departure. “Take me back with you.”

“Impossible, my love. The change is doing you so much good; and I took
the apartments for six weeks. You must at least remain that time.”

The color flowed painfully into her cheek. “I cannot stay without you,
Archibald.”

“Tell me why.”

“I am so dull without you,” was all she could say. He felt that this was
not reason enough for altering an arrangement that was so beneficial to
her; so he left her the following morning, commending her to the
continued care of Captain Levison.



CHAPTER XXI.

QUITTING THE DANGER.

Lady Isabel was seated on one of the benches of the Petit Camp, as it is
called, underneath the ramparts of the upper tower. A week or ten days
had passed away since the departure of Mr. Carlyle, and in her health
there was a further visible improvement.

It was still evening, cool for July; no sound was heard save the hum of
the summer insects, and Lady Isabel sat in silence with her companion,
her rebellious heart beating with a sense of its own happiness. But for
the voice of conscience, strong within her; but for the sense of right
and wrong; but for the existing things; in short, but that she was a
wife, she might have been content to sit by his side forever, never to
wish to move or to break the silence. Did he read her feelings? He told
her, months afterward, that he did; but it may have been a vain boast,
an excuse.

“Do you remember the evening, Lady Isabel, just such a one as this, that
we all passed at Richmond?” he suddenly asked. “Your father, Mrs. Vane,
you, I and others?”

“Yes, I remember it. We had spent a pleasant day; the two Miss
Challoners were with us. You drove Mrs. Vane home, and I went with papa.
You drove recklessly, I recollect, and Mrs. Vane said when we got home
that you should never drive her again.”

“Which meant, not until the next time. Of all capricious, vain, exacting
women, Emma Vane was the worst; and Emma Mount Severn is no improvement
upon it; she’s a systematic flirt, and nothing better. I drove
recklessly on purpose to put her in a fright, and pay her off.”

“What had she done?”

“Put me in a rage. She had saddled herself upon me, when I wanted--I
wished for another to be my companion.”

“Blanche Challoner.”

“Blanche Challoner!” echoed Captain Levison, in a mocking tone; “what
did I care for Blanche Challoner?”

Isabel remembered that he had been supposed in those days to care a
great deal for Miss Blanche Challoner--a most lovely girl of seventeen.
“Mrs. Vane used to accuse you of caring too much for her,” she said,
aloud.

“She accused me of caring for some one else more than for Blanche
Challoner,” he significantly returned; “and for once her jealous
surmises were not misplaced. No Lady Isabel, it was not Blanche
Challoner I had wished to drive home. Could you not have given a better
guess than that at the time?” he added, turning to her.

There was no mistaking the tone of his voice or the glance of his eye.
Lady Isabel felt a crimson flush rising and she turned her face away.

“The past is gone, and cannot be recalled,” he continued, “but we both
played our cards like simpletons. If ever two beings were formed to love
each other, you and I were. I sometimes thought you read my feelings--”

Surprise had kept her silent, but she interrupted him now, haughtily
enough.

“I must speak, Lady Isabel; it is but a few words, and then I am silent
forever. I would have declared myself had I dared, but my uncertain
position, my debts, my inability to keep a wife, weighed me down; and,
instead of appealing to Sir Peter, as I ought to have done, for the
means to assume a position that would justify me in asking Lord Mount
Severn’s daughter, I crushed my hopes within me, and suffered you to
escape--”

“I will not hear this, Captain Levison,” she cried, rising from her seat
in anger.

He touched her arm to place her on it again.

“One single moment yet, I pray you. I have for years wished that you
should know why I lost you--a loss that tells upon me yet. I have
bitterly worked out my own folly since I knew not how passionately I
loved you until you became the wife of another. Isabel, I love you
passionately still.”

“How dare you presume so to address me?”

She spoke in a cold, dignified tone of hauteur, as it was her bounden
duty to speak; but, nevertheless, she was conscious of an undercurrent
of feeling, whispering that, under other auspices, the avowal would have
brought to her heart the most intense bliss.

“What I have said can do no hurt now,” resumed Captain Levison; “the
time has gone by for it; for neither you nor I are likely to forget that
you are a wife. We have each chosen our path in life, and must abide by
it; the gulf between us is impassable but the fault was mine. I ought to
have avowed my affection, and not have suffered you to throw yourself
away upon Mr. Carlyle.”

“Throw myself away!” she indignantly uttered, roused to the retort. “Mr.
Carlyle is my dear husband, esteemed, respected, and beloved. I married
him of my own free choice, and I have never repented it; I have grown
more attached to him day by day. Look at his noble nature, his noble
form; what are you by his side? You forget yourself, Francis Levison.”

He bit his lip. “No, I do not.”

“You are talking to me as you have no right to talk!” she exclaimed, in
agitation. “Who but you, would so insult me, taking advantage of my
momentarily unprotected condition. Would you dare to do it, were Mr.
Carlyle within reach! I wish you good-evening, sir.”

She walked away as quickly as her tired frame would permit. Captain
Levison strode after her. He took forcible possession of her hand, and
placed it within his arm.

“I pray you forgive and forget what has escaped me, Lady Isabel. Suffer
me to be, as before, the kind friend, the anxious brother endeavoring to
be of service to you in the absence of Mr. Carlyle.”

“It is what I have suffered you to be, looking upon you as, I may say, a
relative,” she coldly rejoined, withdrawing her hand from his contact.
“Not else should I have permitted your incessant companionship; and this
is how you have repaid it! My husband thanked you for your attention to
me; could he have read what was in your false heart, he had offered you
different sort of thanks, I fancy.”

“I ask your pardon, Lady Isabel; I have acknowledged my fault, and I can
do no more. I will not so offend again; but there are moments when our
dearest feelings break through the convenances of life and betray
themselves, in spite of our sober judgment. Suffer me to support you
down this steep hill,” he added, for they were then going over the sharp
stones of the Grand Rue; “you are not strong enough to proceed alone,
after this evening’s long walk.”

“You should have thought of that before,” she said, with some sarcasm in
her tone. “No; I have declined.”

So she had to put his arm back, which he was holding out, as she walked
on unsupported, with what strength she had, he continuing by her side.
Arriving at her own door, she wished him a cool good-evening, and he
turned away in the direction of his hotel.

Lady Isabel brushed past Peter, and flew upstairs, startling Wilson, who
had taken possession of the drawing-room to air her smart cap at its
windows in the absence of her lady.

“My desk, Wilson, immediately,” cried she, tearing off her gloves, her
bonnet, and her shawl. “Tell Peter to be in readiness to take a letter
to the post; and he must walk fast, or he will not catch it before the
English mail is closed.”

The symptoms of sinful happiness throbbing at her heart while Francis
Levison told her of his love, spoke plainly to Lady Isabel of the
expediency of withdrawing entirely from his society, and his dangerous
sophistries; she would be away from the very place that contained him;
put the sea between them. So she dashed off a letter to her husband; an
urgent summons that he should come to her without delay for remain away
longer she would not. It is probable she would have started alone, not
waiting for Mr. Carlyle, but for fear of not having sufficient funds for
the journey, after the rent and other things were paid.

Mr. Carlyle, when he received the letter and marked its earnest tone,
wondered much. In reply, he stated that he would be with her on the
following Saturday, and then her returning, or not, with him could be
settled. Fully determined not to meet Captain Levison, Isabel, in the
intervening days, only went out in a carriage. He called once, and was
shown into the drawing-room; but Lady Isabel, who happened to be in her
own chamber, sent out a message, which was delivered by Peter. “My
lady’s compliments, but she must decline receiving visitors.”

Sunday morning--it had been impossible for him to get away before--
brought Mr. Carlyle. He strongly combatted her wish to return home until
six weeks should have expired, he nearly said he would not take her, and
she grew earnest over it, almost to agitation.

“Isabel,” he said, “let me know your motive, for it appears to me you
have one. The sojourn here is evidently doing you a vast deal of good,
and what you urge about ‘being dull,’ sounds very like nonsense. Tell me
what it is.”

A sudden impulse flashed over her that she would tell him the truth. Not
tell him that she loved Francis Levison, or that he had spoken to her as
he did; she valued her husband too greatly to draw him into any
unpleasantness whose end could not be seen; but own to him that she had
once felt a passing fancy for Francis Levison, and preferred not to be
subjected to his companionship now. Oh, that she had done so! Her kind,
her noble, her judicious husband! Why did she not? The whole truth, as
to her present feelings, it was not expedient that she should tell, but
she might have confided to him quite sufficient. He would only have
cherished her the more deeply, and sheltered her under his fostering
care, safe from harm.

Why did she not? In the impulse of the moment she was about to do so,
when Mr. Carlyle, who had been taking a letter from his pocket book put
it into her hand. Upon what slight threads the events of life turn! Her
thoughts diverted, she remained silent while she opened the letter. It
was from Miss Carlyle, who had handed it to her brother in the moment of
his departure, to carry to Lady Isabel and save postage. Mr. Carlyle had
nearly dropped it into the Folkestone post office.

A letter as stiff as Miss Corny herself. The children were well, and the
house was going on well, and she hoped Lady Isabel was better. It filled
three sides of note paper, but that was all the news it contained, and
it wound up with the following sentence, “I would continue my epistle,
but Barbara Hare, who is to spend the day with us, has just arrived.”

Barbara Hare spending the day at East Lynne! That item was quite enough
for Lady Isabel, and her heart and her confidence closed to her husband.
She must go home to her children, she urged; she could not remain longer
away from them; and she urged it at length with tears.

“Nay, Isabel,” said Mr. Carlyle; “if you are so much in earnest as this,
you shall certainly go back with me.”

Then she was like a child let loose from school. She laughed, she danced
in her excess of content; she showered kisses on her husband, thanking
him in her gleeful gratitude. Mr. Carlyle set it down to her love for
him; he arrived at the conclusion that, in reiterating that she could
not bear to be away from him, she spoke the fond truth.

“Isabel,” he said, smiling tenderly upon her, “do you remember, in the
first days of our marriage, you told me you did not yet love me, but
that the love would come. I think this is it.”

Her face flushed nearly to tears at the words; a bright, glowing, all
too conscious flush. Mr. Carlyle mistook its source, and caught her to
his heart.

Lady Isabel had returned home to bodily health, to the delight of
meeting her children, to the glad sensation of security. But as the days
went on, a miserable feeling of apathy stole over her: a feeling as if
all whom she had loved in the world had died, leaving her living and
alone.

She did not encourage these reflections; knowing what you do know of
her, you may be sure of that, but they thrust themselves continually
forward. The form of Francis Levison was ever present to her; not a
minute of the day but it gave the coloring to her thoughts, and at night
it made the subject of her dreams. Oh, those dreams! They were painful
to wake from; painful from the contrasts they presented to reality; and
equally painful to her conscience, in its strife after what was right.

Mr. Carlyle mounted his horse one morning and rode over to Levison Park.
He asked for Sir Peter, but was shown into the presence of Lady Levison-
-a young and pretty woman dressed showily. She inquired his business.

“My business, madam, is with Sir Peter.”

“But Sir Peter is not well enough to attend to business; it upsets him--
worries him.”

“Nevertheless, I am here by his own appointment. Twelve o’clock he
mentioned; and the hour has barely struck.”

Lady Levison bit her lip and bowed coldly; and at that moment a servant
appeared to conduct Mr. Carlyle to Sir Peter. The matter which had taken
Mr. Carlyle thither was entered upon immediately--Francis Levison, his
debts, and his gracelessness. Sir Peter, an old gentleman in a velvet
skullcap, particularly enlarged upon the latter.

“I’d pay his debts to-day and set him upon his legs again, but that I
know I should have to do the same thing over and over again to the end
of the chapter, as I have done it repeatedly hitherto,” cried Sir Peter.
“His grandfather was my only brother, his father my dutiful and beloved
nephew; but he is just as bad as they were estimable. He is a worthless
fellow and nothing else, Mr. Carlyle.”

“His tale drew forth my compassion, and I promised I would see you and
speak for him,” returned Mr. Carlyle. “Of Captain Levison’s personal
virtues or vices, I know nothing.”

“And the less you know the better,” growled Sir Peter. “I suppose he
wants me to clear him and start him afresh.”

“Something of that sort, I conclude.”

“But how is it to be done? I am at home, and he is over there. His
affairs are in a state of confusion, and nobody can come to the bottom
of them without an explanation from him. Some liabilities, for which I
have furnished the money, the creditors swear have not been liquidated.
He must come over if he wants anything done.”

“Where is he to come to? He must be in England sub rosa.”

“He can’t be here,” hastily rejoined Sir Peter. “Lady Levison would not
have him for a day.”

“He might be at East Lynne,” good-naturedly observed Mr. Carlyle.
“Nobody would think of looking for him there. I think it is a pity that
you should not meet, if you do feel inclined to help him.”

“You are a deal more considerate to him than he deserves, Mr. Carlyle.
May I ask if you intend to act for him in a professional capacity?”

“I do not.”

A few more words, and it was decided that Captain Levison should be
immediately sent for. As Mr. Carlyle left Sir Peter’s presence, he
encountered Lady Levison.

“I can scarcely be ignorant that your conference with my husband has
reference to his grandnephew,” she observed.

“It has,” replied Mr. Carlyle.

“I have had a very bad opinion of him, Mr. Carlyle; at the same time I
do not wish you to carry away a wrong impression of me. Francis Levison
is my husband’s nephew, his presumptive heir; it may, therefore, appear
strange that I set my face against him. Two or three years ago, previous
to my marriage with Sir Peter, in fact before I knew Sir Peter, I was
brought into contact with Francis Levison. He got acquainted with some
friends of mine, and at their house I met him. He behaved shamefully
ill; he repaid their hospitality with gross ingratitude; other details
and facts regarding his conduct also became known to me. Altogether I
believe him to be a base and despicable man, both by nature and
inclination, and that he will remain such to the end of time.”

“I know very little indeed of him,” observed Mr. Carlyle. “May I inquire
the nature of his ill-conduct in that instance?”

“He ruined them--he ruined them, Mr. Carlyle. They were simple,
unsuspicious country people, understanding neither fraud nor vice, nor
the ways of an evil world. Francis Levison got them to put their names
to bills, ‘as a matter of form, to accommodate him for a month or so,’
he stated, and so they believed. They were not wealthy; they lived upon
their own small estate, with none too much of superfluous money to
spare, and when the time came for them to pay--as come it did--it
brought ruin, and they had to leave their home. He deliberately did it--
knowing what would be the end. And I could tell you of other things. Sir
Peter may have informed you that I object to receive him here. I do. My
objection is to the man--to his character; not owing, as I hear it has
been said, to any jealous paltry feeling touching his being the heir. I
must lose my own self-respect before I admit Francis Levison to my house
as an inmate. Sir Peter may assist him in welcome--may pay his debt, and
get him out of his scrapes as often as he pleases, but I will not have
him here.”

“Sir Peter said you declined to receive him. But it is necessary that he
should come to England, if his affairs are to be set straight, and also
that he should see Sir Peter.”

“Come to England!” interrupted Lady Levison. “How can he come to England
under present circumstances, unless, indeed, he comes en cachette?”

“En cachette, of course,” replied Mr. Carlyle. “There is no other way. I
have offered to let him stay at East Lynne. He is, you may be aware, a
sort of connection of Lady Isabel’s.”

“Take care that he does not repay your hospitality with ingratitude,”
 warmly returned Lady Levison. “It would only be in accordance with his
practice.”

Mr. Carlyle laughed.

“I do not see what harm he could do me, allowing that he had the
inclination. He would not scare my clients from me, or beat my children,
and I can take care of my pocket. A few days will, no doubt, be the
extent of his sojourn.”

Lady Levison smiled too, and shook hands with Mr. Carlyle.

“In your house, perhaps, there may be no field for his vagaries, but
rely upon it, where there is one he is sure to be at some mischief or
other.”

This visit of Mr. Carlyle’s to Levison Park took place on a Friday
morning, and on his return to his office he dispatched an account of it
to Captain Levison at Boulogne, telling him he had better come over. But
now Mr. Carlyle, like many another man whose mind has its share of work,
was sometimes forgetful of trifles, and it entirely slipped his memory
to mention the expected arrival at home. The following evening,
Saturday, he and Lady Isabel were dining in the neighborhood, when the
conversation at table turned upon the Ducies and their embarrassments.
The association of ideas led Mr. Carlyle’s thoughts to Boulogne, to
Captain Levison and his embarrassments, and it immediately occurred to
him that he had not told his wife of the anticipated visit. He kept it
in his mind then, and spoke as soon as they were in the chariot
returning home.

“Isabel,” began he, “I suppose we have always rooms ready for visitors,
because I am expecting one.”

“Oh, yes; or if not, they are soon made ready.”

“Ah, but to-morrow’s Sunday, and I have no doubt that’s the day he will
take advantage of to come. I am sorry I forgot to mention it yesterday.”

“Who is coming, then?”

“Captain Levison.”

“Who?” repeated Lady Isabel, in a sharp tone of consternation.

“Captain Levison. Sir Peter consents to see him, with a view to the
settlement of his liabilities, but Lady Levison declines to receive him
at the Park. So I offered to give him house-room at East Lynne for a few
days.”

There is an old saying, “the heart leaping into the mouth;” and Lady
Isabel’s leaped into hers. She grew dizzy at the words--her senses
seemed momentarily to desert her. Her first sensation was as if the dull
earth had opened and shown her a way into Paradise; her second, a lively
consciousness that Francis Levison ought not to be suffered to come
again into companionship with her. Mr. Carlyle continued to converse of
the man’s embarrassments, of his own interview with Sir Peter and Lady
Levison; but Isabel was as one who heard not. She was debating the
question, how she could prevent his coming?

“Archibald,” she presently said, “I do not wish Francis Levison to stay
at East Lynne.”

“It will only be for a few days--perhaps but a day or two. Sir Peter is
in the humor to discharge the claims, and, the moment his resolve is
known, the ex-captain can walk on her majesty’s dominions, an unmolested
man, free to go where he will.”

“That may be,” interrupted Lady Isabel, in an accent of impatience; “but
why should he come to our house?”

“I proposed it myself. I had no idea you would dislike his coming. Why
should you?”

“I don’t like Francis Levison,” she murmured. “That is, I don’t care to
have him at East Lynne.”

“My dear, I fear there is no help for it now; he is most likely on his
road, and will arrive to-morrow. I cannot turn him out again, after my
own voluntary invitation. Had I known it would be disagreeable to you, I
would not have proposed it.”

“To-morrow!” she exclaimed, all the words that caught her ear. “Is he
coming to-morrow?”

“Being Sunday, a free day, he will be sure to take advantage of it. What
has he done that you should object to his coming? You did not say in
Boulogne that you disliked him.”

“He had done nothing,” was her faltering answer, feeling that her
grounds of opposition must melt under her one by one.

“Lady Levison appears to possess a very ill opinion of him,” resumed Mr.
Carlyle. “She says she knew him in years gone by. She mentioned one or
two things which, if true, must be bad enough. But possibly she may be
prejudiced.”

“She is prejudiced,” said Isabel. “At least Francis Levison told me at
Boulogne. There appeared to be no love lost between them.”

“At any rate, his ill doings or well doings cannot affect us for the
short period he is likely to remain. You have taken a prejudice against
him also, I suppose, Isabel.”

She suffered Mr. Carlyle to remain in the belief, and sat with clasped
hands and a despairing spirit feeling that fate was against her.

How could she accomplish her task of forgetting this man, if he was thus
to be thrown into her home and her companionship? Suddenly she turned to
her husband, and laid her cheek upon his shoulder.

He thought she was tired. He passed his arm round her waist, drew her
face to a more comfortable position, and bent his own lovingly upon it.
It came to her mind, as she lay there, to tell him a portion of the
truth, like it had done once before. It was a strong arm of shelter,
that round her--a powerful pillar of protection, him upon whom she
leaned; why did she not confide herself to him as trustingly as a little
child? Simply because her courage failed. Once, twice, the opening words
were upon her lips, but come forth they did not; and then the carriage
stopped at East Lynne, and the opportunity was over. Oh! How many a time
in her after years did Lady Isabel recall that midnight drive with her
husband, and wish, in her vain repentance, that she had opened his eyes
to that dangerous man.

On Sunday Captain Levison arrived at East Lynne.



CHAPTER XXII.

MRS. HARE’S DREAM.

The next day rose bright, warm, and cloudless, and the morning sun
streamed into the bedroom of Mrs. Hare. Mr. and Mrs. Hare were of the
old-fashioned class who knew nothing about dressing-rooms, their
bedrooms were very large, and they never used a dressing-room in their
lives, or found the want of one. The justice rubbed his face to a
shining brilliancy, settled on his morning wig and his dressing-gown,
and then turned to the bed.

“What will you have for breakfast?”

“Thank you, Richard, I do not think that I can eat any thing. I shall be
glad of my tea; I am very thirsty.”

“All nonsense,” responded the justice, alluding to the intimation of not
eating. “Have a poached egg.”

Mrs. Hare smiled at him, and gently shook her head. “You are very kind,
Richard, but I could not eat it this morning. Barbara may send up the
smallest bit of dry toast. Would you please throw the window open before
you go down; I should like to feel the air.”

“You will get the air too near from this window,” replied Mr. Justice
Hare, opening the further one. Had his wife requested that the further
one to be opened, he would have opened the other; his own will and
opinions were ever paramount. Then he descended.

A minute or two, and up ran Barbara, looking bright and fair as the
morning, her pink muslin dress, with its ribbons and its open white lace
sleeves, as pretty as she was. She leaned over to kiss her mother.

“Mamma, are you ill? And you have been so well lately; you went to bed
so well last night. Papa says--”

“Barbara, dear,” interrupted Mrs. Hare, glancing round the room with
dread, and speaking in a deep whisper, “I have had one of those dreadful
dreams again.”

“Oh, mamma, how can you!” exclaimed Barbara, starting up in vexation.
“How can you suffer a foolish dream to overcome you as to make you ill?
You have good sense in other matters, but, in this, you seem to put all
sense away from you.”

“Child, will you tell me how I am to help it?” returned Mrs. Hare,
taking Barbara’s hand and drawing her to her again. “I do not give
myself the dreams; I cannot prevent their making me sick, prostrate,
feverish. How can I help these things, I ask?”

At this moment the bedroom door was flung open, and the face of the
justice, especially stern and cross then was pushed in. So startled was
Mrs. Hare, that she shook till she shook the pillow, and Barbara sprang
away from the bed. Surely he had not distinguished their topic of
conversation!

“Are you coming to make the breakfast to-day, or not Barbara? Do you
expect me to make it?”

“She is coming this instant, Richard,” said Mrs. Hare, her voice more
faint than usual. And the justice turned and stamped down again.

“Barbara, could your papa have heard me mention Richard?”

“No, no, mamma impossible: the door was shut. I will bring up your
breakfast myself and then you can tell me the dream.”

Barbara flew after Mr. Hare, poured out his coffee, saw him settled at
his breakfast, with a plateful of grouse-pie before him, and then
returned upstairs with her mamma’s tea and dry toast.

“Go on with your dream, mamma,” she said.

“But your breakfast will be cold, child.”

“Oh, don’t mind that. Did you dream of Richard?”

“Not very much of Richard; except that the old and continuous trouble of
his being away and unable to return, seemed to pervade it all through.
You remember, Barbara, Richard asserted to us, in that short, hidden
night visit, that he did not commit the murder; that it was another who
did?”

“Yes, I remember it,” replied Barbara.

“Barbara, I am convinced he spoke the truth; I trust him implicitly.”

“I feel sure of it also, mamma.”

“I asked him, you remember, whether it was Otway Bethel who committed
it; for I have always doubted Bethel, in an indefinite, vague manner.
Richard replied it was not Bethel, but a stranger. Well, Barbara, in my
dream I thought that stranger came to West Lynne, that he came to this
house here, and we were talking to him of him, conversing as we might
with any other visitor. Mind you, we seemed to know that he was the one
who actually did it; but he denied it. He wanted to put it upon Richard;
and I saw him, yes I did, Barbara--whisper to Otway Bethel. But oh, I
cannot tell you the sickening horror that was upon me throughout, and
seemed to be upon you also, lest he should make good his own apparent
innocence, and crush Richard, his victim. I think the dread and horror
awoke me.”

“What was he like, this stranger?” asked Barbara, in a low tone.

“Well, I cannot quite tell. The recollection of his appearance seemed to
pass away from me with the dream. He was dressed as a gentleman, and we
conversed, with him as an equal.”

Barbara’s mind was full of Captain Thorn, but his name had not been
mentioned to Mrs. Hare, and neither would she mention it now. She fell
into deep thought; and Mrs. Hare had to speak twice before she could be
aroused.

“Barbara, I say, don’t you think this dream, coming uncalled for
uninduced, must forebode some ill? Rely upon it, something connected
with that wretched murder is going to be stirred up again.”

“You know, I do not believe in dreams,” was Barbara’s answer. “I think
when people say, ‘this dream is a sign of such and such a thing,’ it is
the greatest absurdity in the world. I wish you could remember what the
man seemed like in your dream.”

“I wish I could,” answered Mrs. Hare, breaking off a particle of her dry
toast. “All I can remember is, that he appeared to be a gentleman.”

“Was he tall? Had he black hair?”

Mrs. Hare shook her heard. “I tell you, my dear, the remembrance has
passed from me; so whether his hair was black or light, I cannot say. I
think he was tall, but he was sitting down, and Otway Bethel stood
behind his chair. I seemed to feel that Richard was outside the door in
hiding, trembling lest the man should go out and see him there; and I
trembled, too. Oh, Barbara, it was a distressing dream!”

“I wish you could avoid having them, mamma, for they seem to upset you
very much.”

“Why did you ask whether the man was tall, and had black hair?”

Barbara returned an evasive answer. It would not do to tell Mrs. Hare
that her suspicions pointed to one particular quarter; it would have
agitated her too greatly.

So vivid was the dream, she could scarcely persuade herself, when she
awoke, that it was not real, and the murderer actually at West Lynne.

“Oh, Barbara, Barbara!” she exclaimed, in a wailing tone, “when will
this mystery be cleared, and my own restored to me? Seven years since he
stole here to see us, and no tidings yet.”

“People say that changes come every seven years, mamma,” said Barbara,
hopefully; “but I will go down and send you up some more tea.”

“And guard your countenance well,” returned her mother. “Don’t let your
father suspect anything. Remember his oath to bring Richard to justice.
If he thought we dwelt on his innocence, there is no knowing what he
might do to find him, he is so very just.”

“So very cruel and unnatural, I call it, mamma. But never fear my
betraying anything. But have you heard about Joyce?”

“No. What is it?”

“She had a severe fall while playing with little Isabel, and it is said
she will be confined to bed for several weeks. I am very sorry for her.”
 And, composing her face, she descended to the breakfast-room.

The dinner hour at the Hares’, when they were alone, was four o’clock
and it arrived that day as usual, and they sat down to table. Mrs. Hare
was better then; the sunshine and the business of stirring life had in
some measure effaced the visions of the night, and restored her to her
wonted frame of mind.

The cloth removed, the justice sat but a little while over his port
wine, for he was engaged to smoke an after-dinner pipe with a brother
magistrate, Mr. Justice Herbert.

“Shall you be home to tea, papa?” inquired Barbara.

“Is it any business of yours, young lady?”

“Oh, not in the least,” answered Miss Barbara. “Only if you had been
coming home to tea, I suppose we must have waited, had you not been in
time.”

“I thought you said, Richard, that you were going to stay the evening
with Mr. Herbert?” observed Mrs. Hare.

“So I am,” responded the justice. “But Barbara has a great liking for
the sound of her own tongue.”

The justice departed, striding pompously down the gravel walk. Barbara
waltzed round the large room to a gleeful song, as if she felt his
absence a relief. Perhaps she did. “You can have tea now, mamma, at any
time you please, if you are thirsty, without waiting till seven,” quoth
she.

“Barbara!” said Mrs. Hare.

“What, mamma?”

“I am sorry to hear of the calamity which has fallen upon Joyce! I
should like to walk to East Lynne this evening and inquire after her,
and see her, if I may; it would be but neighborly. I feel quite equal to
it. Since I have accustomed myself to take more exercise I feel better
for it, you know; and we have not been out to-day. Poor Joyce! What time
shall we go, Barbara?”

“If we were to get there by--by seven, I should think; their dinner will
be over then.”

“Yes,” answered Mrs. Hare, with alacrity, who was always pleased when
somebody else decided for her. “But I should like some tea before we
start, Barbara.”

Barbara took care that her mamma should have some tea and then they
proceeded toward East Lynne. It was a lovely evening--the air warm, and
the humming gnats sported in it as if to make the most of the waning
summer. Mrs. Hare enjoyed it at first, but ere she reached East Lynne,
she became aware that the walk was too much for her. She did not usually
venture upon half so long a one, and probably the fever and agitation of
the morning had somewhat impaired her day’s strength. She laid her hand
upon the iron gate as they turned into the park, and stood still.

“I did wrong to come, Barbara.”

“Lean on me, mamma. When you reach those benches, you can take a good
rest before proceeding to the house. It is very warm, and that may have
fatigued you.”

They gained the benches, which were placed under some of the park trees,
in front of the gates and the road, but not of the house, and Mrs. Hare
sat down. Another minute and they were surrounded. Mr. Carlyle, his
wife, and sister, who were taking an after-dinner stroll amidst the
flowers with their guest, Francis Levison, discerned them, and came up.
The children, except the youngest, were of the party. Lady Isabel warmly
welcomed Mrs. Hare; she had become quite attached to the delicate and
suffering woman.

“A pretty one, I am, am I not, Archibald, to come inquiring after one
invalid, and am so much of an invalid myself that I have to stop half-
way?” Mrs. Hare exclaimed, as Mr. Carlyle shook her hand. “I was so
greatly concerned to hear of poor Joyce.”

“You must stay the evening, now you are here,” cried Lady Isabel. “It
will afford you a good rest; and tea will refresh you.”

“Oh thank you, but we have taken tea,” said Mrs. Hare.

“There is no reason why you should not take some more,” she laughed.
“Indeed, you seem too fatigued to be anything but a prisoner with us for
the next hour or two.”

“I fear I am,” answered Mrs. Hare.

“Who the dickens are they?” Captain Levison was muttering to himself, as
he contemplated the guests from a distance. “It’s a deuced pretty girl,
whoever she may be. I think I’ll approach, they don’t look formidable.”

He did approach, and the introduction was made: “Captain Levison, Mrs.
Hare and Miss Hare.” A few formal words, and Captain Levison disappeared
again, challenging little William Carlyle to a foot-race.

“How very poorly your mamma looks!” Mr. Carlyle exclaimed to Barbara,
when they were beyond the hearing of Mrs. Hare, who was busy talking
with Lady Isabel and Miss Carlyle. “And she has appeared so much
stronger lately; altogether better.”

“The walk here has fatigued her; I feared it would be too long; so that
she looks unusually pale,” replied Barbara. “But what do you think it is
that has upset her again, Mr. Carlyle?”

He turned his inquiring eyes upon Barbara.

“Papa came downstairs this morning, saying mamma was ill, that she had
one of her old attacks of fever and restlessness. I declare, as papa
spoke, I thought to myself could mamma have been dreaming some foolish
dream again--for you remember how ill she used to be after them. I ran
upstairs and the first thing that mamma said to me was, that she had had
one of those dreadful dreams.”

“I fancied she must have outlived her fear of them; that her own plain
sense had come to her aid long ago, showing her how futile dreams are,
meaning nothing, even if hers do occasionally touch upon that--that
unhappy mystery.”

“You may just as well reason with a post as reason with mamma when she
is suffering from the influence of one of those dreams,” returned
Barbara. “I tried it this morning. I asked her to call up--as you
observe--good sense to her aid. And her reply was, ‘How could she help
her feelings? She did not induce the dream by thinking of Richard, or in
any other way, and yet it came and shattered her.’ Of course so far,
mamma is right, for she cannot help the dreams coming.”

Mr. Carlyle made no immediate reply. He picked up a ball belonging to
one of the children, which lay in his path, and began tossing it gently
in his hand. “It is a singular thing,” he observed, presently, “that we
do not hear from Richard.”

“Oh, very, very. And I know mamma distresses over it. A few words which
she let fall this morning, betrayed it plainly. I am no believer in
dreams,” continued Barbara, “but I cannot deny that these, which take
such a hold upon mamma, do bear upon the case in a curious manner--the
one she had last night especially.”

“What was it?” asked Mr. Carlyle.

“She dreamed that the real murderer was at West Lynne. She thought he
was at our house--as a visitor, she said, or like one making a morning
call--and we, she and I, were conversing with him about the murder. He
wanted to deny it--to put it on Richard; and he turned and whispered to
Otway Bethel, who stood behind his chair. This is another strange
thing,” added Barbara, lifting her blue eyes in their deep earnestness
to the face of Mr. Carlyle.

“What is strange? You speak in enigmas, Barbara.”

“I mean that Otway Bethel should invariably appear in her dreams. Until
that stolen visit of Richard’s we had no idea he was near the spot at
the time, and yet he had always made a prominent feature in these
dreams.”

“And who was the murderer--in your mamma’s dream?” continued Mr.
Carlyle, speaking as gravely as though he were upon a subject that men
ridicule not.

“She cannot remember, except that he seemed a gentleman, and that we
held intercourse with him as such. Now, that again is remarkable. We
never told her, you know, of our suspicions of Captain Thorn.”

“I think you must be becoming a convert to the theory of dreams
yourself, Barbara; you are so very earnest,” smiled Mr. Carlyle.

“No, not to dreams; but I am earnest for my dear brother Richard’s
sake.”

“That Thorn does not appear in a hurry again to favor West Lynne with
his----”

Mr. Carlyle paused, for Barbara had hurriedly laid her hand upon his
arm, with a warning gesture. In talking they had wandered across the
park to its ornamental grounds, and were now in a quiet path,
overshadowed on the other side by a chain of imitation rocks. Seated
astride on the summit of these rocks, right above where Mr. Carlyle and
Barbara were standing was Francis Levison. His face was turned from them
and he appeared intent upon a child’s whip, winding leather round its
handle. Whether he heard their footsteps or not, he did not turn. They
quickened their pace, and quitted the walk, bending their steps backward
toward the group of ladies.

“Could he have heard what we were saying?” ejaculated Barbara, below her
breath.

Mr. Carlyle looked down upon the concerned, flushed cheeks with a smile.
Barbara was so evidently perturbed. But for a certain episode of their
lives, some years ago, he might have soothed her tenderly.

“I think he must have heard a little, Barbara, unless his wits were
wool-gathering. He might not be attending. What if he did hear? It is of
no consequence.”

“I was speaking, you know, of Captain Thorn--of his being the murderer.”

“You were not speaking of Richard or his movements, so never mind.
Levison is a stranger to the whole. It is nothing to him. If he did hear
the name of Thorn mentioned, or even distinguished the subject, it would
bear for him no interest--would go, as the saying runs, ‘in at one ear
and out at the other.’ Be at rest, Barbara.”

He really did look somewhat tenderly upon her as he spoke--and they were
near enough to Lady Isabel for her to note the glance. She need not have
been jealous: it bore no treachery to her. But she did note it; she had
noted also their wandering away together, and she jumped to the
conclusion that it was premeditated, that they had gone beyond her sight
to enjoy each other’s society for a few stolen moments. Wonderfully
attractive looked Barbara that evening, for Mr. Carlyle or any one else
to steal away with. Her tasty, elegant airy summer attire, her bright
blue eyes, her charming features, and her damask cheeks! She had untied
the strings of her pretty white bonnet, and was restlessly playing with
them, more in thought than nervousness.

“Barbara, love, how are we to get home?” asked Mrs. Hare. “I do fear I
shall never walk it. I wish I had told Benjamin to bring the phaeton.”

“I can send to him,” said Mr. Carlyle.

“But it is too bad of me, Archibald, to take you and Lady Isabel by
storm in this unceremonious manner; and to give your servants trouble
besides.”

“A great deal too bad, I think,” returned Mr. Carlyle, with mock
gravity. “As to the servants, the one who has to go will never get over
the trouble, depend upon it. You always were more concerned for others
than for yourself, dear Mrs. Hare.”

“And you were always kind, Archibald, smoothing difficulties for all,
and making a trouble of nothing. Ah, Lady Isabel, were I a young woman,
I should be envying you your good husband; there are not many like him.”

Possibly the sentence reminded Lady Isabel that another, who was young,
might be envying her, for her cheeks--Isabel’s--flushed crimson. Mr.
Carlyle held out his strong arm of help to Mrs. Hare.

“If sufficiently rested, I fancy you would be more comfortable on a sofa
indoors. Allow me to support you thither.”

“And you can take my arm on the other side,” cried Miss Carlyle, placing
her tall form by Mrs. Hare. “Between us both we will pull you bravely
along; your feet need scarcely touch the ground.”

Mrs. Hare laughed, but said she thought Mr. Carlyle’s arm would be
sufficient. She took it, and they were turning toward the house, when
her eye caught the form of a gentleman passing along the road by the
park gate.

“Barbara, run,” she hurriedly exclaimed. “There’s Tom Herbert going
toward our house, and he will just call in and tell them to send the
phaeton, if you ask him, which will save the trouble to Mr. Carlyle’s
servants of going expressly. Make haste, child! You will be up with him
in half a minute.”

Barbara, thus urged, set off, on the spur of the moment, toward the
gates, before the rest of the party well knew what was being done. It
was too late for Mr. Carlyle to stop her and repeat that the servant
should go, for Barbara was already up with Mr. Tom Herbert. The latter
had seen her running toward him, and waited at the gate.

“Are you going past our house?” inquired Barbara, perceiving then that
Otway Bethel also stood there, but just beyond the view of the women.

“Yes. Why?” replied Tom Herbert, who was not famed for his politeness,
being blunt by nature and “fast” by habit.

“Mamma would be so much obliged to you, if you would just call in and
leave word that Benjamin is to bring up the phaeton. Mamma walked here,
intending to walk home, but she finds herself so fatigued as to be
unequal to it.”

“All right. I’ll call and send him. What time?”

Nothing had been said to Barbara about the time, so she was at liberty
to name her own. “Ten o’clock. We shall be home then before papa.”

“That you will,” responded Tom Herbert. “He and the governor, and two or
three more old codgers, are blowing clouds till you can’t see across the
room; and they are sure to get at it after supper. I say, Miss Barbara
are you engaged for a few picnics?”

“Good for a great many,” returned Barbara.

“Our girls want to get up some in the next week or two. Jack’s home, you
know.”

“Is he?” said Barbara, in surprise.

“We had a letter yesterday, and he came to-day--a brother officer with
him. Jack vows if the girls don’t cater well for them in the way of
amusement, he’ll never honor them by spending his leave at home again;
so mind you keep yourself in readiness for any fun that may turn up.
Good evening.”

“Good evening, Miss Hare,” added Otway Bethel.

As Barbara was returning the salutation, she became conscious of other
footsteps advancing from the same direction that they had come, and
moved her head hastily round. Two gentlemen, walking arm-in-arm, were
close upon her, in one of whom she recognized “Jack,” otherwise Major
Herbert. He stopped, and held out his hand.

“It is some years since we met, but I have not forgotten the pretty face
of Miss Barbara,” he cried. “A young girl’s face it was then, but it is
a stately young lady’s now.”

Barbara laughed. “Your brother has just told me you had arrived at West
Lynne; but I did not know you were so close to me. He has been asking me
if I am ready for some pic--”

Barbara’s voice faltered, and the rushing crimson dyed her face. Whose
face was that, who was he, standing opposite to her, side by side with
John Herbert? She had seen the face but once, yet it had implanted
itself upon her memory in characters of fire. Major Herbert continued to
talk, but Barbara for once lost her self-possession; she could not
listen, she could only stare at that face as if fascinated to the gaze,
looking herself something like a simpleton, her shy blue eyes anxious
and restless, and her lips turning to an ashy whiteness. A strange
feeling of wonder, of superstition was creeping over Barbara. Was that
man behind her in sober, veritable reality--or was it but a phantom
called up in her mind by the associations rising from her mamma’s dream;
or by the conversation held not many moments ago with Mr. Carlyle.

Major Herbert may have deemed that Barbara, who evidently could not
attend to himself, but was attending to his companion, wished for an
introduction, and he accordingly made it. “Captain Thorn--Miss Hare.”

Then Barbara roused herself; her senses were partially coming to her,
and she became alive to the fact that they must deem her behavior
unorthodox for a young lady.

“I--I looked at Captain Thorn, for I thought I remembered his face,” she
stammered.

“I was in West Lynne for a day or two, some five years ago,” he
observed.

“Ah--yes,” returned Barbara. “Are you going to make a long stay now?”

“We have several weeks’ leave of absence. Whether we shall remain here
all the time I cannot say.”

Barbara parted from them. Thought upon thought crowded upon her brain as
she flew back to East Lynne. She ran up the steps to the hall, gliding
toward a group which stood near its further end--her mother, Miss
Carlyle, Mr. Carlyle, and little Isabel; Lady Isabel she did not see.
Mrs. Hare was then going up to see Joyce.

In the agitation of the moment she stealthily touched Mr. Carlyle, and
he stepped away from the rest to speak to her, she drawing back toward
the door of one of the reception rooms, and motioning him to approach.

“Oh, Archibald, I must speak to you alone! Could you not come out again
for a little while?”

He nodded, and walked out openly by her side. Why should he not? What
had he to conceal? But, unfortunately, Lady Isabel, who had but gone
into that same room for a minute, and was coming out again to join Mrs.
Hare, both saw Barbara’s touch upon her husband’s arm, marked her
agitation, and heard her words. She went to one of the hall windows and
watched them saunter toward the more private part of the ground; she saw
her husband send back Isabel. Never, since her marriage, had Lady
Isabel’s jealousy been excited as it was excited that evening.

“I--I feel--I scarcely know whether I am awake or dreaming,” began
Barbara, putting up her hand to her brow and speaking in a dreamy tone.
“Pardon me for bringing you out in this unceremonious fashion.”

“What state secrets have you to discuss?” asked Mr. Carlyle in a jesting
manner.

“We were speaking of mamma’s dream. She said the impression it had left
upon her mind--that the murderer was in West Lynne--was so vivid that in
spite of common sense she could not persuade herself that he was not.
Well--just now----”

“Barbara, what can be the matter?” uttered Mr. Carlyle, perceiving that
her agitation was so great as to impede her words.

“I have just seen him!” she rejoined.

“Seen him!” echoed Mr. Carlyle, looking at her fixedly, a doubt crossing
his mind whether Barbara’s mind might be as uncollected as her manner.

“What were nearly my last words to you? That if ever that Thorn did come
to West Lynne again, I would leave no stone unturned to bring it home to
him. He is here, Archibald. Now, when I went to the gate to speak to Tom
Herbert, his brother, Major Herbert, was also there, and with him
Captain Thorn. Bethel, also. Do you wonder I say that I know not whether
I am awake or dreaming? They have some weeks’ holiday, and are here to
spend it.”

“It is a singular coincidence,” exclaimed Mr. Carlyle.

“Had anything been wanting to convince me that Thorn is the guilty man,
this would have done it,” went on Barbara, in her excitement. “Mamma’s
dream, with the steadfast impression it left upon her that Hallijohn’s
murderer was now at West Lynne--”

In turning the sharp corner of the covered walk they came in contact
with Captain Levison, who appeared to be either standing or sauntering
there, his hands underneath his coat-tails. Again Barbara felt vexed,
wondering how much he had heard, and beginning in her heart to dislike
the man. He accosted them familiarly, and appeared as if he would have
turned with them; but none could put down presumption more effectually
than Mr. Carlyle, calm and gentlemanly though he always was.

“I will join you presently, Captain Levison,” he said with a wave of the
hand. And he turned back with Barbara toward the open parts of the park.

“Do you like that Captain Levison?” she abruptly inquired, when they
were beyond hearing.

“I cannot say I do,” was Mr. Carlyle’s reply. “He is one who does not
improve upon acquaintance.”

“To me it looks as though he had placed himself in our way to hear what
we were saying.”

“No, no, Barbara. What interest could it bear for him?”

Barbara did not contest the point; she turned to the one nearer at
heart. “What must be our course with regard to Thorn?”

“It is more than I can tell you,” replied Mr. Carlyle. “I cannot go up
to the man and unceremoniously accuse him of being Hallijohn’s
murderer.”

They took their way to the house, for there was nothing further to
discuss. Captain Levison entered it before them, and saw Lady Isabel
standing at the hall window. Yes, she was standing and looking still,
brooding over her fancied wrongs.

“Who is that Miss Hare?” he demanded in a cynical tone. “They appear to
have a pretty good understanding together. Twice this evening I have met
them enjoying a private walk and a private confab.”

“What did you say?” sharply and haughtily returned Lady Isabel.

“Nay, I did not mean to offend you,” was the answer, for he knew that
she heard his words distinctly in spite of her question. “I spoke of
Monsieur votre mari.”



CHAPTER XXIII.

CAPTAIN THORN IN TROUBLE ABOUT “A BILL.”

In talking over a bygone misfortune, we sometimes make the remark, or
hear it made to us, “Circumstances worked against it.” Such and such a
thing might have turned out differently, we say, had the surrounding
circumstances been more favorable, but they were in opposition; they
were dead against it. Now, if ever attendant circumstances can be said
to have borne a baneful influence upon any person in this world, they
most assuredly did at this present time against Lady Isabel Carlyle.

Coeval, you see, with the arrival of the ex-captain, Levison, at East
Lynne, all the jealous feeling, touching her husband and Barbara Hare,
was renewed, and with greater force than ever. Barbara, painfully
anxious that something should be brought to light, it would have puzzled
her to say how or by what means, by which her brother should be
exonerated from the terrible charge under which he lay; fully believing
that Frederick Thorn, captain in her majesty’s service, was the man who
had committed the crime, as asserted by Richard, was in a state of
excitement bordering upon frenzy. Too keenly she felt the truth of her
own words, that she was powerless, that she could, herself, do nothing.
When she rose in the morning, after a night passed in troubled
reflection more than in sleep, her thoughts were, “Oh, that I could this
day find out something certain!” She was often at the Herberts’;
frequently invited there--sometimes going uninvited. She and the
Herberts were intimate and they pressed Barbara into all the impromptu
gay doings, now their brother was at home. There she of course saw
Captain Thorn, and now and then she was enabled to pick up scraps of his
past history. Eagerly were these scraps carried to Mr. Carlyle. Not at
his office; Barbara would not appear there. Perhaps she was afraid of
the gossiping tongues of West Lynne, or that her visits might have come
to the knowledge of that stern, prying, and questioning old gentleman
whom she called sire. It may be too, that she feared, if seen haunting
Mr. Carlyle’s office, Captain Thorn might come to hear of it and suspect
the agitation, that was afloat--for who could know better than he, the
guilt that was falsely attaching to Richard? Therefore she chose rather
to go to East Lynne, or to waylay Mr. Carlyle as he passed to and from
business. It was little she gathered to tell him; one evening she met
him with the news that Mr. Thorn had been in former years at West Lynne,
though she could not fix the date; another time she went boldly to East
Lynne in eager anxiety, ostensibly to make a call on Lady Isabel--and a
very restless one it was--contriving to make Mr. Carlyle understand that
she wanted to see him alone. He went out with her when she departed, and
accompanied her as far as the park gates, the two evidently absorbed in
earnest converse. Lady Isabel’s jealous eye saw that. The communication
Barbara had to make was, that Captain Thorn had let fall the avowal that
he had once been “in trouble,” though of its nature there was no
indication given. Another journey of hers took the scrap of news that
she had discovered he knew Swainson well. Part of this, nay, perhaps the
whole of it, Mr. Carlyle had found out for himself; nevertheless he
always received Barbara with vivid interest. Richard Hare was related to
Miss Carlyle, and if his innocence could be made clear in the sight of
men, it would be little less gratifying to them than to the Hares. Of
Richard’s innocence, Mr. Carlyle now entertained little, if any doubt,
and he was becoming impressed with the guilt of Captain Thorn. The
latter spoke mysteriously of a portion of his past life--when he could
be brought to speak of it at all--and he bore evidently some secret that
he did not care to have alluded to.

But now look at the mean treachery of that man, Francis Levison! The few
meetings that Lady Isabel did witness between her husband and Barbara
would have been quite enough to excite her anger and jealousy, to
trouble her peace; but, in addition, Francis Levison took care to tell
her of those she did not see. It pleased him--he could best tell with
what motive--to watch the movements of Mr. Carlyle and Barbara. There
was a hedge pathway through the fields, on the opposite side of the road
to the residence of Justice Hare, and as Mr. Carlyle walked down the
road to business in his unsuspicion (not one time in fifty did he choose
to ride; the walk to and fro kept him in health, he said), Captain
Levison would be strolling down like a serpent behind the hedge,
watching all his movements, watching his interviews with Barbara, did
any take place, watching Mr. Carlyle turn into the grove, as he
sometimes did, and perhaps watch Barbara run out of the house to meet
him. It was all related over, and with miserable exaggeration, to Lady
Isabel, whose jealousy, as a natural sequence, grew feverish in its
extent.

It is scarcely necessary to explain, that of this feeling of Lady
Isabel’s Barbara knew nothing; not a shadow of suspicion had ever
penetrated to her mind that Lady Isabel was jealous of her. Had she been
told that such was the fact, she would have laughed in derision at her
informant. Mr. Carlyle’s happy wife, proudly secure in her position and
in his affection, jealous of her! of her, to whom he had never given an
admiring look or a loving word! It would have taken a great deal to make
Barbara believe that.

How different were the facts in reality. These meetings of Mr. Carlyle’s
and Barbara’s, instead of episodes of love-making and tender speeches,
were positively painful, especially to Barbara, from the unhappy nature
of the subject to be discussed. Far from feeling a reprehensible
pleasure at seeking the meetings with Mr. Carlyle, Barbara shrank from
them; but that she was urged by dire necessity, in the interests of
Richard, she would wholly have avoided such. Poor Barbara, in spite of
that explosion of bottled-up excitement years back, was a lady,
possessed of a lady’s ideas and feelings, and--remembering the
explosion--it did not accord with her pride at all to be pushing herself
into what might be called secret meetings with Archibald Carlyle. But
Barbara, in her sisterly love, pressed down all thought of self, and
went perseveringly forward for Richard’s sake.

Mr. Carlyle was seated one morning in his private room at his office,
when his head clerk, Mr. Dill came in. “A gentleman is asking to see
you, Mr. Archibald.”

“I am too busy to see anybody for this hour to come. You know that,
Dill.”

“So I told him, sir, and he says he’ll wait. It is that Captain Thorn
who is staying here with John Herbert.”

Mr. Carlyle raised his eyes, and they encountered those of the old man;
a peculiar expression was in the face of both. Mr. Carlyle glanced down
at the parchment he was perusing, as if calculating his time. Then he
looked up again and spoke.

“I will see him, Dill. Send him in.”

The business leading to the visit was quite simple. Captain Frederick
Thorn had got himself into some trouble and vexation about “a bill”--as
too many captains will do--and he had come to crave advice of Mr.
Carlyle.

Mr. Carlyle felt dubious about giving it. This Captain Thorn was a
pleasant, attractive sort of a man, who won much on acquaintance; one
whom Mr. Carlyle would have been pleased, in a friendly point of view,
and setting professional interest apart, to help out of his
difficulties; but if he were the villain they suspected him to be, the
man with crime upon his hand, then Mr. Carlyle would have ordered his
office door held wide for him to slink out of it.

“Cannot you advise me what my course ought to be?” he inquired,
detecting Mr. Carlyle’s hesitation.

“I could advise you, certainly. But--you must excuse my being plain,
Captain Thorn--I like to know who my clients are before I take up their
cause or accept them as clients.”

“I am able to pay you,” was Captain Thorn’s reply. “I am not short of
ready money; only this bill--”

Mr. Carlyle laughed out, after having bit his lip with annoyance. “It
was a natural inference of yours,” he said, “but I assure you I was not
thinking of your purse or my pocket. My father held it right never to
undertake business for a stranger--unless a man was good, in a
respectable point of view, and his cause was good, he did not mention
it--and I have acted on the same principle. By these means, the position
and character of our business, is rarely attained by a solicitor. Now,
in saying that you are a stranger to me, I am not casting any doubt upon
you, Captain Thorn, I am merely upholding my common practice.”

“My family is well connected,” was Captain Thorn’s next venture.

“Excuse me; family has nothing to do with it. If the poorest day
laborer, if a pauper out of the workhouse came to me for advice, he
should be heartily welcome to it, provided he were an honest man in the
face of the day. Again I repeat, you must take no offence at what I say,
for I cast no reflection on you; I only urge that you and your character
are unknown to me.”

Curious words from a lawyer to a client-aspirant, and Captain Thorn
found them so. But Mr. Carlyle’s tone was so courteous, his manner so
affable, in fact he was so thoroughly the gentleman, that it was
impossible to feel hurt.

“Well, how can I convince you that I am respectable? I have served my
country ever since I was sixteen, and my brother officers have found no
cause of complaint--any position as an officer and a gentleman would be
generally deemed a sufficient guarantee. Inquire of John Herbert. The
Herberts, too, are friends of yours, and they have not disdained to give
me room amidst their family.”

“True,” returned Mr. Carlyle, feeling that he could not well object
further; and also that all men should be deemed innocent until proved
guilty. “At any rate, I will advise you what must be done at present,”
 he added, “though if the affair is one that must go on, I do not promise
that I can continue to act for you. I am very busy just now.”

Captain Thorn explained his dilemma, and Mr. Carlyle told him what to do
in it. “Were you not at West Lynne some ten years ago?” he suddenly
inquired, at the close of the conversation. “You denied it to me once at
my house; but I concluded from an observation you let fall, that you had
been here.”

“Yes, I was,” replied Captain Thorn, in a confidential tone. “I don’t
mind owning it to you in confidence, but I do not wish it to get abroad.
I was not at West Lynne, but in its neighborhood. The fact is, when I
was a careless young fellow, I was stopping a few miles from here, and
got into a scrape, through a--a--in short it was an affair of gallantry.
I did not show out very well at the time, and I don’t care that it
should be known in the country again.”

Mr. Carlyle’s pulse--for Richard Hare’s sake--beat a shade quicker. The
avowal of “an affair of gallantry” was almost a confirmation of his
suspicions.

“Yes,” he pointedly said. “The girl was Afy Hallijohn.”

“Afy--who?” repeated Captain Thorn, opening his eyes, and fixing them on
Mr. Carlyle’s.

“Afy Hallijohn.”

Captain Thorn continued to look at Mr. Carlyle, an amused expression,
rather than any other, predominant on his features. “You are mistaken,”
 he observed. “Afy Hallijohn? I never heard the name before in my life.”

“Did you ever hear or know that a dreadful tragedy was enacted in this
place about that period?” replied Mr. Carlyle, in a low, meaning tone.
“That Afy Hallijohn’s father was--”

“Oh, stay, stay, stay,” hastily interrupted Captain Thorn. “I am telling
a story in saying I never heard her name. Afy Hallijohn? Why, that’s the
girl Tom Herbert was telling me about--who--what was it?--disappeared
after her father was murdered.”

“Murdered in his own cottage--almost in Afy’s presence--murdered by--by-
---” Mr. Carlyle recollected himself; he had spoken more impulsively
than was his custom. “Hallijohn was my father’s faithful clerk for many
years,” he more calmly concluded.

“And he who committed the murder was young Hare, son of Justice Hare,
and brother to that attractive girl, Barbara. Your speaking of this has
recalled, what they told me to my recollection, the first evening I was
at the Herberts. Justice Hare was there, smoking--half a dozen pipes
there were going at once. I also saw Miss Barbara that evening at your
park gates, and Tom told me of the murder. An awful calamity for the
Hares. I suppose that is the reason the young lady is Miss Hare still.
One with her good fortune and good looks ought to have changed her name
ere this.”

“No, it is not the reason,” returned Mr. Carlyle.

“What is the reason, then?”

A faint flush tinged the brow of Mr. Carlyle. “I know more than one who
would be glad to get Barbara, in spite of the murder. Do not depreciate
Miss Hare.”

“Not I, indeed; I like the young lady too well,” replied Captain Thorn.
“The girl, Afy, has never been heard of since, has she?”

“Never,” said Mr. Carlyle. “Do you know her well?” he deliberately
added.

“I never knew her at all, if you mean Afy Hallijohn. Why should you
think I did? I never heard of her till Tom Herbert amused me with the
history.”

Mr. Carlyle most devoutly wished he could tell whether the man before
him was speaking the truth or falsehood. He continued,--

“Afy’s favors--I speak in no invidious sense--I mean her smiles and
chatter--were pretty freely dispersed, for she was heedless and vain.
Amidst others who got the credit for occasional basking in her rays, was
a gentleman of the name of Thorn. Was it not yourself?”

Captain Thorn stroked his moustache with an air that seemed to say he
could boast of his share of such baskings: in short, as if he felt half
inclined to do it. “Upon my word,” he simpered, “you do me too much
honor; I cannot confess to having been favored by Miss Afy.”

“Then she was not the--the damsel you speak of, who drove you--if I
understand aright--from the locality?” resumed Mr. Carlyle, fixing his
eyes upon him, so as to take in every tone of the answer and shade of
countenance as he gave it.

“I should think not, indeed. It was a married lady, more’s the pity;
young, pretty, vain and heedless, as you represent this Afy. Things went
smoother after a time, and she and her husband--a stupid country yeoman-
-became reconciled; but I have been ashamed of it since I have grown
wiser, and I do not care ever to be recognized as the actor in it, or to
have it raked up against me.”

Captain Thorn rose and took a somewhat hasty leave. Was he, or was he
not, the man? Mr. Carlyle could not solve the doubt.

Mr. Dill came in as he disappeared, closed the door, and advanced to his
master, speaking in an under tone.

“Mr. Archibald, has it struck you that the gentleman just gone out may
be the Lieutenant Thorn you once spoke to me about--he who had used to
gallop over from Swainson to court Afy Hallijohn?”

“It has struck me so, most forcibly,” replied Mr. Carlyle. “Dill, I
would give five hundred pounds out of my pocket this moment to be
assured of the fact--if he is the same.”

“I have seen him several times since he has been staying with the
Herberts,” pursued the old gentleman, “and my doubts have naturally been
excited as to whether it could be the man in question. Curious enough,
Bezant, the doctor, was over here yesterday from Swainson; and as I was
walking with him, arm-in-arm, we met Captain Thorn. The two recognized
each other and bowed, merely as distant acquaintances. ‘Do you know that
gentleman?’ said I to Bezant. ‘Yes,’ he answered, ‘it is Mr. Frederick.’
‘Mr. Frederick with something added on to it,’ said I; ‘his name is
Thorn.’ ‘I know that,’ returned Bezant; ‘but when he was in Swainson
some years ago, he chose to drop the Thorn, and the town in general knew
him only as Mr. Frederick.’ ‘What was he doing there, Bezant?’ I asked.
‘Amusing himself and getting into mischief,’ was the answer; ‘nothing
very bad, only the random scrapes of young men.’ ‘Was he often on
horseback, riding to a distance?’ was my next question. ‘Yes, that he
was,’ replied Bezant; ‘none more fond of galloping across the country
than he; I used to tell him he’d ride his horse’s tail off.’ Now, Mr.
Archibald, what do you think?” concluded the old clerk; “and so far as I
could make out, this was about the very time of the tragedy at
Hallijohn’s.”

“Think?” replied Mr. Carlyle. “What can I think but that it is the same
man. I am convinced of it now.”

And, leaning back into his chair, he fell into a deep reverie,
regardless of the parchments that lay before him.

The weeks went on--two or three--and things seemed to be progressing
backward, rather than forward--if that’s not Irish. Francis Levison’s
affairs--that is, the adjustment of them--did not advance at all.

Another thing that may be said to be progressing backward, for it was
going on fast to bad, instead of good, was the jealousy of Lady Isabel.
How could it be otherwise, kept up, as it was, by Barbara’s frequent
meetings with Mr. Carlyle, and by Captain Levison’s exaggerated whispers
of them. Discontented, ill at ease with herself and with everybody about
her, Isabel was living now in a state of excitement, a dangerous
resentment against her husband beginning to rise up in her heart. That
very day--the one of Captain Levison’s visit to Levison Park--in driving
through West Lynne in the pony carriage, she had come upon her husband
in close converse with Barbara Hare. So absorbed were they, that they
never saw her, though her carriage passed close to the pavement where
they stood.

On the morning following this, as the Hare family were seated at
breakfast, the postman was observed coming toward the house. Barbara
sprang from her seat to the open window, and the man advanced to her.

“Only one miss. It is for yourself.”

“Who is it from?” began the justice, as Barbara returned to her chair.
In letters as in other things, he was always curious to know their
contents, whether they might be addressed to himself or not.

“It is from Anne, papa,” replied Barbara, as she laid the letter by her
side on the table.

“Why don’t you open it and see what she says?”

“I will, directly; I am just going to pour out some more tea for mamma.”

Finally the justice finished his breakfast, and strolled out into the
garden.

Barbara opened her letter; Mrs. Hare watched her movements and her
countenance. She saw the latter flush suddenly and vividly, and then
become deadly pale; she saw Barbara crush the note in her hand when
read.

“Oh, mamma!” she uttered.

The flush of emotion came also into Mrs. Hare’s delicate cheeks.
“Barbara, is it bad news?”

“Mamma, it--it--is about Richard,” she whispered, glancing at the door
and window, to see that none might be within sight or hearing. “I never
thought of him; I only fancied Anne might be sending me some bit of news
concerning her own affairs. Good Heavens! How fortunate--how
providential that papa did not see the paper fall; and that you did not
persist in your inquiries. If he--”

“Barbara, you are keeping me in suspense,” interrupted Mrs. Hare, who
had also grown white. “What should Anne know about Richard?”

Barbara smoothed out the writing, and held it before her mother. It was
as follows:--

“I have had a curious note from R. It was without date or signature, but
I knew his handwriting. He tells me to let you know, in the most sure
and private manner that I can, that he will soon be paying another night
visit. You are to watch the grove every evening when the present moon
gets bright.”

Mrs. Hare covered her face for some minutes. “Thank God for all his
mercies,” she murmured.

“Oh, mamma, but it is an awful risk for him to run!”

“But to know that he is in life--to know that he is in life! And for the
risk--Barbara, I dread it not. The same God who protected him through
the last visit, will protect him through this. He will not forsake the
oppressed, the innocent. Destroy the paper, child.”

“Archibald Carlyle must first see it, mamma.”

“I shall not be easy until it is destroyed, Barbara.”

Braving the comments of the gossips, hoping the visit would not reach
the ears or eyes of the justice, Barbara went that day to the office of
Mr. Carlyle. He was not there, he was at West Lynne; he had gone to
Lynneborough on business, and Mr. Dill thought it a question if he would
be at the office again that day. If so, it would be late in the
afternoon. Barbara, as soon as their own dinner was over, took up her
patient station at the gate, hoping to see him pass; but the time went
by and he did not. She had little doubt that he had returned home
without going to West Lynne.

What should she do? “Go up to East Lynne and see him,” said her
conscience. Barbara’s mind was in a strangely excited state. It appeared
to her that this visit of Richard’s must have been specially designed by
Providence, that he might be confronted by Thorn.

“Mamma,” she said, returning indoors, after seeing the justice depart
upon an evening visit to the Buck’s Head, where he and certain other
justices and gentlemen sometimes congregated to smoke and chat, “I shall
go up to East Lynne, if you have no objection. I must see Mr. Carlyle.”

Away went Barbara. It had struck seven when she arrived at East Lynne.

“Is Mr. Carlyle disengaged?”

“Mr. Carlyle is not yet home, miss. My lady and Miss Carlyle are waiting
dinner for him.”

A check for Barbara. The servant asked her to walk in, but she declined
and turned from the door. She was in no mood for visit paying.

Lady Isabel had been standing at the window watching for her husband and
wondering what made him so late. She observed Barbara approach the
house, and saw her walk away again. Presently the servant who had
answered the door, entered the drawing-room.

“Was not that Miss Hare?”

“Yes, my lady,” was the man’s reply. “She wanted master. I said your
ladyship was at home, but she would not enter.”

Isabel said no more; she caught the eyes of Francis Levison fixed on her
with as much meaning, compassionate meaning, as they dared express. She
clasped her hands in pain, and turned again to the window.

Barbara was slowly walking down the avenue, Mr. Carlyle was then in
sight, walking quickly up it. Lady Isabel saw their hands meet in
greeting.

“Oh, I am so thankful to have met you!” Barbara exclaimed to him,
impulsively. “I actually went to your office to-day, and I have been now
to your house. We have such news!”

“Ay! What? About Thorn?”

“No; about Richard,” replied Barbara, taking the scrap of paper from the
folds of her dress. “This came to me this morning from Anne.”

Mr. Carlyle took the document, and Barbara looked over him whilst he
read it; neither of them thinking that Lady Isabel’s jealous eyes, and
Captain Levison’s evil ones, were strained upon them from the distant
windows. Miss Carlyle’s also, for the matter of that.

“Archibald, it seems to me that Providence must be directing him hither
at this moment. Our suspicions with regard to Thorn can now be set at
rest. You must contrive that Richard shall see him. What can he be
coming again for?”

“More money,” was the supposition of Mr. Carlyle. “Does Mrs. Hare know
of this?”

“She does, unfortunately. I opened the paper before her, never dreaming
it was connected with Richard--poor, unhappy Richard!--and not to be
guilty.”

“He acted as though he were guilty, Barbara; and that line of conduct
often entails as much trouble as real guilt.”

“You do not believe him guilty?” she most passionately uttered.

“I do not. I have little doubt of the guilt of Thorn.”

“Oh, if it could but be brought home to him!” returned Barbara, “so that
Richard might be cleared in the sight of day. How can you contrive that
he shall see Thorn?”

“I cannot tell; I must think it over. Let me know the instant he
arrives, Barbara.”

“Of course I shall. It may be that he does not want money; that his
errand is only to see mamma. He was always so fond of her.”

“I must leave you,” said Mr. Carlyle, taking her hand in token of
farewell. Then, as a thought occurred to him, he turned and walked a few
steps with her without releasing it. He was probably unconscious that he
retained it; she was not.

“You know, Barbara, if he should want money, and it be not convenient to
Mrs. Hare to supply it at so short a notice, I can give it to him, as I
did before.”

“Thank you, thank you, Archibald. Mamma felt sure you would.”

She lifted her eyes to his with an expression of gratitude; a warmer
feeling for an uncontrolled moment mingled with it. Mr. Carlyle nodded
pleasantly, and then set off toward his house at the pace of a steam
engine.

Two minutes in his dressing-room, and he entered the drawing-room,
apologizing for keeping them waiting dinner, and explaining that he had
been compelled to go to his office to give some orders subsequent to his
return to Lynneborough. Lady Isabel’s lips were pressed together, and
she preserved an obstinate silence. Mr. Carlyle, in his unsuspicion, did
not notice it.

“What did Barbara Hare want?” demanded Miss Carlyle, during dinner.

“She wanted to see me on business,” was his reply, given in a tone that
certainly did not invite his sister to pursue the subject. “Will you
take some more fish, Isabel?”

“What was that you were reading over with her?” pursued the
indefatigable Miss Corny. “It looked like a note.”

“Ah, that would be telling,” returned Mr. Carlyle, willing to turn it
off with gayety. “If young ladies choose to make me party to their love
letters, I cannot betray confidence, you know.”

“What rubbish Archibald!” quoth she. “As if you could not say outright
what Barbara wants, without making a mystery of it. And she seems to be
always wanting you now.”

Mr. Carlyle glanced at his sister a quick, peculiar look; it seemed to
her to speak both of seriousness and warning. Involuntarily her
thoughts--and her fears--flew back to the past.

“Archibald, Archibald!” she uttered, repeating the name, as if she could
not get any further words out in her dread. “It--it--is never--that old
affair is never being raked up again?”

Now Miss Carlyle’s “old affair” referred to one sole and sore point--
Richard Hare, and so Mr. Carlyle understood it. Lady Isabel unhappily
believing that any “old affair” could only have reference to the bygone
loves of her husband and Barbara.

“You will oblige me by going on with your dinner, Cornelia,” gravely
responded Mr. Carlyle. Then--assuming a more laughing tone--“I tell you
it is unreasonable to expect me to betray a young woman’s secrets,
although she may choose to confide them professionally to me. What say
you, Captain Levison?”

The gentleman addressed bowed, a smile of mockery, all too perceptible
to Lady Isabel, on his lips. And Miss Carlyle bent her head over her
plate, and went on with her dinner as meek as any lamb.

That same evening, Lady Isabel’s indignant and rebellious heart
condescended to speak of it when alone with her husband.

“What is it that she wants with you so much, that Barbara Hare?”

“It is private business, Isabel. She has to bring me messages from her
mother.”

“Must the business be kept from me?”

He was silent for a moment, considering whether he might tell her. But
it was impossible he could speak, even to his wife, of the suspicion
they were attaching to Captain Thorn. It would have been unfair and
wrong; neither could he betray that a secret visit was expected from
Richard. To no one in the world could he betray that, however safe and
true.

“It would not make you the happier to know it, Isabel. There is a dark
secret, you are aware, touching the Hare family. It is connected with
that.”

She did not put faith in a word of the reply. She believed he could not
tell her because her feelings, as his wife, would be outraged by the
confession; and it goaded her anger into recklessness. Mr. Carlyle, on
his part, never gave a thought to the supposition that she might be
jealous; he had believed that nonsense at an end years ago. He was
perfectly honorable and true; strictly faithful to his wife, giving her
no shadow of cause or reason to be jealous of him; and being a
practical, matter-of-fact man, it did not occur to him that she could be
so.

Lady Isabel was sitting, the following morning, moody and out of sorts.
Captain Levison, who had accompanied Mr. Carlyle in the most friendly
manner possible to the park gate on his departure, and then stolen along
the hedgewalk, had returned to Lady Isabel with the news of an “ardent”
 interview with Barbara, who had been watching for his going by at the
gate of the grove. She sat, sullenly digesting the tidings, when a note
was brought in. It proved to be an invitation to dinner for the
following Tuesday, at a Mrs. Jefferson’s--for Mr. and Lady Isabel
Carlyle and Miss Carlyle.

“Do you go?” asked Miss Carlyle.

“Yes,” replied Isabel. “Mr. Carlyle and I both want a change of some
sort,” she added, in a mocking sort of spirit; “it may be well to have
it, if only for an evening.”

In truth this unhappy jealousy, this distrust of her husband, appeared
to have altered Lady Isabel’s very nature.

“And leave Captain Levison?” returned Miss Carlyle.

Lady Isabel went over to her desk, making no reply.

“What will you do with him, I ask?” persisted Miss Carlyle.

“He can remain here--he can dine by himself. Shall I accept the
invitation for you?”

“No; I shall not go,” said Miss Carlyle.

“Then, in that case, there can be no difficulty in regard to Captain
Levison,” coldly spoke Lady Isabel.

“I don’t want his company--I am not fond of it,” cried Miss Carlyle. “I
would go to Mrs. Jefferson’s, but that I should want a new dress.”

“That’s easily had,” said Lady Isabel. “I shall want one myself.”

“You want a new dress!” uttered Miss Carlyle. “Why, you have a dozen!”

“I don’t know that I could count a dozen in all,” returned Lady Isabel,
chafing at the remark, and the continual thwarting put upon her by Miss
Carlyle, which had latterly seemed more than hard to endure. Petty evils
are more difficult to support than great ones, take notice.

Lady Isabel concluded her note, folded, sealed it, and then rang the
bell. As the man left the room with it, she desired that Wilson might be
sent to her.

“Is it this morning, Wilson, that the dressmaker comes to try on Miss
Isabel’s dress?” she inquired.

Wilson hesitated and stammered, and glanced from her mistress to Miss
Carlyle. The latter looked up from her work.

“The dressmaker’s not coming,” spoke she, sharply. “I countermanded the
order for the frock, for Isabel does not require it.”

“She does require it,” answered Lady Isabel, in perhaps the most
displeased tone she had ever used to Miss Carlyle. “I am a competent
judge of what is necessary for my children.”

“She no more requires a new frock than that table requires one, or that
you require the one you are longing for,” stoically persisted Miss
Carlyle. “She has got ever so many lying by, and her striped silk,
turned, will make up as handsome as ever.”

Wilson backed out of the room and closed the door softly, but her
mistress caught a compassionate look directed toward her. Her heart
seemed bursting with indignation and despair; there seemed to be no side
on which she could turn for refuge. Pitied by her own servants!

She reopened her desk and dashed off a haughty, peremptory note for the
attendance of the dressmaker at East Lynne, commanding its immediate
dispatch.

Miss Corny groaned in her wrath.

“You will be sorry for not listening to me, ma’am, when your husband
shall be brought to poverty. He works like a horse now, and with all his
slaving, can scarcely, I fear, keep expenses down.”

Poor Lady Isabel, ever sensitive, began to think they might, with one
another, be spending more than Mr. Carlyle’s means would justify; she
knew their expenses were heavy. The same tale had been dinned into her
ears ever since she married him. She gave up in that moment all thought
of the new dress for herself and for Isabel; but her spirit, in her deep
unhappiness, felt sick and faint within her.

Wilson, meanwhile, had flown to Joyce’s room, and was exercising her
dearly beloved tongue in an exaggerated account of the matter--how Miss
Carlyle put upon my lady, and had forbidden a new dress to her, as well
as the frock to Miss Isabel.

And yet a few more days passed on.



CHAPTER XXIV.

RICHARD HARE AT MR. DILL’S WINDOW.

Bright was the moon on that genial Monday night, bright was the evening
star, as they shone upon a solitary wayfarer who walked on the shady
side of the road with his head down, as though he did not care to court
observation. A laborer, apparently, for he wore a smock-frock and had
hobnails in his shoes; but his whiskers were large and black, quite
hiding the lower part of his face, and his broad-brimmed “wide-awake”
 came far over his brows. He drew near the dwelling of Richard Hare,
Esq., plunged rapidly over some palings, after looking well to the right
and to the left, into a field, and thence over the side wall into Mr.
Hare’s garden, where he remained amidst the thick trees.

Now, by some mischievous spirit of intuition or contrariety, Justice
Hare was spending this evening at home, a thing he did not do once in
six months unless he had friends with him. Things in real life do mostly
go by the rules of contrary, as children say in their play, holding the
corners of the handkerchief, “Here we go round and round by the rules of
contrary; if I tell you to hold fast, you must loose; if I tell you to
loose, you must hold fast.” Just so in the play of life. When we want
people to “hold fast,” they “loose;” and when we want them to “loose,”
 they “hold fast.”

Barbara, anxious, troubled, worn out almost with the suspense of looking
and watching for her brother, feeling a feverish expectation that night
would bring him--but so had she felt for the two or three nights past--
would have given her hand for her father to go out. But no--things were
going by the rule of contrary. There sat the stern justice in full view
of the garden and the grove, his chair drawn precisely in front of the
window, his wig awry, and a long pipe in his mouth.

“Are you not going out, Richard?” Mrs. Hare ventured to say.

“No.”

“Mamma, shall I ring for the shutters to be closed?” asked Barbara, by
and by.

“Shutters closed?” said the justice. “Who’d shut out this bright moon?
You have got the lamp at the far end of the room, young lady, and can go
to it.”

Barbara ejaculated an inward prayer for patience--for safety of Richard,
if he did come, and waited on, watching the grove in the distance. It
came, the signal, her quick eye caught it; a movement as if some person
or thing had stepped out beyond the trees and stepped back again.
Barbara’s face turned white and her lips dry.

“I am so hot!” she exclaimed, in her confused eagerness for an excuse;
“I must take a turn in the garden.”

She stole out, throwing a dark shawl over her shoulders, that might
render her less conspicuous to the justice, and her dress that evening
was a dark silk. She did not dare to stand still when she reached the
trees, or to penetrate them, but she caught glimpses of Richard’s face,
and her heart ached at the change in it. It was white, thin, and full of
care; and his hair, he told her, was turning gray.

“Oh, Richard, darling, and I may not stop to talk to you!” she wailed,
in a deep whisper. “Papa is at home, you see, of all the nights in the
world.”

“Can’t I see my mother?”

“How can you? You must wait till to-morrow night.”

“I don’t like waiting a second night, Barbara. There’s danger in every
inch of ground that this neighborhood contains.”

“But you must wait, Richard, for reasons. That man who caused all the
mischief--Thorn--”

“Hang him!” gloomily interrupted Richard.

“He is at West Lynne. At least there is a Thorn, we--I and Mr. Carlyle--
believe to be the same, and we want you to see him.”

“Let me see him,” panted Richard, whom the news appeared to agitate;
“let me see him, Barbara, I say----”

Barbara had passed on again, returning presently.

“You know, Richard, I must keep moving, with papa’s eyes there. He is a
tall man, very good-looking, very fond of dress and ornament, especially
of diamonds.”

“That’s he,” cried Richard, eagerly.

“Mr. Carlyle will contrive that you shall see him,” she continued,
stooping as if to tie her shoe. “Should it prove to be the same, perhaps
nothing can be done--immediately done--toward clearing you, but it shall
be a great point ascertained. Are you sure you should know him again?”

“Sure! That I should know him?” uttered Richard Hare. “Should I know my
own father? Should I know you? And are you not engraven on my heart in
letters of blood, as is he? How and when am I to see him, Barbara?”

“I can tell you nothing till I have seen Mr. Carlyle. Be here to-morrow,
as soon as ever the dusk will permit you. Perhaps Mr. Carlyle will
contrive to bring him here. If--”

The window was thrown open, and the stentorian voice of Justice Hare was
heard from it.

“Barbara, are you wandering about there to take cold? Come in! Come in,
I say!”

“Oh, Richard, I am so sorry!” she lingered to whisper. “But papa is sure
to be out to-morrow evening; he would not stay in two evenings running.
Good-night, dear.”

There must be no delay now, and the next day Barbara, braving comments,
appeared once more at the office of Mr. Carlyle. Terribly did the rules
of contrary seem in action just then. Mr. Carlyle was not in, and the
clerks did not know when to expect him; he was gone out for some hours,
they believed.

“Mr. Dill,” urged Barbara, as the old gentleman came to the door to
greet her, “I must see him.”

“He will not be in till late in the afternoon, Miss Barbara. I expect
him then. Is it anything I can do?”

“No, no,” sighed Barbara.

At that moment Lady Isabel and her little girl passed in the chariot.
She saw Barbara at her husband’s door; what should she be doing there,
unless paying him a visit? A slight, haughty bow to Barbara, a pleasant
nod and smile to Mr. Dill, and the carriage bowled on.

It was four o’clock before Barbara could see Mr. Carlyle, and
communicate her tidings that Richard had arrived.

Mr. Carlyle held deceit and all underhand doings in especial abhorrence;
yet he deemed that he was acting right, under the circumstances, in
allowing Captain Thorn to be secretly seen by Richard Hare. In haste he
arranged his plans. It was the evening of his own dinner engagement at
Mrs. Jefferson’s but that he must give up. Telling Barbara to dispatch
Richard to his office as soon as he should make his appearance at the
grove, and to urge him to come boldly and not fear, for none would know
him in his disguise, he wrote a hurried note to Thorn, requesting him
also to be at his office at eight o’clock that evening, as he had
something to communicate to him. The latter plea was no fiction, for he
had received an important communication that morning relative to the
business on which Captain Thorn had consulted him, and his own absence
from the office in the day had alone prevented his sending for him
earlier.

Other matters were calling the attention of Mr. Carlyle, and it was five
o’clock ere he departed for East Lynne; he would not have gone so early,
but that he must inform his wife of his inability to keep his dinner
engagement. Mr. Carlyle was one who never hesitated to sacrifice
personal gratification to friendship or to business.

The chariot was at the door, and Lady Isabel dressed and waiting for him
in her dressing-room. “Did you forget that the Jeffersons dined at six?”
 was her greeting.

“No, Isabel; but it was impossible for me to get here before. And I
should not have come so soon, but to tell you that I cannot accompany
you. You must make my excuses to Mrs. Jefferson.”

A pause. Strange thoughts were running through Lady Isabel’s mind. “Why
so?” she inquired.

“Some business has arisen which I am compelled to attend to this
evening. As soon as I have snatched a bit of dinner at home I must
hasten back to the office.”

Was he making this excuse to spend the hours of her absence with Barbara
Hare? The idea that it was so took firm possession of her mind, and
remained there. Her face expressed a variety of feelings, the most
prominent that of resentment. Mr. Carlyle saw it.

“You must not be vexed, Isabel. I assure you it is no fault of mine. It
is important private business which cannot be put off, and which I
cannot delegate to Dill. I am sorry it should have so happened.”

“You never return to the office in the evening,” she remarked, with pale
lips.

“No; because if anything arises to take us there after hours, Dill
officiates. But the business to-night must be done by myself.”

Another pause. Lady Isabel suddenly broke it. “Shall you join us later
in the evening?”

“I believe I shall not be able to do so.”

She drew her light shawl around her shoulders, and swept down the
staircase. Mr. Carlyle followed to place her in the carriage. When he
said farewell, she never answered but looked out straight before her
with a stony look.

“What time, my lady?” inquired the footman, as he alighted at Mrs.
Jefferson’s.

“Early. Half-past nine.”

A little before eight o’clock, Richard Hare, in his smock-frock and his
slouching hat and his false whiskers, rang dubiously at the outer door
of Mr. Carlyle’s office. That gentleman instantly opened it. He was
quite alone.

“Come in, Richard,” said he, grasping his hand. “Did you meet any whom
you knew?”

“I never looked at whom I met, sir,” was the reply. “I thought that if I
looked at people, they might look at me, so I came straight ahead with
my eyes before me. How the place has altered! There’s a new brick house
on the corner where old Morgan’s shop used to stand.”

“That’s the new police station. West Lynne I assure you, is becoming
grand in public buildings. And how have you been, Richard?”

“Ailing and wretched,” answered Richard Hare. “How can I be otherwise,
Mr. Carlyle, with so false an accusation attached to me; and working
like a slave, as I have to do?”

“You may take off the disfiguring hat, Richard. No one is here.”

Richard slowly heaved it from his brows, and his fair face, so like his
mother’s, was disclosed. But the moment he was uncovered he turned
shrinkingly toward the entrance door. “If any one should come in, sir?”

“Impossible!” replied Mr. Carlyle. “The front door is fast, and the
office is supposed to be empty at this hour.”

“For if I should be seen and recognized, it might come to hanging, you
know, sir. You are expecting that cursed Thorn here, Barbara told me.”

“Directly,” replied Mr. Carlyle, observing the mode of addressing him
“sir.” It spoke plainly of the scale of society in which Richard had
been mixing; that he was with those who said it habitually; nay, that he
used it habitually himself. “From your description of the Lieutenant
Thorn who destroyed Hallijohn, we believe this Captain Thorn to be the
same man,” pursued Mr. Carlyle. “In person he appears to tally exactly;
and I have ascertained that a few years ago he was a deal at Swainson,
and got into some sort of scrape. He is in John Herbert’s regiment, and
is here with him on a visit.”

“But what an idiot he must be to venture here!” uttered Richard. “Here
of all places in the world!”

“He counts, no doubt, on not being known. So far as I can find out,
Richard, nobody here did know him, save you and Afy. I shall put you in
Mr. Dill’s room--you may remember the little window in it--and from
thence you can take a full view of Thorn, whom I shall keep in the front
office. You are sure you would recognize him at this distance of time?”

“I should know him if it were fifty years to come; I should know him
were he disguised as I am disguised. We cannot,” Richard sank his voice,
“forget a man who has been the object of our frenzied jealousy.”

“What has brought you to East Lynne again, Richard? Any particular
object?”

“Chiefly a hankering within me that I could not get rid of,” replied
Richard. “It was not so much to see my mother and Barbara--though I did
want that, especially since my illness--as that a feeling was within me
that I could not rest away from it. So I said I’d risk it again, just
for a day.”

“I thought you might possibly want some assistance, as before.”

“I do want that, also,” said Richard. “Not much. My illness has run me
into debt, and if my mother can let me have a little, I shall be
thankful.”

“I am sure she will,” answered Mr. Carlyle. “You shall have it from me
to-night. What has been the matter with you?”

“The beginning of it was a kick from a horse, sir. That was last winter,
and it laid me up for six weeks. Then, in the spring, after I got well
and was at work again, I caught some sort of fever, and down again I was
for six weeks. I have not been to say well since.”

“How is it you have never written or sent me your address?”

“Because I dared not,” answered Richard, timorously, “I should always be
in fear; not of you, Mr. Carlyle, but of its becoming known some way or
other. The time is getting on, sir; is that Thorn sure to come?”

“He sent me word that he would, in reply to my note. And--there he is!”
 uttered Mr. Carlyle, as a ring was heard at the bell. “Now, Richard,
come this way. Bring your hat.”

Richard complied by putting his hat on his head, pulling it so low that
it touched his nose. He felt himself safer in it. Mr. Carlyle showed him
into Mr. Dill’s room, and then turned the key upon him, and put it in
his pocket. Whether this precautionary measure was intended to prevent
any possibility of Captain Thorn’s finding his way in, or of Richard’s
finding his way out, was best known to himself.

Mr. Carlyle came to the front door, opened it, and admitted Captain
Thorn. He brought him into the clerk’s office, which was bright with
gas, keeping him in conversation for a few minutes standing, and then
asking him to be seated--all in full view of the little window.

“I must beg your pardon, for being late,” Captain Thorn observed. “I am
half an hour beyond the time you mentioned, but the Herberts had two or
three friends at dinner, and I could not get away. I hope, Mr. Carlyle,
you have not come to your office to-night purposely for me.”

“Business must be attended to,” somewhat evasively answered Mr. Carlyle;
“I have been out myself nearly all day. We received a communication from
London this morning, relative to your affair, and I am sorry to say
anything but satisfactory. They will not wait.”

“But I am not liable, Mr. Carlyle, not liable in justice.”

“No--if what you tell me be correct. But justice and law are sometimes
in opposition, Captain Thorn.”

Captain Thorn sat in perplexity. “They will not get me arrested here,
will they?”

“They would have done it, beyond doubt; but I have caused a letter to be
written and dispatched to them, which must bring forth an answer before
any violent proceedings are taken. That answer will be here the morning
after to-morrow.”

“And what am I do to then?”

“I think it is probable there may be a way of checkmating them. But I am
not sure, Captain Thorn, that I can give my attention further to this
affair.”

“I hope and trust you will,” was the reply.

“You have not forgotten that I told you at first I could not promise to
do so,” rejoined Mr. Carlyle. “You shall hear from me to-morrow. If I
carry it on for you, I will then appoint an hour for you to be here on
the following day; if not--why, I dare say you will find a solicitor as
capable of assisting you as I am.”

“But why will you not? What is the reason?”

“I cannot always give reasons for what I do,” was the response. “You
will hear from me to-morrow.”

He rose as he spoke; Captain Thorn also rose. Mr. Carlyle detained him
yet a few moments, and then saw him out at the front door and fastened
it.

He returned and released Richard. The latter took off his hat as he
advanced into the blaze of light.

“Well, Richard, is it the same man?”

“No, sir. Not in the least like him.”

Mr. Carlyle, though little given to emotion, felt a strange relief--
relief for Captain Thorn’s sake. He had rarely seen one whom he could so
little associate with the notion of a murderer as Captain Thorn, and he
was a man who exceedingly won upon the regard. He would heartily help
him out of his dilemma now.

“Excepting that they are both tall, with nearly the same color of hair,
there is no resemblance whatever between them,” proceeded Richard.
“Their faces, their figures, are as opposite as light is from dark. That
other, in spite of his handsome features, had the expression at times of
a demon, but this one’s expression is the best part of his face.
Hallijohn’s murderer had a curious look here, sir.”

“Where?” questioned Mr. Carlyle, for Richard had only pointed to his
face generally.

“Well--I cannot say precisely where it lay, whether in the eyebrows or
the eyes; I could not tell when I used to have him before me; but it was
in one of them. Ah, Mr. Carlyle, I thought, when Barbara told me Thorn
was here, it was too good news to be true; depend upon it, he won’t
venture to West Lynne again. This man is no more like that other villain
than you are like him.”

“Then--as that is set at rest--we had better be going, Richard. You have
to see your mother, and she must be waiting in anxiety. How much money
do you want?”

“Twenty-five pounds would do, but----” Richard stopped in hesitation.

“But what?” asked Mr. Carlyle. “Speak out, Richard.”

“Thirty would be more welcome. Thirty would put me at ease.”

“You shall take thirty,” said Mr. Carlyle, counting out the notes to
him. “Now--will you walk with me to the grove, or will you walk alone? I
mean to see you there in safety.”

Richard thought he would prefer to walk alone; everybody they met might
be speaking to Mr. Carlyle. The latter inquired why he chose moonlight
nights for his visits.

“It is pleasanter for travelling. And had I chosen dark nights, Barbara
could not have seen my signal from the trees,” was the answer of
Richard.

They went out and proceeded unmolested to the house of Justice Hare. It
was past nine, then. “I am so much obliged to you Mr. Carlyle,”
 whispered Richard, as they walked up the path.

“I wish I could help you more effectually, Richard, and clear up the
mystery. Is Barbara on the watch? Yes; there’s the door slowly opening.”

Richard stole across the hall and into the parlor to his mother. Barbara
approached and softly whispered to Mr. Carlyle, standing, just outside
the portico; her voice trembled with the suspense of what the answer
might be.

“Is it the same man--the same Thorn?”

“No. Richard says this man bears no resemblance to the real one.”

“Oh!” uttered Barbara, in her surprise and disappointment. “Not the
same! And for the best part of poor Richard’s evening to have been taken
up for nothing.”

“Not quite nothing,” said Mr. Carlyle. “The question is now set at
rest.”

“Set at rest!” repeated Barbara. “It is left in more uncertainty than
ever.”

“Set at rest so far as regards Captain Thorn. And whilst our suspicions
were concentrated upon him, we thought not of looking to other
quarters.”

When they entered the sitting-room Mrs. Hare was crying over Richard,
and Richard was crying over her; but she seized the hand of Mr. Carlyle.

“You have been very kind; I don’t know whatever we should do without
you. And I want to tax your kindness further. Has Barbara mentioned it?”

“I could not talk in the hall, mamma; the servants might have
overheard.”

“Mr. Hare is not well, and we terribly fear he will be home early, in
consequence; otherwise we should have been quite safe until after ten,
for he is gone to the Buck’s Head, and they never leave, you know, till
that hour has struck. Should he come in and see Richard--oh, I need not
enlarge upon the consequences to you, Archibald; the very thought sends
me into a shiver. Barbara and I have been discussing it all the evening,
and we can only think of one plan; it is, that you will kindly stay in
the garden, near the gate; and, should he come in, stop him, and keep
him in conversation. Barbara will be with you, and will run in with the
warning, and Richard can go inside the closet in the hall till Mr. Hare
has entered and is safe in this room, and then he can make his escape.
Will you do this, Archibald?”

“Certainly I will.”

“I cannot part with him before ten o’clock, unless I am forced,” she
whispered, pressing Mr. Carlyle’s hands, in her earnest gratitude. “You
don’t know what it is, Archibald, to have a lost son home for an hour
but once in seven years. At ten o’clock we will part.”

Mr. Carlyle and Barbara began to pace in the path in compliance with the
wish of Mrs. Hare, keeping near the entrance gate. When they were
turning the second time, Mr. Carlyle offered her his arm; it was an act
of mere politeness. Barbara took it; and there they waited and waited;
but the justice did not come.

Punctually to the minute, half after nine, Lady Isabel’s carriage
arrived at Mrs. Jefferson’s, and she came out immediately--a headache
being the plea for her early departure. She had not far to go to reach
East Lynne--about two miles--and it was a by-road nearly all the way.
They could emerge into the open road, if they pleased, but it was a
trifle further. Suddenly a gentleman approached the carriage as it was
bowling along, and waved his hand to the coachman to pull up. In spite
of the glowing moonlight, Lady Isabel did not at first recognize him,
for he wore a disfigured fur cap, the ears of which were tied over his
ears and cheeks. It was Francis Levison. She put down the window.

“I thought it must be your carriage. How early you are returning! Were
you tired of your entertainers?”

“Why, he knew what time my lady was returning,” thought John to himself;
“he asked me. A false sort of a chap that, I’ve a notion.”

“I came out for a midnight stroll, and have tired myself,” he proceeded.
“Will you take compassion on me, and give me a seat home?”

She acquiesced. She could not do otherwise. The footman sprang from
behind the door, and Francis Levison took his place beside Lady Isabel.
“Take the high road,” he put out his head to say to the coachman; and
the man touched his hat--which high road would cause them to pass Mr.
Hare’s.

“I did not know you,” she began, gathering herself into her own corner.
“What ugly thing is that you have on? It is like a disguise.”

He was taking off the “ugly thing” as she spoke and began to twirl it
round his hand. “Disguise? Oh, no; I have no creditors in the immediate
neighborhood of East Lynne.”

False as ever it was worn as a disguise and he knew it.

“Is Mr. Carlyle at home?” she inquired.

“No.” Then, after a pause--“I expect he is more agreeably engaged.”

The tone, a most significant one, brought the tingling blood to the
cheeks of Lady Isabel. She wished to preserve a dignified silence, and
did for a few moments; but the jealous question broke out,--

“Engaged in what manner?”

“As I came by Hare’s house just now, I saw two people, a gentleman and a
young lady, coupled lovingly together, enjoying a tete-a-tete by
moonlight. Unless I am mistaken, he was the favored individual whom you
call lord and master.”

Lady Isabel almost gnashed her teeth; the jealous doubts which had been
tormenting her all the evening were confirmed. That the man whom she
hated--yes, in her blind anger, she hated him then--should so impose
upon her, should excuse himself by lies, lies base and false as he was,
from accompanying her out, on purpose to pass the hours with Barbara
Hare! Had she been alone in the carriage, a torrent of passion had
probably escaped her.

She leaned back, panting in her emotion, but hiding it from Captain
Levison. As they came opposite to Justice Hare’s she deliberately bent
forward and scanned the garden with eager eyes.

There, in the bright moonlight, all too bright and clear, slowly paced
arm in arm, and drawn close to each other, her husband and Barbara Hare.
With a choking sob that could no longer be controlled or hidden, Lady
Isabel sunk back again.

He, that bold, bad man, dared to put his arm around her, to draw her to
his side; to whisper that his love was left to her, if another’s was
withdrawn. She was most assuredly out of her senses that night, or she
never would have listened.

A jealous woman is mad; an outraged woman is doubly mad; and the ill-
fated Lady Isabel truly believed that every sacred feeling which ought
to exist between man and wife was betrayed by Mr. Carlyle.

“Be avenged on that false hound, Isabel. He was never worthy of you.
Leave your life of misery, and come to happiness.”

In her bitter distress and wrath, she broke into a storm of sobs. Were
they caused by passion against her husband, or by those bold and
shameless words? Alas! Alas! Francis Levison applied himself to soothe
her with all the sweet and dangerous sophistry of his crafty nature.

The minutes flew on. A quarter to ten; now a quarter past ten; and still
Richard Hare lingered on with his mother, and still Mr. Carlyle and
Barbara paced patiently the garden path. At half-past ten Richard came
forth, after having taken his last farewell. Then came Barbara’s tearful
farewell, which Mr. Carlyle witnessed; and then a hard grasp of that
gentleman’s hand, and Richard plunged amidst the trees to depart the way
he came.

“Good night, Barbara,” said Mr. Carlyle.

“Will you not come in and say good night to mamma?”

“Not now; it is late. Tell her how glad I am things have gone off so
well.”

He started off at a strapping pace toward his home, and Barbara leaned
on the gate to indulge her tears. Not a soul passed to interrupt her,
and the justice did not come. What could have become of him? What could
the Buck’s Head be thinking of, to retain respectable elderly justices
from their beds, who ought to go home early and set a good example to
the parish? Barbara knew, the next day, that Justice Hare, with a few
more gentlemen, had been seduced from the staid old inn to a friend’s
house, to an entertainment of supper, pipes, and whist, two tables,
penny points, and it was between twelve and one ere the party rose from
the fascination. So far, well--as it happened.

Barbara knew not how long she lingered at the gate; ten minutes it may
have been. Nobody summoned her. Mrs. Hare was indulging her grief
indoors, giving no thought to Barbara, and the justice did not make his
appearance. Exceedingly surprised was Barbara to hear fast footsteps,
and to find that they were Mr. Carlyle’s.

“The more haste, the less speed, Barbara,” he called out as he came up.
“I had got half-way home and have had to come back again. When I went
into your sitting-room, I left a small parcel, containing a parchment,
on the sideboard. Will you get it for me?”

Barbara ran indoors and brought forth the parcel, and Mr. Carlyle, with
a brief word of thanks, sped away with it.

She leaned on the gate as before, the ready tears flowing again; her
heart was aching for Richard; it was aching for the disappointment the
night had brought forth respecting Captain Thorn. Still nobody passed;
still the steps of her father were not heard, and Barbara stayed on.
But--what was that figure cowering under the shade of the hedge at a
distance, and seemingly, watching her? Barbara strained her eyes, while
her heart beat as if it would burst its bounds. Surely, surely, it was
her brother? What had he ventured back for?

Richard Hare it was. When fully assured that Barbara was standing there,
he knew the justice was still absent, and ventured to advance. He
appeared to be in a strange state of emotion--his breath labored, his
whole frame trembling.

“Barbara! Barbara!” he called. “I have seen Thorn.”

Barbara thought him demented. “I know you saw him,” she slowly said,
“but it was not the right Thorn.”

“Not he,” breathed Richard; “and not the gentleman I saw to-night in
Carlyle’s office. I have seen the fellow himself. Why to you stare at me
so, Barbara?”

Barbara was in truth scanning his face keenly. It appeared to her a
strange tale that he was telling.

“When I left here, I cut across into Bean lane, which is more private
for me than this road,” proceeded Richard. “Just as I got to that clump
of trees--you know it, Barbara--I saw somebody coming toward me from a
distance. I stepped back behind the trunks of the trees, into the shade
of the hedge, for I don’t care to be met, though I am disguised. He came
along the middle of the lane, going toward West Lynne, and I looked out
upon him. I knew him long before he was abreast of me; it was Thorn.”
 Barbara made no comment; she was digesting the news.

“Every drop of blood within me began to tingle, and an impulse came upon
me to spring upon him and accuse him of the murder of Hallijohn,” went
on Richard, in the same excited manner. “But I resisted it; or, perhaps,
my courage failed. One of the reproaches against me had used to be that
I was a physical coward, you know, Barbara,” he added, in a tone of
bitterness. “In a struggle, Thorn would have had the best of it; he is
taller and more powerful than I, and might have battered me to death. A
man who can commit one murder won’t hesitate at a second.”

“Richard, do you think you could have been deceived?” she urged. “You
had been talking of Thorn, and your thoughts were, naturally bearing
upon him. Imagination--”

“Be still, Barbara,” he interrupted in a tone of pain. “Imagination,
indeed! Did I not tell you he was stamped here?” touching his breast.
“Do you take me for a child, or an imbecile, that I should fancy I see
Thorn in every shadow, or meet people where I do not? He had his hat
off, as if he had been walking fast and had got hot--fast he was
walking; and he carried the hat in one hand, and what looked like a
small parcel. With the other hand he was pushing the hair from his brow-
-in this way--a peculiar way,” added Richard, slightly lifting his own
hat and pushing back his hair. “By that action alone I should have known
him, for he was always doing it in the old days. And there was his white
hand, adorned with his diamond ring! Barbara, the diamond glittered in
the moonlight!”

Richard’s voice and manner were singularly earnest, and a conviction of
the truth of his assertion flashed over his sister.

“I saw his face as plainly as I ever saw it--every feature--he is
scarcely altered, save for a haggardness in his cheeks now. Barbara, you
need not doubt me; I swear it was Thorn!”

She grew excited as he was; now that she believed the news, it was
telling upon her; reason left its place and impulse succeeded; Barbara
did not wait to weigh her actions.

“Richard! Mr. Carlyle ought to know this. He has but just gone; we may
overtake him, if we try.”

Forgetting the strange appearances it would have--her flying along the
public road at that hour of the night--should she meet any who knew her-
-forgetting what the consequence might be, did Justice Hare return and
find her absent, Barbara set off with a fleet foot, Richard more
stealthily following her--his eyes cast in all directions. Fortunately
Barbara wore a bonnet and mantle, which she had put on to pace the
garden with Mr. Carlyle; fortunately, also, the road was remarkably
empty of passengers. She succeeded in reaching Mr. Carlyle before he
turned into East Lynne gates.

“Barbara!” he exclaimed in the extreme of astonishment. “Barbara!”

“Archibald! Archibald!” She panted, gasping for breath. “I am not out of
my mind--but do come and speak to Richard! He has just seen the real
Thorn.”

Mr. Carlyle, amazed and wondering, turned back. They got over the field
stile, nearly opposite the gates, drew behind the hedge, and there
Richard told his tale. Mr. Carlyle did not appear to doubt it, as
Barbara had done; perhaps he could not, in the face of Richard’s
agitated and intense earnestness.

“I am sure there is no one named Thorn in the neighborhood, save the
gentleman you saw in my office to-night, Richard,” observed Mr. Carlyle,
after some deliberation. “It is very strange.”

“He may be staying here under a feigned name,” replied Richard. “There
can be no mistake that it was Thorn whom I have just met.”

“How was he dressed? As a gentleman?”

“Catch him dressing as anything else,” returned Richard. “He was in an
evening suit of black, with a sort of thin overcoat thrown on, but it
was flung back at the shoulders, and I distinctly saw his clothes. A
gray alpaca, it looked like. As I have told Barbara, I should have known
him by this action of the hand,” imitating it, “as he pushed his hair
off his forehead; it was the delicate white hand of the days gone by,
Mr. Carlyle; it was the flashing of the diamond ring!”

Mr. Carlyle was silent; Barbara also; but the thoughts of both were
busy. “Richard,” observed the former, “I should advise you to remain a
day or two in the neighborhood, and look out for this man. You may see
him again, and may track him home; it is very desirable to find out who
he really is if practicable.”

“But the danger?” urged Richard.

“Your fears magnify that. I am quite certain that nobody would know you
in broad daylight, disguised as you are now. So many years have flown
since, that people have forgotten to think about you, Richard.”

But Richard could not be persuaded; he was full of fears. He described
the man as accurately as he could to Mr. Carlyle and Barbara, and told
them they must look out. With some trouble, Mr. Carlyle got from him an
address in London, to which he might write, in case anything turned up,
and Richard’s presence should be necessary. He then once more said
farewell, and quitted them, his way lying past East Lynne.

“And now to see you back, Barbara,” said Mr. Carlyle.

“Indeed you shall not do it--late as it is, and tired as you must be. I
came here alone; Richard did not keep near me.”

“I cannot help your having come here alone, but you may rely upon it, I
do not suffer you to go back so. Nonsense, Barbara! Allow you to go
along the high road by yourself at eleven o’clock at night? What are you
thinking of?”

He gave Barbara his arm, and they pursued their way. “How late Lady
Isabel will think you!” observed Barbara.

“I don’t know that Lady Isabel has returned home yet. My being late once
in a while is of no consequence.”

Not another word was spoken, save by Barbara. “Whatever excuse can I
make, should papa come home?” Both were buried in their own reflections.
“Thank you very greatly,” she said as they reached her gate, and Mr.
Carlyle finally turned away. Barbara stole in, and found the coast
clear; her papa had not arrived.

Lady Isabel was in her dressing-room when Mr. Carlyle entered; she was
seated at a table, writing. A few questions as to her evening’s visit,
which she answered in the briefest way possible, and then he asked her
if she was not going to bed.

“By and by. I am not sleepy.”

“I must go at once, Isabel, for I am dead tired.” And no wonder.

“You can go,” was her answer.

He bent down to kiss her, but she dexterously turned her face away. He
supposed that she felt hurt that he had not gone with her to the party,
and placed his hand on her shoulder with a pleasant smile.

“You foolish child, to be aggrieved at that! It was no fault of mine,
Isabel; I could not help myself. I will talk to you in the morning; I am
too tired to-night. I suppose you will not be long.”

Her head was bent over her writing again, and she made no reply. Mr.
Carlyle went into his bedroom and shut the door. Some time after, Lady
Isabel went softly upstairs to Joyce’s room. Joyce, fast in her first
sleep, was suddenly aroused from it. There stood her mistress, a wax
light in her hand. Joyce rubbed her eyes, and collected her senses, and
finally sat up in bed.

“My lady! Are you ill?”

“Ill! Yes; ill and wretched,” answered Lady Isabel; and ill she did
look, for she was perfectly white. “Joyce, I want a promise from you. If
anything should happen to me, stay at East Lynne with my children.”

Joyce stared in amazement, too much astonished to make any reply.

“Joyce, you promised it once before; promise it again. Whatever betide
you, you will stay with my children when I am gone.”

“I will stay with them. But, oh, my lady, what can be the matter with
you? Are you taken suddenly ill?”

“Good-bye, Joyce,” murmured Lady Isabel, gliding from the chamber as
quietly as she had entered it. And Joyce, after an hour of perplexity,
dropped asleep again.

Joyce was not the only one whose rest was disturbed that eventful night.
Mr. Carlyle himself awoke, and to his surprise found that his wife had
not come to bed. He wondered what the time was, and struck his repeater.
A quarter past three!

Rising, he made his way to the door of his wife’s dressing-room. It was
in darkness; and, so far as he could judge by the absence of sound,
unoccupied.

“Isabel!”

No reply. Nothing but the echo of his own voice in the silence of the
night.

He struck a match and lighted a taper, partially dressed himself, and
went about to look for her. He feared she might have been taken ill; or
else that she had fallen asleep in some one of the rooms. But nowhere
could he find her, and feeling perplexed, he proceeded to his sister’s
chamber door and knocked.

Miss Carlyle was a slight sleeper, and rose up in bed at once. “Who’s
that?” cried out she.

“It is only I, Cornelia,” said Mr. Carlyle.

“You!” cried Miss Corny. “What in the name of fortune do you want? You
can come in.”

Mr. Carlyle opened the door, and met the keen eyes of his sister bent on
him from the bed. Her head was surmounted by a remarkable nightcap, at
least a foot high.

“Is anybody ill?” she demanded.

“I think Isabel must be, I cannot find her.”

“Not find her?” echoed Miss Corny. “Why, what’s the time? Is she not in
bed?”

“It is three o’clock. She had not been to bed. I cannot find her in the
sitting-rooms; neither is she in the children’s room.”

“Then I’ll tell you what it is, Archibald; she’s gone worrying after
Joyce. Perhaps the girl may be in pain to-night.”

Mr. Carlyle was in full retreat toward Joyce’s room, at this suggestion,
when his sister called to him.

“If anything is amiss with Joyce, you come and tell me, Archibald, for I
shall get up and see after her. The girl was my servant before she was
your wife’s.”

He reached Joyce’s room, and softly unlatched the door, fully expecting
to find a light there, and his wife sitting by the bedside. There was no
light there, however, save that which came from the taper he held, and
he saw no signs of his wife. Where was she? Was it probable that Joyce
should tell him? He stepped inside the room and called to her.

Joyce started up in a fright, which changed to astonishment when she
recognized her master. He inquired whether Lady Isabel had been there,
and for a few moments Joyce did not answer. She had been dreaming of
Lady Isabel, and could not at first detach the dream from the visit
which had probably given rise to it.

“What did you say, sir? Is my lady worse?”

“I asked if she had been here. I cannot find her.”

“Why, yes,” said Joyce, now fully aroused. “She came here and woke me.
That was just before twelve, for I heard the clock strike. She did not
stay here a minute, sir.”

“Woke you!” repeated Mr. Carlyle. “What did she want? What did she come
here for?”

Thoughts are quick; imagination is still quicker; and Joyce was giving
the reins to both. Her mistress’s gloomy and ambiguous words were
crowding on her brain. Three o’clock and she had not been in bed, and
was not to be found in the house? A nameless horror struggled to Joyce’s
face, her eyes were dilating with it; she seized and threw on a large
flannel gown which lay on a chair by the bed, and forgetful of her
master who stood there, out she sprang to the floor. All minor
considerations faded to insignificance beside the terrible dread which
had taken possession of her. Clasping the flannel gown tight around her
with one hand, she laid the other on the arm of Mr. Carlyle.

“Oh, master! Oh, master! She has destroyed herself! I see it all now.”

“Joyce!” sternly interrupted Mr. Carlyle.

“She has destroyed herself, as true as that we two are living here,”
 persisted Joyce, her own face livid with emotion. “I can understand her
words now; I could not before. She came here--and her face was like a
corpse as the light fell upon it--saying she had come to get a promise
from me to stay with her children when she was gone, I asked whether she
was ill, and she answered, ‘Yes, ill and wretched.’ Oh, sir, may heaven
support you under this dreadful trial!”

Mr. Carlyle felt bewildered--perplexed. Not a syllable did he believe.
He was not angry with Joyce, for he thought she had lost her reason.

“It is so, sir, incredible as you may deem my words,” pursued Joyce,
wringing her hands. “My lady has been miserably unhappy; and that has
driven her to it.”

“Joyce, are you in your senses or out of them?” demanded Mr. Carlyle, a
certain sternness in his tone. “Your lady miserably unhappy! What do you
mean?”

Before Joyce could answer, an addition was received to the company in
the person of Miss Carlyle, who appeared in black stockings and a shawl,
and the lofty nightcap. Hearing voices in Joyce’s room, which was above
her own, and full of curiosity, she ascended, not choosing to be shut
out from the conference.

“Whatever’s up?” cried she. “Is Lady Isabel found?”

“She is not found, and she never will be found but in her winding-
sheet,” returned Joyce, whose lamentable and unusual state of excitement
completely overpowered her customary quiet respect and plain good sense.
“And, ma’am, I am glad that you have come up; for what I was about to
say to my master I would prefer to say in your presence. When my lady is
brought into this house, and laid before us dead, what will your
feelings be? My master has done his duty by her in love; but you--you
have made her life a misery. Yes, ma’am, you have.”

“Hoity-toity!” muttered Miss Carlyle, staring at Joyce in consternation.
“What is all this? Where’s my lady?”

“She has gone and taken the life that was not hers to take,” sobbed
Joyce, “and I say she has been driven to it. She has not been allowed to
indulge a will of her own, poor thing, since she came to East Lynne; in
her own house she has been less free than either of her servants. You
have curbed her, ma’am, and snapped at her, and you made her feel that
she was but a slave to your caprices and temper. All these years she has
been crossed and put upon; everything, in short, but beaten--ma’am, you
know she has--and has borne it all in silence, like a patient angel,
never, as I believe, complaining to master; he can say whether she has
or not. We all loved her, we all felt for her; and my master’s heart
would have bled had he suspected what she had to put up with day after
day, and year after year.”

Miss Carlyle’s tongue was glued to her mouth. Her brother, confounded at
the rapid words, could scarcely gather in their sense.

“What is it that you are saying, Joyce?” he asked, in a low tone. “I do
not understand.”

“I have longed to say it to you many a hundred times, sir; but it is
right that you should hear it, now things have come to this dreadful
ending. Since the very night Lady Isabel came home here, your wife, she
had been taunted with the cost she has brought to East Lynne and to you.
If she wanted but the simplest thing, she was forbidden to have it, and
told that she was bringing her husband to poverty. For this very dinner
party that she went to to-night she wished for a new dress, and your
cruel words, ma’am, forbade her having it. She ordered a new frock for
Miss Isabel, and you countermanded it. You have told her that master
worked like a dog to support her extravagances, when you know that she
never was extravagant; that none were less inclined to go beyond proper
limits than she. I have seen her, ma’am, come away from your reproaches
with the tears in her eyes, and her hands meekly clasped upon her bosom,
as though life was heavy to bear. A gentle-spirited, high-born lady, as
I know she was, could not fail to be driven to desperation; and I know
that she has been.”

Mr. Carlyle turned to his sister. “Can this be true?” he inquired, in a
tone of deep agitation.

She did not answer. Whether it was the shade cast by the nightcap, or
the reflection of the wax taper, her face looked of a green cast, and,
for the first time probably in Miss Carlyle’s life, her words failed
her.

“May God forgive you, Cornelia!” he muttered, as he went out of the
chamber.

He descended to his own. That his wife had laid violent hands upon
herself, his reason utterly repudiated, she was one of the least likely
to commit so great a sin. He believed that, in her unhappiness, she
might have wandered out in the grounds, and was lingering there. By this
time the house was aroused, and the servants were astir. Joyce--surely a
supernatural strength was given her, for though she had been able to put
her foot to the ground, she had not yet walked upon it--crept
downstairs, and went into Lady Isabel’s dressing-room. Mr. Carlyle was
hastily assuming the articles of attire he had not yet put on, to go out
and search the grounds, when Joyce limped in, holding out a note. Joyce
did not stand on ceremony that night.

“I found this in the dressing-glass drawer, sir. It is my lady’s
writing.”

He took it in his hand and looked at the address--“Archibald Carlyle.”
 Though a calm man, one who had his emotions under his own control, he
was no stoic, and his fingers shook as he broke the seal.

“When years go on, and my children ask where their mother is, and why
she left them, tell them that you, their father, goaded her to it. If
they inquire what she is, tell them, also, if you so will; but tell
them, at the same time, that you outraged and betrayed her, driving her
to the very depth of desperation ere she quitted them in her despair.”

The handwriting, his wife’s, swam before the eyes of Mr. Carlyle. All,
save the disgraceful fact that she had flown--and a horrible suspicion
began to dawn upon him, with whom--was totally incomprehensible. How had
he outraged her? In what manner had he goaded her to it. The discomforts
alluded to by Joyce, and the work of his sister, had evidently no part
in this; yet what had he done? He read the letter again, more slowly. No
he could not comprehend it; he had not the clue.

At that moment the voices of the servants in the corridor outside
penetrated his ears. Of course they were peering about, and making their
own comments. Wilson, with her long tongue, the busiest. They were
saying that Captain Levison was not in his room; that his bed had not
been slept in.

Joyce sat on the edge of a chair--she could not stand--watching her
master with a blanched face. Never had she seen him betray agitation so
powerful. Not the faintest suspicion of the dreadful truth yet dawned
upon her. He walked to the door, the open note in his hand; then turned,
wavered, and stood still, as if he did not know what he was doing.
Probably he did not. Then he took out his pocket-book, put the note
inside it, and returned it to his pocket, his hands trembling equally
with his livid lips.

“You need not mention this,” he said to Joyce, indicating the note. “It
concerns myself alone.”

“Sir, does it say she’s dead?”

“She is not dead,” he answered. “Worse than that,” he added in his
heart.

“Why--who’s this?” uttered Joyce.

It was little Isabel, stealing in with a frightened face, in her white
nightgown. The commotion had aroused her.

“What’s the matter?” she asked. “Where’s mamma?”

“Child, you’ll catch your death of cold,” said Joyce. “Go back to bed.”

“But I want mamma.”

“In the morning, dear,” evasively returned Joyce. “Sir, please, must not
Isabel go back to bed?”

Mr. Carlyle made no reply to the question; most likely he never heard
its import. But he touched Isabel’s shoulder to draw Joyce’s attention
to the child.

“Joyce--Miss Lucy in future.”

He left the room, and Joyce remained silent from amazement. She heard
him go out at the hall door and bang it after him. Isabel--nay, we must
say “Lucy” also--went and stood outside the chamber door; the servants
gathered in a group near, did not observe her. Presently she came
running back, and disturbed Joyce from her reverie.

“Joyce, is it true?”

“Is what true, my dear?”

“They are saying that Captain Levison has taken away my mamma.”

Joyce fell back in her chair with a scream. It changed to a long, low
moan of anguish.

“What has he taken her for--to kill her? I thought it was only
kidnappers who took people.”

“Child, child, go to bed.”

“Oh, Joyce, I want mamma. When will she come back?”

Joyce hid her face in her hands to conceal its emotion from the
motherless child. And just then Miss Carlyle entered on tiptoe, and
humbly sat down on a low chair, her green face--green that night--in its
grief, its remorse, and its horror, looking nearly as dark as her
stockings.

She broke into a subdued wail.

“God be merciful to this dishonored house!”

Mr. Justice Hare turned into the gate between twelve and one--turned in
with a jaunty air; for the justice was in spirits, he having won nine
sixpences, and his friend’s tap of ale having been unusually good. When
he reached his bedroom, he told Mrs. Hare of a chaise and four which had
gone tearing past at a furious pace as he was closing the gate, coming
from the direction of East Lynne. He wondered where it could be going at
that midnight hour, and whom it contained.



CHAPTER XXV.

CHARMING RESULTS.

Nearly a year went by.

Lady Isabel Carlyle had spent it on the continent--that refuge for such
fugitives--now moving about from place to place with her companion, now
stationary and alone. Quite half the time--taking one absence with the
other--he had been away from her, chiefly in Paris, pursuing his own
course and his own pleasure.

How fared it with Lady Isabel? Just as it must be expected to fare, and
does fare, when a high-principled gentlewoman falls from her pedestal.
Never had she experienced a moment’s calm, or peace, or happiness, since
the fatal night of quitting her home. She had taken a blind leap in a
moment of wild passion, when, instead of the garden of roses it had been
her persuader’s pleasure to promise her she would fall into, but which,
in truth, she had barely glanced at, for that had not been her moving
motive, she had found herself plunged into a yawning abyss of horror,
from which there was never more any escape--never more, never more. The
very instant--the very night of her departure, she awoke to what she had
done. The guilt, whose aspect had been shunned in the prospective,
assumed at once its true frightful color, the blackness of darkness; and
a lively remorse, a never-dying anguish, took possession of her soul
forever. Oh, reader, believe me! Lady--wife--mother! Should you ever be
tempted to abandon your home, so will you awake. Whatever trials may be
the lot of your married life, though they may magnify themselves to your
crushed spirit as beyond the nature, the endurance of woman to bear,
resolve to bear them; fall down upon your knees, and pray to be enabled
to bear them--pray for patience--pray for strength to resist the demon
that would tempt you to escape; bear unto death, rather than forfeit
your fair name and your good conscience; for be assured that the
alternative, if you do rush on to it, will be found worse than death.

Poor thing--poor Lady Isabel! She had sacrificed husband, children,
reputation, home, all that makes life of value to woman. She had
forfeited her duty to God, had deliberately broken his commandments, for
the one poor miserable mistake of flying with Francis Levison. But the
instant the step was irrevocable, the instant she had left the barrier
behind, repentance set in. Even in the first days of her departure, in
the fleeting moments of abandonment, when it may be supposed she might
momentarily forget conscience, it was sharply wounding her with its
adder stings; and she knew that her whole future existence, whether
spent with that man or without him, would be a dark course of gnawing
retribution.

Nearly a year went by, save some six or eight weeks, when, one morning
in July, Lady Isabel made her appearance in the breakfast-room. They
were staying now at Grenoble. Taking that town on their way to
Switzerland through Savoy, it had been Captain Levison’s pleasure to
halt in it. He engaged apartments, furnished, in the vicinity of the
Place Grenette. A windy, old house it was, full of doors and windows,
chimneys and cupboards; and he said he should remain there. Lady Isabel
remonstrated; she wished to go farther on, where they might get quicker
news from England; but her will now was as nothing. She was looking like
the ghost of her former self. Talk of her having looked ill when she
took that voyage over the water with Mr. Carlyle; you should have seen
her now--misery marks the countenance worse than sickness. Her face was
white and worn, her hands were thin, her eyes were sunken and surrounded
by a black circle--care was digging caves for them. A stranger might
have attributed these signs to the state of her health; she knew better-
-knew that they were the effects of her wretched mind and heart.

It was very late for breakfast, but why should she rise early only to
drag through another endless day? Languidly she took her seat at the
table, just as Captain Levison’s servant, a Frenchman whom he had
engaged in Paris, entered the room with two letters.

“Point de gazette, Pierre?” she said.

“Non, miladi.”

And all the time the sly fox had got the Times in his coat pocket. But
he was only obeying the orders of his master. It had been Captain
Levison’s recent pleasure that the newspapers should not be seen by Lady
Isabel until he had over-looked them. You will speedily gather his
motive.

Pierre departed toward Captain Levison’s room, and Lady Isabel took up
the letters and examined their superscription with interest. It was
known to her that Mr. Carlyle had not lost a moment in seeking a divorce
and the announcement that it was granted was now daily expected. She was
anxious for it--anxious that Captain Levison should render her the only
reparation in his power before the birth of her unhappy child. Little
thought she that there was not the least intention on his part to make
her reparation, any more than he had made it to others who had gone
before her. She had become painfully aware of the fact that the man for
whom she had chosen to sacrifice herself was bad, but she had not
learned all his badness yet.

Captain Levison, unwashed, unshaven, with a dressing-gown loosely flung
on, lounged in to breakfast. The decked-out dandies before the world are
frequently the greatest slovens in domestic privacy. He wished her good
morning in a careless tone of apathy, and she as apathetically answered
to it.

“Pierre says there are some letters,” he began. “What a precious hot day
it is!”

“Two,” was her short reply, her tone sullen as his. For if you think my
good reader, that the flattering words, the ardent expressions, which
usually attend the first go-off of these promising unions last out a
whole ten months, you are in egregious error. Compliments the very
opposite to honey and sweetness have generally supervened long before.
Try it, if you don’t believe me.

“Two letters,” she continued, “and they are both in the same
handwriting--your solicitors’, I believe.”

Up went his hand at the last word, and he made a sort of grab at the
letters, stalked to the farthest window, opened it, and glanced over its
contents.

“Sir--We beg to inform you that the suit Carlyle vs. Carlyle, is at an
end. The divorce was pronounced without opposition. According to your
request, we hasten to forward you the earliest intimation of the fact.

“We are, sir, faithfully yours,

“MOSS & GRAB.

“F. LEVISON, Esq.”

It was over, then, and all claim to the name of Carlyle was declared to
have been forfeited by the Lady Isabel forever. Captain Levison folded
up the letter, and placed it securely in an inner pocket.

“Is there any news?” she asked.

“News!”

“Of the divorce, I mean?”

“Tush!” was the response of Captain Levison, as if wishing to imply that
the divorce was yet a far-off affair, and he proceeded to open the other
letter.

“Sir--After sending off our last, dated to-day, we received tidings of
the demise of Sir Peter Levison, your grand-uncle. He expired this
afternoon in town, where he had come for the benefit of medical advice.
We have much pleasure in congratulating you upon your accession to the
title and estates, and beg to state that should it not be convenient to
you to visit England at present, we will be happy to transact all
necessary matters for you, on your favoring us with instructions. And we
remain, sir, most faithfully yours,

“MOSS & GRAB.

“SIR FRANCIS LEVISON, Bart.”

The outside of the letter was superscribed as the other, “F. Levison,
Esquire,” no doubt with a view to its more certain delivery.

“At last, thank the pigs!” was the gentleman’s euphonious expression, as
he tossed the letter, open, on the breakfast-table.

“The divorce is granted!” feverishly uttered Lady Isabel.

He made no reply, but seated himself to breakfast.

“May I read the letter? Is it for me to read?”

“For what else should I have thrown it there?” he said.

“A few days ago you put a letter, open on the table, I thought for me;
but when I took it up you swore at me. Do you remember it Captain
Levison?”

“You may drop that odious title, Isabel, which has stuck to me too long.
I own a better, now.”

“What one, pray?”

“You can look and see.”

Lady Isabel took up the letter and read it. Sir Francis swallowed down
his coffee, and rang the table hand-bell--the only bell you generally
meet with in France. Pierre answered it.

“Put me up a change of things,” said he, in French. “I start for England
in an hour.”

“It is very well,” Pierre responded; and departed to do it. Lady Isabel
waited till the man was gone, and then spoke, a faint flush of emotion
in her cheeks.

“You do not mean what you say? You will not leave me yet?”

“I cannot do otherwise,” he answered. “There’s a mountain of business to
be attended to, now that I am come into power.”

“Moss & Grab say they will act for you. Had there been a necessity for
your going, they would not have offered that.”

“Ay, they do say so--with a nice eye to the feathering of their pockets!
Besides, I should not choose for the old man’s funeral to take place
without me.”

“Then I must accompany you,” she urged.

“I wish you would not talk nonsense, Isabel. Are you in a state to
travel night and day? Neither would home be agreeable to you yet
awhile.”

She felt the force of the objections. Resuming after a moment’s pause--
“Were you to go to England, you might not be back in time.”

“In time for what?”

“Oh, how can you ask?” she rejoined, in a sharp tone of reproach; “you
know too well. In time to make me your wife when the divorce shall
appear.”

“I shall chance it,” coolly observed Sir Francis.

“Chance it! chance the legitimacy of the child? You must assure that,
before all things. More terrible to me than all the rest would it be,
if--”

“Now don’t put yourself in a fever, Isabel. How many times am I to be
compelled to beg that of you! It does no good. Is it my fault, if I am
called suddenly to England?”

“Have you no pity for your child?” she urged in agitation. “Nothing can
repair the injury, if you once suffer it to come upon him. He will be a
by-word amidst men throughout his life.”

“You had better have written to the law lords to urge on the divorce,”
 he returned. “I cannot help the delay.”

“There has been no delay; quite the contrary. But it may be expected
hourly now.”

“You are worrying yourself for nothing, Isabel. I shall be back in
time.”

He quitted the room as he spoke, and Lady Isabel remained in it, the
image of despair. Nearly an hour elapsed when she remembered the
breakfast things, and rang for them to be removed. A maid-servant
entered to do it, and she thought how ill miladi looked.

“Where is Pierre?” miladi asked.

“Pierre was making himself ready to attend monsieur to England.”

Scarcely had she closed the door upon herself and the tray when Sir
Francis Levison appeared, equipped for traveling. “Good-bye, Isabel,”
 said he, without further circumlocution or ceremony.

Lady Isabel, excited beyond all self-control, slipped the bolt of the
door; and, half leaning against it, half leaning at his feet, held up
her hand in supplication.

“Francis, have you any consideration left for me--any in the world?”

“How can you be so alarmed, Isabel? Of course I have,” he continued, in
a peevish, though kind tone, as he took hold of her hands to raise her.

“No, not yet. I will remain here until you say you will wait another day
or two. You know that the French Protestant minister is prepared to
marry us the instant news of the divorce shall arrive; if you do care
still for me, you will wait.”

“I cannot wait,” he replied, his tone changing to one of determination.
“It is useless to urge it.”

He broke from her and left the room, and in another minute had left the
house, Pierre attending him. A feeling, amounting to a conviction,
rushed over the unhappy lady that she had seen him for the last time
until it was too late.

She was right. It was too late by weeks and months.

December came in. The Alps were covered with snow; Grenoble borrowed the
shade, and looked cold, and white, and sleety, and sloppy; the gutters,
running through the middle of certain of the streets, were unusually
black, and the people crept along especially dismal. Close to the fire
in the barn of a French bedroom, full of windows, and doors, and
draughts, with its wide hearth and its wide chimney, into which we could
put four or five of our English ones, shivered Lady Isabel Vane. She had
an invalid cap on, and a thick woolen invalid shawl, and she shook and
shivered perpetually; though she had drawn so close to the wood fire
that there was a danger of her petticoats igniting, and the attendant
had frequently to spring up and interpose between them and the crackling
logs. Little did it seem to matter to Lady Isabel; she sat in one
position, her countenance the picture of stony despair.

So had she sat, so looking, since she began to get better. She had had a
long illness, terminating in a low fever; but the attendants whispered
among themselves that miladi would soon get about if she would only
rouse herself. She had got so far about as to sit up in the windy
chamber; and it seemed to be to her a matter of perfect indifference
whether she ever got out of it.

This day she had partaken of her early dinner--such as it was, for her
appetite failed--and had dozed asleep in the arm chair, when a noise
arose from below, like a carriage driving into the courtyard through the
porte cochere. It instantly aroused her. Had he come?

“Who is it?” she asked of the nurse.

“Miladi, it is monsieur; and Pierre is with him. I have begged milady
often and often not to fret, for monsieur would surely come; miladi,
see, I am right.”

The girl departed, closing the door, and Lady Isabel sat looking at it,
schooling her patience. Another moment, and it was flung open.

Sir Francis Levison approached to greet her as he came in. She waved him
off, begging him, in a subdued, quiet tone, not to draw too near, as any
little excitement made her faint now. He took a seat opposite to her,
and began pushing the logs together with his boot, as he explained that
he really could not get away from town before.

“Why did you come now?” she quietly rejoined.

“Why did I come?” repeated he. “Are these all the thanks a fellow gets
for travelling in this inclement weather? I thought you would at least
have been glad to welcome me, Isabel.”

“Sir Francis,” she rejoined, speaking still with almost unnatural
calmness, as she continued to do throughout the interview--though the
frequent changes in her countenance, and the movement of her hands, when
she laid them from time to time on her chest to keep down its beating,
told what effort the struggle cost her--“Sir Francis, I am glad, for one
reason, to welcome you; we must come to an understanding one with the
other; and, so far, I am pleased that you are here. It was my intention
to have communicated with you by letter as soon as I found myself
capable of the necessary exertion, but your visit has removed the
necessity. I wish to deal with you quite unreservedly, without
concealment, or deceit; I must request you so to deal with me.”

“What do you mean by ‘deal?’” he asked, settling the logs to his
apparent satisfaction.

“To speak and act. Let there be plain truth between us at this
interview, if there never has been before.”

“I don’t understand you.”

“Naked truth, unglossed over,” she pursued, bending her eyes
determinately upon him. “It must be.”

“With all my heart,” returned Sir Francis. “It is you who have thrown
out the challenge, mind.”

“When you left in July you gave me a sacred promise to come back in time
for our marriage; you know what I mean when I say ‘in time,’ but--”

“Of course I meant to do so when I gave the promise,” he interrupted.
“But no sooner had I set my foot in London than I found myself
overwhelmed with business, and away from it I could not get. Even now I
can only remain with you a couple of days, for I must hasten back to
town.”

“You are breaking faith already,” she said, after hearing him calmly to
the end. “Your words are not words of truth, but of deceit. You did not
intend to be back in time for the marriage, or otherwise you would have
caused it to take place ere you went at all.”

“What fancies you do take up!” uttered Francis Levison.

“Some time subsequent to your departure,” she quietly went on, “one of
the maids was setting to rights the clothes in your dressing-closet, and
she brought me a letter she found in one of the pockets. I saw by the
date that it was one of those two which you received on the morning of
your departure. It contained the information that the divorce was
pronounced.”

She spoke so quietly, so apparently without feeling or passion, that Sir
Francis was agreeably astonished. He should have less trouble in
throwing off the mask. But he was an ill-tempered man; and to hear that
the letter had been found to have the falseness of his fine
protestations and promises laid bare, did not improve his temper now.
Lady Isabel continued,--

“It would have been better to have undeceived me then; to have told me
that the hopes I was cherishing for the sake of the unborn child were
worse than vain.”

“I did not judge so,” he replied. “The excited state you then appeared
to be in, would have precluded your listening to any sort of reason.”

Her heart beat a little quicker; but she stilled it.

“You deem that it was not in reason that I should aspire to be the wife
of Sir Francis Levison?”

He rose and began kicking at the logs; with the heel of his boot this
time.

“Well, Isabel, you must be aware that it is an awful sacrifice for a man
in my position to marry a divorced woman.”

The hectic flushed into her thin cheeks, but her voice sounded calm as
before.

“When I expected or wished, for the ‘sacrifice,’ it was not for my own
sake; I told you so then. But it was not made; and the child’s
inheritance is that of sin and shame. There he lies.”

Sir Francis half turned to where she pointed, and saw an infant’s cradle
by the side of the bed. He did not take the trouble to look at it.

“I am the representative now of an ancient and respected baronetcy,” he
resumed, in a tone as of apology for his previous heartless words, “and
to make you my wife would so offend all my family, that--”

“Stay,” interrupted Lady Isabel, “you need not trouble yourself to find
needless excuses. Had you taken this journey for the purpose of making
me your wife, were you to propose to do so this day, and bring a
clergyman into the room to perform the ceremony, it would be futile. The
injury to the child can never be repaired; and, for myself, I cannot
imagine any fate in life worse than being compelled to pass it with
you.”

“If you have taken this aversion to me, it cannot be helped,” he coldly
said, inwardly congratulating himself, let us not doubt, at being spared
the work of trouble he had anticipated. “You made commotion enough once
about me making you reparation.”

She shook her head.

“All the reparation in your power to make--all the reparation that the
whole world can invent could not undo my sin. It and the effects must
lie upon me forever.”

“Oh--sin!” was the derisive exclamation. “You ladies should think of
that beforehand.”

“Yes,” she sadly answered. “May heaven help all to do so who may be
tempted as I was.”

“If you mean that as a reproach to me, it’s rather out of place,” chafed
Sir Francis, whose fits of ill-temper were under no control, and who
never, when in them, cared what he said to outrage the feelings of
another. “The temptation to sin, as you call it, lay not in my
persuasions half so much as in your jealous anger toward your husband.”

“Quite true,” was her reply.

“And I believe you were on the wrong scent, Isabel--if it will be any
satisfaction to you to hear it. Since we are mutually on this
complimentary discourse, it is of no consequence to smooth over facts.”

“I do not understand what you would imply,” she said, drawing her shawl
round her with a fresh shiver. “How on the wrong scent?”

“With regard to your husband and that Hare girl. You were blindly,
outrageously jealous of him.”

“Go on.”

“And I say I think you are on the wrong scent. I do not believe Mr.
Carlyle ever thought of the girl--in that way.”

“What do you mean?” she gasped.

“They had a secret between them--not of love--a secret of business; and
those interviews they had together, her dancing attendance upon him
perpetually, related to that, and that alone.”

Her face was more flushed than it had been throughout the interview. He
spoke quietly now, quite in an equal tone of reasoning; it was his way
when the ill-temper was upon him: and the calmer he spoke, the more
cutting were his words. He need not have told her this.

“What was the secret?” she inquired, in a low tone.

“Nay, I can’t explain all; they did not take me into their confidence.
They did not even take you; better, perhaps that they had though, as
things have turned out, or seem to be turning. There’s some disreputable
secret attaching to the Hare family, and Carlyle was acting in it, under
the rose, for Mrs. Hare. She could not seek out Carlyle herself, so she
sent the young lady. That’s all I know.”

“How did you know it?”

“I had reason to think so.”

“What reason? I must request you to tell me.”

“I overheard scraps of their conversation now and then in those
meetings, and so gathered my information.”

“You told a different tale to me, Sir Francis,” was her remark, as she
turned her indignant eyes toward him.

Sir Francis laughed.

“All stratagems are fair in love and war.”

She dared not immediately trust herself to reply, and a silence ensued.
Sir Francis broke it, pointing with his left thumb over his shoulder in
the direction of the cradle.

“What have you named that young article there?”

“The name which ought to have been his by inheritance--‘Francis
Levison,’” was her icy answer.

“Let’s see--how old is he now?”

“He was born on the last day of August.”

Sir Francis threw up his arms and stretched himself, as if a fit of
idleness had overtaken him; then advanced to the cradle and pulled down
the clothes.

“Who is he like, Isabel? My handsome self?”

“Were he like you in spirit, I would pray that he might die ere he could
speak, or think!” she burst forth. And then remembering the resolution
marked out for herself, subsided outwardly into calmness again.

“What else?” retorted Sir Francis. “You know my disposition pretty well
by this time, Isabel, and may be sure that if you deal out small change
to me, you will get it back again with interest.”

She made no reply. Sir Francis put the clothes back over the sleeping
child, returned to the fire, and stood a few moments with his back to
it.

“Is my room prepared for me, do you know?” he presently asked.

“No, it is not,” she quietly rejoined. “These apartments are mine now;
they have been transferred into my name, and they can never again afford
you accommodation. Will you be so obliging--I am not strong--as to hand
me that writing case?”

Sir Francis walked to the table she indicated, which was at the far end
of the great barn of a room, and taking the writing-case from it, gave
it to her.

She reached her keys from the stand at her elbow, unlocked the case, and
took from it some bank-notes.

“I received these from you a month ago,” she said. “They came by post.”

“And never had the grace to acknowledge them,” he returned, in a sort of
mock reproachful tone.

“Forty pounds. That was the amount, was it not?”

“I believe so.”

“Allow me to return them to you. Count them.”

“Return them to me--for what?” inquired Sir Francis, in amazement.

“I have no longer anything whatever to do with you in any way. Do not
make my arm ache, holding out these notes to you so long! Take them!”

Sir Francis took the notes from her hand and placed them on a stand near
to her.

“If it be your wish that all relations should end between us, why, let
it be so,” he said. “I must confess I think it may be the wisest course,
as things have come to this pass; for a cat and dog life, which would
seemingly be ours, is not agreeable. Remember, though, that it is your
doing, not mine. But you cannot think I am going to see you starve,
Isabel. A sum--we will fix upon the amount amicably--shall be placed to
your credit half-yearly, and--”

“I beg of you to cease,” she passionately interrupted. “What do you take
me for?”

“Take you for! Why, how can you live? You have no fortune--you must
receive assistance from some one.”

“I will not receive it from you. If the whole world denied me, and I
could find no help from strangers, or means of earning my own bread, and
it was necessary that I should still exist, I would apply to my husband
for means, rather than to you. In saying this, it ought to convince you
that the topic may cease.”

“Your husband!” sarcastically rejoined Sir Francis. “Generous man!”

A flush, deep and painful, dyed her cheeks. “I should have said my late
husband. You need not have reminded me of the mistake.”

“If you will accept nothing for yourself, you must for the child. He, at
any rate, falls to my share. I shall give you a few hundred a year with
him.”

She beat her hands before her, as if beating off the man and his words.
“Not a farthing, now or ever. Were you to attempt to send money to him,
I would throw it into the nearest river. Whom do you take me for? What
do you take me for?” she repeated, rising in her bitter mortification.
“If you have put me beyond the pale of the world, I am still Lord Mount
Severn’s daughter!”

“You did as much toward putting yourself beyond its pale as--”

“Don’t I know it? Have I not said so?” she sharply interrupted. And then
she sat, striving to calm herself, clasping together her shaking hands.

“Well, if you will persist in this perverse resolution, I cannot mend
it,” resumed Sir Francis. “In a little time you may probably wish to
recall it; in which case a line, addressed to me at my banker’s, will--”

Lady Isabel drew herself up. “Put away those notes, if you please,” she
interrupted, not allowing him to finish his sentence.

He took out his pocket-book and placed the bank notes within it.

“Your clothes--those you left here when you went to England--you will
have the goodness to order Pierre to take away this afternoon. And now,
Sir Francis, I believe that is all: we will part.”

“To remain mortal enemies from henceforth? Is that to be it?”

“To be strangers,” she replied, correcting him. “I wish you a good day.”

“So you will not even shake hands with me, Isabel?”

“I would prefer not.”

And thus they parted. Sir Francis left the room, but not immediately the
house. He went into a distant apartment, and, calling the servants
before him--there were but two--gave them each a year’s wages in
advance--“That they might not have to trouble miladi for money,” he said
to them. Then he paid a visit to the landlord, and handed him, likewise
a year’s rent in advance, making the same remark. After that, he ordered
dinner at a hotel, and the same night he and Pierre departed on their
journey home again, Sir Francis thanking his lucky star that he had so
easily got rid of a vexatious annoyance.

And Lady Isabel? She passed her evening alone, sitting in the same
place, close to the fire and the sparks. The attendant remonstrated that
miladi was remaining up too late for her strength, but miladi ordered
her and her remonstrances into an adjoining room.

When Lady Isabel lay down to rest, she sank into a somewhat calmer sleep
than she had known of late; also into a dream. She thought she was back
at East Lynne--not back, in one sense, but that she seemed never to have
gone away from it--walking in the flower garden with Mr. Carlyle, while
the three children played on the lawn. Her arm was within her husband’s,
and he was relating something to her. What the news was, she could not
remember afterward, excepting that it was connected with the office and
old Mr. Dill, and that Mr. Carlyle laughed when he told it. They
appeared to be interrupted by the crying of Archibald; and, in turning
to the lawn to ask what was the matter, she awoke. Alas! It was the
actual crying of her own child which awoke her--this last child--the
ill-fated little being in the cradle beside her. But, for a single
instant, she forgot recent events and doings, she believed she was
indeed in her happy home at East Lynne, a proud woman, an honored wife.
As recollection flashed across her, with its piercing stings, she gave
vent to a sharp cry of agony, of unavailing despair.



CHAPTER XXVI.

ALONE FOR EVERMORE.

A surprise awaited Lady Isabel Vane. It was on a windy day in the
following March that a traveller arrived at Grenoble, and inquired his
way of a porter, to the best hotel in the place, his French being such
as only an Englishman can produce.

“Hotel? Let’s see,” returned the man, politely, but with native
indifference. “There are two hotels, nearly contiguous to each other,
and monsieur would find himself comfortable at either. There is the
Tross Dauphins, and there is the Ambassadeurs.”

“Monsieur” chose haphazard, the Hotel des Ambassadeurs, and was
conducted to it. Shortly after his arrival there, he inquired his road
to the Place Grenette, and was offered to be shown: but he preferred
that it should be described to him, and to go alone. The Place was
found, and he thence turned to the apartments of Lady Isabel Vane.

Lady Isabel was sitting where you saw her the previous December--in the
precise spot--courting the warmth of the fire, and it seemed, courting
the sparks also, for they appeared as fond of her as formerly. The
marvel was, how she had escaped spontaneous combustion; but there she
was yet, and her clothes likewise. You might think that but a night had
passed, when you looked at the room, for it wore precisely the same
aspect now, as then; everything was the same, even to the child’s cradle
in the remote corner, partially hidden by the bed-curtains, and the
sleeping child in it. Lady Isabel’s progress toward recovery was
remarkably lingering, as is frequently the case when mind and body are
both diseased. She was so sitting when Susanne entered the room, and
said that a “Monsieur Anglais” had arrived in the town to see her, and
was waiting below, in the saloon.

Lady Isabel was startled. An English gentleman--to see her!

English for certain, was Susanne’s answer, for she had difficulty to
comprehend his French.

Who could be desirous to see her? One out of the world and forgotten!
“Susanne,” she cried aloud, a thought striking her, “it is never Sir
Fran--it is not monsieur!”

“Not in the least like monsieur,” complacently answered Susanne. “It is
a tall, brave English gentleman, proud and noble looking like a prince.”

Every pulse within Lady Isabel’s body throbbed rebelliously: her heart
bounded till it was like to burst her side, and she turned sick with
astonishment.

“Tall, brave, noble?” could that description apply to any but Mr.
Carlyle? Strange that so unnatural an idea should have occurred to her;
it would not have done so in a calmer moment. She rose, tottered across
the chamber, and prepared to descend. Susanne’s tongue was let loose at
the proceeding.

“Was miladi out of her senses? To attempt going downstairs would be a
pretty ending, for she’d surely fall by the way. Miladi knew that the
bottom step was of lead, and that no head could pitch down upon that,
without ever never being a head any more, except in the hospitals. Let
miladi sit still in her place and she’d bring the monsieur up. What did
it signify? He was not a young petit maitre, to quiz things: he was
fifty, if he was a day: his hair already turned to fine gray.”

This set the question touching Mr. Carlyle at rest, and her heart
stilled again. The next moment she was inwardly laughing in her bitter
mockery at her insensate folly. Mr. Carlyle come to see her! Her!
Francis Levison might be sending over some man of business, regarding
the money question, was her next thought: if so, she should certainly
refuse to see him.

“Go down to the gentleman and ask him his name Susanne. Ask also from
whence he came.”

Susanne disappeared, and returned, and the gentleman behind her. Whether
she had invited him, or whether he had chosen to come uninvited, there
he was. Lady Isabel caught a glimpse, and flung her hands over her
burning cheeks of shame. It was Lord Mount Severn.

“How did you find out where I was?” she gasped, when some painful words
had been uttered on both sides.

“I went to Sir Francis Levison and demanded your address. Certain recent
events implied that he and you must have parted, and I therefore deemed
it time to inquire what he had done with you.”

“Since last July,” she interrupted. Lifting up her wan face, now
colorless again. “Do not think worse of me than I am. He was here in
December for an hour’s recriminating interview, and we parted for life.”

“What have you heard of him lately?”

“Not anything. I never know what is passing in the world at home; I have
no newspaper, no correspondence; and he would scarcely be so bold as to
write to me again.”

“I shall not shock you, then by some tidings I bring you regarding him,”
 returned Lord Mount Severn.

“The greatest shock to me would be to hear that I should ever again be
subjected to the sight of him,” she answered.

“He is married.”

“Heaven have pity on his poor wife!” was all the comment of Lady Isabel.

“He has married Alice Challoner.”

She lifted her head, then, in simple surprise. “Alice? Not Blanche?”

“The story runs that he has played Blanche very false. That he has been
with her much during the last three or four months, leading on her
expectations; and then suddenly proposed for her younger sister. I know
nothing of the details myself; it is not likely; and I heard nothing,
until one evening at the club I saw the announcement of the marriage for
the following day at St. George’s. I was at the church the next morning
before he was.”

“Not to stop it; not to intercept the marriage!” breathlessly uttered
the Lady Isabel.

“Certainly not. I had no power to attempt anything of the sort. I went
to demand an answer to my question--what he had done with you, and where
you were. He gave me this address, but said he knew nothing of your
movements since December.”

There was a long silence. The earl appeared to be alternately ruminating
and taking a survey of the room. Isabel sat with her head down.

“Why did you seek me out?” she presently broke forth. “I am not worth
it. I have brought enough disgrace upon your name.”

“And upon your husband’s and upon your children’s,” he rejoined, in the
most severe manner, for it was not in the nature of the Earl of Mount
Severn to gloss over guilt. “Nevertheless it is incumbent upon me, as
your nearest blood relative, to see after you, now that you are alone
again, and to take care, as far as I can, that you do not lapse lower.”

He might have spared her that stab. But she scarcely understood him. She
looked at him, wondering whether she did understand.

“You have not a shilling in the world,” he resumed. “How do you propose
to live?”

“I have some money yet. When--”

“His money?” sharply and haughtily interposed the earl.

“No,” she indignantly replied. “I am selling my trinkets. Before they
are all gone, I shall look out to get a living in some way; by teaching,
probably.”

“Trinkets!” repeated Lord Mount Severn. “Mr. Carlyle told me that you
carried nothing away with you from East Lynne.”

“Nothing that he had given me. These were mine before I married. You
have seen Mr. Carlyle, then?” she faltered.

“Seen him?” echoed the indignant earl. “When such a blow was dealt him
by a member of my family, could I do less than hasten to East Lynne to
tender my sympathies? I went with another subject too--to discover what
could have been the moving springs of your conduct; for I protest, when
the black tidings reached me, I believed that you must have gone mad.
You were one of the last whom I should have feared to trust. But I
learned nothing, and Carlyle was as ignorant as I. How could you strike
him such a blow?”

Lower and lower drooped her head, brighter shone the shame on her hectic
cheek. An awful blow to Mr. Carlyle it must have been; she was feeling
it in all its bitter intensity. Lord Mount Severn read her repentant
looks.

“Isabel,” he said, in a tone which had lost something of its harshness,
and it was the first time he had called her by her Christian name, “I
see that you are reaping the fruits. Tell me how it happened. What demon
prompted you to sell yourself to that bad man?”

“He is a bad man!” she exclaimed. “A base, heartless man!”

“I warned you at the commencement of your married life to avoid him; to
shun all association with him; not to admit him to your house.”

“His coming to East Lynne was not my doing,” she whispered. “Mr. Carlyle
invited him.”

“I know he did. Invited him in his unsuspicious confidence, believing
his wife to be his wife, a trustworthy woman of honor,” was the severe
remark.

She did not reply; she could not gainsay it; she only sat with her meek
face of shame and her eyelids drooping.

“If ever a woman had a good husband, in every sense of the word, you
had, in Carlyle; if ever man loved his wife, he loved you. How could you
so requite him?”

She rolled, in a confused manner, the corners of her warm shawl over her
unconscious fingers.

“I read the note you left for your husband. He showed it to me; the only
one, I believe, to whom he did show it. It was to him entirely
inexplicable, it was so to me. A notion had been suggested to him, after
your departure, that his sister had somewhat marred your peace at East
Lynne, and he blamed you much, if it was so, for not giving him your
full confidence on the point, that he might set matters on the right
footing. But it was impossible, and there was the evidence in the note
besides, that the presence of Miss Carlyle at East Lynne could be any
excuse for your disgracing us all and ruining yourself.”

“Do not let us speak of these things,” said Lady Isabel, faintly. “It
cannot redeem the past.”

“But I must speak of them; I came to speak of them,” persisted the earl;
“I could not do it as long as that man was here. When these inexplicable
things take place in the career of a woman, it is a father’s duty to
look into motives and causes and actions, although the events in
themselves may be, as in this case, irreparable. Your father is gone,
but I stand in his place, there is no one else to stand in it.”

Her tears began to fall. And she let them fall--in silence. The earl
resumed.

“But for that extraordinary letter, I should have supposed you had been
actuated by a mad infatuation for the cur, Levison; its tenor gave the
matter a different aspect. To what did you allude when you asserted that
your husband had driven you to it?”

“He knew,” she answered, scarcely above her breath.

“He did not know,” sternly replied the earl. “A more truthful, honorable
man than Carlyle does not exist on the face of the earth. When he told
me then, in his agony of grief, that he was unable to form even a
suspicion of your meaning, I could have staked my earldom on his
veracity. I would stake it still.”

“I believed,” she began, in a low, nervous voice, for she knew that
there was no evading the questions of Lord Mount Severn, when he was
resolute in their being answered, and, indeed she was too weak, both in
body and spirit, to resist--“I believed that his love was no longer
mine; that he had deserted me, for another.”

The earl stared at her. “What can you mean by ‘deserted!’ He was with
you.”

“There is a desertion of the heart,” was her murmured answer.

“Desertion of a fiddlestick!” retorted his lordship. “The interpretation
we gave to the note, I and Carlyle, was, that you had been actuated by
motives of jealousy; had penned it in a jealous mood. I put the question
to Carlyle--as between man and man--do you listen, Isabel!--whether he
had given you cause; and he answered me, as with God over us, he had
never given you cause; he had been faithful to you in thought, word and
deed; he had never, so far as he could call to mind, even looked upon
another woman with covetous feelings, since the hour that he made you
his wife; his whole thoughts had been of you, and of you alone. It is
more than many a husband can say,” significantly coughed Lord Mount
Severn.

Her pulses were beating wildly. A powerful conviction that the words
were true; that her own blind jealousy had been utterly mistaken and
unfounded, was forcing its way to her brain.

“After that I could only set your letter down as a subterfuge,” resumed
the earl--“a false, barefaced plea, put forth to conceal your real
motives, and I told Carlyle so. I inquired how it was he had never
detected any secret understanding between you and that--that beast,
located, as the fellow was, in the house. He replied that no such
suspicion had ever occurred to him. He placed the most implicit
confidence in you, and would have trusted you with the creature around
the world, aye, with any one else.”

She entwined her hands one within the other, pressing them to pain. It
would not deaden the pain at her heart.

“Carlyle told me he had been unusually occupied during the stay of that
man. Besides his customary office work, his time was taken up with some
private business for a family in the neighborhood, and he had repeatedly
to see them, more particularly the daughter, after office hours. Very
old acquaintances of his, he said, relatives of the Carlyle family; and
he was as anxious about the secret--a painful one--as they were. This, I
observed to him, may have rendered him unobservant to what was passing
at home. He told me, I remember, that on the very evening of the--the
catastrophe, he ought to have gone with you to a dinner party, but most
important circumstances arose, in connection with the affair, which
obliged him to meet two gentlemen at his office, and to receive them in
secret, unknown to his clerks.”

“Did he mention the name of the family?” inquired Lady Isabel, with
white lips.

“Yes, he did. I forgot it, though. Rabbit! Rabit!--some such name as
that.”

“Was it Hare?”

“That was it--Hare. He said you appeared vexed that he did not accompany
you to the dinner; and seeing that he intended to go in afterward, but
was prevented. When the interview was over in his office, he was again
detained at Mrs. Hare’s house, and by business as impossible to avoid as
the other.”

“Important business!” she echoed, giving way for a moment to the
bitterness of former feelings. “He was promenading in their garden by
moonlight with Barbara--Miss Hare. I saw them as my carriage passed.”

“And you were jealous that he should be there!” exclaimed Lord Mount
Severn, with mocking reproach, as he detected her mood. “Listen!” he
whispered, bending his head toward her. “While you may have thought, as
your present tone would seem to intimate, that they were pacing there to
enjoy each other’s society, know that they--Carlyle, at any rate--was
pacing the walk to keep guard. One was within that house--for a short
half hour’s interview with his poor mother--one who lives in danger of
the scaffold, to which his own father would be the first to deliver him
up. They were keeping the path against that father--Carlyle and the
young lady. Of all the nights in the previous seven years, that one only
saw the unhappy son at home for a half hour’s meeting with his mother
and sister. Carlyle, in the grief and excitement caused by your conduct,
confided so much to me, when mentioning what kept him from the dinner
party.”

Her face had become crimson--crimson at her past lamentable folly. And
there was no redemption!

“But he was always with Barbara Hare,” she murmured, by way of some
faint excuse.

“I have mentioned so. She had to see him upon this affair, her mother
could not, for it was obliged to be kept from the father. And so, you
construed business interviews into assignations!” continued Lord Mount
Severn with cutting derision. “I had given you credit for better sense.
But was this enough to hurl you on the step you took? Surely not. You
must have yielded in the persuasions of that wicked man.”

“It is all over now,” she wailed.

“Carlyle was true and faithful to you, and to you alone. Few women have
the chance of happiness, in their married life, in the degree that you
had. He is an upright and good man; one of nature’s gentlemen; one that
England may be proud of as having grown upon her soil. The more I see of
him, the greater becomes my admiration of him, and of his thorough
honor. Do you know what he did in the matter of the damages?”

She shook her head.

“He did not wish to proceed for damages, or only for the trifling sum
demanded by law; but the jury, feeling for his wrongs, gave
unprecedently heavy ones. Since the fellow came into his baronetcy they
have been paid. Carlyle immediately handed them over to the county
hospital. He holds the apparently obsolete opinion that money cannot
wipe out a wife’s dishonor.”

“Let us close those topics” implored the poor invalid. “I acted wickedly
and madly, and have the consequences to bear forever. More I cannot
say.”

“Where do you intend to fix your future residence?” inquired the earl.

“I am unable to tell. I shall leave this town as soon as I am well
enough.”

“Aye. It cannot be pleasant for you to remain under the eyes of its
inhabitants. You were here with him, were you not?”

“They think I am his wife,” she murmured. “The servants think it.”

“That’s well, so far. How many servants have you?”

“Two. I am not strong enough yet to do much myself, so am obliged to
keep two,” she continued, as if in apology for the extravagance, under
her reduced circumstances. “As soon as ever the baby can walk, I shall
manage to do with one.”

The earl looked confounded. “The baby!” he uttered, in a tone of
astonishment and grief painful to her to hear. “Isabel, is there a
child?”

Not less painful was her own emotion as she hid her face. Lord Mount
Severn rose and paced the room with striding steps.

“I did not know it! I did not know it! Wicked, heartless villain! He
ought to have married you before its birth. Was the divorce out
previously?” he asked stopping short in his strides to put the question.

“Yes.”

“Coward! Sneak! May good men shun him from henceforth! May his queen
refuse to receive him! You, an earl’s daughter! Oh, Isabel, how utterly
you have lost yourself!”

Lady Isabel started from her chair in a burst of hysterical sobs, her
hands extended beseechingly toward the earl. “Spare me! Spare me! You
have been rending my heart ever since you came; indeed I am too weak to
bear it.”

The earl, in truth, had been betrayed into showing more of his
sentiments than he intended. He recalled his recollection.

“Well, well, sit down again, Isabel,” he said, putting her into her
chair. “We shall go to the point I chiefly came here to settle. What sum
will it take you to live upon? Quietly; as of course you would now wish
to live, but comfortably.”

“I will not accept anything,” she replied. “I will get my own living.”
 And the earl’s irascibility again arose at the speech. He spoke in a
sharp tone.

“Absurd, Isabel! Do not add romantic folly to your own mistakes. Get
your own living, indeed! As much as is necessary for you to live upon, I
shall supply. No remonstrance; I tell you I am acting as for your
father. Do you suppose he would have abandoned you to starve or to
work?”

The allusion touched every chord within her bosom, and the tears fell
fast. “I thought I could get my living by teaching,” she sobbed.

“And how much did you anticipate the teaching would bring you in?”

“Not very much,” she listlessly said. “A hundred a year, perhaps; I am
very clever at music and singing. That sum might keep us, I fancy, even
if I only went out by the day.”

“And a fine ‘keep’ it would be! You shall have that sum every quarter!”

“No, no! no, no! I do not deserve it; I could not accept it; I have
forfeited all claim to assistance.”

“Not to mine. Now, it is of no use to excite yourself, my mind is made
up. I never willingly forego a duty, and I look upon this not only as a
duty, but as an imperative one. Upon my return, I shall immediately
settle four hundred upon you, and you can draw it quarterly.”

“Then half that sum,” she reflected, knowing how useless it was to
contend with Lord Mount Severn when he got upon the stilts of “duty.”
 “Indeed, two hundred a year will be ample; it will seem like riches to
me.”

“I have named the sum, Isabel, and I shall not make it less. A hundred
pounds every three months shall be paid to you, dating from this day.
This does not count,” said he, laying down some notes on the table.

He took her hand within his in token of farewell; turned and was gone.

And Lady Isabel remained in her chamber alone.

Alone; alone! Alone for evermore!



CHAPTER XXVII.

BARBARA’S MISDOINGS.

A sunny afternoon in summer. More correctly speaking, it may be said a
summer’s evening, for the bright beams were already slanting athwart the
substantial garden of Mr. Justice Hare, and the tea hour, seven, was
passing. Mr. and Mrs. Hare and Barbara were seated at the meal; somehow,
meals always did seem in process at Justice Hare’s; if it was not
breakfast, it was luncheon--if it was not luncheon, it was dinner--if it
was not dinner, it was tea. Barbara sat in tears, for the justice was
giving her a “piece of his mind,” and poor Mrs. Hare deferently agreeing
with her husband, as she would have done had he proposed to set the
house on fire and burn her up in it, yet sympathizing with Barbara,
moved uneasily in her chair.

“You do it for the purpose; you do it to anger me,” thundered the
justice, bringing down his hand on the tea-table and causing the cups to
rattle.

“No I don’t, papa,” sobbed Barbara.

“Then why do you do it?”

Barbara was silent.

“No; you can’t answer; you have nothing to urge. What is the matter,
pray, with Major Thorn? Come, I will be answered.”

“I don’t like him,” faltered Barbara.

“You do like him; you are telling me an untruth. You have liked him well
enough whenever he has been here.”

“I like him as an acquaintance, papa; not as a husband.”

“Not as a husband!” repeated the exasperated justice. “Why, bless my
heart and body, the girl’s going mad! Not as a husband! Who asked you to
like him as a husband before he became such? Did ever you hear that it
was necessary or expedient, or becoming for a young lady to act on and
begin to ‘like’ a gentleman as ‘her husband?’”

Barbara felt a little bewildered.

“Here’s the whole parish saying that Barbara Hare can’t be married, that
nobody will have her, on account of--of--of that cursed stain left by---
-, I won’t trust myself to name him, I should go too far. Now, don’t you
think that’s a pretty disgrace, a fine state of things?”

“But it is not true,” said Barbara; “people do ask me.”

“But what’s the use of their asking when you say ‘No?’” raved the
justice. “Is that the way to let the parish know that they ask? You are
an ungrateful, rebellious, self-willed daughter, and you’ll never be
otherwise.”

Barbara’s tears flowed freely. The justice gave a dash at the bell
handle, to order the tea things carried away, and after their removal
the subject was renewed, together with Barbara’s grief. That was the
worst of Justice Hare. Let him seize hold of a grievance, it was not
often he got upon a real one, and he kept on at it, like a blacksmith
hammering at his forge. In the midst of a stormy oration, tongue and
hands going together, Mr. Carlyle came in.

Not much altered; not much. A year and three-quarters had gone by and
they had served to silver his hair upon the temples. His manner, too,
would never again be careless and light as it once had been. He was the
same keen man of business, the same pleasant, intelligent companion; the
generality of people saw no change in him. Barbara rose to escape.

“No,” said Justice Hare, planting himself between her and the door;
“that’s the way you like to get out of my reach when I am talking to
you. You won’t go; so sit down again. I’ll tell you of your ill-conduct
before Mr. Carlyle, and see if that will shame you.”

Barbara resumed her seat, a rush of crimson dyeing her cheeks. And Mr.
Carlyle looked inquiringly, seeming to ask an explanation of her
distress. The justice continued after his own fashion.

“You know, Carlyle, that horrible blow that fell upon us, that shameless
disgrace. Well, because the parish can’t clack enough about the fact
itself, it must begin about Barbara, saying that the disgrace and
humiliation are reflected upon her, and that nobody will come near her
to ask her to be his wife. One would think, rather than lie under the
stigma and afford the parish room to talk, she’d marry the first man
that came, if it was the parish beadle--anybody else would. But now,
what are the facts? You’ll stare when you know them. She has received a
bushel of good offers--a bushel of them,” repeated the justice, dashing
his hand down on his knee, “and she says ‘No!’ to all. The last was to-
day, from Major Thorn, and, my young lady takes and puts the stopper
upon it, as usual, without reference to me or her mother, without saying
with your leave or by your leave. She wants to be kept in her room for a
week upon bread and water, to bring her to her senses.”

Mr. Carlyle glanced at Barbara. She was sitting meekly under the
infliction, her wet eyelashes falling on her flushed cheeks and shading
her eyes. The justice was heated enough, and had pushed his flaxen wig
nearly hind-part before, in the warmth of his argument.

“What did you say to her?” snapped the justice.

“Matrimony may not have charms for Barbara,” replied Mr. Carlyle half
jokingly.

“Nothing does have charms for her that ought to have,” growled Justice
Hare. “She’s one of the contrary ones. By the way, though,” hastily
resumed the justice, leaving the objectionable subject, as another
flashed across his memory, “they were coupling your name and matrimony
together, Carlyle, last night, at the Buck’s Head.”

A very perceptible tinge of red rose to the face of Mr. Carlyle, telling
of inward emotion, but his voice and manner betrayed none.

“Indeed,” he carelessly said.

“Ah, you are a sly one; you are, Carlyle. Remember how sly you were over
your first----” marriage, Justice Hare was going to bring out, but it
suddenly occurred to him that all circumstances considered, it was not
precisely the topic to recall to Mr. Carlyle. So he stopped himself in
the utterance, coughed, and went on again. “There you go, over to see
Sir John Dobede, not to see Sir John, but paying court to Miss Dobede.”

“So the Buck’s Head was amusing itself with that!” good-naturedly
observed Mr. Carlyle. “Well, Miss Dobede is going to be married, and I
am drawing up the settlements.”

“It’s not she; she marries young Somerset; everybody knows that. It’s
the other one, Louisa. A nice girl, Carlyle.”

“Very,” responded Mr. Carlyle, and it was all the answer he gave. The
justice, tired of sitting indoors, tired, perhaps, of extracting nothing
satisfactory from Mr. Carlyle, rose, shook himself, set his wig aright
before the chimney-glass, and quitted the house on his customary evening
visit to the Buck’s Head. Barbara, who watched him down the path, saw
that he encountered someone who happened to be passing the gate. She
could not at first distinguish who it might be, nothing but an arm and
shoulder cased in velveteen met her view, but as their positions changed
in conversation--his and her father’s--she saw that it was Locksley; he
had been the chief witness, not a vindictive one; he could not help
himself, against her brother Richard, touching the murder of Hallijohn.

Meanwhile Mrs. Hare had drawn Mr. Carlyle into a chair close by her own.

“Archibald, will you forgive me if I say a word upon the topic
introduced by Mr. Hare?” she said, in a low tone, as she shook his hand.
“You know how fondly I have ever regarded you, second only to my poor
Richard. Your welfare and happiness are precious to me. I wish I could
in any way promote them. It occurs to me, sometimes, that you are not at
present so happy as you might be.”

“I have some sources of happiness,” said Mr. Carlyle. “My children and I
have plenty of sources of interest. What do you mean, dear Mrs. Hare?”

“Your home might be made happier.”

Mr. Carlyle smiled, nearly laughed. “Cornelia takes care of that, as she
did in the old days, you know.”

“Yes, I know. Would it not be as well to consider whether she would not
be better in a home of her own--and for you to give East Lynne another
mistress?”

He shook his head.

“Archibald, it would be happier for you; it would indeed. It is only in
new ties that you can forget the past. You might find recompense yet for
the sorrow you have gone through; and I know none,” repeated Mrs. Hare,
emphatically, “more calculated to bring it you than that sweet girl,
Louisa Dobede.”

“So long as--” Mr. Carlyle was beginning, and had not got so far in his
sentence, when he was interrupted by an exclamation from Barbara.

“What can be the matter with papa? Locksley must have said something to
anger him. He is coming in the greatest passion, mamma; his face
crimson, and his hands and arms working.”

“Oh, dear, Barbara!” was all poor Mrs. Hare’s reply. The justice’s great
bursts of passion frightened her.

In he came, closed the door, and stood in the middle of the room,
looking alternately at Mrs. Hare and Barbara.

“What is this cursed report, that’s being whispered in the place!” quoth
he, in a tone of suppressed rage, but not unmixed with awe.

“What report?” asked Mr. Carlyle, for the justice waited for an answer,
and Mrs. Hare seemed unable to speak. Barbara took care to keep silence;
she had some misgivings that the justice’s words might be referring to
herself--to the recent grievance.

“A report that he--he--has been here disguised as a laborer, has dared
to show himself in the place where he’ll come yet, to the gibbet.”

Mrs. Hare’s face turned as white as death; Mr. Carlyle rose and
dexterously contrived to stand before her, so that it should not be
seen. Barbara silently locked her hands, one within the other, and
turned to the window.

“Of whom did you speak?” asked Mr. Carlyle, in a matter-of-fact tone, as
if he were putting the most matter-of-fact question. He knew too well;
but he thought to temporize for the sake of Mrs. Hare.

“Of whom do I speak!” uttered the exasperated justice, nearly beside
himself with passion; “of whom would I speak but the bastard Dick! Who
else in West Lynne is likely to come to a felon’s death?”

“Oh, Richard!” sobbed forth Mrs. Hare, as she sank back in her chair,
“be merciful. He is our own true son.”

“Never a true son of the Hares,” raved the justice. “A true son of
wickedness, and cowardice, and blight, and evil. If he has dared to show
his face at West Lynne, I’ll set the whole police of England upon his
track, that he may be brought here as he ought, if he must come. When
Locksley told me of it just now, I raised my hand to knock him down, so
infamously false did I deem the report. Do you know anything of his
having been here?” continued the justice to his wife, in a pointed,
resolute tone.

How Mrs. Hare would have extricated herself, or what she would have
answered, cannot even be imagined, but Mr. Carlyle interposed.

“You are frightening Mrs. Hare, sir. Don’t you see that she knows
nothing of it--that the very report of such a thing is alarming her into
illness? But--allow me to inquire what it may be that Locksley said?”

“I met him at the gate,” retorted Justice Hare, turning his attention
upon Mr. Carlyle. “He was going by as I reached it. ‘Oh, justice, I am
glad I met you. That’s a nasty report in the place that Richard has been
here. I’d see what I could do toward hushing it up, sir, if I were you,
for it may only serve to put the police in mind of by gone things, which
it may be better they should forget.’ Carlyle, I went, as I tell you, to
knock him down. I asked him how he could have the hardihood to repeat
such slander to my face. He was on the high horse directly; said the
parish spoke the slander, not he; and I got out of him what it was he
had heard.”

“And what was it?” interrupted Mr. Carlyle, more eagerly than he
generally spoke.

“Why, they say the fellow showed himself here some time ago, a year or
so, disguised as a farm laborer--confounded fools! Not but what he’d
have been the fool had he done it.”

“To be sure he would,” repeated Mr. Carlyle, “and he is not fool enough
for that, sir. Let West Lynne talk, Mr. Hare; but do not put faith in a
word of its gossip. I never do. Poor Richard, wherever he may be--”

“I won’t have him pitied in my presence,” burst forth the justice. “Poor
Richard, indeed! Villain Richard, if you please.”

“I was about to observe that, wherever he may be--whether in the
backwoods of America, or digging for gold in California, or wandering
about the United Kingdom--there is little fear that he will quit his
place of safety to dare the dangerous ground of West Lynne. Had I been
you, sir, I should have laughed at Locksley and his words.”

“Why does West Lynne invent such lies?”

“Ah, there’s the rub. I dare say West Lynne could not tell why, if it
were paid for doing it; but it seems to have been a lame story it had
got up this time. If they must have concocted a report that Richard had
been seen at West Lynne, why put it back to a year ago--why not have
fixed it for to-day or yesterday? If I heard anything more, I would
treat it with the silence and contempt it deserves, justice.”

Silence and contempt were not greatly in the justice’s line; noise and
explosion were more so. But he had a high opinion of the judgment of Mr.
Carlyle; and growling a sort of assent, he once more set forth to pay
his evening visit.

“Oh, Archibald!” uttered Mrs. Hare, when her husband was half-way down
the path, “what a mercy that you were here! I should inevitably have
betrayed myself.”

Barbara turned round from the window, “But what could have possessed
Locksley to say what he did?” she exclaimed.

“I have no doubt Locksley spoke with a motive,” said Mr. Carlyle. “He is
not unfriendly to Richard, and thought, probably, that by telling Mr.
Hare of the report he might get it stopped. The rumor had been mentioned
to me.”

Barbara turned cold all over. “How can it have come to light?” she
breathed.

“I am at a loss to know,” said Mr. Carlyle. “The person to mention it to
me was Tom Herbert. ‘I say,’ said he meeting me yesterday, ‘what’s this
row about Dick Hare?’ ‘What now?’ I asked him. ‘Why, that Dick was at
West Lynne some time back, disguised as a farm laborer.’ Just the same,
you see, that Locksley said to Mr. Hare. I laughed at Tom Herbert,”
 continued Mr. Carlyle; “turned his report into ridicule also, before I
had done with him.”

“Will it be the means of causing Richard’s detection?” murmured Mrs.
Hare from between her dry lips.

“No, no,” warmly responded Mr. Carlyle. “Had the report arisen
immediately after he was really here, it might not have been so
pleasant; but nearly two years have elapsed since the period. Be under
no uneasiness, dear Mrs. Hare, for rely upon it there is no cause.”

“But how could it have come out, Archibald?” she urged, “and at this
distant period of time?”

“I assure you I am quite at a loss to imagine. Had anybody at West Lynne
seen and recognized Richard, they would have spoken of it at the time.
Do not let it trouble you; the rumor will die away.”

Mrs. Hare sighed deeply, and left the room to proceed to her own
chamber. Barbara and Mr. Carlyle were alone.

“Oh, that the real murderer could be discovered!” she aspirated,
clasping her hands. “To be subjected to these shocks of fear is
dreadful. Mamma will not be herself for days to come.”

“I wish the right man could be found; but it seems as far off as ever,”
 remarked Mr. Carlyle.

Barbara sat ruminating. It seemed that she would say something to Mr.
Carlyle, but a feeling caused her to hesitate. When she did at length
speak, it was in a low, timid voice.

“You remember the description Richard gave, that last night, of the
person he had met--the true Thorn?”

“Yes.”

“Did it strike you then--has it ever occurred to you to think--that it
accorded with some one?”

“In what way, Barbara?” he asked, after a pause. “It accorded with the
description Richard always gave of the man Thorn.”

“Richard spoke of the peculiar movement of throwing off the hair from
the forehead--in this way. Did that strike you as being familiar, in
connection with the white hand and the diamond ring?”

“Many have a habit of pushing off their hair--I think I do it myself
sometimes. Barbara, what do you mean? Have you a suspicion of any one?”

“Have you?” she returned, answering the question by asking another.

“I have not. Since Captain Thorn was disposed of, my suspicions have not
pointed anywhere.”

This sealed Barbara’s lips. She had hers, vague doubts, bringing wonder
more than anything else. At times she had thought the same doubts might
have occurred to Mr. Carlyle; she now found that they had not. The
terrible domestic calamity which had happened to Mr. Carlyle the same
night that Richard protested he had seen Thorn, had prevented Barbara’s
discussing the matter with him then, and she had never done so since.
Richard had never been further heard of, and the affair had remained in
abeyance.

“I begin to despair of its ever being discovered,” she observed. “What
will become of poor Richard?”

“We can but wait, and hope that time may bring forth its own
elucidation,” continued Mr. Carlyle.

“Ah,” sighed Barbara, “but it is weary waiting--weary, weary.”

“How is it you contrive to get under the paternal displeasure?” he
resumed, in a gayer tone.

She blushed vividly, and it was her only answer.

“The Major Thorn alluded to by your papa is our old friend, I presume?”

Barbara inclined her head.

“He is a very pleasant man, Barbara. Many a young lady in West Lynne
would be proud to get him.”

There was a pause. Barbara broke it, but she did not look at Mr. Carlyle
as she spoke.

“The other rumor--is it a correct one?”

“What other rumor?”

“That you are to marry Louisa Dobede.”

“It is not. I have no intention of marrying any one. Nay, I will say it
more strongly; it is my intention not to marry any one--to remain as I
am.”

Barbara lifted her eyes to his in the surprise of the moment.

“You look amused, Barbara. Have you been lending your credence to the
gossips, who have so kindly disposed of me to Louisa Dobede?”

“Not so. But Louisa Dobede is a girl to be coveted, and, as mamma says,
it might be happier for you if you married again. I thought you would be
sure to do so.”

“No. She--who was my wife--lives.”

“What of that?” uttered Barbara, in simplicity.

He did not answer for a moment, and when he did, it was in a low, almost
imperceptible tone, as he stood by the table at which Barbara sat, and
looked down on her.

“‘Whosoever putteth away his wife, and marrieth another, committeth
adultery.’”

And before Barbara could answer, if, indeed, she had found any answer to
make, or had recovered her surprise, he had taken his hat and was gone.

To return for a short while to Lady Isabel. As the year advanced she
grew stronger, and in the latter part of the summer she made
preparations for quitting Grenoble. Where she would fix her residence,
or what she would do, she knew not. She was miserable and restless, and
cared little what became of her. The remotest spot on earth, one
unpenetrated by the steps of civilized man, appeared the most desirable
for her. Where was she to find this?

She set out on her search, she and the child and its nurse. Not Susanne.
Susanne had a sweetheart in Grenoble, and declined to leave it, so a
girl was engaged for the child in her place. Lady Isabel wound up her
housekeeping, had her things packed and forwarded to Paris, there to
wait her orders and finally quitted Grenoble. It was a fine day when she
left it--all too fine for the dark ending it was to bring.

When a railway accident does take place in France, it is an accident.
None of your milk-and-water affairs, where a few bruises and a great
fright are the extent of the damages but too often a calamity whose
remembrance lasts a lifetime. Lady Isabel had travelled a considerable
distance that first day, and at the dusk of evening, as they were
approaching a place, Cammere, where she purposed to halt for the night,
a dreadful accident occurred. The details need not be given, and will
not be. It is sufficient to say that some of the passengers were killed,
her child and nurse being amongst them, and she herself was dangerously
injured.

The injuries lay chiefly in her left leg and in her face--the lower part
of her face. The surgeons, taking their cursory view of her, as they did
of the rest of the sufferers, were not sparing in their remarks, for
they believed her to be insensible. She had gathered that the leg was to
be amputated, and that she would probably die under the operation--but
her turn to be attended to was not yet. How she contrived to write she
never knew, but she got a pen and ink brought to her, and did succeed in
scrawling a letter to Lord Mount Severn.

She told him that a sad accident had taken place; she could not say how;
all was confusion; and that her child and maid were killed. She herself
was dangerously injured, and was about to undergo an operation, which
the doctors believed she could not survive; only in case of her death
would the letter be sent to Lord Mount Severn. She could not die, she
said, without a word of thanks for all his kindness; and she begged him,
when he saw Mr. Carlyle, to say that with her last breath she humbly
implored his forgiveness, and his children’s whom she no longer dared to
call hers.

Now this letter, by the officiousness of a servant at the inn to which
the sufferers were carried, was taken at once to the post. And, after
all, things turned out not quite so bad as anticipated; for when the
doctors came to examine the state of Lady Isabel, not cursorily, they
found there would be no absolute necessity for the operation
contemplated. Fond as the French surgeons are of the knife, to resort to
it in this instance would have been cruel, and they proceeded to other
means of cure.

The letter was duly delivered at the town house of Lord Mount Severn,
where it was addressed. The countess was sojourning there for a few
days; she had quitted it after the season, but some business, or
pleasure, had called her again to town. Lord Vane was with her, but the
earl was in Scotland. They were at breakfast, she and her son, when the
letter was brought in: eighteen pence to pay. Its scrawled address, its
foreign aspect, its appearance, altogether, excited her curiosity; in
her own mind, she believed she had dropped upon a nice little conjugal
mare’s nest.

“I shall open this,” cried she.

“Why, it is addressed to papa!” exclaimed Lord Vane who possessed all
his father’s notions of honor.

“But such an odd letter! It may require an immediate answer; or is some
begging petition, perhaps. Get on with your breakfast.”

Lady Mount Severn opened the letter, and with some difficulty spelt
through its contents. They shocked even her.

“How dreadful!” she uttered, in the impulse of the moment.

“What is dreadful?” asked Lord Vane, looking up from his breakfast.

“Lady Isabel--Isabel Vane--you have not forgotten her?”

“Forgotten her!” he echoed. “Why, mamma, I must possess a funny memory
to have forgotten her already.”

“She is dead. She has been killed in a railway accident in France.”

His large blue eyes, honest and true as they had been in childhood,
filled, and his face flushed. He said nothing, for emotion was strong
within him.

“But, shocking as it is, it is better for her,” went on the countess;
“for, poor creature what could her future life had been?”

“Oh, don’t say it!” impetuously broke out the young viscount. “Killed in
a railway accident, and for you to say that it is better for her!”

“So it is better,” said the countess. “Don’t go into heroics, William.
You are quite old enough to know that she had brought misery upon
herself, and disgrace upon all connected with her. No one could ever
have taken notice of her again.”

“I would,” said the boy, stoutly.

Lady Mount Severn smiled derisively.

“I would. I never liked anybody in the world half so much as I liked
Isabel.”

“That’s past and gone. You would not have continued to like her, after
the disgrace she wrought.”

“Somebody else wrought more of the disgrace than she did; and, had I
been a man, I would have shot him dead,” flashed the viscount.

“You don’t know anything about it.”

“Don’t I!” returned he, not over dutifully. But Lady Mount Severn had
not brought him up to be dutiful.

“May I read the letter, mamma?” he demanded, after a pause.

“If you can read it,” she replied, tossing it to him. “It is written in
the strangest style; syllables divided, and the words running one into
the other. She wrote it herself when she was dying.”

Lord Vane took the letter to a window, and stayed looking over it for
some time; the countess ate an egg and a plate of ham meanwhile.
Presently he came back with it folded, and laid in on the table.

“You will forward it to papa to-day,” he observed.

“I shall forward it to him. But there’s no hurry; and I don’t exactly
know where your papa may be. I shall send the notice of her death to the
papers; and I am glad to do it; it is a blight removed from the family.”

“Mamma, I do think you are the unkindest woman that ever breathed!”

“I’ll give you something to call me unkind for, if you don’t mind,”
 retorted the countess, her color rising. “Dock you of your holiday, and
pack you back to school to-day.”

A few mornings after this Mr. Carlyle left East Lynne and proceeded to
his office as usual. Scarcely was he seated, when Mr. Dill entered, and
Mr. Carlyle looked at him inquiringly, for it was not Mr. Carlyle’s
custom to be intruded upon by any person until he had opened his
letters; then he would ring for Mr. Dill. The letters and the Times
newspaper lay on the table before him. The old gentleman came up in a
covert, timid sort of way, which made Mr. Carlyle look all the more.

“I beg pardon, sir; will you let me ask if you have heard any particular
news?”

“Yes, I have heard it,” replied Mr. Carlyle.

“Then, sir, I beg your pardon a thousand times over. It occurred to me
that you probably had not, Mr. Archibald; and I thought I would have
said a word to prepare you, before you came upon it suddenly in the
paper.”

“To prepare me!” echoed Mr. Carlyle, as old Dill was turning away. “Why,
what has come to you, Dill? Are you afraid my nerves are growing
delicate, or that I shall faint over the loss of a hundred pounds? At
the very most, we shall not suffer above that extent.”

Old Dill turned back again.

“If I don’t believe you are speaking of the failure of Kent & Green!
It’s not that, Mr. Archibald. They won’t affect us much; and there’ll be
a dividend, report runs.”

“What is it, then?”

“Then you have not heard it, sir! I am glad that I’m in time. It might
not be well for you to have seen it without a word of preparation, Mr.
Archibald.”

“If you have not gone demented, you will tell me what you mean, Dill,
and leave me to my letters,” cried Mr. Carlyle, wondering excessively at
his sober, matter-of-fact clerk’s words and manner.

Old Dill put his hands upon the Times newspaper.

“It’s here, Mr. Archibald, in the column of deaths; the first on the
list. Please, prepare yourself a little before you look at it.”

He shuffled out quickly, and Mr. Carlyle as quickly unfolded the paper.
It was, as old Dill said, the first on the list of deaths:

“At Cammere, in France, on the 18th inst., Isabel Mary, only child of
William, late Earl of Mount Severn.”

Clients called; Mr. Carlyle’s bell did not ring; an hour or two passed,
and old Dill protested that Mr. Carlyle was engaged until he could
protest no longer. He went in, deprecatingly. Mr. Carlyle sat yet with
the newspaper before him, and the letters unopened at his elbow.

“There are one or two who will come in, Mr. Archibald--who will see you;
what am I to say?”

Mr. Carlyle stared at him for a moment, as if his wits had been in the
next world. Then he swept the newspaper from before him, and was the
calm, collected man of business again.

As the news of Lady Isabel’s marriage had first come in the knowledge of
Lord Mount Severn through the newspapers, so singular to say did the
tidings of her death. The next post brought him the letter, which his
wife had tardily forwarded. But, unlike Lady Mount Severn, he did not
take her death as entirely upon trust; he thought it possible the letter
might have been dispatched without its having taken place; and he deemed
it incumbent on him to make inquiries. He wrote immediately to the
authorities of the town, in the best French he could muster, asking for
particulars, and whether she was really dead.

He received, in due course a satisfactory answer; satisfactory in so far
as that it set his doubts at rest. He had inquired after her by her
proper name, and title, “La Dame Isabelle Vane,” and as the authorities
could find none of the survivors owning that name, they took it for
granted she was dead. They wrote him word that the child and nurse were
killed on the spot; two ladies, occupying the same compartment of the
carriage, had since died, one of whom was no doubt the mother and lady
he inquired for. She was dead and buried, sufficient money having been
found upon her person to defray the few necessary expenses.

Thus, through no premeditated intention of Lady Isabel, news of her
death went forth to Lord Mount Severn and to the world. Her first
intimation that she was regarded as dead, was through a copy of that
very day’s Times seen by Mr. Carlyle--seen by Lord Mount Severn. An
English traveller, who had been amongst the sufferers, and who received
the English newspaper daily, sometimes lent them to her to read. She was
not travelling under her own name; she left that behind her when she
left Grenoble; she had rendered her own too notorious to risk the chance
recognition of travellers; and the authorities little thought that the
quiet unobtrusive Madame Vine, slowly recovering at the inn, was the
Dame Isabella Vane, respecting whom the grand English comte wrote.

Lady Isabel understood it at once; that the dispatching of her letter
had been the foundation of the misapprehension; and she began to ask
herself now, why she should undeceive Lord Mount Severn and the world.
She longed, none knew with what intense longings, to be unknown,
obscure, totally unrecognized by all; none can know it, till they have
put a barrier between themselves and the world, as she had done. The
child was gone--happy being! She thought she could never be sufficiently
thankful that it was released from the uncertain future--therefore she
had not his support to think of. She had only herself; and surely she
could with ease earn enough for that; or she could starve; it mattered
little which. No, there was no necessity for her continuing to accept
the bounty of Lord Mount Severn, and she would let him and everybody
else continue to believe that she was dead, and be henceforth only
Madame Vine. A resolution she adhered to.

Thus the unhappy Isabel’s career was looked upon as run. Lord Mount
Severn forwarded her letter to Mr. Carlyle, with the confirmation of her
death, which he had obtained from the French authorities. It was a nine
day’s wonder: “That poor, erring Lady Isabel was dead”--people did not
call her names in the very teeth of her fate--and then it was over.

It was over. Lady Isabel was as one forgotten.



CHAPTER XXVIII.

AN UNEXPECTED VISITOR AT EAST LYNNE.

There went, sailing up the avenue to East Lynne, a lady, one windy
afternoon. If not a lady, she was attired as one; a flounced dress, and
a stylish looking shawl, and a white veil. A very pretty woman, tall and
slender was she, and she minced as she walked, and coquetted with her
head, and, altogether contrived to show that she had quite as much
vanity as brains. She went boldly up to the broad entrance of the house,
and boldly rang at it, drawing her white veil over her face as she did
so.

One of the men-servants answered it, not Peter; and, seeing somebody
very smart before him, bowed deferentially.

“Miss Hallijohn is residing here, I believe. Is she within?”

“Who, ma’am?”

“Miss Hallijohn; Miss Joyce Hallijohn,” somewhat sharply repeated the
lady, as if impatient of any delay. “I wish to see her.”

The man was rather taken aback. He had deemed it a visitor to the house,
and was prepared to usher her to the drawing-room, at least; but it
seemed it was only a visitor to Joyce. He showed her into a small
parlor, and went upstairs to the nursery, where Joyce was sitting with
Wilson--for there had been no change in the domestic department of East
Lynne. Joyce remained as upper maid, partially superintending the
servants, attending upon Lucy, and making Miss Carlyle’s dresses as
usual. Wilson was nurse still.

“Miss Joyce, there’s a lady asking for you,” said the man. “I have shown
her into the gray parlor.”

“A lady for me?” repeated Joyce. “Who is it? Some one to see the
children, perhaps.”

“It’s for yourself, I think. She asked for Miss Hallijohn.”

Joyce looked at the man; but she put down her work and proceeded to the
gray parlor. A pretty woman, vain and dashing, threw up her white veil
at her entrance.

“Well, Joyce, how are you?”

Joyce, always pale, turned paler still, as she gazed in blank
consternation. Was it really Afy who stood before her--Afy, the erring?

Afy it was. And she stood there, holding out her hand to Joyce, with
what Wilson would have called, all the brass in the world. Joyce could
not reconcile her mind to link her own with it.

“Excuse me, Afy, but I cannot take your hand, I cannot welcome you here.
What could have induced you to come?”

“If you are going to be upon the high ropes, it seems I might as well
have stayed away,” was Afy’s reply, given in the pert, but good-humored
manner she had ever used to Joyce. “My hand won’t damage yours. I am not
poison.”

“You are looked upon in the neighborhood as worse than poison, Afy,”
 returned Joyce, in a tone, not of anger but of sorrow. “Where’s Richard
Hare?”

Afy tossed her head. “Where’s who?” asked she.

“Richard Hare. My question was plain enough.”

“How should I know where he is? It’s like your impudence to mention him
to me. Why don’t you ask me where Old Nick is, and how he does? I’d
rather own acquaintance with him than with Richard Hare, if I’d my
choice between the two.”

“Then you have left Richard Hare? How long since?”

“I have left--what do you say?” broke off Afy, whose lips were quivering
ominously with suppressed passion. “Perhaps you’ll condescend to
explain. I don’t understand.”

“When you left here, did you not go after Richard Hare--did you not join
him?”

“I’ll tell you what it is, Joyce,” flashed Afy, her face indignant and
her voice passionate, “I have put up with some things from you in my
time, but human nature has its limits of endurance, and I won’t bear
that. I have never set eyes on Richard Hare since that night of horror;
I wish I could; I’d help to hang him.”

Joyce paused. The belief that Afy was with him had been long and deeply
imbued within her; it was the long-continued and firm conviction of all
West Lynne, and a settled belief, such as that, is not easily shaken.
Was Afy telling the truth? She knew her propensity for making false
assertions, when they served to excuse herself.

“Afy,” she said at length, “let me understand you. When you left this
place, was it not to share Richard Hare’s flight? Have you not been
living with him?”

“No!” burst forth Afy, with kindling eyes. “Living with him--with our
father’s murderer! Shame upon you, Joyce Hallijohn! You must be precious
wicked yourself to suppose it.”

“If I have judged you wrongly, Afy, I sincerely beg your pardon. Not
only myself, but the whole of West Lynne, believed you were with him;
and the thought has caused me pain night and day.”

“What a cannibal minded set you all must be, then!” was Afy’s indignant
rejoinder.

“What have you been doing ever since, then? Where have you been?”

“Never mind, I say,” repeated Afy. “West Lynne has not been so
complimentary to me, it appears, that I need put myself out of my way to
satisfy its curiosity. I was knocking about a bit at first, but I soon
settled down as steady as Old Time--as steady as you.”

“Are you married?” inquired Joyce, noting the word “settled.”

“Catch me marrying,” retorted Afy; “I like my liberty too well. Not but
what I might be induced to change my condition, if anything out of the
way eligible occurred; it must be very eligible, though, to tempt me. I
am what I suppose you call yourself--a lady’s maid.”

“Indeed!” said Joyce, much relieved. “And are you comfortable, Afy? Are
you in good service?”

“Middling, for that. The pay’s not amiss, but there’s a great deal to
do, and Lady Mount Severn’s too much of a Tartar for me.”

Joyce looked at her in surprise. “What have you to do with Lady Mount
Severn?”

“Well, that’s good! It’s where I am at service.”

“At Lady Mount Severn’s?”

“Why not? I have been there two years. It is not a great deal longer I
shall stop, though; she had too much vinegar in her for me. But it poses
me to imagine what on earth could have induced you to fancy I should go
off with that Dick Hare,” she added, for she could not forget the
grievance.

“Look at the circumstances,” argued Joyce. “You both disappeared.”

“But not together.”

“Nearly together. There were only a few days intervening. And you had
neither money nor friends.”

“You don’t know what I had. But I would rather have died of want on
father’s grave than have shared his means,” continued Afy, growing
passionate again.

“Where is he? Not hung, or I should have heard of it.”

“He has never been seen since that night, Afy.”

“Nor heard of?”

“Nor heard of. Most people think he is in Australia, or some other
foreign land.”

“The best place for him; the more distance he puts between him and home,
the better. If he does come back, I hope he’ll get his desserts--which
is a rope’s end. I’d go to his hanging.”

“You are as bitter against him as Mr. Justice Hare. He would bring his
son back to suffer, if he could.”

“A cross-grained old camel!” remarked Afy, in allusion to the qualities,
social and amiable, of the revered justice. “I don’t defend Dick Hare--I
hate him too much for that--but if his father had treated him
differently, Dick might have been different. Well, let’s talk of
something else; the subject invariably gives me the shivers. Who is
mistress here?”

“Miss Carlyle.”

“Oh, I might have guessed that. Is she as fierce as ever?”

“There is little alteration in her.”

“And there won’t be on this side the grave. I say, Joyce, I don’t want
to encounter her; she might set on at me, like she has done many a time
in the old days. Little love was there lost between me and Corny
Carlyle. Is Mr. Carlyle at home?”

“He will be home to dinner. I dare say you would like some tea; you
shall come and take it with me and Wilson, in the nursery.”

“I was thinking you might have the grace to offer me something,” cried
Afy. “I intend to stop till to-morrow in the neighborhood. My lady gave
me two days’ holiday--for she was going to see her dreadful old
grandmother, where she can’t take a maid--and I thought I’d use it in
coming to have a look at the old place again. Don’t stare at me in that
blank way, as if you feared I should ask the grand loan of sleeping
here. I shall sleep at the Mount Severn Arms.”

“I was not glancing at such a thought, Afy. Come and take your bonnet
off.”

“Is the nursery full of children?”

“There is only one child in it. Miss Lucy and Master William are with
the governess.”

Wilson received Afy with lofty condescension, having Richard Hare in her
thoughts. But Joyce explained that it was all a misapprehension--that
her sister had never been near Richard Hare, but was as indignant
against him as they were. Upon which Wilson grew cordial and chatty,
rejoicing in the delightful recreation her tongue would enjoy that
evening.

Afy’s account of herself, as to past proceedings, was certainly not the
most satisfactory in the world; but, altogether, taken in the present,
it was so vast an improvement upon Joyce’s conclusions, that she had not
felt so elated for many a day. When Mr. Carlyle returned home Joyce
sought him, and acquainted him with what had happened; that Afy was
come; was maid to Lady Mount Severn; and, above all, that she had never
been with Richard Hare.

“Ah! You remember what I said, Joyce,” he remarked. “That I did not
believe Afy was with Richard Hare.”

“I have been telling her so, sir, to be sure, when I informed her what
people had believed,” continued Joyce. “She nearly went into one of her
old passions.”

“Does she seem steady, Joyce?”

“I think so, sir--steady for her. I was thinking, sir, that as she
appears to have turned out so respectable, and is with Lady Mount
Severn, you, perhaps, might see no objection to her sleeping here for
to-night. It would be better than for her to go to the inn, as she talks
of doing.”

“None at all,” replied Mr. Carlyle. “Let her remain.”

Later in the evening, after Mr. Carlyle’s dinner, a message came that
Afy was to go to him. Accordingly she proceeded to his presence.

“So, Afy, you have returned to let West Lynne know that you are alive.
Sit down.”

“West Lynne may go a-walking for me in future, sir, for all the heed I
shall take of it,” retorted Afy. “A set of wicked-minded scandal-
mongers, to take and say I had gone after Richard Hare!”

“You should not have gone off at all, Afy.”

“Well, sir, that was my business, and I chose to go. I could not stop in
the cottage after that night’s work.”

“There is a mystery attached to that night’s work, Afy,” observed Mr.
Carlyle; “a mystery that I cannot fathom. Perhaps you can help me out.”

“What mystery, sir?” returned Afy.

Mr. Carlyle leaned forward, his arms on the table. Afy had taken a chair
at the other end of it. “Who was it that committed the murder?” he
demanded, in a grave and somewhat imperative tone.

Afy stared some moments before she replied, astonished at the question.
“Who committed the murder, sir?” she uttered at length. “Richard Hare
committed it. Everybody knows that.”

“Did you see it done?”

“No,” replied Afy. “If I had seen it, the fright and horror would have
killed me. Richard Hare quarreled with my father, and drew the gun upon
him in passion.”

“You assume this to have been the case, Afy, as others have assumed it.
I do not think that it was Richard Hare who killed your father.”

“Not Richard Hare!” exclaimed Afy, after a pause. “Then who do you think
did it, sir--I?”

“Nonsense, Afy.”

“I know he did it,” proceeded Afy. “It is true that I did not see it
done, but I know it for all that. I know it, sir.”

“You cannot know it, Afy.”

“I do know it, sir; I would not assert it to you if I did not. If
Richard Hare was here, present before us, and swore until he was black
in the face that it was not him, I could convict him.”

“By what means?”

“I had rather not say, sir. But you may believe me, for I am speaking
truth.”

“There was another friend of yours present that evening, Afy. Lieutenant
Thorn.”

Afy’s face turned crimson; she was evidently surprised. But Mr.
Carlyle’s speech and manner were authoritative, and she saw it would be
useless to attempt to trifle with him.

“I know he was, sir. A young chap who used to ride over some evenings to
see me. He had nothing to do with what occurred.”

“Where did he ride from?”

“He was stopping with some friends at Swainson. He was nobody, sir.”

“What was his name?” questioned Mr. Carlyle.

“Thorn,” said Afy.

“I mean his real name. Thorn was an assumed name.”

“Oh, dear no,” returned Afy. “Thorn was his name.”

Mr. Carlyle paused and looked at her.

“Afy, I have reason to believe that Thorn was only an assumed name. Now,
I have a motive for wishing to know his real one, and you would very
much oblige me by confiding it to me. What was it?”

“I don’t know that he had any other name, sir; I am sure he had no
other,” persisted Afy. “He was Lieutenant Thorn, then and he was Captain
Thorn, afterward.”

“You have seen him since?”

“Once in a way we have met.”

“Where is he now?”

“Now! Oh, my goodness, I don’t know anything about him now,” muttered
Afy. “I have not heard of him or seen him for a long while. I think I
heard something about his going to India with his regiment.”

“What regiment is he in?”

“I’m sure I don’t know about that,” said Afy. “Is not one regiment the
same as another; they are all in the army, aren’t they, sir?”

“Afy, I must find this Captain Thorn. Do you know anything of his
family?”

Afy shook her head. “I don’t think he had any. I never heard him mention
as much as a brother or a sister.”

“And you persist in saying his name was Thorn?”

“I persist in saying it because it was his name. I am positive it was
his name.”

“Afy, shall I tell you why I want to find him; I believe it was he who
murdered your father, not Richard Hare.”

Afy’s mouth and eyes gradually opened, and her face turned hot and cold
alternately. Then passion mastered her, and she burst forth.

“It’s a lie! I beg your pardon, sir, but whoever told you that, told you
a lie. Thorn had no more to do with it than I had; I’ll swear it.”

“I tell you, Afy, I believe Thorn to have been the man. You were not
present; you cannot know who actually did it.”

“Yes, I can, and do know,” said Afy, bursting into sobs of hysterical
passion. “Thorn was with me when it happened, so it could not have been
Thorn. It was that wicked Richard Hare. Sir, have I not said that I’ll
swear it?”

“Thorn was with you--at the moment of the murder?” repeated Mr. Carlyle.

“Yes, he was,” shrieked Afy, nearly beside herself with emotion.
“Whoever has been trying to put it off Richard Hare, and on to him, is a
wicked, false-hearted wretch. It was Richard Hare, and nobody else, and
I hope he’ll be hung for it yet.”

“You are telling me the truth, Afy?” gravely spoke Mr. Carlyle.

“Truth!” echoed Afy, flinging up her hands. “Would I tell a lie over my
father’s death? If Thorn had done it, would I screen him, or shuffle it
off to Richard Hare? Not so.”

Mr. Carlyle felt uncertain and bewildered. That Afy was sincere in what
she said, was but too apparent. He spoke again but Afy had risen from
her chair to leave.

“Locksley was in the wood that evening. Otway Bethel was in it. Could
either of them have been the culprit?”

“No, sir,” firmly retorted Afy; “the culprit was Richard Hare; and I’d
say it with my latest breath--I’d say it because I know it--though I
don’t choose to say how I know it; time enough when he gets taken.”

She quitted the room, leaving Mr. Carlyle in a state of puzzled
bewilderment. Was he to believe Afy, or was he to believe the bygone
assertion of Richard Hare?



CHAPTER XXIX.

A NIGHT INVASION OF EAST LYNNE.

In one of the comfortable sitting-rooms of East Lynne sat Mr. Carlyle
and his sister, one inclement January night. The contrast within and
without was great. The warm, blazing fire, the handsome carpet on which
it flickered, the exceedingly comfortable arrangement of the furniture,
of the room altogether, and the light of the chandelier, which fell on
all, presented a picture of home peace, though it may not have deserved
the name of luxury. Without, heavy flakes of snow were falling thickly,
flakes as large and nearly as heavy as a crown piece, rendering the
atmosphere so dense and obscure that a man could not see a yard before
him. Mr. Carlyle had driven home in the pony carriage, and the snow had
so settled upon him that Lucy, who happened to see him as he entered the
hall, screamed out laughingly that her papa had turned into a white man.
It was now later in the evening; the children were in bed; the governess
was in her own sitting room--it was not often that Miss Carlyle invited
her to theirs of an evening--and the house was quite. Mr. Carlyle was
deep in the pages of one of the monthly periodicals, and Miss Carlyle
sat on the other side of the fire, grumbling, and grunting, and
sniffling, and choking.

Miss Carlyle was one of your strong-minded ladies, who never
condescended to be ill. Of course, had she been attacked with scarlet
fever, or paralysis, or St. Vitus’ dance, she must have given in to the
enemy; but trifling ailments, such as headache, influenza, sore throat,
which other people get, passed her by. Imagine, therefore, her
exasperation at finding her head stuffed up, her chest sore, and her
voice going; in short, at having, for once in her life, caught a cold
like ordinary mortals.

“What’s the time, I wonder?” she exclaimed.

Mr. Carlyle looked at his watch. “It is just nine, Cornelia.”

“Then I think I shall go to bed. I’ll have a basin of arrowroot or
gruel, or some slop of that sort, after I’m in it. I’m sure I have been
free enough all my life from requiring such sick dishes.”

“Do so,” said Mr. Carlyle. “It may do you good.”

“There’s one thing excellent for a cold in the head, I know. It’s to
double your flannel petticoat crossways, or any other large piece of
flannel you may conveniently have at hand, and put it on over your
night-cap. I’ll try it.”

“I would,” said Mr. Carlyle, smothering an irreverent laugh.

She sat on five minutes longer, and then left, wishing Mr. Carlyle good-
night. He resumed his reading; but another page or two concluded the
article, upon which Mr. Carlyle threw the book on the table, rose and
stretched himself, as if tired of sitting.

He stirred the fire into a brighter blaze, and stood on the hearthrug.
“I wonder if it snows still?” he exclaimed to himself.

Proceeding to the window, one of those opening to the ground, he threw
aside the half of the warm crimson curtain. It all looked dull and dark
outside. Mr. Carlyle could see little what the weather was, and he
opened the window and stepped half out.

The snow was falling faster and thicker than ever. Not at that did Mr.
Carlyle start with surprise, if not with a more unpleasant sensation;
but a feeling a man’s hand touch his, and at finding a man’s face nearly
in contact with his own.

“Let me come in, Mr. Carlyle, for the love of life! I see you are alone.
I’m dead beat, and I don’t know but I’m dodged also.”

The tones struck familiarly on Mr. Carlyle’s ear. He drew back
mechanically, a thousand perplexing sensations overwhelming him, and the
man followed him into the room--a white man, as Lucy called her father.
Aye, for he had been hours and hours on foot in the snow; his hat, his
clothes, his eyebrows, his large whiskers, all were white. “Lock the
door, sir,” were his first words. Need you be told that it was Richard
Hare?

Mr. Carlyle fastened the window, drew the heavy curtains across, and
turned rapidly to lock the two doors--for there were two to the room,
one of them leading into the adjoining one. Richard meanwhile took off
his wet smock-frock of former memory--his hat, and his false black
whiskers, wiping the snow from the latter with his hand.

“Richard,” uttered Mr. Carlyle, “I am thunderstruck! I fear you have
done wrong to come here.”

“I cut off from London at a moment’s notice,” replied Richard, who was
literally shivering with the cold. “I’m dodged, Mr. Carlyle, I am
indeed. The police are after me, set on by that wretch Thorn.”

Mr. Carlyle turned to the sideboard and poured out a wineglass of
brandy. “Drink it, Richard, it will warm you.”

“I’d rather have it in some hot water, sir.”

“But how am I to get the hot water brought in? Drink this for now. Why,
how you tremble.”

“Ah, a few hours outside in the cold snow is enough to make the
strongest man tremble, sir; and it lies so deep in places that you have
to come along at a snail’s pace. But I’ll tell you about this business.
A fortnight ago I was at a cabstand at the West End, talking to a cab-
driver, when some drops of rain came down. A gentleman and lady were
passing at the time, but I had not paid any attention to them. ‘By
Jove!’ I heard him exclaim to her, ‘I think we’re going to have pepper.
We had better take a cab, my dear.’ With that the man I was talking to
swung open the door of his cab, and she got in--such a fair young lady,
she was! I turned to look at him, and you might just have knocked me
down with astonishment. Mr. Carlyle, it was the man, Thorn.”

“Indeed!”

“You thought I might be mistaken in him that moonlight night, but there
was no mistaking him in broad daylight. I looked him full in the face,
and he looked at me. He turned as white as cloth. Perhaps I did--I don’t
know.”

“Was he well dressed?”

“Very. Oh, there’s no mistaking his position. That he moves in the
higher classes there’s no doubt. The cab drove away, and I got up behind
it. The driver thought boys were there, and turned his head and his
whip, but I made him a sign. We didn’t go much more than the length of a
street. I was on the pavement before Thorn was, and looked at him again,
and again he went white. I marked the house, thinking it was where he
lived, and--”

“Why did you not give him into custody, Richard?”

Richard Hare shook his head. “And my proofs of his guilt, Mr. Carlyle? I
could bring none against him--no positive ones. No, I must wait till I
can get proofs to do that. He would turn round upon me now and swear my
life away to murder. Well, I thought I’d ascertain for certain what his
name was, and that night I went to the house, and got into conversation
with one of the servants, who was standing at the door. ‘Does Captain
Thorn live here?’ I asked him.

“‘Mr. Westleby lives here,’ said he; ‘I don’t know any Captain Thorn.’

“Then that’s his name, thought I to myself. ‘A youngish man, isn’t he?’
said I, ‘very smart, with a pretty wife?’

“‘I don’t know what you call youngish,’ he laughed, ‘my master’s turned
sixty, and his wife’s as old.’

“That checked me. ‘Perhaps he has sons?’ I asked.

“‘Not any,’ the man answered; ‘there’s nobody but their two selves.’

“So, with that, I told him what I wanted--that a lady and gentleman had
alighted there in a cab that day, and I wished to know his name. Well,
Mr. Carlyle, I could get at nothing satisfactory; the fellow said that a
great many had called there that day, for his master was just up from a
long illness, and people came to see him.”

“Is that all, Richard?”

“All! I wish it had been all. I kept looking about for him in all the
best streets; I was half mad--”

“Do you not wonder, if he is in this position of life, and resides in
London, that you have never dropped upon him previously?” interrupted
Mr. Carlyle.

“No, sir; and I’ll tell you why. I have been afraid to show myself in
those latter parts of the town, fearing I might meet with some one I
used to know at home, who would recognize me, so I have kept mostly in
obscure places--stables and such like. I had gone up to the West End
this day on a matter of business.”

“Well, go on with your story.”

“In a week’s time I came upon him again. It was at night. He was coming
out of one of the theatres, and I went up and stood before him.”

“‘What do you want, fellow?’ he asked. ‘I have seen you watching me
before this.’

“‘I want to know your name,’ I said, ‘that’s enough for me at present.’

“He flew into a passion, and swore that if ever he caught sight of me
near him again he would hand me over into custody. ‘And remember, men
are not given into custody for watching others,’ he significantly added.
‘I know you, and if you have any regard for yourself, you’ll keep out of
my way.’

“He had got into a private carriage as he spoke, and it drove away; I
could see that it had a great coat-of-arms upon it.”

“When do you say this was?”

“A week ago. Well, I could not rest; I was half mad, I say, and went
about, still trying if I could not discover his name and who he was. I
did come upon him, but he was walking quickly, arm-in-arm with--with
another gentleman. Again I saw him, standing at the entrance to the
betting rooms, talking to the same gentleman, and his face turned
savage--I believe with fear as much as anger--when he discerned me. He
seemed to hesitate, and then--as if he acted in a passion--suddenly
beckoned to a policeman, pointed me out, and said something to him in a
fast tone. That frightened me, and I slipped away. Two hours after, when
I was in quite a different part of the town, in turning my head I saw
the same policeman following me. I bolted under the horses of a passing
vehicle, down some turnings and passages, out into another street, and
up beside a cabman who was on his box, driving a fare past. I reached my
lodgings in safety, as I thought, but happening to glance into the
street, there I saw the man again, standing opposite, and reconnoitering
the house. I had gone home hungry, but this took all my hunger away from
me. I opened the box where I kept my disguise, put it on, and got out by
a back way. I have been pretty nearly ever since on my feet reaching
here; I only got a lift now and then.”

“But, Richard, do you know that West Lynne is the very worst place you
could have flown to? It has come to light that you were here before,
disguised as a farm laborer.”

“Who the deuce betrayed that?” interrupted Richard.

“I am unable to tell; I cannot even imagine. The rumor was rife in the
place, and it reached your father’s ear. The rumor may make people’s
wits sharper to know you in your disguise, than they otherwise might
have been.”

“But what was I to do? I was forced to come here first and get a little
money. I shall fix myself in some other big town, far away from London--
Liverpool or Manchester, perhaps; and see what employment I can get
into, but I must have something to live upon till I can get it. I don’t
possess a penny piece,” he added, drawing out his trousers pockets for
the inspection of Mr. Carlyle. “The last coppers, I had, three pence, I
spent in bread and cheese and half a pint of beer at midday. I have been
outside that window for more than an hour, sir.”

“Indeed!”

“And as I neared West Lynne I began to think what I should do. It was no
use in me trying to catch Barbara’s attention such a night as this; I
had no money to pay for a lodging; so I turned off here, hoping I might,
by good luck, drop upon you. There was a little partition in the window
curtain--it had not been drawn close--and through it I could see you and
Miss Carlyle. I saw her leave the room; I saw you come to the window and
open it, and then I spoke. Mr. Carlyle,” he added, after a pause, “is
this life to go on with me forever?”

“I am deeply sorry for you, Richard,” was the sympathizing answer. “I
wish I could remedy it.”

Before another word was spoken the room door was tried, and then gently
knocked at. Mr. Carlyle placed his hand on Richard, who was looking
scared out of his wits.

“Be still; be at ease, Richard; no one shall come in. It is only Peter.”

Not Peter’s voice, however, but Joyce’s was heard, in response to Mr.
Carlyle’s demand of who was there.

“Miss Carlyle has left her handkerchief downstairs, sir, and has sent me
for it.”

“You cannot come in--I am busy,” was the answer, delivered in a clear
and most decisive tone.

“Who was it?” quivered Richard, as Joyce was heard going away.

“It was Joyce.”

“What! Is she here still? Has anything ever been heard of Afy, sir?”

“Afy was here herself two or three months ago.”

“Was she, though?” uttered Richard, beguiled for an instant from the
thought of his own danger. “What is she doing?”

“She is in service as a lady’s maid. Richard, I questioned Afy about
Thorn. She protested solemnly to me that it was not Thorn who committed
the deed--that it could not have been he, for Thorn was with her at the
moment of its being done.”

“It’s not true!” fired Richard. “It was Thorn.”

“Richard, you cannot tell; you did not see it done.”

“I know that no man could have rushed out in that frantic manner, with
those signs of guilt and fear about him, unless he had been engaged in a
bad deed,” was Richard Hare’s answer. “It could have been no one else.”

“Afy declared he was with her,” repeated Mr. Carlyle.

“Look here, sir, you are a sharp man, and folks say I am not, but I can
see things and draw my reasoning as well as they can, perhaps. If Thorn
were not Hallijohn’s murderer, why should he be persecuting me--what
would he care about me? And why should his face turn livid, as it has
done, each time he has seen my eyes upon him? Whether he did commit the
murder, or whether he didn’t, he must know that I did not, because he
came upon me, waiting, as he was tearing from the cottage.”

Dick’s reasoning was not bad.

“Another thing,” he resumed. “Afy swore at the inquest that she was
alone when the deed was done; that she was alone at the back of the
cottage, and knew nothing about it till afterwards. How could she have
sworn she was alone, if Thorn was with her?”

The fact had entirely escaped Mr. Carlyle’s memory in his conversation
with Afy, or he would not have failed to point out the discrepancy, and
to inquire how she could reconcile it. Yet her assertion to him had been
most positive and solemn. There were difficulties in the matter which he
could not reconcile.

“Now that I have got over my passion for Afy, I can see her faults, Mr.
Carlyle. She’d no more tell an untruth than I should stick--”

A most awful thundering at the room door--loud enough to bring the very
house down. No officers of justice, searching for a fugitive, ever made
a louder. Richard Hare, his face turned to chalk, his eyes starting, and
his own light hair bristling up with horror, struggled into his wet
smock-frock after a fashion, the tails up about his ears and the sleeves
hanging, forced on his hat and his false whiskers, looked round in a
bewildered manner for some cupboard or mouse-hole into which he might
creep, and, seeing none, rushed to the fireplace and placed his foot on
the fender. That he purposed an attempt at chimney-climbing was evident,
though how the fire would have agreed with his pantaloons, not to speak
of what they contained, poor Dick appeared completely to ignore. Mr.
Carlyle drew him back, keeping his calm, powerful hand upon his
shoulder, while certain sounds in an angry voice were jerked through the
keyhole.

“Richard, be a man, put aside this weakness, this fear. Have I not told
you that harm shall not come near you in my house?”

“It may be that officer from London; he may have brought half a dozen
more with him!” gasped the unhappy Richard. “I said they might have
dodged me all the way here.”

“Nonsense. Sit you down, and be at rest, it is only Cornelia; and she
will be as anxious to shield you from danger as I can be.”

“Is it?” cried the relieved Richard. “Can’t you make her keep out?” he
continued, his teeth still chattering.

“No, that I can’t, if she has a mind to come in,” was the candid answer.
“You remember what she was, Richard; she is not altered.”

Knowing that to speak on this side the door to his sister, when she was
in one of her resolute moods, would be of no use, Mr. Carlyle opened the
door, dexterously swung himself through it, and shut it after him. There
she stood; in a towering passion, too.

It had struck Miss Carlyle, while undressing, that certain sounds, as of
talking, proceeded from the room underneath, which she had just quitted.
She possessed a remarkably keen sense of hearing, did Miss Carlyle;
though, indeed, none of her faculties lacked the quality of keenness.
The servants, Joyce and Peter excepted, would not be convinced but that
she must “listen;” but, in that, they did her injustice. First of all,
she believed her brother must be reading aloud to himself; but she soon
decided otherwise. “Who on earth has he got in there with him?” quoth
Miss Carlyle.

She rang her bell; Joyce answered it.

“Who is it that is with your master?”

“Nobody, ma’am.”

“But I say there is. I can hear him talking.”

“I don’t think anybody can be with him,” persisted Joyce. “And the walls
of this house are too well built, ma’am, for sounds from the down stairs
rooms to penetrate here.”

“That’s all you know about it,” cried Miss Carlyle. “When talking goes
on in that room, there’s a certain sound given out which does penetrate
here, and which my ears have grown accustomed to. Go and see who it is.
I believe I left my handkerchief on the table; you can bring it up.”

Joyce departed, and Miss Carlyle proceeded to take off her things; her
dress first, her silk petticoat next. She had arrived as far as the
flannel petticoat when Joyce returned.

“Yes, ma’am, some one is talking with master. I could not go in, for the
door was bolted, and master called out that he was busy.”

Food for Miss Carlyle. She, feeling sure that no visitor had come to the
house, ran her thoughts rapidly over the members of the household, and
came to the conclusion that it must be the governess, Miss Manning, who
had dared to closet herself with Mr. Carlyle. This unlucky governess was
pretty, and Miss Carlyle had been cautious to keep her and her
prettiness very much out of her brother’s sight; she knew the attraction
he would present to her visions, or to those of any other unprovided-for
governess. Oh, yes; it was Miss Manning; she had stolen in; believing
she, Miss Carlyle, was safe for the night; but she’d just unearth my
lady. And what in the world could possess Archibald--to lock the door!

Looking round for something warm to throw over her shoulders, and
catching up an article that looked as much like a green baize table-
cover as anything else, and throwing it on, down stalked Miss Carlyle.
And in this trim Mr. Carlyle beheld her when he came out.

The figure presented by Miss Carlyle to her brother’s eyes was certainly
ridiculous enough. She gave him no time to comment upon it, however, but
instantly and curtly asked,--

“Who have you got in that room?”

“It is some one on business,” was his prompt reply. “Cornelia, you
cannot go in.”

She very nearly laughed. “Not go in?”

“Indeed it is much better that you should not. Pray go back. You will
make your cold worse, standing here.

“Now, I want to know whether you are not ashamed of yourself?” she
deliberately pursued. “You! A married man, with children in your house!
I’d rather have believed anything downright wicked of myself, than of
you, Archibald.”

Mr. Carlyle stared considerably.

“Come; I’ll have her out. And out of this house she tramps to-morrow
morning. A couple of audacious ones, to be in there with the door
locked, the moment you thought you had got rid of me! Stand aside, I
say, Archibald, I will enter.”

Mr. Carlyle never felt more inclined to laugh. And, to Miss Carlyle’s
exceeding discomposure she, at this juncture, saw the governess emerge
from the gray parlor, glance at the hall clock, and retire again.

“Why! She’s there,” she uttered. “I thought she was with you.”

“Miss Manning, locked in with me! Is that the mare’s nest, Cornelia? I
think your cold must have obscured your reason.”

“Well, I shall go in, all the same. I tell you, Archibald, that I will
see who is there.”

“If you persist in going in, you must go. But allow me to warn you that
you will find tragedy in that room, not comedy. There is no woman in it,
but there is a man; a man who came in through the window, like a hunted
stag; a man upon whom a ban is set, who fears the police are upon his
track. Can you guess his name?”

It was Miss Carlyle’s turn to stare now. She opened her dry lips to
speak, but they closed again.

“It is Richard Hare, your kinsman. There’s not a roof in the wide world
open to him this bitter night.”

She said nothing. A long pause of dismay, and then she motioned to have
the door opened.

“You will not show yourself--in--in that guise?”

“Not show myself in this guise to Richard Hare--whom I have whipped--
when he was a child--ten times a day! Stand on ceremony with him! I dare
say he looks no better than I do. But it’s nothing short of madness,
Archibald, for him to come here.”

He left her to enter, telling her to lock the door as soon as she was
inside, and went himself into the adjoining room, the one which, by
another door, opened to the one Richard was in. Then he rang the bell.
It was answered by a footman.

“Send Peter to me.”

“Lay supper here, Peter, for two,” began Mr. Carlyle, when the old
servant appeared. “A person is with me on business. What have you in the
house?”

“There’s the spiced beef, sir; and there are some home-made raised pork
pies.”

“That will do,” said Mr. Carlyle. “Put a quart of ale on the table, and
everything likely to be wanted. And then the household can go to bed; we
may be late, and the things can be removed in the morning. Oh--and
Peter--none of you must come near the room, this or the next, under any
pretence whatever, unless I ring, for I shall be too busy to be
disturbed.”

“Very well, sir. Shall I serve the ham also?”

“The ham?”

“I beg pardon, sir; I guessed it might be Mr. Dill, and he is so fond of
our hams.”

“Ah, you were always a shrewd guesser, Peter,” smiled his master. “He is
fond of ham I know; yes, you may put it on the table. Don’t forget the
small kettle.”

The consequence of which little finesse on Mr. Carlyle’s part was, that
Peter announced in the kitchen that Mr. Dill had arrived, and supper was
to be served for two. “But what a night for the old gentleman to have
trudged through on foot!” exclaimed he.

“And what a trudge he’ll have of it back again, for it’ll be worse
then!” chimed in one of the maids.

When Mr. Carlyle got back in the other room, his sister and Richard Hare
had scarcely finished staring at each other.

“Please lock the door, Miss Cornelia,” began poor shivering Dick.

“The door’s locked,” snapped she. “But what on earth brought you here,
Richard? You must be worse than mad.”

“The Bow-street officers were after me in London,” he meekly responded,
unconsciously using a term which had been familiar to his boyish years.
“I had to cut away without a thing belonging to me, without so much as a
clean shirt.”

“They must be polite officers, not to have been after you before,” was
the consolatory remark of Miss Carlyle. “Are you going to dance a
hornpipe through the streets of West Lynne to-morrow, and show yourself
openly?”

“Not if I can help it,” replied Richard.

“You might just as well do that, if you come to West Lynne at all; for
you can’t be here now without being found out. There was a bother about
your having been here the last time: I should like to know how it got
abroad.”

“The life I lead is dreadful!” cried Richard. “I might make up my mind
to toil, though that’s hard, after being reared a gentleman; but to be
an exile, banned, disgraced, afraid to show my face in broad daylight
amidst my fellowmen, in dread every hour that the sword may fall! I
would almost as soon be dead as continue to live it.”

“Well, you have got nobody to grumble at; you brought it upon yourself,”
 philosophically returned Miss Carlyle, as she opened the door to admit
her brother. “You would go hunting after that brazen hussy, Afy, you
know, in defiance of all that could be said to you.”

“That would not have brought it upon me,” said Richard. “It was through
that fiend’s having killed Hallijohn; that was what brought the ban upon
me.”

“It’s a most extraordinary thing, if anybody else did kill him, that the
facts can’t be brought to light,” retorted Miss Carlyle. “Here you tell
a cock-and-bull story of some man’s having done it, some Thorn; but
nobody ever saw or heard of him, at the time or since. It looks like a
made-up story, Mr. Dick, to whiten yourself.”

“Made up!” panted Richard, in agitation, for it seemed cruel to him,
especially in his present frame of mind, to have a doubt cast upon his
tale. “It is Thorn who is setting the officers upon me. I have seen him
three or four times within the last fortnight.”

“And why did you not turn the tables, and set the officers upon him?”
 demanded Miss Carlyle.

“Because it would lead to no good. Where’s the proof, save my bare word,
that he committed the murder?”

Miss Carlyle rubbed her nose. “Dick Hare,” said she.

“Well?”

“You know you always were the greatest natural idiot that ever was let
loose out of leading strings.”

“I know I always was told so.”

“And it’s what you always will be. If I were accused of committing a
crime, which I knew another had committed and not myself, should I be
such an idiot as not to give that other into custody if I got the
chance? If you were not in such a cold, shivery, shaky state, I would
treat you to a bit of my mind, you may rely upon that.”

“He was in league with Afy, at that period,” pursued Richard; “a
deceitful, bad man; and he carries it in his countenance. And he must be
in league with her still, if she asserts that he was in her company at
the moment the murder was committed. Mr. Carlyle says she does; that she
told him so the other day, when she was here. He never was; and it was
he, and no other, who did the murder.”

“Yes,” burst forth Miss Carlyle, for the topic was sure to agitate her,
“that Jezebel of brass did presume to come here! She chose her time
well, and may thank her lucky stars I was not at home. Archibald, he’s a
fool too, quite as bad a you are, Dick Hare, in some things--actually
suffered her to lodge here for two days! A vain, ill-conducted hussy,
given to nothing but finery and folly!”

“Afy said that she knew nothing of Thorn’s movements now, Richard, and
had not for some time,” interposed Mr. Carlyle, allowing his sister’s
compliments to pass in silence. “She heard a rumor, she thought, that he
had gone abroad with his regiment.”

“So much the better for her, if she does know nothing of him, sir,” was
Richard’s comment. “I can answer for it that he is not abroad, but in
England.”

“And where are you going to lodge to-night?” abruptly spoke Miss
Carlyle, confronting Richard.

“I don’t know,” was the broken-spirited answer, sighed forth. “If I lay
myself down in a snowdrift, and am found frozen in the morning, it won’t
be of much moment.”

“Was that what you thought of doing?” returned Miss Carlyle.

“No,” he mildly said. “What I thought of doing was to ask Mr. Carlyle
for the loan of a few shillings, and then I can get a bed. I know a
place where I shall be in safety, two or three miles from here.”

“Richard, I would not turn a dog out to go two or three miles on such a
night as this,” impulsively uttered Mr. Carlyle. “You must stop here.”

“Indeed I don’t see how he is to get up to a bedroom, or how a room is
to be made ready for him, for the matter of that, without betraying his
presence to the servants,” snapped Miss Carlyle. And poor Richard laid
his aching head upon his hands.

But now Miss Carlyle’s manner was more in fault than her heart. Will it
be believed that, before speaking the above ungracious words, before Mr.
Carlyle had touched upon the subject, she had been casting about in her
busy mind for the best plan of keeping Richard--how it could be
accomplished.

“One thing is certain,” she resumed, “that it will be impossible for you
to sleep here without its being known to Joyce. And I suppose you and
Joyce are upon the friendly terms of drawing daggers, for she believes
you were the murderer of her father.”

“Let me disabuse her,” interrupted Richard, his pale lips working as he
started up. “Allow me to see her and convince her, Mr. Carlyle. Why did
you not tell Joyce better?”

“There’s that small room at the back of mine,” said Miss Carlyle,
returning to the practical part of the subject. “He might sleep there.
But Joyce must be taken in confidence.”

“Joyce had better come in,” said Mr. Carlyle. “I will say a word to her
first.”

He unlocked the door and quitted the room. Miss Carlyle as jealously
locked it again; called to Joyce and beckoned her into the adjoining
apartment. He knew that Joyce’s belief in the guilt of Richard Hare was
confirmed and strong, but he must uproot that belief if Richard was to
be lodged in his house that night.

“Joyce,” he began, “you remember how thoroughly imbued with the
persuasion you were, that Afy went off with Richard Hare, and was living
with him. I several times expressed my doubts upon the point. The fact
was, I had positive information that she was not with him, and never had
been, though I considered it expedient to keep my information to myself.
You are convinced now that she was not with him?”

“Of course I am, sir.”

“Well, you see, Joyce, that my opinion would have been worth listening
to. Now I am going to shake your belief upon another point, and if I
assure you that I have equally good grounds for doing so, you will
believe me?”

“I am quite certain, sir, that you would state nothing but what was
true, and I know that your judgment is sound,” was Joyce’s answer.

“Then I must tell you that I do not believe it was Richard Hare who
murdered your father.”

“Sir!” uttered Joyce, amazed out of her senses.

“I believe Richard Hare to be as innocent of the murder as you or I,” he
deliberately repeated. “I have held grounds for this opinion, Joyce, for
many years.”

“Then, sir, who did it?”

“Afy’s other lover. That dandy fellow, Thorn, as I truly believe.”

“And you say you have grounds, sir?” Joyce asked, after a pause.

“Good grounds; and I tell you I have been in possession of them for
years. I should be glad for you to think as I do.”

“But, sir, if Richard Hare was innocent, why did he run away?”

“Ah, why, indeed! It is that which has done the mischief. His own weak
cowardice was in fault. He feared to come back, and he felt that he
could not remove the odium of circumstances. Joyce I should like you to
see him and hear his story.”

“There is not much chance of that, sir. I dare say he will never venture
here again.”

“He is here now.”

Joyce looked up, considerably startled.

“Here, in this house,” repeated Mr. Carlyle. “He has taken shelter in
it, and for the few hours that he will remain, we must extend our
hospitality and protection to him, concealing him in the best manner we
can. I thought it well that this confidence should be reposed in you,
Joyce. Come now and see him.”

Considering that it was a subdued interview--the voices subdued, I mean-
-it was a confused one. Richard talking vehemently, Joyce asking
question after question, Miss Carlyle’s tongue going as fast as theirs.
The only silent one was Mr. Carlyle. Joyce could not refuse to believe
protestations so solemn, and her suspicions veered round upon Captain
Thorn.

“And now about the bed,” interjected Miss Carlyle, impatiently. “Where’s
he to sleep, Joyce? The only safe room that I know of will be the one
through mine.”

“He can’t sleep there, ma’am. Don’t you know that the key of the door
was lost last week, and we cannot open it?”

“So much the better. He’ll be all the safer.”

“But how is he to get in?”

“To get in? Why, through my room, of course. Doesn’t mine open to it,
stupid?”

“Oh, well, ma’am, if you would like him to go through yours, that’s
different.”

“Why shouldn’t he go through? Do you suppose I mind young Dick Hare? Not
I, indeed,” she irascibly continued. “I only wish he was young enough
for me to flog him as I used to, that’s all. He deserves it as much as
anybody ever did, playing the fool, as he has done, in all ways. I shall
be in bed, with the curtains drawn, and his passing through won’t harm
me, and my lying there won’t harm him. Stand on ceremony with Dick Hare!
What next, I wonder?”

Joyce made no reply to this energetic speech, but at once retired to
prepare the room for Richard. Miss Carlyle soon followed. Having made
everything ready, Joyce returned.

“The room is ready, sir,” she whispered, “and all the household are in
bed.”

“Then now’s your time, Richard. Good-night.”

He stole upstairs after Joyce, who piloted him through the room of Miss
Carlyle. Nothing could be seen of that lady, though something might be
heard, one given to truth more than politeness might have called it
snoring. Joyce showed Richard his chamber, gave him the candle, and
closed the door upon him.

Poor hunted Richard, good-night to you.



CHAPTER XXX.

BARBARA’S HEART AT REST.

Morning dawned. The same dull weather, the same heavy fall of snow. Miss
Carlyle took her breakfast in bed, an indulgence she had not favored for
ever so many years. Richard Hare rose, but remained in his chamber, and
Joyce carried his breakfast in to him.

Mr. Carlyle entered whilst he was taking it. “How did you sleep,
Richard?”

“I slept well. I was so dead tired. What am I to do next, Mr. Carlyle?
The sooner I get away from here the better. I can’t feel safe.”

“You must not think of it before evening. I am aware that you cannot
remain here, save for a few temporary hours, as it would inevitably
become known to the servants. You say you think of going to Liverpool or
Manchester?”

“To any large town; they are all alike to me; but one pursued as I am is
safer in a large place than a small one.”

“I am inclined to think that this man, Thorn, only made a show of
threatening you, Richard. If he be really the guilty party, his policy
must be to keep all in quietness. The very worst thing that could happen
for him, would be your arrest.”

“Then why molest me? Why send an officer to dodge me?”

“He did not like your molesting him, and he thought he would probably
frighten you. After that day you would probably have seen no more of the
officer. You may depend upon one thing, Richard, had the policeman’s
object been to take you, he would have done so, not have contented
himself with following you about from place to place. Besides when a
detective officer is employed to watch a party, he takes care not to
allow himself to be seen; now this man showed himself to you more than
once.”

“Yes, there’s a good deal in all that,” observed Richard. “For, to one
in his class of life, the bare suspicion of such a crime, brought
against him, would crush him forever in the eyes of his compeers.”

“It is difficult to me Richard, to believe that he is in the class of
life you speak of,” observed Mr. Carlyle.

“There’s no doubt about it; there’s none indeed. But that I did not much
like to mention the name, for it can’t be a pleasant name to you, I
should have said last night who I have seen him walking with,” continued
simple-hearted Richard.

Mr. Carlyle looked inquiringly. “Richard say on.”

“I have seen him, sir, with Sir Francis Levison, twice. Once he was
talking to him at the door of the betting-rooms, and once they were
walking arm-in-arm. They are apparently upon intimate terms.”

At this moment a loud, flustering, angry voice was heard calling from
the stairs, and Richard leaped up as if he had been shot. His door--not
the one leading to the room of Miss Carlyle--opened upon the corridor,
and the voice sounded close, just as if its owner were coming in with a
hound. It was the voice of Mr. Justice Hare.

“Carlyle, where are you? Here’s a pretty thing happened! Come down!”

Mr. Carlyle for once in his life lost his calm equanimity, and sprang to
the door, to keep it against invasion, as eagerly as Richard could have
done. He forgot that Joyce had said the door was safely locked, and the
key mislaid. As to Richard, he rushed on his hat and his black whiskers,
and hesitated between under the bed and inside the wardrobe.

“Don’t agitate yourself, Richard,” whispered Mr. Carlyle, “there is no
real danger. I will go and keep him safely.”

But when Mr. Carlyle got through his sister’s bedroom, he found that
lady had taken the initiative, and was leaning over the balustrades,
having been arrested in the process of dressing. Her clothes were on,
but her nightcap was not off; little cared she, however, who saw her
nightcap.

“What on earth brings you up in this weather?” began she, in a tone of
exasperation.

“I want to see Carlyle. Nice news I have had!”

“What about? Anything concerning Anne, or her family?”

“Anne be bothered,” replied the justice, who was from some cause, in a
furious temper. “It concerns that precious rascal, who I am forced to
call son. I am told he is here.”

Down the stairs leaped Mr. Carlyle, four at a time, wound his arm within
Mr. Hare’s, and led him to a sitting-room.

“Good-morning, justice. You had courage to venture up through the snow!
What is the matter, you seem excited.”

“Excited?” raved the justice, dancing about the room, first on one leg,
then on the other, like a cat upon hot bricks, “so you would be excited,
if your life were worried out, as mine is, over a wicked scamp of a son.
Why can’t folks trouble their heads about their own business, and let my
affairs alone? A pity but what he was hung, and the thing done with!”

“But what has happened?” questioned Mr. Carlyle.

“Why this has happened,” retorted the justice, throwing a letter on the
table. “The post brought me this, just now--and pleasant information it
gives.”

Mr. Carlyle took up the note and read it. It purported to be from “a
friend” to Justice Hare, informing that gentleman that his “criminal
son” was likely to have arrived at West Lynne, or would arrive in the
course of a day or so; and it recommended Mr. Hare to speed his
departure from it, lest he should be pounced upon.

“This letter is anonymous!” exclaimed Mr. Carlyle.

“Of course it is,” stamped the justice.

“The only notice I should ever take of an anonymous letter would be to
put it in the fire,” cried Mr. Carlyle, his lip curling with scorn.

“But who has written it?” danced Justice Hare. “And is Dick at West
Lynne--that’s the question.”

“Now, is it likely that he should come to West Lynne?” remonstrated Mr.
Carlyle. “Justice, will you pardon me, if I venture to give you my
candid opinion.”

“The fool at West Lynne, running into the very jaws of death! By
Jupiter! If I can drop upon him, I’ll retain him in custody, and make
out a warrant for his committal! I’ll have this everlasting bother
over.”

“I was going to give you my opinion,” quietly put in Mr. Carlyle. “I
fear, Justice, you bring these annoyances upon yourself.”

“Bring them upon myself!” ranted the indignant justice. “I? Did I murder
Hallijohn? Did I fly away from the law? Am I hiding, Beelzebub knows
where? Do I take starts, right into my native parish, disguised as a
laborer, on purpose to worry my own father? Do I write anonymous
letters? Bring them upon myself, do I? That cobs all, Carlyle.”

“You will not hear me out. It is known that you are much exasperated
against Richard--”

“And if your son serves you the same when he is grown up, shan’t you be
exasperated, pray?” fired Justice Hare.

“Do hear me. It is known that you are much exasperated, and that any
allusion to him excites and annoys you. Now, my opinion is, justice,
that some busybody is raising these reports and writing these letters on
purpose to annoy you. It may be somebody at West Lynne, very near to us,
for all we know.”

“That’s all rubbish!” peevishly responded the justice, after a pause.
“It’s not likely. Who’d do it?”

“It is very likely; but you may be sure they will not give us a clue as
to the ‘who.’ I should put that letter in the fire, and think no more
about it. That’s the only way to serve them. A pretty laugh they have
had in their sleeve, if it is anybody near, at seeing you wade up here
through the snow this morning! They would know you were bringing the
letter, to consult me.”

The justice--in spite of his obstinacy he was somewhat easily persuaded
to different views of things, especially by Mr. Carlyle--let fall his
coat tails, which had been gathered in his arms, as he stood with his
back to the fire, and brought down both his hands upon the table with
force enough to break it.

“If I thought that,” he spluttered, “if I could think it, I’d have the
whole parish of West Lynne before me to-day, and commit them for trial.”

“It’s a pity but what you could,” said Mr. Carlyle.

“Well, it may be, or it may not be, that that villain is coming here,”
 he resumed. “I shall call in at the police station, and tell them to
keep a sharp lookout.”

“You will do nothing of the sort justice,” exclaimed Mr. Carlyle, almost
in agitation. “Richard is not likely to make his appearance at West
Lynne; but if he did, would you, his own father, turn the flood upon
him? Not a man living but would cry shame upon you.”

“I took an oath I’d do it,” said the justice.

“You did not take an oath to go open-mouthed to the police station, upon
the receipt of any despicable anonymous letter or any foolish report, to
say, ‘I have news that my son will be here to-day; look after him.’
Nonsense, justice! Let the police look out for themselves, but don’t you
set them on.”

The justice growled, whether in assent or dissent did not appear, and
Mr. Carlyle resumed,--

“Have you shown this letter to Mrs. Hare, or mentioned it to her?”

“Not I. I didn’t give myself time. I had gone down to the front gate, to
see how deep the snow lay in the road, when the postman came up; so I
read it as I stood there. I went in for my coat and umbrella, to come
off to you, and Mrs. Hare wanted to know where I was going in such a
hurry, but I did not satisfy her.”

“I am truly glad to hear it,” said Mr. Carlyle. “Such information as
this could not fail to have a dangerous effect upon Mrs. Hare. Do not
suffer a hint of it to escape you justice; consider how much anxiety she
has already suffered.”

“It’s partly her own fault. Why can’t she drive the ill-doing boy from
her mind?”

“If she could,” said Mr. Carlyle, “she would be acting against human
nature. There is one phase of the question which you may possibly not
have glanced at, justice. You speak of delivering your son up to the
law; has it ever struck you that you would be delivering up at the same
time your wife’s life?”

“Stuff!” said the justice.

“You would find it no ‘stuff.’ So sure as Richard gets brought to trial,
whether through your means, or through any other, so sure will it kill
your wife.”

Mr. Hare took up the letter, which had lain open on the table, folded
it, and put it in its envelope.

“I suppose you don’t know the writing?” he asked of Mr. Carlyle.

“I never saw it before, that I remember. Are you returning home?”

“No. I shall go on to Beauchamp’s and show him this, and hear what he
says. It’s not much farther.”

“Tell him not to speak of it then. Beauchamp’s safe, for his sympathies
are with Richard--oh, yes, they are, justice, ask him the question
plainly if you like, and he will confess to it. I can tell you more
sympathy goes with Richard than is acknowledged to you. But I would not
show that letter to anyone else than Beauchamp,” added Mr. Carlyle,
“neither would I speak of it.”

“Who can have written it?” repeated the justice. “It bears, you see the
London Post-mark.”

“It is too wide a speculation to enter upon. And no satisfactory
conclusion could come of it.”

Justice Hare departed. Mr. Carlyle watched him down the avenue, striding
under his umbrella, and then went up to Richard. Miss Carlyle was
sitting with the latter then.

“I thought I should have died,” spoke poor Dick. “I declare, Mr.
Carlyle, my very blood seemed turned to water, and I thought I should
have died with fright. Is he gone away--is all safe?”

“He is gone, and it’s all safe.”

“And what did he want? What was it he had heard about me?”

Mr. Carlyle gave a brief explanation, and Richard immediately set down
the letter as the work of Thorn.

“Will it be possible for me to see my mother this time?” he demanded of
Mr. Carlyle.

“I think it would be highly injudicious to let your mother know you are
here, or have been here,” was the answer of Mr. Carlyle. “She would
naturally be inquiring into particulars, and when she came to hear that
you were pursued, she would never have another minute’s peace. You must
forego the pleasure of seeing her this time, Richard.”

“And Barbara?”

“Barbara might come and stay the day with you. Only----”

“Only what, sir?” cried Richard, for Mr. Carlyle had hesitated.

“I was thinking what a wretched morning it is for her to come out in.”

“She would go through an avalanche--she’d wade through mountains of
snow, to see me,” cried Richard eagerly, “and be delighted to do it.”

“She always was a little fool,” put in Miss Carlyle, jerking some
stitches out of her knitting.

“I know she would,” observed Mr. Carlyle, in answer to Richard. “We will
try and get her here.”

“She can arrange about the money I am to have, just as well as my mother
could you know, sir.”

“Yes; for Barbara is in receipt of money of her own now, and I know she
would not wish better than to apply some of it to you. Cornelia, as an
excuse for getting her here, I must say to Mrs. Hare that you are ill,
and wish Barbara to come for the day and bear your company. Shall I?”

“Say I am dead, if you like,” responded Miss Corny, who was in one of
her cross moods.

Mr. Carlyle ordered the pony carriage, and drove forth with John. He
drew in at the grove. Barbara and Mrs. Hare were seated together, and
looked surprised at the early visit.

“Do you want Mr. Hare, Archibald? He is out. He went while the breakfast
was on the table, apparently in a desperate hurry.”

“I don’t want Mr. Hare; I want Barbara. I have come to carry her off.”

“To carry off Barbara!” echoed Mrs. Hare.

“Cornelia is not well; she had caught a violent cold, and wishes Barbara
to spend the day with her.”

“Oh, Mr. Carlyle, I cannot leave mamma to-day. She is not well herself,
and she would be dull without me.”

“Neither can I spare her, Archibald. It is not a day for Barbara to go
out.”

How could he get to say a word to Barbara alone? Whilst he deliberated,
talking on, though, all the while to Mrs. Hare, a servant appeared at
the sitting-room door.

“The fishmonger’s boy is come up, ma’am. His master has sent him to say
that he fears there’ll be no fish in to-day, in anything like time. The
trains won’t get up, with this weather.”

Mrs. Hare rose from her seat to hold a confab at the door with the maid;
and Mr. Carlyle seized his opportunity.

“Barbara,” he whispered, “make no opposition. You must come. What I
really want you for is connected with Richard.”

She looked up at him, a startled glance, and the crimson flew to her
face. Mrs. Hare returned to her seat. “Oh, such a day!” she shivered. “I
am sure Cornelia cannot expect Barbara.”

“But Cornelia does. And there is my pony carriage waiting to take her
before I go to the office. Not a flake of snow can come near her, Mrs.
Hare. The large warm apron will be up, and an umbrella shield her bonnet
and face. Get your things on, Barbara.”

“Mamma if you would not very much mind being left, I should like to go,”
 said Barbara, with almost trembling eagerness.

“But you would be sure to take cold, child.”

“Oh, dear no. I can wrap up well.”

“And I will see that she comes home all right this evening,” added Mr.
Carlyle.

In a few minutes they were seated in the pony carriage. Barbara’s tongue
was burning to ask questions, but John sat behind them, and would have
overheard. When they arrived at East Lynne, Mr. Carlyle gave her his arm
up the steps, and took her into the breakfast-room.

“Will you prepare yourself for a surprise, Barbara?”

Suspense--fear--had turned her very pale. “Something that has happened
to Richard!” she uttered.

“Nothing that need agitate you. He is here.”

“Here? Where?

“Here. Under this roof. He slept here last night.”

“Oh, Archibald!”

“Only fancy, Barbara, I opened the window at nine last night to look at
the weather, and in burst Richard. We could not let him go out again in
the snow, so he slept here, in that room next Cornelia’s.”

“Does she know of it?”

“Of course. And Joyce also; we were obliged to tell Joyce. It is he you
have come to spend the day with. But just imagine Richard’s fear. Your
father came this morning, calling up the stairs after me, saying he
heard Richard was here. I thought Richard would have gone out of his
mind with fright.”

A few more explanations, and Mr. Carlyle took Barbara into the room,
Miss Carlyle and her knitting still keeping Richard company. In fact,
that was to be the general sitting room of the day, and a hot lunch,
Richard’s dinner, would be served to Miss Carlyle’s chamber at one
o’clock. Joyce only admitted to wait on her.

“And now I must go,” said Mr. Carlyle, after chatting a few minutes.
“The office is waiting for me, and my poor ponies are in the snow.”

“But you’ll be sure to be home early, Mr. Carlyle,” said Richard. “I
dare not stop here; I must be off not a moment later than six or seven
o’clock.”

“I will be home, Richard.”

Anxiously did Richard and Barbara consult that day, Miss Carlyle of
course putting in her word. Over and over again did Barbara ask the
particulars of the slight interviews Richard had had with Thorn; over
and over again did she openly speculate upon what his name really was.
“If you could but discover some one whom he knows, and inquire it,” she
exclaimed.

“I have seen him with one person, but I can’t inquire of him. They are
too thick together, he and Thorn, and are birds of a feather also, I
suspect. Great swells both.”

“Oh, Richard don’t use those expressions. They are unsuited to a
gentleman.”

Richard laughed bitterly. “A gentleman?”

“Who is it you have seen Thorn with?” inquired Barbara.

“Sir Francis Levison,” replied Richard, glancing at Miss Carlyle, who
drew in her lips ominously.

“With whom?” uttered Barbara, betraying complete astonishment. “Do you
know Sir Francis Levison?”

“Oh, yes, I know him. Nearly the only man about town that I do know.”

Barbara seemed lost in a puzzled reverie, and it was some time before
she aroused herself from it.

“Are they at all alike?” she asked.

“Very much so, I suspect. Both bad men.”

“But I meant in person.”

“Not in the least. Except that they are both tall.”

Again Barbara sank into thought. Richard’s words had surprised her. She
was aroused by it from hearing a child’s voice in the next room. She ran
into it, and Miss Carlyle immediately fastened the intervening door.

It was little Archibald Carlyle. Joyce had come in with the tray to lay
the luncheon, and before she could lock the door, Archibald ran in after
her. Barbara lifted him in her arms to carry him back to the nursery.

“Oh, you heavy boy!” she exclaimed.

Archie laughed. “Wilson says that,” he lisped, “if ever she has to carry
me.”

“I have brought you a truant, Wilson,” cried Barbara.

“Oh, is it you, Miss Barbara? How are you, miss? Naughty boy!--yes, he
ran away without my noticing him--he is got now so that he can open the
door.”

“You must be so kind as to keep him strictly in for to-day,” concluded
Miss Barbara, authoritatively. “Miss Carlyle is not well, and cannot be
subjected to the annoyance of his running into the room.”

Evening came, and the time of Richard’s departure. It was again snowing
heavily, though it had ceased in the middle of the day. Money for the
present had been given to him; arrangements had been discussed. Mr.
Carlyle insisted upon Richard’s sending him his address, as soon as he
should own one to send, and Richard faithfully promised. He was in very
low spirits, almost as low as Barbara, who could not conceal her tears;
they dropped in silence on her pretty silk dress. He was smuggled down
the stairs, a large cloak of Miss Carlyle’s enveloping him, into the
room he had entered by storm the previous night. Mr. Carlyle held the
window open.

“Good-bye, Barbara dear. If ever you should be able to tell my mother of
this day, say that my chief sorrow was not to see her.”

“Oh, Richard!” she sobbed forth, broken-hearted, “good-bye. May God be
with you and bless you!”

“Farewell, Richard,” said Miss Carlyle; “don’t you be fool enough to get
into any more scrapes.”

Last of all he rung the hand of Mr. Carlyle. The latter went outside
with him for an instant, and their leave-taking was alone.

Barbara returned to the chamber he had quitted. She felt that she must
indulge in a few moments sobbing; Joyce was there, but Barbara was
sobbing when she entered it.

“It is hard for him, Miss Barbara, if he is really innocent.”

Barbara turned her streaming eyes upon her. “If! Joyce do you doubt that
he is innocent?”

“I quite believe him to be so now, miss. Nobody could so solemnly assert
what was not true. The thing at present will be to find that Captain
Thorn.”

“Joyce!” exclaimed Barbara, in excitement, seizing hold of Joyce’s
hands, “I thought I had found him; I believed in my own mind that I knew
who he was. I don’t mind telling you, though I have never before spoken
of it; and with one thing or other, this night I feel just as if I
should die--as if I must speak. I thought it was Sir Francis Levison.”

Joyce stared with all her eyes. “Miss Barbara!”

“I did. I have thought it ever since the night that Lady Isabel went
away. My poor brother was at West Lynne then--he had come for a few
hours, and he met the man Thorn walking in Bean lane. He was in evening
dress, and Richard described a peculiar motion of his--the throwing off
of his hair from his brow. He said his white hand and his diamond ring
glittered in the moonlight. The white hand, the ring, the motion--for he
was always doing it--all reminded me of Captain Levison; and from that
hour until to-day I believed him to be the man Richard saw. To-day
Richard tells me that he knows Sir Francis Levison, and that he and
Thorn are intimate. What I think now is, that this Thorn must have paid
a flying visit to the neighborhood that night to assist Captain Levison
in the wicked work that he had on hand.”

“How strange it all sounds!” uttered Joyce.

“And I never could tell my suspicions to Mr. Carlyle! I did not like to
mention Francis Levison’s name to him.”

Barbara soon returned down stairs. “I must be going home,” she said to
Mr. Carlyle. “It is turned half-past seven, and mamma will be uneasy.”

“Whenever you like, Barbara.”

“But can I not walk? I am sorry to take out your ponies again, and in
this storm.”

Mr. Carlyle laughed. “Which would feel the storm the worst, you or the
ponies?”

But when Barbara got outside, she saw that it was not the pony carriage,
but the chariot that was in waiting for her. She turned inquiringly to
Mr. Carlyle.

“Did you think I should allow you to go home in an open carriage to-
night, Barbara?”

“Are you coming also?”

“I suppose I had better,” he smiled. “To see that you and the carriage
do not get fixed in a rut.”

Barbara withdrew to her corner of the chariot, and cried silently. Very,
very deeply did she mourn the unhappy situation--the privations of her
brother; and she knew that he was one to feel them deeply. He could not
battle with the world’s hardships so bravely as many could. Mr. Carlyle
only detected her emotion as they were nearing the Grove. He leaned
forward, took her hand, and held it between his.

“Don’t grieve, Barbara. Bright days may be in store for us yet.”

The carriage stopped.

“You may go back,” he said to the servants, when he alighted. “I shall
walk home.”

“Oh,” exclaimed Barbara, “I do think you intend to spend the evening
with us? Mamma will be so pleased.”

Her voice sounded as if she was also. Mr. Carlyle drew her hand within
his arm as they walked up the path.

But Barbara had reckoned without her host. Mrs. Hare was in bed,
consequently could not be pleased at the visit of Mr. Carlyle. The
justice had gone out, and she, feeling tired and not well, thought she
would retire to rest. Barbara stole into her room, but found her asleep,
so that it fell to Barbara to entertain Mr. Carlyle.

They stood together before the large pierglass, in front of the blazing
fire. Barbara was thinking over the events of the day. What Mr. Carlyle
was thinking of was best known to himself; his eyes, covered with their
drooping eyelids, were cast upon Barbara. There was a long silence, at
length Barbara seemed to feel that his gaze was upon her, and she looked
up at him.

“Will you marry me, Barbara?”

The words were spoken in the quietest, most matter-of-fact tone, just as
if he had said, “Shall I give you a chair, Barbara?” But, oh! The change
that passed over her countenance! The sudden light of joy! The scarlet
flush of emotion and happiness. Then it all faded down to paleness and
sadness.

She shook her head in the negative. “But you are very kind to ask me,”
 she added in words.

“What is the impediment, Barbara?”

Another rush of color as before and a deep silence. Mr. Carlyle stole
his arm around her and bent his face on a level with hers.

“Whisper it to me, Barbara.”

She burst into a flood of tears.

“Is it because I once married another?”

“No, no. It is the remembrance of that night--you cannot have forgotten
it, and it is stamped on my brain in letters of fire. I never thought so
to betray myself. But for what passed that night you would not have
asked me now.”

“Barbara!”

She glanced up at him; the tone was so painful.

“Do you know that I love you? That there is none other in the whole
world whom I would care to marry but you? Nay, Barbara, when happiness
is within our reach, let us not throw it away upon a chimera.”

She cried more softly, leaning upon his arm. “Happiness? Would it be
happiness for you?”

“Great and deep happiness,” he whispered.

She read truth in his countenance, and a sweet smile illumined her sunny
features. Mr. Carlyle read its signs.

“You love me as much as ever, Barbara!”

“Far more, far more,” was the murmured answer, and Mr. Carlyle held her
closer, and drew her face fondly to his. Barbara’s heart was at length
at rest, and she had been content to remain where she was forever.

And Richard? Had he got clear off? Richard was stealing along the road,
plunging into the snow by the hedge because it was more sheltered there
than in the beaten path, when his umbrella came in contact with another
umbrella. Miss Carlyle had furnished it to him; not to protect his
battered hat but to protect his face from being seen by the passers by.
The umbrella he encountered was an aristocratic silk one, with an ivory
handle; Dick’s was of democratic cotton, with hardly any handle at all;
and the respective owners had been bearing on, heads down and umbrellas
out, till they, the umbrellas, met smash, right under a gas lamp. Aside
went the umbrellas, and the antagonists stared at each other.

“How dare you, fellow? Can’t you see where you are going on?”

Dick thought he should have dropped. He would have given all the money
his pockets held if the friendly earth had but opened and swallowed him
in; for he was now peering into the face of his own father.

Uttering an exclamation of dismay, which broke from him involuntarily,
Richard sped away with the swiftness of an arrow. Did Justice Hare
recognize the tones? It cannot be said. He saw a rough, strange looking
man, with bushy, black whiskers, who was evidently scared at the sight
of him. That was nothing; for the justice, being a justice, and a strict
one, was regarded with considerable awe in the parish by those of Dick’s
apparent caliber. Nevertheless, he stood still and gazed in the
direction until all sound of Richard’s footsteps had died away in the
distance.

Tears were streaming down the face of Mrs. Hare. It was a bright morning
after the snowstorm, so bright that the sky was blue, and the sun was
shining, but the snow lay deeply upon ground. Mrs. Hare sat in her
chair, enjoying the brightness, and Mr. Carlyle stood near her. The
tears were of joy and of grief mingled--of grief at hearing that she
should at last have to part with Barbara, of joy that she was going to
one so entirely worthy of her as Mr. Carlyle.

“Archibald, she has had a happy home here; you will render yours as much
so?”

“To the very utmost of my power.”

“You will be ever kind to her, and cherish her?”

“With my whole strength and heart. Dear Mrs. Hare; I thought you knew me
too well to doubt me.”

“Doubt you! I do not doubt you, I trust you implicitly, Archibald. Had
the whole world laid themselves at Barbara’s feet, I should have prayed
that she might choose you.”

A small smile flitted over Mr. Carlyle’s lips. He knew it was what
Barbara would have done.

“But, Archibald, what about Cornelia?” returned Mrs. Hare. “I would not
for a moment interfere in your affairs, or in the arrangements you and
Barbara may agree upon, but I cannot help thinking that married people
are better alone.”

“Cornelia will quit East Lynne,” said Mr. Carlyle. “I have not spoken to
her yet, but I shall do so now. I have long made my mind up that if ever
I did marry again, I and my wife would live alone. It is said she
interfered too much with my former wife. Had I suspected it, Cornelia
should not have remained in the house a day. Rest assured that Barbara
shall not be an object to the chance.”

“How did you come over her?” demanded the justice, who had already given
his gratified consent, and who now entered in his dressing gown and
morning wig. “Others have tried it on, and Barbara would not listen to
them.”

“I suppose I must have cast a spell upon her,” answered Mr. Carlyle,
breaking into a smile.

“Here she is. Barbara,” carried on the unceremonious justice, “what is
it that you see in Carlyle more than anybody else?”

Barbara’s scarlet cheeks answered for her. “Papa,” she said, “Otway
Bethel is at the door asking to speak to you. Jasper says he won’t come
in.”

“Then I’m sure I’m not going out to him in the cold. Here, Mr. Otway,
what are you afraid of?” he called out. “Come in.”

Otway Bethel made his appearance in his usual sporting costume. But he
did not seem altogether at his ease in the presence of Mrs. Hare and
Barbara.

“The colonel wished to see you, justice, and ask you if you had any
objection to the meeting’s being put off from one o’clock till two,”
 cried he, after nodding to Mr. Carlyle. “He has got a friend coming to
see him unexpectedly who will leave again by the two o’clock train.”

“I don’t care which it is,” answered Mr. Hare. “Two o’clock will do as
well as one, for me.”

“That’s all right, then; and I’ll drop in upon Herbert and Pinner and
acquaint them.”

Miss Carlyle’s cold was better that evening, in fact she seemed quite
herself again, and Mr. Carlyle introduced the subject of his marriage.
It was after dinner that he began upon it.

“Cornelia, when I married Lady Isabel Vane, you reproached me severely
with having kept you in the dark--”

“If you had not kept me in the dark, but consulted me, as any other
Christian would, the course of events would have been wholly changed,
and the wretchedness and disgrace that fell on this house been spared to
it,” fiercely interrupted Miss Carlyle.

“We will leave the past,” he said, “and consider the future. I was about
to remark, that I do not intend to fall under your displeasure again for
the like offense. I believe you have never wholly forgiven it.”

“And never shall,” cried she, impetuously. “I did not deserve the
slight.”

“Therefore, almost as soon as I know it myself, I acquaint you. I am
about to marry a second time, Cornelia.”

Miss Carlyle started up. Her spectacles dropped off her nose, and a
knitting-box which she happened to have on her knees, clattered to the
floor.

“What did you say?” she uttered, aghast.

“I’m about to marry.”

“You!”

“I. Is there anything so very astonishing in it?”

“For the love of common sense, don’t go and make such a fool of
yourself. You have done it once; was not that enough for you, but you
must run your head into the noose again?”

“Now, Cornelia, can you wonder that I do not speak of things when you
meet them in this way? You treat me just as you did when I was a child.
It is very foolish.”

“When folk act childishly, they must be treated as children. I always
thought you were mad when you married before, but I shall think you
doubly mad now.”

“Because you have preferred to remain single and solitary yourself, is
it any reason why you should condemn me to do the same? You are happy
alone; I should be happier with a wife.”

“That she may go and disgrace you, as the last one did!” intemperately
spoke Miss Carlyle, caring not a rush what she said in her storm of
anger.

Mr. Carlyle’s brow flushed, but he controlled his temper.

“No,” he calmly replied. “I am not afraid of that in the one I have now
chosen.”

Miss Corny gathered her knitting together, he had picked up her box. Her
hands trembled, and the lines of her face were working. It was a blow to
her as keen as the other had been.

“Pray who is it that you have chosen?” she jerked forth. “The whole
neighborhood has been after you.”

“Let it be who it will, Cornelia, you will be sure to grumble. Were I to
say that it was a royal princess, or a peasant’s daughter, you would
equally see grounds for finding fault.”

“Of course I should. I know who it is--that stuck-up Louisa Dobede.”

“No, it is not. I never had the slightest intention of choosing Louisa
Dobede, nor she of choosing me. I am marrying to please myself, and, for
a wife, Louisa Dobede would not please me.”

“As you did before,” sarcastically put in Miss Corny.

“Yes; as I did before.”

“Well, can’t you open your mouth and say who it is?” was the exasperated
rejoinder.

“It is Barbara Hare.”

“Who?” shrieked Miss Carlyle.

“You are not deaf, Cornelia.”

“Well, you are an idiot!” she exclaimed, lifting up her hands and eyes.

“Thank you,” he said, but without any signs of irritation.

“And so you are; you are, Archibald. To suffer that girl, who has been
angling after you so long, to catch you at last.”

“She has not angled after me; had she done so, she would probably never
have been Mrs. Carlyle. Whatever passing fancy she may have entertained
for me in earlier days, she has shown no symptoms of it of late years;
and I am quite certain that she had no more thought or idea that I
should choose her for my second wife, than you had I should choose you.
Others have angled after me too palpably, but Barbara has not.”

“She is a conceited minx, as vain as she is high.”

“What else have you to urge against her?”

“I would have married a girl without a slur, if I must have married,”
 aggravatingly returned Miss Corny.

“Slur?”

“Slur, yes. Dear me, is it an honor--the possessing a brother such as
Richard?”

Miss Corny sniffed. “Pigs may fly; but I never saw them try at it.”

“The next consideration, Cornelia, is about your residence. You will go
back, I presume, to your own home.”

Miss Corny did not believe her own ears. “Go back to my own home!” she
exclaimed. “I shall do nothing of the sort. I shall stop at East Lynne.
What’s to hinder me?”

Mr. Carlyle shook his head. “It cannot be,” he said, in a low, decisive
tone.

“Who says so?” she sharply asked.

“I do. Have you forgotten that night--when she went away--the words
spoken by Joyce? Cornelia, whether they were true or false, I will not
subject another to the chance.”

She did not answer. Her lips parted and closed again. Somehow, Miss
Carlyle could not bear to be reminded of that revelation of Joyce’s; it
subdued even her.

“I cast no reflection upon you,” hastily continued Mr. Carlyle. “You
have been a mistress of a house for many years, and you naturally look
to be so; it is right you should. But two mistresses in a house do not
answer, Cornelia; they never did, and they never will.”

“Why did you not give me so much of your sentiments when I first came to
East Lynne?” she burst forth. “I hate hypocrisy.”

“They were not my sentiments then; I possessed none. I was ignorant upon
the subject as I was upon many others. Experience has come to me since.”

“You will not find a better mistress of a house than I have made you,”
 she resentfully spoke.

“I do not look for it. The tenants leave your house in March, do they
not?”

“Yes, they do,” snapped Miss Corny. “But as we are on the subject of
details of ways and means, allow me to tell you that if you did what is
right, you would move into that house of mine, and I will go to a
smaller--as you seem to think I shall poison Barbara if I remain with
her. East Lynne is a vast deal too fine and too grand for you.”

“I do not consider it so. I shall not quit East Lynne.”

“Are you aware that, in leaving your house, I take my income with me,
Archibald?”

“Most certainly. Your income is yours, and you will require it for your
own purposes. I have neither a right to, nor wish for it.”

“It will make a pretty good hole in your income, the withdrawing of it,
I can tell you that. Take care that you and East Lynne don’t go bankrupt
together.”

At this moment the summons of a visitor was heard. Even that excited the
ire of Miss Carlyle. “I wonder who’s come bothering to-night?” she
uttered.

Peter entered. “It is Major Thorn, sir. I have shown him into the
drawing-room.”

Mr. Carlyle was surprised. He had not thought Major Thorn within many a
mile of West Lynne. He proceeded to the drawing-room.

“Such a journey!” said Major Thorn to Mr. Carlyle. “It is my general
luck to get ill-weather when I travel. Rain and hail, thunder and heat;
nothing bad comes amiss when I am out. The snow lay on the rails, I
don’t know how thick; at one station we were detained two hours.”

“Are you proposing to make any stay at West Lynne?”

“Off again to-morrow. My leave, this time, is to be spent at my
mother’s. I may bestow a week of it or so on West Lynne, but am not
sure. I must be back in Ireland in a month. Such a horrid boghole we are
quartered in just now!”

“To go from one subject to another,” observed Mr. Carlyle; “there is a
question I have long thought to put to you, Thorn, did we ever meet
again. Which year was it that you were staying at Swainson?”

Major Thorn mentioned it. It was the year of Hallijohn’s murder.

“As I thought--in fact, know,” said Mr. Carlyle. “Did you, while you
were stopping there, ever come across a namesake of yours--one Thorn?”

“I believe I did. But I don’t know the man, of my knowledge, and I saw
him but once only. I don’t think he was living at Swainson. I never
observed him in the town.”

“Where did you meet with him?”

“At a roadside beer-shop, about two miles from Swainson. I was riding
one day, when a fearful storm came on, and I took shelter there.
Scarcely had I entered, when another horsemen rode up, and he likewise
took shelter--a tall, dandified man, aristocratic and exclusive. When he
departed--for he quitted first, the storm being over--I asked the people
who he was. They said they did not know, though they had often seen him
ride by; but a man who was there, drinking, said he was a Captain Thorn.
The same man, by the way, volunteered the information that he came from
a distance; somewhere near West Lynne; I remember that.”

“That Captain Thorn did?”

“No--that he, himself did. He appeared to know nothing of Captain Thorn,
beyond the name.”

It seemed to be ever so! Scraps of information, but nothing tangible.
Nothing to lay hold of, or to know the man by. Would it be thus always?

“Should you recognize him again were you to see him?” resumed Mr.
Carlyle awakening from his reverie.

“I think I should. There was something peculiar in his countenance, and
I remember it well yet.”

“Were you by chance to meet him, and discover his real name--for I have
reason to believe that Thorn, the one he went by then, was an assumed
one--will you oblige me by letting me know it?”

“With all the pleasure in life,” replied the major. “The chances are
against it though, confined as I am to that confounded sister country.
Other regiments get the luck of being quartered in the metropolis, or
near it; ours doesn’t.”

When Major Thorn departed, and Mr. Carlyle was about to return to the
room where he left his sister, he was interrupted by Joyce.

“Sir,” she began. “Miss Carlyle tells me that there is going to be a
change at East Lynne.”

The words took Mr. Carlyle by surprise.

“Miss Carlyle has been in a hurry to tell you,” he remarked--a certain
haughty displeasure in his tone.

“She did not speak for the sake of telling me, sir, it is not likely;
but I fancy she was thinking about her own plans. She inquired whether I
would go with her when she left, or whether I meant to remain at East
Lynne. I would not answer her, sir, until I had spoken to you.”

“Well?” said Mr. Carlyle.

“I gave a promise sir, to--to--my late lady--that I would remain with
her children as long as I was permitted. She asked it of me when she was
ill--when she thought she was going to die. What I would inquire of you,
sir, is, whether the change will make any difference to my staying?”

“No,” he decisively replied. “I also, Joyce, wish you to remain with the
children.”

“It is well, sir,” Joyce answered, and her face looked bright as she
quitted the room.



CHAPTER XXXI.

MR. DILL IN AN EMBROIDERED SHIRT-FRONT.

It was a lovely morning in June, and all West Lynne was astir. West
Lynne generally was astir in the morning, but not in the bustling manner
that might be observed now. People were abroad in numbers, passing down
to St. Jude’s Church, for it was the day of Mr. Carlyle’s marriage to
Barbara Hare.

Miss Carlyle made herself into a sort of martyr. She would not go near
it; fine weddings in fine churches did not suit her, she proclaimed;
they could tie themselves up together fast enough without her presence.
She had invited the little Carlyles and their governess and Joyce to
spend the day with her; and she persisted in regarding the children as
martyrs too, in being obliged to submit to the advent of a second
mother. She was back in her old house again, next door to the office,
settled there for life now with her servants. Peter had mortally
offended her in electing to remain at East Lynne.

Mr. Dill committed himself terribly on the wedding morning. About ten
o’clock he made his appearance at Miss Carlyle’s; he was a man of the
old stage, possessing old-fashioned notions, and he had deemed that to
step in to congratulate her on the auspicious day would be only good
manners.

Miss Carlyle was seated in her dining-room, her hands folded before her.
It was rare indeed that she was caught doing nothing. She turned her
eyes on Mr. Dill as he entered.

“Why, what on earth has taken you?” began she, before he could speak.
“You are decked out like a young duck!”

“I am going to the wedding, Miss Cornelia. Did you know it? Mrs. Hare
was so kind as to invite me to the breakfast, and Mr. Archibald insists
upon my going to church. I am not too fine, am I?”

Poor old Dill’s “finery” consisted of a white waistcoat with gold
buttons, and an embroidered shirt-front. Miss Corny was pleased to
regard it with sarcastic wrath.

“Fine!” echoed she. “I don’t know what you call it. I would not make
myself such a spectacle for untold gold. You’ll have all the ragamuffins
in the street forming a tail after you, thinking you are the bridegroom.
A man of your years to deck yourself out in a worked shirt! I would have
had some rosettes on my coat-tails, while I was about it.”

“My coat’s quite plain, Miss Cornelia,” he meekly remonstrated.

“Plain! What would you have it?” snapped Miss Cornelia. “Perhaps you
covet a wreath of embroidery round it, gold leaves and scarlet flowers,
with a swansdown collar? It would only be in keeping with that shirt and
waistcoat. I might as well have gone and ordered a white tarletan dress,
looped up with peas, and streamed through the town in that guise. It
would be just as consistent.”

“People like to dress a little out of common at a wedding, Miss
Cornelia; it’s only respectful, when they are invited guests.”

“I don’t say people should go to a wedding in a hop sack. But there’s a
medium. Pray, do you know your age?”

“I am turned sixty, Miss Corny.”

“You just are. And do you consider it decent for an old man, going on
for seventy, to be decorated off as you are now? I don’t; and so I tell
you my mind. Why, you’ll be the laughing-stock of the parish! Take care
the boys don’t tie a tin kettle to you!”

Mr. Dill thought he would leave the subject. His own impression was,
that he was not too fine, and that the parish would not regard him as
being so; still, he had a great reverence for Miss Corny’s judgment, and
was not altogether easy. He had had his white gloves in his hand when he
entered, but he surreptitiously smuggled them into his pocket, lest they
might offend. He passed to the subject which had brought him thither.

“What I came in for, was to offer you my congratulations on this
auspicious day, Miss Cornelia. I hope Mr. Archibald and his wife, and
you, ma’am--”

“There! You need not trouble yourself to go on,” interrupted Miss Corny,
hotly arresting him. “We want condolence here to-day, rather than the
other thing. I’m sure I’d nearly as soon see Archibald go to his
hanging.”

“Oh, Miss Corny!”

“I would; and you need not stare at me as if you were throttled. What
business has he to go and fetter himself with a wife again. One would
have thought he had had enough with the other. It is as I have always
said, there’s a soft place in Archibald’s brain.”

Old Dill knew there was no “soft place” in the brain of Mr. Carlyle, but
he deemed it might be as well not to say so, in Miss Corny’s present
humor. “Marriage is a happy state, as I have heard, ma’am, and
honorable; and I am sure Mr. Archibald--”

“Very happy! Very honorable!” fiercely cried Miss Carlyle, sarcasm in
her tone. “His last marriage brought him all that, did it not?”

“That’s past and done with, Miss Corny, and none of us need recall it. I
hope he will find in his present wife a recompense for what’s gone; he
could not have chosen a prettier or nicer young lady than Miss Barbara;
and I am glad to my very heart that he has got her.”

“Couldn’t he?” jerked Miss Carlyle.

“No, ma’am, he could not. Were I young, and wanted a wife, there’s no
one in all West Lynne I would so soon look out for as Miss Barbara. Not
that she’d have me; and I was not speaking in that sense, Miss Corny.”

“It’s to be hoped you were not,” retorted Miss Corny. “She is an idle,
insolent, vain fagot, caring for nothing but her own doll’s face and for
Archibald.”

“Ah, well, ma’am never mind that; pretty young girls know they are
pretty, and you can’t take their vanity from them. She’ll be a good and
loving wife to him; I know she will; it is in her nature; she won’t
serve him as--as--that other poor unfortunate did.”

“If I feared she was one to bring shame to him, as the other did, I’d go
into the church this hour and forbid the marriage; and if that didn’t
do, I’d--smother her!” shrieked Miss Carlyle. “Look at that piece of
impudence!”

That last sentence was uttered in a different tone, and concerned
somebody in the street. Miss Carlyle hopped off her chair and strode to
the window. Mr. Dill’s eyes turned in the like direction.

In a gay and summer’s dress, fine and sparkling, with a coquettish
little bonnet, trimmed with pink, shaded by one of those nondescript
articles at present called veils, which article was made of white
spotted net with a pink ruche round it, sailed Afy Hallijohn, conceited
and foolish and good-looking as ever. Catching sight of Mr. Dill, she
made him a flourishing and gracious bow. The courteous old gentleman
returned it, and was pounced upon by Miss Corny’s tongue for his pains.

“Whatever possessed you to do that?”

“Well, Miss Corny, she spoke to me. You saw her.”

“I saw her? Yes, I did see her, the brazen bellwether! And she saw me,
and spoke to you in her insolence. And you must answer her, in spite of
my presence, instead of shaking your fist and giving her a reproving
frown. You want a little sharp talking to, yourself.”

“But, Miss Corny, it’s always best to let bygones be bygones,” he
pleaded. “She was flighty and foolish, and all that, was Afy; but now
that it’s proved she did not go with Richard Hare, as was suspected, and
is at present living creditably, why should she not be noticed?”

“If the very deuce himself stood there with his horns and tail, you
would find excuses to make for him,” fired Miss Corny. “You are as bad
as Archibald! Notice Afy Hallijohn, when she dresses and flirts and
minces as you saw her but now! What creditable servant would flaunt
abroad in such a dress and bonnet as that, with that flimsy gauze thing
over her face. It’s as disreputable as your shirt-front.”

Mr. Dill coughed humbly, not wishing to renew the point of the shirt-
front. “She is not exactly a servant, Miss Corny, she’s a lady’s maid;
and ladies’ maids do dress outrageously fine. I had great respect for
her father, ma’am; never a better clerk came into our office.”

“Perhaps you’ll tell me you have a respect for her! The world’s being
turned upside down, I think. Formerly, mistresses kept their servants to
work; now it seems they keep them for play! She’s going to St. Jude’s,
you may be sure of it, to stare at this fine wedding, instead of being
at home, in a cotton gown and white apron, making beds. Mrs. Latimer
must be a droll mistress, to give her liberty in this way. What’s that
fly for?” sharply added Miss Corny, as one drew up to the office door.

“Fly,” said Mr. Dill, stretching forward his bald head. “It must be the
one I ordered. Then I’ll wish you good-day, Miss Corny.”

“Fly for you?” cried Miss Corny. “Have you got the gout, that you could
not walk to St. Jude’s on foot?”

“I am not going to the church yet; I am going on to the Grove, Miss
Corny. I thought it would look more proper to have a fly ma’am; more
respectful.”

“Not a doubt but you need it in that trim,” retorted she. “Why didn’t
you put on pumps and silk stockings with pink clocks?”

He was glad to bow himself out, she kept on so. But he thought he would
do it with a pleasant remark, to show her he bore no ill-will. “Just
look at the crowds pouring down, Miss Corny; the church will be as full
as it can cram.”

“I dare say it will,” retorted she. “One fool makes many.”

“I fear Miss Cornelia does not like this marriage, any more than she did
the last,” quoth Mr. Dill to himself as he stepped into his fly. “Such a
sensible woman as she is in other things, to be so bitter against Mr.
Archibald because he marries! It’s not like her. I wonder,” he added,
his thoughts changing, “whether I do look foolish in this shirt? I’m
sure I never thought of decking myself out to appear young--as Miss
Corny said--I only wished to testify respect to Mr. Archibald and Miss
Barbara; nothing else would have made me give five-and-twenty shillings
for it. Perhaps it’s not etiquette--or whatever they call it--to wear
them in the morning, Miss Corny ought to know; and there certainly must
be something wrong about it, by the way it put her up. Well, it can’t be
helped now; it must go; there’s no time to return home now to change
it.”

St. Jude’s Church was in a cram; all the world and his wife had flocked
into it. Those who could not get in, took up their station in the
churchyard and in the road.

Well, it was a goodly show. Ladies and gentlemen as smart as fine
feathers could make them. Mr. Carlyle was one of the first to enter the
church, self-possessed and calm, the very sense of a gentleman. Oh, but
he was noble to look upon; though when was he otherwise? Mr. and Mrs.
Clithero were there, Anne Hare, that was; a surprise for some of the
gazers, who had not known they were expected at the wedding. Gentle,
delicate Mrs. Hare walked up the church leaning on the arm of Sir John
Dobede, a paler shade than usual on her sweet, sad face. “She’s thinking
of her wretched, ill-doing son,” quoth the gossips, one to another. But
who comes in now, with an air as if the whole church belonged to him? An
imposing, pompous man, stern and grim, in a new flaxen wig, and a white
rose in his buttonhole. It is Mr. Justice Hare, and he leads in one,
whom folks jump upon seats to get a look at.

Very lovely was Barbara, in her soft white silk robes and her floating
veil. Her cheeks, now blushing rosy red, now pale as the veil that
shaded them, betrayed how intense was her emotion. The bridesmaids came
after her with jaunty steps, vain in their important office--Louisa
Dobede, Augusta and Kate Herbert, and Mary Pinner.

Mr. Carlyle was already in his place at the altar, and as Barbara neared
him, he advanced, took her hand, and placed her on his left. I don’t
think that it was quite usual; but he had been married before, and ought
to know. The clerk directed the rest where to stand, and, after some
little delay, the service proceeded.

In spite of her emotion--and that it was great, scarcely to be
suppressed, none could doubt--Barbara made the responses bravely. Be you
very sure that a woman who loves him she is being united to, must
experience this emotion.

“Wilt thou have this man to be thy wedded husband, to live together
after God’s ordinance, in the holy estate of matrimony?” spoke the Rev.
Mr. Little. “Wilt thou obey him, and serve him, love, honor, and keep
him in sickness and in health, and forsaking all others, keep thee only
unto him, so long as ye both shall live?”

“I will.”

Clearly, firmly, impressively was the answer given. It was as if Barbara
had in her thoughts one who had not “kept holy unto him,” and would
proclaim her own resolution never so to betray him, God helping her.

The ceremony was very soon over, and Barbara, the magic ring upon her
finger and her arm within Mr. Carlyle’s was led out to his chariot, now
hers--had he not just endowed her with his worldly goods?

The crowd shouted and hurrahed as they caught sight of her blushing
face, but the carriage was soon clear of the crowd, who concentrated
their curiosity upon the other carriages that were to follow it. The
company were speeding back to the Grove to breakfast. Mr. Carlyle,
breaking the silence, suddenly turned to his bride and spoke, his tone
impassioned, almost unto pain.

“Barbara, you will keep your vows to me?”

She raised her shy blue eyes, so full of love to his; earnest feeling
had brought the tears to them.

“Always, in the spirit and in the letter, until death shall claim me. So
help me Heaven!”

The German watering-places were crowded that early autumn. They
generally are crowded at that season, now that the English flock abroad
in shoals, like the swallows quitting our cold country, to return again
some time. France has been pretty well used up, so now we fall upon
Germany. Stalkenberg was that year particularly full, for its size--you
might have put it in a nutshell; and it derived its importance, name,
and most else belonging to it, from its lord of the soil, the Baron von
Stalkenberg. A stalwart old man was the baron, with grizzly hair, a
grizzled beard, and manners as loutish as those of the boars he hunted.
He had four sons as stalwart as himself, and who promised to be in time
as grizzled. They were all styled the Counts von Stalkenberg, being
distinguished by their Christian names--all save the eldest son, and he
was generally called the young baron. Two of them were away--soldiers;
and two, the eldest and the youngest, lived with their father in the
tumble-down castle of Stalkenberg, situated about a mile from the
village to which it gave its name. The young Baron von Stalkenberg was
at liberty to marry; the three Counts von Stalkenberg were not--unless
they could pick up a wife with enough money to keep herself and her
husband. In this creed they had been brought up. It was a perfectly
understood creed, and not rebelled against.

The young Baron von Stalkenberg, who was only styled young in
contradistinction to his father, being in his forty-first year, was
famous for a handsome person, and for his passionate love of the chase:
of wild boars and wolves he was the deadly enemy. The Count Otto von
Stalkenberg, eleven years his brother’s junior, was famous for nothing
but his fiercely-ringed moustache, a habit of eating, and an undue
addiction to draughts of Marcobrunen. Somewhat meager fare, so report
ran, was the fashion in the Castle of Stalkenberg--neither the old baron
nor his heir cared for luxury; therefore Count von Otto was sure to be
seen at the table d’ hote as often as anybody would invite him, and that
was nearly every day, for the Count von Stalkenberg was a high-sounding
title, and his baronial father, proprietor of all Stalkenberg, lorded it
in the baronial castle close by, all of which appeared very grand and
great, and that the English bow down to with an idol’s worship.

Stopping at the Ludwig Bad, the chief hotel in the place, was a family
of the name of Crosby. It consisted of Mr. and Mrs. Crosby, an only
daughter, her governess, and two or three servants. What Mr. Crosby had
done to England, or England to him, I can’t say, but he never went near
his native country. For years and years he had lived abroad--not in any
settled place of residence: they would travel about, and remain a year
or two in one place, a year or two in another, as the whim suited them.
A respectable, portly man, of quiet and gentlemanly manners, looking as
little like one who need be afraid of the laws of his own land as can
be. Neither is it said or insinuated that he was afraid of them. A
gentleman who knew him had told, many years before, in answer to a
doubt, that Crosby was as free to go home and establish himself in a
mansion in Piccadilly as the best of them. But he had lost fearfully by
some roguish scheme, like the South Sea Bubble, and could not live in
the style he once had done, therefore preferred remaining abroad. Mrs.
Crosby was a pleasant, chatty woman given to take as much gayety as she
could get, and Helena Crosby was a remarkably fine grown girl of
seventeen. You might have given her some years on it had you been
guessing her age, for she was no child, either in appearance or manners,
and never had been. She was an heiress, too. An uncle had left her
twenty thousand pounds, and at her mother’s death she would have ten
thousand more. The Count Otto von Stalkenberg heard of the thirty
thousand pounds, and turned his fierce moustache and his eyes on Miss
Helena.

“Thirty thousand pounds and von handsome girls!” cogitated he, for he
prided himself upon his English. “It is just what I have been seeking
after.”

He found the rumor touching her fortune to be correct, and from that
time was seldom apart from the Crosbys. They were as pleased to have his
society as he was to be in theirs, for was he not the Count von
Stalkenberg? And the other visitors at Stalkenberg looking on with envy,
would have given their ears to be honored with a like intimacy.

One day there thundered down in a vehicle the old Baron von Stalkenberg.
The old chief had come to pay a visit of ceremony to the Crosbys. And
the host of the Ludwig Bad, as he appeared himself to marshal this
chieftain to their saloon, bowed his body low with every step.

“Room there, room there, for the mighty Baron von Stalkenberg.”

The mighty baron had come to invite them to a feast at his castle, where
no feast had ever been made so grand before as this would be; and Otto
had carte blanche to engage other distinguished sojourners at
Stalkenberg, English, French, and natives, who had been civil to him.
Mrs. Crosby’s head was turned.

And now, I ask you, knowing as you do our national notions, was it not
enough to turn it? You will not, then, be surprised to hear that when,
some days subsequent to the feast, the Count Otto von Stalkenberg laid
his proposals at Helena’s feet, they were not rejected.

Helena Crosby rushed into her governess’s room.

“Madam! Madam! Only think. I am going to be married!”

Madam lifted her pale, sad face--a very sad and pale face was hers.

“Indeed!” she gently uttered.

“And my studies are to be over from to-day, Mamma says so.”

“You are over young to marry, Helena.”

“Now don’t you bring up that, madam. It is just what papa is harping
upon,” returned Miss Helena.

“It is to Count Otto?” And it may be remarked that the governess’s
English was perfect, although the young lady addressed her as “Madam.”

“Count Otto, of course. As if I would marry anybody else!”

Look at the governess, reader, and see whether you know her. You will
say “No.” But you do, for it is Lady Isabel Vane. But how strangely she
is altered! Yes, the railway accident did that for her, and what the
accident left undone, grief and remorse accomplished. She limps as she
walks, and slightly stoops, taken from her former height. A scar extends
from her chin above her mouth, completely changing the character of the
lower part of her face; some of her teeth are missing, so that she
speaks with a lisp, and the sober bands of her gray hair--it is nearly
silver--are confined under a large and close cap. She herself tries to
make the change greater, so that all chance of being recognized may be
at an end, and for that reason she wears disfiguring spectacles, and a
broad band of gray velvet, coming down low upon her forehead. Her dress,
too, is equally disfiguring. Never is she seen in one that fits her
person, but in those frightful “loose jackets,” which must surely have
been invented by somebody envious of a pretty shape. As to her bonnet,
it would put to shame those masquerade things tilted on to the back of
the head, for it actually shaded her face; and she was never seen out
without a thick veil. She was pretty easy upon the score of being
recognized now; for Mrs. Ducie and her daughters had been sojourning at
Stalkenberg, and they did not know her in the least. Who could know her?
What resemblance was there between that gray, broken-down woman, with
her disfiguring marks, and the once loved Lady Isabel, with her bright
color, her beauty, her dark flowing curls, and her agile figure? Mr.
Carlyle himself could not have told her. But she was good-looking still,
in spite of it all, gentle and interesting; and people wondered to see
that gray hair in one yet young.

She had been with the Crosbys going on for two years. After her recovery
from the railway accident, she removed to a quiet town in the vicinity;
they were living there, and she became daily governess to Helena. The
Crosbys were given to understand that she was English, but the widow of
a Frenchman--she was obliged to offer some plausible account. There were
no references; but she so won upon their esteem as the daily governess,
that they soon took her into the house. Had Lady Isabel surmised that
they would be travelling to so conspicuous a spot as an English-
frequented German watering-place, she might have hesitated to accept the
engagement. However, it had been of service to her, the meeting with
Mrs. Ducie proving that she was altered beyond chance of recognition.
She could go anywhere now.

But now, about her state of mind? I don’t know how to describe it; the
vain yearning, the inward fever, the restless longing for what might not
be. Longing for what? For her children. Let the mother, be she a
duchess, or be she an apple-woman at a stand, be separated for awhile
from her little children; let her answer how she yearns for them. She
may be away on a tour of pleasure for a few weeks; the longing to see
their little faces again, to hear their prattling tongues, to feel their
soft kisses, is kept under; and there may be frequent messages, “The
children’s dear love to mamma;” but as the weeks lengthen out, the
desire to see them again becomes almost irrepressible. What must it have
been then, for Lady Isabel, who had endured this longing for years? Talk
of the mal du pays, which is said to attack the Swiss when exiled from
their country--that is as nothing compared to the heartsickness which
clung to Lady Isabel. She had passionately loved her children; she had
been anxious for their welfare in all ways; and not the least she had to
endure now was the thought that she had abandoned them to be trained by
strangers. Would they be trained to goodness, to morality, to religion?
Careless as she herself had once been upon these points, she had learnt
better now. Would Isabel grow up to indifference, to--perhaps do as she
had done? Lady Isabel flung her hands before her eyes and groaned in
anguish.

It happened that Mrs. Latimer, a lady living at West Lynne, betook
herself about that time to Stalkenberg, and with her, three parts maid
and one part companion, went Afy Hallijohn. Not that Afy was admitted to
the society of Mrs. Latimer, to sit with her or dine with her, nothing
of that; but she did enjoy more privileges than most ladies’ maids do,
and Afy, who was never backward at setting off her own consequence, gave
out that she was “companion.” Mrs. Latimer was an easy woman, fond of
Afy, and Afy had made her own tale good to her respecting the ill-
natured reports at the time of the murder, so that Mrs. Latimer looked
upon her as one to be compassionated.

Mrs. Latimer and Mrs. Crosby, whose apartments in the hotel joined,
struck up a violent friendship, the one for the other. Ere the former
had been a week at the Ludwig, they had sworn something like eternal
sisterhood--as both had probably done for others fifty times before.



CHAPTER XXXII.

MEETING OF LADY ISABEL AND AFY.

On the evening of the day when Helena Crosby communicated her future
prospects to Lady Isabel, the latter strolled out in the twilight and
took her seat on a bench in an unfrequented part of the gardens, where
she was fond of sitting. Now it occurred that Afy, some minutes
afterwards, found herself in the same walk--and a very dull one, too,
she was thinking.

“Who’s that?” quoth Afy to herself, her eyes falling upon Lady Isabel.
“Oh, it’s that governess of the Crosby’s. She may be known, a half a
mile off, by her grandmother’s bonnet. I’ll go and have a chat with
her.”

Accordingly Afy, who was never troubled with bashfulness, went up and
seated herself beside Lady Isabel. “Good evening, Madame Vine,” cried
she.

“Good evening,” replied Lady Isabel, courteously, not having the least
idea who Afy might be.

“You don’t know me, I fancy,” pursued Afy, so gathering from Lady
Isabel’s looks. “I am companion to Mrs. Latimer; and she is spending the
evening with Mrs. Crosby. Precious dull, this Stalkenberg.”

“Do you think so?”

“It is for me. I can’t speak German or French, and the upper attendants
of families here can’t; most of them speak English. I’m sure I go about
like an owl, able to do nothing but stare. I was sick enough to come
here, but I’d rather be back at West Lynne, quiet as it is.”

Lady Isabel had not been encouraging her companion, either by words or
manner, but the last sentence caused her heart to bound within her.
Control herself as she would, she could not quite hide her feverish
interest.

“Do you come from West Lynne?”

“Yes. Horrid place. Mrs. Latimer took a house there soon after I went to
live with her. I’d rather she’d taken it at Botany Bay.”

“Why do you not like it?”

“Because I don’t,” was Afy’s satisfactory answer.

“Do you know East Lynne?” resumed Lady Isabel, her heart beating and her
brain whirling, as she deliberated how she could put all the questions
she wished to ask.

“I ought to know it,” returned Afy. “My own sister, Miss Hallijohn, is
head maid there. Why, do you know it, Madame Vine?”

Lady Isabel hesitated; she was deliberating upon her answer.

“Some years ago I was staying in the neighborhood for a little time,”
 she said. “I should like to hear of the Carlyles again; they were a nice
family.”

Afy tossed her head.

“Ah! But there have been changes since that. I dare say you knew them in
the time of Lady Isabel?”

Another pause.

“Lady Isabel? Yes she was Mr. Carlyle’s wife.”

“And a nice wife she made him!” ironically rejoined Afy. “You must have
heard of it, Madame Vine, unless you lived in the wood. She eloped--
abandoned him and her children.”

“Are the children living?”

“Yes, poor things. But the one’s on the road to the churchyard--if ever
I saw threatened consumption yet. Joyce, that’s my sister, is in a
flaring temper when I say it. She thinks it will get strong again.”

Lady Isabel passed her handkerchief across her moist brow.

“Which of the children is it?” she faintly asked. “Isabel?”

“Isabel!” retorted Afy. “Who’s Isabel?”

“The eldest child, I mean; Miss Isabel Carlyle.”

“There’s no Isabel. There’s Lucy. She’s the only daughter.”

“When--when--I knew them, there was only one daughter; the other two
were boys; I remember quite well that she was called Isabel.”

“Stay,” said Afy; “now you speak of it, what was it that I heard? It was
Wilson told me, I recollect--she’s the nurse. Why, the very night that
his wife went away Mr. Carlyle gave orders that the child in future
should be called Lucy, her second name. No wonder,” added Afy, violently
indignant, “that he could no longer endure the sound of her mother’s or
suffer the child to bear it.”

“No wonder,” murmured Lady Isabel. “Which child is it that’s ill?”

“It’s William, the eldest boy. He is not to say ill, but he is as thin
as a herring, with an unnaturally bright look on his cheek, and a glaze
upon his eye. Joyce says that his cheeks are no brighter than his
mother’s were, but I know better. Folks in health don’t have those
brilliant colors.”

“Did you ever see Lady Isabel?” she asked, in a low tone.

“Not I,” returned Afy; “I should have thought it demeaning. One does not
care to be brought into contact with that sort of misdoing lot, you
know, Madame Vine.”

“There as another one, a little boy--Archibald, I think, his name was.
Is he well?”

“Oh, the troublesome youngster! He is as sturdy as a Turk. No fear of
his going into consumption. He is the very image of Mr. Carlyle, is that
child. I say though, madame,” continued Afy, changing the subject
unceremoniously, “if you were stopping at West Lynne, perhaps you heard
some wicked mischief-making stories concerning me?”

“I believe I did hear your name mentioned. I cannot charge my memory now
with the particulars.”

“My father was murdered--you must have heard of that?”

“Yes, I recollect so far.”

“He was murdered by a chap called Richard Hare, who decamped instanter.
Perhaps you know the Hares also? Well, directly after the funeral I left
West Lynne; I could not bear the place, and I stopped away. And what do
you suppose they said of me? That I had gone after Richard Hare. Not
that I knew they were saying it, or I should pretty soon have been back
and given them the length of my tongue. But now I just ask you, as a
lady, Madame Vine, whether a more infamous accusation was ever pitched
upon?”

“And you had not gone after him?”

“No; that I swear,” passionately returned Afy. “Make myself a companion
of my father’s murderer! If Mr. Calcraft, the hangman, finished off a
few of those West Lynne scandalmongers, it might be a warning to the
others. I said so to Mr. Carlyle.”

“To Mr. Carlyle?” repeated Lady Isabel, hardly conscious that she did
repeat it.

“He laughed, I remember, and said that would not stop the scandal. The
only one who did not misjudge me was himself; he did not believe that I
was with Richard Hare, but he was ever noble-judging was Mr. Carlyle.”

“I suppose you were in a situation?”

Afy coughed.

“To be sure. More than one. I lived as companion with an old lady, who
so valued me that she left me a handsome legacy in her will. I lived two
years with the Countess of Mount Severn.”

“With the Countess of Mount Severn!” echoed Lady Isabel, surprised into
the remark. “Why, she--she--was related to Mr. Carlyle’s wife. At least
Lord Mount Severn was.”

“Of course; everybody knows that. I was living there at the time the
business happened. Didn’t the countess pull Lady Isabel to pieces! She
and Miss Levison used to sit, cant, cant all day over it. Oh, I assure
you I know all about it, just as much as Joyce did. Have you got that
headache, that you are leaning on your hand?”

“Headache and heartache both,” she might have answered.

Miss Afy resumed.

“So, after the flattering compliment West Lynne had paid to me, you may
judge I was in no hurry to go back to it, Madame Vine. And if I had not
found that Mrs. Latimer’s promised to be an excellent place, I should
have left it, rather than be marshaled there. But I have lived it down;
I should like to hear any of them fibbing against me now. Do you know
that blessed Miss Corny?”

“I have seen her.”

“She shakes her head and makes eyes at me still. But so she would at an
angel; a cross-grained old cockatoo!”

“Is she still at East Lynne?”

“Not she, indeed. There would be drawn battles between her and Mrs.
Carlyle, if she were.”

A dart, as of an ice-bolt, seemed to arrest the blood in Lady Isabel’s
veins.

“Mrs. Carlyle,” she faltered. “Who is Mrs. Carlyle?”

“Mr. Carlyle’s wife--who should she be?”

The rushing blood leaped on now fast and fiery.

“I did not know he had married again.”

“He has been married now--oh, getting on for fifteen months; a
twelvemonth last June. I went to the church to see them married. Wasn’t
there a cram! She looked beautiful that day.”

Lady Isabel laid her hand upon her breast. But for that delectable
“loose jacket,” Afy might have detected her bosom rise and fall. She
steadied her voice sufficiently to speak.

“Did he marry Barbara Hare?”

“You may take your oath of that,” said Afy. “If folks tell true, there
was love scenes between them before he ever thought of Lady Isabel. I
had that from Wilson, and she ought to know, for she lived at the
Hares’. Another thing is said--only you must just believe one word of
West Lynne talk, and disbelieve ten--that if Lady Isabel had not died,
Mr. Carlyle never would have married again; he had scruples. Half a
dozen were given him by report; Louisa Dobede for one, and Mary Pinner
for another. Such nonsense! Folks might have made sure it would be
Barbara Hare. There’s a baby now.”

“Is there?” was the faint answer.

“A beautiful boy three or four months old. Mrs. Carlyle is not a little
proud of him. She worships her husband.”

“Is she kind to the first children?”

“For all I know. I don’t think she has much to do with them. Archibald
is in the nursery, and the other two are mostly with the governess.”

“I wonder,” cried the governess, “how the tidings of Lady Isabel’s death
were received at East Lynne?”

“I don’t know anything about that. They held it as a jubilee, I should
say, and set all the bells in town to ring, and feasted the men upon
legs of mutton and onion sauce afterward. I should, I know. A brute
animal, deaf and dumb, such as a cow or a goose, clings to its
offspring, but she abandoned hers. Are you going in Madame Vine?”

“I must go in now. Good evening to you.”

She had sat till she could sit no longer; her very heartstrings were
wrung, and she might not rise up in defence of herself. Defence? Did she
not deserve more, ten thousand times more reproach than had met her ears
now? This girl did not say of her half what the world must say.

“There is a governess?”

“Nearly the first thing that Mr. Carlyle did, after his wife’s moonlight
flitting, was to seek a governess, and she has been there ever since.
She is going to leave now; to be married, Joyce told me.”

“Are you much at East Lynne?”

Afy shook her head. “I am not going much, I can tell you, where I am
looked down upon. Mrs. Carlyle does not favor me. She knew that her
brother Richard would have given his hand to marry me, and she resents
it. Not such a great catch, I’m sure, that Dick Hare, even if he had
gone on right,” continued Afy, somewhat after the example of the fox,
looking at the unattainable grapes. “He had no brains to speak of; and
what he had were the color of a peacock’s tail--green.”

To bed at the usual time, but not to sleep. What she had heard only
increased her vain, insensate longing. A stepmother at East Lynne, and
one of her children gliding on to death! Oh! To be with them! To see
them once again! To purchase that boon, she would willingly forfeit all
the rest of her existence.

Her frame was fevered; the bed was fevered; and she arose and paced the
room. This state of mind would inevitably bring on bodily illness,
possibly an attack of the brain. She dreaded that; for there was no
telling what she might reveal in her delirium. Her temples were
throbbing, her heart was beating, and she once more threw herself upon
the bed, and pressed the pillow down upon her forehead. There is no
doubt that the news of Mr. Carlyle’s marriage helped greatly the
excitement. She did not pray to die, but she did wish that death might
come to her.

What would have been the ending, it is impossible to say, but a strange
turn in affairs came; one of those wonderful coincidences sometimes, but
not often to be met with. Mrs. Crosby appeared in Madame Vine’s room
after breakfast, and gave her an account of Helena’s projected marriage.
She then apologized, the real object of her visit, for dispensing so
summarily with madame’s services, but had reason to hope that she could
introduce her to another situation. Would madame have any objection to
take one in England? Madame was upon the point of replying that she
should not choose to enter one in England, when Mrs. Crosby stopped her,
saying that she would call in Mrs. Latimer, who could tell her about it
better than she could.

Mrs. Latimer came in, all eagerness and volubility. “Ah, my dear
madame,” she exclaimed, “you would be fortunate indeed if you were to
get into this family. The nicest people they are; he so liked and
respected; she so pretty and engaging. A most desirable situation, too,
treated as a lady, and all things comfortable. There’s only one pupil, a
girl; one of the little boys, I believe, goes in for an hour or two, but
that’s not much; and the salary’s seventy guineas. They are friends of
mine; the Carlyles; such a beautiful place they live at--East Lynne.”

The Carlyles! East Lynne! Go governess there? Lady Isabel’s breath was
taken away.

“They are parting with their governess,” continued Mrs. Latimer, “and
when I was there, a day or two before I started on my tour to Germany,
Mrs. Carlyle said to me, ‘I suppose you could not pick us up a desirable
governess for Lucy; one who is mistress of French and German.’ She spoke
in a half joking tone, but I feel sure that were I to write word I had
found one desirable, it would give her pleasure. Now, Mrs. Crosby tells
me your French is quite that of a native, Madame Vine, that you read and
speak German well, and that your musical abilities are excellent. I
think you would be just the one to suit; and I have no doubt I could get
you the situation. What do you say?”

What could she say? Her brain was in a whirl.

“I am anxious to find you one if I can,” put in Mrs. Crosby. “We have
been much pleased with you, and I should like you to be desirably
placed. As Mrs. Latimer is so kind as to interest herself, it appears to
me an opportunity that should not be missed.”

“Shall I write to Mrs. Carlyle?” rejoined Mrs. Latimer.

Lady Isabel roused herself, and so far cleared her intellect as to
understand and answer the question. “Perhaps you would kindly give me
until to-morrow morning to consider on it? I had not intended to take a
situation in England.”

A battle she had with herself that day. At one moment it seemed to her
that Providence must have placed this opportunity in her way that she
might see her children, in her desperate longing; at another, a voice
appeared to whisper that it was a wily, dangerous temptation flung
across her path, one which it was her duty to resist and flee from. Then
came another phase of the picture--how should she bear to see Mr.
Carlyle the husband of another--to live in the same house with them, to
witness his attentions, possibly his caresses? It might be difficult;
but she could force and school her heart to endurance. Had she not
resolved, in her first bitter repentance, to take up her cross daily,
and bear it? No, her own feelings, let them be wrung as they would,
should not prove the obstacle.

Evening came, and she had not decided. She passed another night of pain,
of restlessness, of longing for her children; this intense longing
appeared to be overmastering all her powers of mind and body. The
temptation at length proved too strong; the project having been placed
before her covetous eyes could not be relinquished, and she finally
consented to go. “What is it that would keep me away?” she argued. “The
dread of discovery? Well if that comes it must; they could not hang me
or kill me. Deeper humiliation than ever would be my portion when they
drive me from East Lynne with abhorrence and ignominy, as a soldier is
drummed out of his regiment; but I could bear that as I must bear the
rest and I can shrink under the hedge and lay myself down to die.
Humiliation for me? No; I will not put that in comparison with seeing
and being with my children.”

Mrs. Latimer wrote to Mrs. Carlyle. She had met with a governess; one
desirable in every way who could not fail to suit her views precisely.
She was a Madame Vine, English by birth, but the widow of a Frenchman; a
Protestant, a thorough gentlewoman, an efficient linguist and musician,
and competent to her duties in all ways. Mrs. Crosby, with whom she had
lived two years regarded her as a treasure, and would not have parted
with her but for Helena’s marriage with a German nobleman. “You must not
mind her appearance,” went on the letter. “She is the oddest-looking
person; wears spectacles, caps, enormous bonnets, and has a great scar
on her mouth and chin; and though she can’t be more than thirty, her
hair is gray; she is also slightly lame. But, understand you, she is a
lady, with it all, and looks one.”

When this description reached East Lynne, Barbara laughed at it as she
read it aloud to Mr. Carlyle. He laughed also.

“It is well governesses are not chosen according to their looks,” he
said, “or I fear Madame Vine would stand but a poor chance.”

They resolved to engage her, and word went back to that effect.

A strangely wild tumult filled Lady Isabel’s bosom. She first of all
hunted her luggage over, her desk, everything belonging to her lest any
mark on the linen might be there, which could give a clue to her former
self. The bulk of her luggage remained in Paris, warehoused, where it
had been sent ere she quitted Grenoble. She next saw to her wardrobe,
making it still more unlike anything she had used to wear; her caps,
save that they were simple, and fitted closely to the face, nearly
rivaled those of Miss Carlyle. Her handwriting she had been striving for
years to change the character of, and had so far succeeded that none
would now take it for Lady Isabel Vane’s. But her hand shook as she
wrote to Mrs. Carlyle--who had written to her. She--she writing to Mr.
Carlyle’s wife! And in the capacity of a subordinate! How would she like
to live with her as a subordinate, as servant--it may be said--where she
had once reigned, the idolized lady? She must bear that, as she must
bear all else. Hot tears came into her eyes, with a gush, as they fell
on the signature, “Barbara Carlyle.”

All ready, she sat down and waited the signal of departure; but that was
not to be yet. It was finally arranged that she should travel to England
and to West Lynne with Mrs. Latimer, and that lady would not return
until October. Lady Isabel could only fold her hands and strive for
patience.

But the day did come--it actually did; and Mrs. Latimer, Lady Isabel,
and Afy quitted Stalkenberg. Mrs. Latimer would only travel slowly, and
the impatient, fevered woman thought the journey would never end.

“You have been informed, I think, of the position of these unhappy
children that you are going to,” Mrs. Latimer observed to her one day.
“You must not speak to them of their mother. She left them.”

“Yes.”

“It is never well to speak to children of a mother who has disgraced
them. Mr. Carlyle would not like it; and I dare say they are taught to
forget her, and to regard Mrs. Carlyle as their only mother.”

Her aching heart had to assent to all.

It was a foggy afternoon, gray with the coming twilight, when they
arrived at West Lynne.

Mrs. Latimer believing the governess was a novice in England, kindly put
her into a fly, and told the driver his destination. “Au revoir,
madame,” she said, “and good luck to you.”

Once more she was whirling along the familiar road. She saw Justice
Hare’s house, she saw other marks which she knew well; and once more she
saw East Lynne, the dear old house, for the fly had turned into the
avenue. Lights were moving in the windows; it looked gay and cheerful, a
contrast to her. Her heart was sick with expectation, her throat was
beating; and as the man thundered up with all the force of his one
horse, and halted at the steps, her sight momentarily left her. Would
Mr. Carlyle come to the fly to hand her out? She wished she had never
undertaken the project, now, in the depth of her fear and agitation. The
hall door was flung open, and there gushed forth a blaze of light.

Two men-servants stood there. The one remained in the hall, the other
advanced to the chaise. He assisted Lady Isabel to alight, and then
busied himself with the luggage. As she ascended to the hall she
recognized old Peter. Strange, indeed, did it seem not to say, “How are
you, Peter?” but to meet him as a stranger. For a moment, she was at a
loss for words; what should she say, or ask, coming to her own home? Her
manner was embarrassed, her voice low.

“Is Mrs. Carlyle within?”

“Yes, ma’am.”

At that moment Joyce came forward to receive her. “It is Madame Vine, I
believe,” she respectfully said. “Please to step this way, madame.”

But Lady Isabel lingered in the hall, ostensibly to see that her boxes
came in right--Stephen was bringing them up--in reality to gather a
short respite, for Joyce might be about to usher her into the presence
of Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle.

Joyce, however, did nothing of the sort. She merely conducted her to the
gray parlor. A fire was burning in the grate, looking cheerful on the
autumn night.

“This is your sitting-room, madame. What will you please to take? I will
order it brought in while I show you your bed-chamber.”

“A cup of tea,” answered Lady Isabel.

“Tea and some cold meat?” suggested Joyce. But Lady Isabel interrupted
her.

“Nothing but tea and a little cold toast.”

Joyce rang the bell, ordered the refreshment to be made ready, and then
preceded Lady Isabel upstairs. On she followed her heart palpitating;
past the rooms that used to be hers, along the corridor, toward the
second staircase. The door of her old dressing-room stood open, and she
glanced in with a yearning look. No, never more, never more could it be
hers; she had put it from her by her own free act and deed. Not less
comfortable did it look now than in former days, but it had passed into
another’s occupancy. The fire threw its blaze on the furniture. There
were the little ornaments on the large dressing-table, as they used to
be in her time; and the cut glass of crystal essence-bottles was
glittering in the firelight. On the sofa lay a shawl and a book, and on
the bed a silk dress, as thrown there after being taken off. No, those
rooms were not for her now, and she followed Joyce up the other
staircase. The bedroom she was shown to was commodious and well
furnished. It was the one Miss Carlyle had occupied when she, Isabella,
had been taken a bride to East Lynne, though that lady had subsequently
quitted it for one on the lower floor. Joyce put down the waxlight she
carried and looked round.

“Would you like a fire lighted here, madame, for to-night? Perhaps it
will feel welcome after travelling.”

“Oh, no, thank you,” was the answer.

Stephen, with somebody to help him, was bringing up the luggage. Joyce
directed him where to place it, telling him to uncord the boxes. That
done, the man left the room, and Joyce turned to Lady Isabel, who had
stood like a statue, never so much as attempting to remove her bonnet.

“Can I do anything for you, madame?” she asked.

Lady Isabel declined. In the first moments of her arrival she was
dreading detection--how was it possible that she should not--and she
feared Joyce’s keen eyes more, perhaps than she feared any others. She
was only wishing that the girl would go down.

“Should you want anything, please to ring, and Hannah will come up,”
 said Joyce, preparing to retire. “She is the maid who waits upon the
gray parlor, and will do anything you like up here.”

Joyce had quitted the room, and Lady Isabel had got her bonnet off, when
the door opened again. She hastily thrust it on, somewhat after the
fashion of Richard Hare’s rushing on his hat and false whiskers. It was
Joyce.

“Do you think you shall find your way down alone, madame?”

“Yes, I can do that,” she answered. Find her way in that house!

Lady Isabel slowly took her things off. What was the use of lingering--
she must meet their eyes, sooner or later. Though, in truth, there was
little, if any, fear of her detection, so effectually was she disguised
by nature’s altering hand, or by art’s. It was with the utmost
difficulty she kept tranquil. Had the tears once burst forth, they would
have gone on to hysterics, without the possibility of control. The
coming home again to East Lynne! Oh, it was indeed a time of agitation,
terrible, painful agitation, and none can wonder at it. Shall I tell you
what she did? Yes, I will at the expense of ridicule. She knelt down by
the bed and prayed for courage to go through the task she had
undertaken; prayed for self-control--even she, the sinful, who had
quitted that house under circumstances notorious. But I am not sure that
this mode of return to it was an expedition precisely calculated to call
down a blessing.

There was no excuse for lingering longer, and she descended, the
waxlight in her hand. Everything was ready in the gray parlor--the tea-
tray on the table, the small urn hissing away, the tea-caddy in
proximity to it. A silver rack of dry toast, butter, and a hot muffin
covered with a small silver cover. The things were to her sight as old
faces--the rack, the small cover, the butter-dish, the tea-service--she
remembered them all; not the urn--a copper one--she had no recollection
of that. It had possibly been bought for the use of the governess, when
a governess came into use at East Lynne. Could she have given herself
leisure to reflect on the matter, she might have told, by the signs
observable in the short period she had been in the house, that
governesses of East Lynne were regarded as gentlewomen--treated well and
liberally. Yes; for East Lynne owned Mr. Carlyle for its master.

She made the tea, and sat down with what appetite she might, her brain,
her thoughts, all in a chaos together. She wondered whether Mr. and Mrs.
Carlyle were at dinner--she wondered in what part of the house were the
children. She heard bells ring now and then; she heard servants cross
and recross the hall. Her meal over, she rang her own.

A neat-looking, good-tempered maid answered it, Hannah, who, as Joyce
had informed her, waited upon the gray parlor, and was at her, the
governess’s, especial command. She took away the things, and then Lady
Isabel sat on alone. For how long, she scarcely knew, when a sound
caused her heart to beat as if it would burst its bounds, and she
started from her chair like one who has received an electric shock.

It was nothing to be startled at either--for ordinary people--for it was
but the sound of children’s voices. Her children! Were they being
brought in to her? She pressed her hand upon her heaving bosom.

No; they were but traversing the hall, and the voices faded away up the
wide staircase. Perhaps they had been in to desert, as in the old times,
and were now going up to bed. She looked at her new watch--half past
seven.

Her new watch. The old one had been changed away for it. All her
trinkets had been likewise parted with, sold or exchanged away, lest
they should be recognized at East Lynne. Nothing whatever had she kept
except her mother’s miniature and a small golden cross, set with its
seven emeralds. Have you forgotten that cross? Francis Levison
accidentally broke it for her, the first time they ever met. If she had
looked upon the breaking of that cross which her mother had enjoined her
to set such store by, as an evil omen, at the time of the accident, how
awfully had the subsequent events seemed to bear her fancy out! These
two articles--the miniature and the cross--she could not bring her mind
to part with. She had sealed them up, and placed them in the remotest
spot of her dressing-case, away from all chance of public view. Peter
entered.

“My mistress says, ma’am, she would be glad to see you, if you are not
too tired. Will you please to walk into the drawing-room?”

A mist swam before her eyes. Was she about to enter the presence of Mrs.
Carlyle? Had the moment really come? She moved to the door, which Peter
held open. She turned her head from the man, for she could feel how ashy
white were her face and lips.

“Is Mrs. Carlyle alone?” she asked, in a subdued voice. The most
indirect way she could put the question, as to whether Mr. Carlyle was
there.

“Quite alone, ma’am. My master is dining out to-day. Madame Vine, I
think?” he added, waiting to announce her, as, the hall traversed, he
laid his hand on the drawing-room door.

“Madame Vine,” she said, correcting him. For Peter had spoken the name,
Vine, broadly, according to our English habitude; she set him right, and
pronounced it a la mode Francaise.

“Madame Vine, ma’am,” quoth Peter to his mistress, as he ushered in Lady
Isabel.

The old familiar drawing-room; its large handsome proportions, the well
arranged furniture, its bright chandelier! It all came back to her with
a heart-sickness. No longer her drawing-room, that she should take pride
in it; she had flung it away from her when she flung away the rest.

Seated under the blaze of the chandelier was Barbara. Not a day older
did she look than when Lady Isabel had first seen her at the churchyard
gates, when she had inquired of her husband who was that pretty girl.
“Barbara Hare,” he answered. Ay. She was Barbara Hare then, but now she
was Barbara Carlyle; and she, she, who had been Isabel Carlyle, was
Isabel Vane again! Oh, woe! Woe!

Inexpressibly more beautiful, looked Barbara than Lady Isabel had ever
seen her--or else she fancied it. Her evening dress was of pale sky-
blue--no other color suited Barbara so well, and there was no other she
was so fond of--and on her fair neck there was a gold chain, and on her
arms were gold bracelets. Her pretty features were attractive as ever;
her cheeks were flushed; her blue eyes sparkled, and her light hair was
rich and abundant. A contrast, her hair, to that of the worn woman
opposite to her.

Barbara came forward, her hand stretched out with a kindly greeting. “I
hope you are not very much tired after your journey?”

Lady Isabel murmured something--she did not know what--and pushed the
chair set for her as much as possible into the shade.

“You are not ill, are you?” uttered Barbara, noting the intensely pale
face--as much as could be seen of it for the cap and the spectacles.

“Not ill,” was the low answer; “only a little fatigued.”

“Would you prefer that I spoke with you in the morning? You would like,
possibly, to retire to bed at once.”

But Lady Isabel declined. Better get the interview over by candlelight
than by daylight.

“You look so very pale, I feared you might be ill.”

“I am generally pale; sometimes remarkably so; but my health is good.”

“Mrs. Latimer wrote us word that you would be quite sure to suit us,”
 freely spoke Barbara. “I hope you will; and that you may find your
residence here agreeable. Have you lived much in England?”

“In the early portion of my life.”

“And you have lost your husband and your children? Stay. I beg your
pardon if I am making a mistake; I think Mrs. Latimer did mention
children.”

“I have lost them,” was the faint, quiet response.

“Oh, but it must be terrible grief when children die!” exclaimed
Barbara, clasping her hands in emotion. “I would not lose my babe for
the world! I could not part with him.”

“Terrible grief, and hard to bear,” outwardly assented Lady Isabel. But
in her heart she was thinking that death was not the worst kind of
parting. There was another far more dreadful. Mrs. Carlyle began to
speak of the children she was to take charge of.

“You are no doubt aware that they are not mine; Mrs. Latimer would tell
you. They are the children of Mr. Carlyle’s first wife.”

“And Mr. Carlyle’s,” interrupted Lady Isabel. What in the world made her
put in that? She wondered herself the moment the words were out of her
mouth. A scarlet streak flushed her cheeks, and she remembered that
there must be no speaking upon impulse at East Lynne.

“Mr. Carlyle’s, of course,” said Barbara, believing Madame Vine had
asked the question. “Their position--the girl’s in particular--is a sad
one, for their mother left them. Oh, it was a shocking business!”

“She is dead, I hear,” said Lady Isabel hoping to turn the immediate
point of conversation. Mrs. Carlyle, however, continued as though she
had not heard her.

“Mr. Carlyle married Lady Isabel Vane, the late Lord Mount Severn’s
daughter. She was attractive and beautiful, but I do not fancy she cared
very much for her husband. However that may have been, she ran away from
him.”

“It was very sad,” observed Lady Isabel, feeling that she was expected
to say something. Besides, she had her role to play.

“Sad? It was wicked--it was infamous!” returned Mrs. Carlyle, giving way
to some excitement. “Of all men living, of all husbands, Mr. Carlyle
least deserved such a requital. You will say so when you come to know.
And the affair altogether was a mystery; for it never was observed or
suspected by any one that Lady Isabel entertained a liking for another.
It was Francis Levison she eloped with--Sir Francis he is now. He had
been staying at East Lynne, but no one detected any undue intimacy
between them, not even Mr. Carlyle. To him, as others, her conduct must
always remain a mystery.”

Madame appeared to be occupied with her spectacles, setting them
straight. Barbara continued,--

“Of course the disgrace is reflected on the children, and always will
be; the shame of having a divorced mother--”

“Is she not dead?” interrupted Lady Isabel.

“She is dead--oh, yes. But they will not be the less pointed at, the
girl especially, as I say. They allude to their mother now and then in
conversation, Wilson tells me; but I would recommend you, Madame Vine,
not to encourage them in that. They had better forget her.”

“Mr. Carlyle would naturally wish them to do so.”

“Most certainly. There is little doubt that Mr. Carlyle would blot out
the recollection of her, were it possible. But unfortunately she was the
children’s mother, and, for that, there’s no help. I trust you will be
able to instill principles into the little girl which will keep her from
a like fate.”

“I will try,” answered Lady Isabel, with more fervor than she had yet
spoken. “Do you have the children much with you, may I inquire?”

“No. I never was fond of being troubled with children. When my own grow
up into childhood I shall deem the nursery and the schoolroom the fitter
place for them. What I trust I shall never give up to another, will be
the training of my children,” pursued Barbara. “Let the offices properly
pertaining to a nurse be performed by the nurse--of course, taking care
that she is thoroughly to be depended on. Let her have the trouble of
the children, their noise, their romping; in short, let the nursery be
her place, and the children’s. But I hope that I shall never fail to
gather my children round me daily, at stated and convenient periods, for
higher purposes; to instill into them Christian and moral duties; to
strive to teach them how best to fulfil the obligations of life. This is
a mother’s task--as I understand the question--let her do this work
well, and the nurse can attend to the rest. A child should never hear
aught from his mother’s lips but persuasive gentleness; and this becomes
impossible if she is very much with her children.”

Lady Isabel silently assented. Mrs. Carlyle’s views were correct ones.

“When I first came to East Lynne I found Miss Manning, the governess,
was doing everything necessary for Mr. Carlyle’s children in the way of
the training that I speak of,” resumed Barbara. “She had them with her
for a short period every morning, even the little one; I saw that it was
all right, therefore did not interfere. Since she left--it is nearly a
month now--I have taken them myself. We were sorry to part with Miss
Manning; she suited very well. But she has been long engaged, it turns
out, to an officer in the navy, and now they are to be married. You will
have the entire charge of the little girl; she will be your companion
out of school hours; did you understand that?”

“I am quite ready and willing to undertake it,” said Lady Isabel, her
heart fluttering. “Are the children well? Do they enjoy good health?”

“Quite so. They had the measles in the spring, and the illness left a
cough upon William, the eldest boy. Mr. Wainwright says he will outgrow
it.”

“He has it still, then?”

“At night and morning. They went last week to spend the day with Miss
Carlyle, and were a little late in returning home. It was foggy, and the
boy coughed dreadfully after he came in. Mr. Carlyle was so concerned
that he left the dinner table and went up to the nursery; he gave Joyce
strict orders that the child should never again be out in the evening so
long as the cough was upon him. We had never heard him cough like that.”

“Do you fear consumption?” asked Lady Isabel, in a low tone.

“I do not fear that, or any other incurable disease for them,” answered
Barbara. “I think, with Mr. Wainwright, that time will remove the cough.
The children come of a healthy stock on the father’s side; and I have no
reason to think they do not on their mother’s. She died young you will
say. Ay, but she did not die of disease; her death was the result of
accident. Mrs. Latimer wrote us word you were of gentle birth and
breeding,” she continued, changing the subject of conversation. “I am
sure you will excuse my speaking of these particulars,” Barbara added,
in a tone of apology, “but this is our first interview--our preliminary
interview, it may in a measure be called, for we could not say much by
letter.”

“I was born and reared a gentlewoman,” answered Lady Isabel.

“Yes, I am sure of it; there is no mistaking the tone of a gentlewoman,”
 said Barbara. “How sad it is when pecuniary reverses fall upon us! I
dare say you never thought to go out as a governess.”

A half smile positively crossed her lips. She think to go out as a
governess!--the Earl of Mount Severn’s only child! “Oh, no, never,” she
said, in reply.

“Your husband, I fear, could not leave you well off. Mrs. Latimer said
something to that effect.”

“When I lost him, I lost all,” was the answer. And Mrs. Carlyle was
struck with the wailing pain betrayed in the tone. At that moment a maid
entered.

“Nurse says the baby is undressed, and quite ready for you ma’am,” she
said, addressing her mistress.

Mrs. Carlyle rose, but hesitated as she was moving away.

“I will have the baby here to-night,” she said to the girl. “Tell nurse
to put a shawl round him and bring him down. It is the hour for my
baby’s supper,” she smiled, turning to Lady Isabel. “I may as well have
him here for once, as Mr. Carlyle is out. Sometimes I am out myself, and
then he has to be fed.”

“You do not stay indoors for the baby, then?”

“Certainly not. If I and Mr. Carlyle have to be out in the evening, baby
gives way. I should never give up my husband for my baby; never, never,
dearly as I love him.”

The nurse came in--Wilson. She unfolded a shawl, and placed the baby on
Mrs. Carlyle’s lap. A proud, fine, fair young baby, who reared his head
and opened wide his great blue eyes, and beat his arms at the lights of
the chandelier, as no baby of nearly six months ever did yet. So thought
Barbara. He was in his clean white nightgown and nightcap, with their
pretty crimped frills and border; altogether a pleasant sight to look
upon. She had once sat in that very chair, with a baby as fair upon her
own knee; but all that was past and gone. She leaned her hot head upon
her hand, and a rebellious sigh of envy went forth from her aching
heart.

Wilson, the curious, was devouring her with her eyes. Wilson was
thinking she never saw such a mortal fright as the new governess. Them
blue spectacles capped everything, she decided; and what on earth made
her tie up her throat in that fashion? As well wear a man’s color and
stock at once! If her teaching was no better than her looks, Miss Lucy
might as well go to the parish charity school!

“Shall I wait, ma’am?” demurely asked Wilson, her investigation being
concluded.

“No,” said Mrs. Carlyle. “I will ring.”

Baby was exceedingly busy taking his supper. And of course, according to
all baby precedent, he ought to have gone off into a sound sleep over
it. But the supper concluded, and the gentleman seemed to have no more
sleep in his eyes than he had before he began. He sat up, crowed at the
lights, stretched out his hands for them, and set his mother at
defiance, absolutely refusing to be hushed up.

“Do you wish to keep awake all night, you rebel?” cried Barbara, fondly
looking on him.

A loud crow, by way of answer. Perhaps it was intended to intimate he
did. She clasped him to her with a sudden gesture of rapture, a sound of
love, and devoured his pretty face with kisses. Then she took him in her
arms, putting him to sit upright, and approached Madame Vine.

“Did you ever see a more lovely child?”

“A fine baby, indeed,” she constrained herself to answer; and she could
have fancied it her own little Archibald over again when he was a baby.
“But he is not much like you.”

“He is the very image of my darling husband. When you see Mr. Carlyle--”
 Barbara stopped, and bent her ear, as listening.

“Mr. Carlyle is probably a handsome man!” said poor Lady Isabel,
believing that the pause was made to give her an opportunity of putting
in an observation.

“He is handsome: but that is the least good about him. He is the most
noble man! Revered, respected by everyone; I may say loved! The only one
who could not appreciate him was his wife; and we must assume that she
did not, by the ending that came. However she could leave him--how she
could even look at another, after calling Mr. Carlyle husband--will
always be a marvel to those who know him.”

A bitter groan--and it nearly escaped her lips.

“That certainly is the pony carriage,” cried Barbara, bending her ear
again. “If so, how very early Mr. Carlyle is home! Yes, I am sure it is
the sound of the wheels.”

How Lady Isabel sat she scarcely knew; how she concealed her trepidation
she never would know. A pause: an entrance to the hall; Barbara, baby in
arms, advanced to the drawing-room door, and a tall form entered. Once
more Lady Isabel was in the presence of her sometime husband.

He did not perceive that any one was present, and he bent his head and
fondly kissed his wife. Isabel’s jealous eyes were turned upon them. She
saw Barbara’s passionate, lingering kiss in return, she heard her
fervent, whispered greeting, “My darling!” and she watched him turn to
press the same fond kisses on the rosy open lips of his child. Isabel
flung her hand over her face. Had she bargained for this? It was part of
the cross she had undertaken to carry, and she must bear it.

Mr. Carlyle came forward and saw her. He looked somewhat surprised.
“Madame Vine,” said Barbara; and he held out his hand and welcomed her
in the same cordial, pleasant manner that his wife had done. She put her
shaking hand into his; there was no help for it. Little thought Mr.
Carlyle that that hand had been tenderly clasped in his a thousand
times--that it was the one pledged to him at the altar of Castle
Marling.

She sat down on her chair again, unable to stand, feeling as though
every drop of blood within her had left her body. It had certainly left
her face. Mr. Carlyle made a few civil inquiries as to her journey, but
she did not dare to raise her eyes to his, as she breathed forth the
answers.

“You are at home soon, Archibald,” said Barbara, addressing him. “I did
not expect you so early. I did not think you could get away. Do you know
what I was wishing to-day?” she continued. “Papa is going to London with
Squire Pinner to see those new agricultural implements--or whatever it
is. They are sure to be away as much as three days. I was thinking if we
could but persuade mamma to come to us for the time papa is to be away,
it would be a delightful little change for her--a break in her
monotonous life.”

“I wish you could,” warmly spoke Mr. Carlyle. “Her life, since you left,
is a monotonous one; though, in her gentle patience, she will not say
so. It is a happy thought, Barbara, and I only hope it may be carried
out. Mrs. Carlyle’s mother is an invalid, and lonely, for she has no
child at home with her now,” he added, in a spirit of politeness,
addressing himself to Madame Vine.

She simply bowed her head; trust herself to speak she did not. Mr.
Carlyle scanned her face attentively, as she sat, her spectacles bent
downward. She did not appear inclined to be sociable, and he turned to
the baby, who was wider awake than ever.

“Young sir, I should like to know what brings you up, and here, at this
hour.”

“You may well ask,” said Barbara. “I just had him brought down, as you
were not here, thinking he would be asleep directly. And only look at
him!--no more sleep in his eyes than there is in mine.”

She would have hushed him to her as she spoke, but the young gentleman
stoutly repudiated it. He set up a half cry, and struggled his arms, and
head free again, crowing the next moment most impudently. Mr. Carlyle
took him.

“It is no use, Barbara; he is beyond your coaxing this evening.” And he
tossed the child in his strong arms, held him up to the chandelier, made
him bob at the baby in the pier-glass, until the rebel was in an ecstacy
of delight. Finally he smothered his face with kisses, as Barbara had
done. Barbara rang the bell.

Oh! Can you imagine what it was for Lady Isabel? So had he tossed, so
had he kissed her children, she standing by, the fond, proud, happy
mother, as Barbara was standing now. Mr. Carlyle came up to her.

“Are you fond of these little troubles, Madame Vine? This one is a fine
fellow, they say.”

“Very fine. What is his name?” she replied, by way of saying something.

“Arthur.”

“Arthur Archibald,” put in Barbara to Madame Vine. “I was vexed that his
name could not be entirely Archibald, but that was already monopolized.
Is that you, Wilson? I don’t know what you’ll do with him, but he looks
as if he would not be asleep by twelve o’clock.”

Wilson, with a fresh satisfying of her curiosity, by taking another
prolonged stare from the corner of her eyes at Madame Vine, received the
baby from Mr. Carlyle, and departed with him.

Madame Vine rose. “Would they excuse her?” she asked, in a low tone;
“she was tired and would be glad to retire to rest.”

“Of course. And anything she might wish in the way of refreshment, would
she ring for?” Barbara shook hands with her, in her friendly way; and
Mr. Carlyle crossed the room to open the door for her, and bowed her out
with a courtly smile.

She went up to her chamber at once. To rest? Well, what think you? She
strove to say to her lacerated and remorseful heart that the cross--far
heavier though it was proving than anything she had imagined or
pictured--was only what she had brought upon herself, and must bear.
Very true; but none of us would like such a cross to be upon our
shoulders.

“Is she not droll looking?” cried Barbara, when she was alone with Mr.
Carlyle. “I can’t think why she wears those blue spectacles; it cannot
be for her sight, and they are very disfiguring.”

“She puts me in mind of--of----” began Mr. Carlyle, in a dreamy tone.

“Of whom?”

“Her face, I mean,” he said, still dreaming.

“So little can be seen of it,” resumed Mrs. Carlyle. “Of whom does she
put you in mind?”

“I don’t know. Nobody in particular,” returned he, rousing himself. “Let
us have tea in, Barbara.”



CHAPTER XXXIII.

THE YEARNING OF A BREAKING HEART.

At her bedroom door, the next morning, stood Lady Isabel, listening
whether the coast was clear ere she descended to the gray parlor, for
she had a shrinking dread of encountering Mr. Carlyle. When he was
glancing narrowly at her face the previous evening she had felt the
gaze, and it impressed upon her the dread of his recognition. Not only
that; he was the husband of another; therefore it was not expedient that
she should see too much of him, for he was far dearer to her than he had
ever been.

Almost at the same moment there burst out of a remote room--the nursery-
-an upright, fair, noble boy, of some five years old, who began
careering along on the corridor, astride upon a hearth-broom. She did
not need to be told it was her boy, Archibald; his likeness to Mr.
Carlyle would have proclaimed it, even if her heart had not. In an
impulse of unrestrainable tenderness, she seized the child, as he was
galloping past her, and carried him into her room, broom and all.

“You must let me make acquaintance with you,” she said to him by way of
excuse. “I love little boys.”

Love! Down she sat upon a low chair, the child held upon her lap,
kissing him passionately, and the tears raining from her eyes. She could
not have helped the tears had it been to save her life; she could as
little have helped the kisses. Lifting her eyes, there stood Wilson, who
had entered without ceremony. A sick feeling came over Lady Isabel: she
felt as if she had betrayed herself. All that could be done now, was to
make the best of it; to offer some lame excuse. What possessed her thus
to forget herself?

“He did so put me in remembrance of my own children,” she said to
Wilson, gulping down her emotion, and hiding her tears in the best
manner she could; whilst the astonished Archibald, released now, stood
with his finger in his mouth and stared at her spectacles, his great
blue eyes opened to their utmost width. “When we have lost children of
our own, we are apt to love fondly all we come near.”

Wilson, who stared only in a less degree than Archie, for she deemed the
new governess had gone suddenly mad, gave some voluble assent, and
turned her attention upon Archie.

“You naughty young monkey! How dare you rush out in that way with
Sarah’s hearth-broom? I’ll tell you what it is, sir, you are getting a
might deal too owdacious and rumbustical for the nursery. I shall speak
to your mamma about it.”

She seized hold of the child and shook him. Lady Isabel started forward,
her hands up, her voice one of painful entreaty.

“Oh, don’t, don’t beat him! I cannot see him beaten.”

“Beaten!” echoed Wilson; “if he got a good beating it would be all the
better for him; but it’s what he never does get. A little shake, or a
tap, is all I must give; and it’s not half enough. You wouldn’t believe
the sturdy impudence of that boy, madame; he runs riot, he does. The
other two never gave a quarter of the trouble. Come along, you figure!
I’ll have a bolt put at the top of the nursery door; and if I did, he’d
be for climbing up the door-post to get at it.”

The last sentence Wilson delivered to the governess, as she jerked
Archie out of the room, along the passage, and into the nursery. Lady
Isabel sat down with a wrung heart, a chafed spirit. Her own child! And
she might not say to the servant, you shall not beat him.

She descended to the gray parlor. The two older children and breakfast
were waiting; Joyce quitted the room when she entered it.

A graceful girl of eight years old, a fragile boy a year younger, both
bearing her once lovely features--her once bright and delicate
complexion--her large, soft brown eyes. How utterly her heart yearned to
them; but there must be no scene like there had just been above.
Nevertheless she stooped and kissed them both--one kiss each of
impassioned fervor. Lucy was naturally silent, William somewhat
talkative.

“You are our new governess,” said he.

“Yes. We must be good friends.”

“Why not!” said the boy. “We were good friends with Miss Manning. I am
to go into Latin soon--as soon as my cough’s gone. Do you know Latin?”

“No--not to teach it,” she said, studiously avoiding all endearing
epithets.

“Papa said you would be almost sure not to know Latin, for that ladies
rarely did. He said he should send up Mr. Kane to teach me.”

“Mr. Kane?” repeated Lady Isabel, the name striking upon her memory.
“Mr. Kane, the music-master?”

“How did you know he was a music-master?” cried shrewd William. And Lady
Isabel felt the red blood flush to her face at the unlucky admission she
had made. It flushed deeper at her own falsehood, as she muttered some
evasive words about hearing of him from Mrs. Latimer.

“Yes, he is a music-master; but he does not get much money at it, and he
teaches the classics as well. He has come up to teach us music since
Miss Manning left; mamma said that we ought not to lose our lessons.”

Mamma! How the word, applied to Barbara, grated on her ear.

“Whom does he teach?” she asked.

“Us two,” replied William, pointing to his sister and himself.

“Do you always take bread and milk?” she inquired, perceiving that to be
what they were eating.

“We get tired of it sometimes and then we have milk and water, and bread
and butter, or honey; and then we take to bread and milk again. It’s
Aunt Cornelia who thinks we should eat bread and milk for breakfast. She
says papa never had anything else when he was a boy.”

Lucy looked up.

“Papa would give me an egg when I breakfasted with him,” cried she, “and
Aunt Cornelia said it was not good for me, but papa gave it to me all
the same. I always had breakfast with him then.”

“And why do you not now?” asked Lady Isabel.

“I don’t know. I have not since mamma came.”

The word “stepmother” rose up rebelliously in the heart of Lady Isabel.
Was Mrs. Carlyle putting away the children from their father?

Breakfast over, she gathered them to her, asking them various questions
about their studies, their hours of recreation, the daily routine of
their lives.

“This is not the schoolroom, you know,” cried William, when she made
some inquiry as to their books.

“No?”

“The schoolroom is upstairs. This is for our meals, and for you in an
evening.”

The voice of Mr. Carlyle was heard at this juncture in the hall, and
Lucy was springing toward the sound. Lady Isabel, fearful lest he might
enter if the child showed herself, stopped her with a hurried hand.

“Stay here, Isabel.”

“Her name’s Lucy,” said William, looking quickly up. “Why do you call
her Isabel?”

“I thought--thought I had heard her called Isabel,” stammered the
unfortunate lady, feeling quite confused with the errors she was
committing.

“My name is Isabel Lucy,” said the child; “but I don’t know who could
have told you, for I am never called Isabel. I have not been since--
since--shall I tell you?--since mamma went away,” she concluded,
dropping her voice. “Mamma that was, you know.”

“Did she go?” cried Lady Isabel, full of emotion, and possessing a very
faint idea of what she was saying.

“She was kidnapped,” whispered Lucy.

“Kidnapped!” was the surprised answer.

“Yes, or she would not have gone. There was a wicked man on a visit to
papa, and he stole her. Wilson said she knew he was a kidnapper before
he took mamma. Papa said I was never to be called Isabel again, but
Lucy. Isabel was mamma’s name.”

“How do you know papa said it?” dreamily returned Lady Isabel.

“I heard him. He said it to Joyce, and Joyce told the servants. I put
only Lucy to my copies. I did put Isabel Lucy, but papa saw it one day,
and he drew his pencil through Isabel, and told me to show it to Miss
Manning. After that, Miss Manning let me put nothing but Lucy. I asked
her why, and she told me papa preferred the name, and that I was not to
ask questions.”

She could not well stop the child, but every word was rending her heart.

“Lady Isabel was our very, very own mamma,” pursued Lucy. “This mamma is
not.”

“Do you love this one as you did the other?” breathed Lady Isabel.

“Oh, I loved mamma--I loved mamma!” uttered Lucy, clasping her hands.
“But it’s all over. Wilson said we must not love her any longer, and
Aunt Cornelia said it. Wilson said, if she loved us she would not have
gone away from us.”

“Wilson said so?” resentfully spoke Lady Isabel.

“She said she need not let that man kidnap her. I am afraid he beat her,
for she died. I lie in my bed at night, and wonder whether he did beat
her, and what made her die. It was after she died that our new mamma
came home. Papa said that she was to be our mamma in place of Lady
Isabel and we were to love her dearly.”

“Do you love her?” almost passionately asked Lady Isabel.

Lucy shook her head.

“Not as I loved mamma.”

Joyce entered to show the way to the schoolroom, and they followed her
upstairs. As Lady Isabel stood at the window, she saw Mr. Carlyle depart
on foot on his way to the office. Barbara was with him, hanging fondly
on his arm, about to accompany him to the park gates. So had she fondly
hung, so had she accompanied him, in the days gone forever.

Barbara came into the schoolroom in the course of the morning, and
entered upon the subject of their studies, the different allotted hours,
some to play, some to work. She spoke in a courteous but decided tone,
showing that she was the unmistakable mistress of the house and
children, and meant to be. Never had Lady Isabel felt her position so
keenly--never did it so gall and fret her spirit; but she bowed to meek
obedience. A hundred times that day did she yearn to hold the children
to her heart, and a hundred times she had to repress the longing.

In a soft, damask dress, not unlike the color of the walls from which
the room took its name, a cap of Honiton lace shading her delicate
features, sat Mrs. Hare. The justice was in London with Squire Pinner,
and Barbara had gone to the Grove and brought her mamma away in triumph.
It was evening now, and Mrs. Hare was paying a visit to the gray parlor.
Miss Carlyle had been dining there, and Lady Isabel, under plea of a
violent headache, had begged to decline the invitation to take tea in
the drawing-room, for she feared the sharp eyes of Miss Carlyle.
Barbara, upon leaving the dessert-table, went to the nursery, as usual,
to her baby, and Mrs. Hare took the opportunity to go and sit a few
minutes with the governess--she feared the governess must be very
lonely. Miss Carlyle, scorning usage and ceremony, had remained in the
dining-room with Mr. Carlyle, a lecture for him, upon some defalcation
or other most probably in store. Lady Isabel was alone. Lucy had gone to
keep a birthday in the neighborhood, and William was in the nursery.
Mrs. Hare found her in a sad attitude, her hands pressed upon her
temples. She had not yet made acquaintance with her beyond a minute’s
formal introduction.

“I am sorry to hear you are not well, this evening,” she gently said.

“Thank you. My head aches much”--which was no false plea.

“I fear you must feel your solitude irksome. It is dull for you to be
here all alone.”

“I am so used to solitude.”

Mrs. Hare sat down, and gazed with sympathy at the young, though
somewhat strange-looking woman before her. She detected the signs of
mental suffering on her face.

“You have seen sorrow,” she uttered, bending forward, and speaking with
the utmost sweetness.

“Oh, great sorrow!” burst from Lady Isabel, for her wretched fate was
very palpable to her mind that evening, and the tone of sympathy
rendered it nearly irrepressible.

“My daughter tells me that you have lost your children, and you have
lost your fortune and position. Indeed I feel for you. I wish I could
comfort you!”

This did not decrease her anguish. She completely lost all self control,
and a gush of tears fell from her eyes.

“Don’t pity me! Don’t pity me dear Mrs. Hare! Indeed, it only makes
endurance harder. Some of us,” she added, looking up, with a sickly
smile, “are born to sorrow.”

“We are all born to it,” cried Mrs. Hare. “I, in truth, have cause to
say so. Oh, you know not what my position has been--the terrible weight
of grief that I have to bear. For many years, I can truly say that I
have not known one completely happy moment.”

“All do not have to bear this killing sorrow,” said Lady Isabel.

“Rely upon it, sorrow of some nature does sooner or later come to all.
In the brightest apparent lot on earth, dark days must mix. Not that
there is a doubt but that it falls unequally. Some, as you observe, seem
born to it, for it clings to them all their days; others are more
favored--as we reckon favor. Perhaps this great amount of trouble is no
more than is necessary to take us to Heaven. You know the saying,
‘Adversity hardens the heart, or it opens it to Paradise.’ It may be
that our hearts continue so hard, that the long-continued life’s trouble
is requisite to soften them. My dear,” Mrs. Hare added, in a lower tone,
while the tears glistened on her pale cheeks, “there will be a blessed
rest for the weary, when this toilsome life is ended; let us find
comfort in that thought.”

“Ay! Ay!” murmured Lady Isabel. “It is all that is left to me.”

“You are young to have acquired so much experience of sorrow.”

“We cannot estimate sorrow by years. We may live a whole lifetime of it
in a single hour. But we generally bring ill fate upon ourselves,” she
continued, in a desperation of remorse; “as our conduct is, so will our
happiness or misery be.”

“Not always,” sighed Mrs. Hare. “Sorrow, I grant you, does come all too
frequently, from ill-doing; but the worst is, the consequences of this
ill-doing fall upon the innocent as well as upon the guilty. A husband’s
errors will involve his innocent wife; parent’s sins fall upon their
children; children will break the hearts of their parents. I can truly
say, speaking in all humble submission, that I am unconscious of having
deserved the great sorrow which came upon me; that no act of mine
invited it on; but though it has nearly killed me, I entertain no doubt
that it is lined with mercy, if I could only bring my weak rebellious
heart to look for it. You, I feel sure, have been equally undeserving.”

She? Mrs. Hare marked not the flush of shame, the drooping of the
eyelids.

“You have lost your little ones,” Mrs. Hare resumed. “That is grief--
great grief; I would not underrate it; but, believe me, it is as nothing
compared to the awful fate, should it ever fall upon you, of finding
your children grow up and become that which makes you wish they had died
in their infancy. There are times when I am tempted to regret that all
my treasures are not in that other world; that they had not gone before
me. Yes; sorrow is the lot of all.”

“Surely, not of all,” dissented Lady Isabel. “There are some bright lots
on earth.”

“There is not a lot but must bear its appointed share,” returned Mrs.
Hare. “Bright as it may appear, ay, and as it may continue to be for
years, depend upon it, some darkness must overshadow it, earlier or
later.”

“Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle--what sorrow can there be in store for them?”
 asked Lady Isabel, her voice ringing with a strange sound, which Mrs.
Hare noted, though she understood it not.

“Mrs. Carlyle’s lot is bright,” she said, a sweet smile illumining her
features. “She loves her husband with an impassioned love; and he is
worthy of it. A happy fate, indeed, is hers; but she must not expect to
be exempted from sorrow. Mr. Carlyle has had his share of it,” continued
Mrs. Hare.

“Ah!”

“You have doubtless been made acquainted with his history. His first
wife left him--left home and her children. He bore it bravely before the
world, but I know that it wrung his very heart-strings. She was his
heart’s sole idol.”

“She? Not Barbara?”

The moment the word “Barbara” had escaped her lips, Lady Isabel,
recollected herself. She was only Madame Vine, the governess; what would
Mrs. Hare think of her familiarity?

Mrs. Hare did not appear to have noticed it; she was absorbed in the
subject.

“Barbara?” she uttered; “certainly not. Had his first love been given to
Barbara, he would have chosen her then. It was given to Lady Isabel.”

“It is given his wife now?”

Mrs. Hare nearly laughed.

“Of course it is; would you wish it to be buried in the grave with the
dead, and with one who was false to him? But, my dear, she was the
sweetest woman, that unfortunate Lady Isabel. I loved her then, and I
cannot help loving her still. Others blamed her, but I pitied. They were
well matched; he so good and noble; she, so lovely and endearing.”

“And she left him--threw him to the winds with all his nobility and
love!” exclaimed the poor governess, with a gesture of the hands that
looked very much like despair.

“Yes. It will not do to talk of--it is a miserable subject. How she
could abandon such a husband, such children, was a marvel to many; but
to none more than it was to me and my daughter. The false step--though I
feel almost ashamed to speak out the thought, lest it may appear to
savor of triumph--while it must have secured her own wretchedness, led
to the happiness of my child; for it is certain Barbara would never love
one as she loves Mr. Carlyle.”

“It did secure wretchedness to her, you think?” cried Lady Isabel, her
tone one of bitter mockery more than anything else.

Mrs. Hare was surprised at the question.

“No woman ever took that fatal step yet, without its entailing on her
the most dire wretchedness,” she replied. “It cannot be otherwise. And
Lady Isabel was of a nature to feel remorse beyond common--to meet it
half-way. Refined, modest, with every feeling of an English gentlewoman,
she was the very last, one would have thought, to act so. It was as if
she had gone away in a dream, not knowing what she was doing; I have
thought so many a time. That terrible mental wretchedness and remorse
did overtake her, I know.”

“How did you know it? Did you hear it?” exclaimed Lady Isabel, her tone
all too eager, had Mrs. Hare been suspicious. “Did he proclaim that--
Francis Levison? Did you hear it from him?”

Mrs. Hare, gentle Mrs. Hare, drew herself up, for the words grated on
her feelings and on her pride. Another moment, and she was mild and kind
again, for she reflected that the poor, sorrowful governess must have
spoken without thought.

“I know not what Sir Francis Levison may have chose to proclaim,” she
said, “but you may be sure he would not be allowed opportunity to
proclaim anything to me, or to any other friend of Mr. Carlyle’s; nay, I
should say, nor to any of the good and honorable. I heard it from Lord
Mount Severn.”

“From Lord Mount Severn?” repeated Lady Isabel. And she opened her lips
to say something more, but closed them again.

“He was here on a visit in the summer; he stayed a fortnight. Lady
Isabel was the daughter of the late earl--perhaps you may not have known
that. He--Lord Mount Severn--told me, in confidence, that he had sought
out Lady Isabel when the man, Levison, left her; he found her sick,
poor, broken-hearted, in some remote French town, utterly borne down
with remorse and repentance.”

“Could it be otherwise?” sharply asked Lady Isabel.

“My dear, I have said it could not. The very thought of her deserted
children would entail it, if nothing she did. There was a baby born
abroad,” added Mrs. Hare, dropping her voice, “an infant in its cradle,
Lord Mount Severn said; but that child, we knew, could only bring pain
and shame.”

“True,” issued from her trembling lips.

“Next came her death; and I cannot but think it was sent to her in
mercy. I trust she was prepared for it, and had made her peace with God.
When all else is taken from us, we turn to him; I hope she had learned
to find the Refuge.”

“How did Mr. Carlyle receive the news of her death?” murmured Lady
Isabel, a question which had been often in her thoughts.

“I cannot tell; he made no outward sign either of satisfaction or grief.
It was too delicate a subject for any one to enter upon with him, and
most assuredly he did not enter upon it himself. After he was engaged to
my child, he told me he should never have married during Lady Isabel’s
life.”

“From--from--the remains of affection?”

“I should think not. I inferred it to be from conscientious scruples.
All his affection is given to his present wife. There is no doubt that
he loves her with a true, a fervent, a lasting love: though there may
have been more romantic sentiment in the early passion felt for Lady
Isabel. Poor thing! She gave up a sincere heart, a happy home.”

Ay, poor thing! She had very nearly wailed forth her vain despair.

“I wonder whether the drawing-room is tenanted yet,” smiled Mrs. Hare,
breaking a pause which had ensued. “If so I suppose they will be
expecting me there.”

“I will ascertain for you,” said Lady Isabel, speaking in the impulse of
the moment; for she was craving an instant to herself, even though it
were but in the next hall.

She quitted the gray parlor and approached the drawing-room. Not a sound
came from it; and, believing it was empty, she opened the door and
looked cautiously in.

Quite empty. The fire blazed, the chandelier was lighted, but nobody was
enjoying the warmth or the light. From the inner room, however, came the
sound of the piano, and the tones of Mr. Carlyle’s voice. She recognized
the chords of the music--they were those of the accompaniment to the
song he had so loved when she sang it him. Who was about to sing it to
him now?

Lady Isabel stole across the drawing-room to the other door, which was
ajar. Barbara was seated at the piano, and Mr. Carlyle stood by her, his
arm on her chair, and bending his face on a level with hers, possibly to
look at the music. So once had stolen, so once had peeped the unhappy
Barbara, to hear this selfsame song. She had been his wife then; she had
craved, and received his kisses when it was over. Their positions were
reversed.

Barbara began. Her voice had not the brilliant power of Lady Isabel’s,
but it was a sweet and pleasant voice to listen to.


“When other lips and other hearts Their tales of love shall tell, In
language whose excess imparts The power they feel so well, There may,
perhaps, in such a scene, Some recollection be, Of days that have as
happy been--And you’ll remember me.”

Days that had as happy been! Ay! did he remember her? Did a thought of
her, his first and best love, flit across him, as the words fell on his
ear? Did a past vision of the time when she had sat there and sung it to
him arouse his heart to even momentary recollection?

Terribly, indeed, were their positions reversed; most terribly was she
feeling it. And by whose act and will had the change been wrought?
Barbara was now the cherished wife, East Lynne’s mistress. And what was
she? Not even the courted, welcomed guest of an hour, as Barbara had
been; but an interloper; a criminal woman who had thrust herself into
the house; her act, in doing so, not justifiable, her position a most
false one. Was it right, even if she did succeed in remaining
undiscovered, that she and Barbara should dwell in the same habitation,
Mr. Carlyle being in it? Did she deem it to be right? No, she did not;
but one act of ill-doing entails more. These thoughts were passing
through her mind as she stood there, listening to the song; stood there
as one turned to stone, her throbbing temples pressed against the door’s
pillar.

The song was over, and Barbara turned to her husband, a whole world of
love in her bright blue eyes. He laid his hand upon her head; Lady
Isabel saw that, but she would not wait to see the caress that most
probably followed it. She turned and crossed the room again, her hands
clasped tightly on her bosom, her breath catching itself in hysterical
sobs. Miss Carlyle was entering the hall. They had not yet met, and Lady
Isabel swept meekly past her with a hurried courtesy. Miss Carlyle
spoke, but she dared not answer, to wait would have been to betray
herself.

Sunday came, and that was the worst of all. In the old East Lynne pew at
St. Jude’s, so conspicuous to the congregation, sat she, as in former
times; no excuse, dared she, the governess make, to remain away. It was
the first time she had entered an English Protestant church since she
had last sat in it, there, with Mr. Carlyle. Can you wonder that the
fact alone, with all the terrible remembrances it brought in its train,
was sufficient to overwhelm her with emotion? She sat at the upper end
now, with Lucy; Barbara occupied the place that had been hers, by the
side of Mr. Carlyle. Barbara there, in her own right his wife; she
severed from him forever and forever!

She scarcely raised her head; she tightened her thick veil over her
face; she kept her spectacles bent toward the ground. Lucy thought she
must be crying; she never had seen anyone so still at church before.
Lucy was mistaken; tears came not to solace the bitter anguish of
hopeless, self-condemning remorse. How she sat out the service she could
not tell; she could not tell how she could sit out other services, as
the Sundays came round! The congregation did not forget to stare at her.
What an extraordinary looking governess Mrs. Carlyle had picked up!

They went out when it was over. Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle in advance; she,
humbly following them with Lucy. She glanced aside at the tomb in the
churchyard’s corner, where moldered the remains of her father; and a
yearning cry went forth from the very depth of her soul. “Oh, that I
were laid there with him! Why did I come back again to East Lynne?”

Why, truly? But she had never thought that her cross would be so sharp
as this.



CHAPTER XXXIV.

AN M. P. FOR WEST LYNNE.

As this is not a history of the British constitution, it does not
concern it to relate how or why West Lynne got into hot water with the
House of Commons. The House threatened to disfranchise it, and West
Lynne under the fear, went into mourning for its sins. The threat was
not carried out; but one of the sitting members was unseated with
ignominy, and sent to the right about. Being considerably humiliated
thereby, and in disgust with West Lynne, he retired accordingly, and a
fresh writ was issued. West Lynne then returned the Hon. Mr. Attley, a
county nobleman’s son; but he died in the very midst of his first
session, and another writ had to be issued.

Of course the consideration now was, who should be the next lucky man
fixed upon. All the notables within ten miles were discussed, not
excepting the bench justices. Mr. Justice Hare? No! he was too
uncompromising, he would study his own will, but not that of West Lynne.
Squire Pinner? He never made a speech in his life, and had not an idea
beyond turnips and farming stock. Colonel Bethel? He had no money to
spend upon an election. Sir John Dobede? He was too old. “By a good
twenty years,” laughed Sir John, to himself. “But here we stand, like a
pack of noodles, conning over the incapables, and passing by the right
one,” continued Sir John. “There’s only one man amongst us fit to be our
member.”

“Who’s that?” cried the meeting.

“Archibald Carlyle.”

A pause of consternation--consternation at their collective
forgetfulness--and then a loud murmur of approaching to a shout, filled
the room. Archibald Carlyle. It should be no other.

“If we can get him,” cried Sir John. “He may decline, you know.”

The best thing, all agreed, was to act promptly. A deputation, half the
length of the street--its whole length, if you include the tagrag and
bobtail that attended behind--set off on the spur of the moment to the
office of Mr. Carlyle. They found that gentleman about to leave it for
the evening, to return home to dinner; for, in the discussion of the
all-important topic, the meeting had suffered time to run on to a late
hour; those gentlemen who dined at a somewhat earlier one had, for once
in their lives, patiently allowed their dinners and their stomachs to
wait--which is saying a great deal for the patience of a justice.

Mr. Carlyle was taken by surprise. “Make me your member?” cried he,
merrily. “How do you know I should not sell you all?”

“We’ll trust you, Carlyle. Too happy to do it.”

“I am not sure that I could spare the time,” deliberated Mr. Carlyle.

“Now, Carlyle, you must remember that you avowed to me, no longer than
last Christmas, your intention of going into parliament some time,”
 struck in Mr. Justice Herbert. “You can’t deny it.”

“Some time!--yes,” replied Mr. Carlyle; “but I did not say when. I have
no thoughts of it yet awhile.”

“You must allow us to put you in nomination--you must, indeed, Mr.
Carlyle. There’s nobody else fit for it. As good send a pig to the House
as some of us.”

“An extremely flattering reason for proposing to shift the honor upon
me,” laughed Mr. Carlyle.

“Well, you know what we mean, Carlyle; there’s not a man in the whole
county so suitable as you, search it to the extremity of its boundaries-
-you must know there is not.”

“I don’t know anything of the sort,” returned Mr. Carlyle.

“At any rate, we shall do it, for we have determined upon having you.
When you walk into West Lynne to-morrow, you’ll see the walks alive with
placards, ‘Carlyle forever!’”

“Suppose you allow me until to-morrow to consider of it, and defer the
garnishing of the walls a day later,” said Mr. Carlyle, a serious tone
peeping out in the midst of his jocularity.

“You do not fear the expenses?”

It was but a glance he returned in answer. As soon as the question had
been put--it was stupid old Pinner who propounded it--they had felt how
foolish it was. And indeed the cost would be a mere nothing, were there
no opposition.

“Come, decide now, Carlyle. Give us your promise.”

“If I decide now, it will be in the negative,” replied Mr. Carlyle. “It
is a question that demands consideration. Give me till to-morrow for
that, and it is possible that I may accede to your request.”

This was the best that could be made of him, and the deputation backed
out, and as nothing more could be done, departed to their several
dinner-tables. Mr. Dill, who had been present, remained rubbing his
hands with satisfaction, and casting admiring glances at Mr. Carlyle.

“What’s the matter, Dill?” asked the latter; “you look as though you
were pleased at this movement, and assumed that I should accept it.”

“And so you will, Mr. Archibald. And as to the looking pleased, there’s
not a man, woman or child in West Lynne who won’t do that.”

“Don’t make too sure, Dill.”

“Of which, sir--of your becoming our member, or of the people looking
pleased?”

“Of either,” laughed Mr. Carlyle.

He quitted the office to walk home, revolving the proposition as he did
so. That he had long thought of some time entering parliament was
certain, though no definite period of the “when” had fixed itself in his
mind. He saw not why he should confine his days entirely to toil, to the
work of his calling. Pecuniary considerations did not require it, for
his realized property, combined with the fortune brought by Barbara, was
quite sufficient to meet expenses, according to their present style of
living. Not that he had the least intention of giving up his business;
it was honorable, as he conducted it, and lucrative, and he really liked
it. He would not have been condemned to lead an idle life for the world;
but there was no necessity for his being always at it. Mr. Dill made as
good a principal as he did, and--if length of service and experience
might be counted--a better one. He could safely be left to manage during
the time it would be necessary for him, Mr. Carlyle, to be in London. He
would rather represent West Lynne than any other spot on the face of the
earth, no matter what might be the other’s importance; and, as West
Lynne was now in want of a member, perhaps his opportunity had come.
That he would make a good and efficient public servant, he believed; his
talents were superior, his oratory persuasive, and he had the gift of a
true and honest spirit. That he would have the interest of West Lynne,
at heart was certain, and he knew that he should serve his constituents
to the very best of his power and ability. They knew it also.

Before Mr. Carlyle had reached East Lynne, he had decided that it should
be.

It was a fine spring evening. The lilac was in bloom, the hedges and
trees were clothed in their early green, and all things seemed full of
promise. Even Mr. Carlyle’s heart was rejoicing in the prospect opened
to it; he was sure he should like a public life; but in the sanguine
moments of realization or of hope, some dark shade will step in to mar
the brightness.

Barbara stood at the drawing-room window watching for him. Not in her
was the dark shade; her dress was a marvel of vanity and prettiness, and
she had chosen to place on her fair hair a dainty headdress of lace--as
if her hair required any such ornament! She waltzed up to Mr. Carlyle
when he entered, and saucily held up her face, the light of love dancing
in her bright blue eyes.

“What do you want?” he provokingly asked, putting his hands behind him,
and letting her stand there.

“Oh, well--if you won’t say good-evening to me, I have a great mind to
say you should not kiss me for a week, Archibald.”

He laughed. “Who would be punished by that?” whispered he.

Barbara pouted her pretty lips, and the tears positively came into her
eyes. “Which is as much as to say it would be no punishment to you.
Archibald, don’t you care for me?”

He threw his arms around her and clasped her to his heart, taking plenty
of kisses then. “You know whether I care not,” he fondly whispered.

But now, will you believe that that unfortunate Lady Isabel had been a
witness to this? Well, it was only what his greeting to her had once
been. Her pale face flushed scarlet, and she glided out of the room
again as softly as she had entered it. They had not seen her. Mr.
Carlyle drew his wife to the window, and stood there, his arms round her
waist.

“Barbara, what should you say to living in London for a few months out
of the twelve?”

“London? I am very happy where I am. Why should you ask me that? You are
not going to live in London?”

“I am not sure of that. I think I am for a portion of the year. I have
had an offer made me this afternoon, Barbara.”

She looked at him, wondering what he meant--wondering whether he was
serious. An offer? What sort of an offer? Of what nature could it be?

He smiled at her perplexity. “Should you like to see M. P. attached to
my name? West Lynne wants me to become its member.”

A pause to take in the news; a sudden rush of color, and then she
gleefully clasped her hands round his arm, her eyes sparkling with
pleasure.

“Oh, Archibald, how glad I am! I knew how you were appreciated, and you
will be appreciated more and more. This is right; it was not well for
you to remain what you are for life--a private individual, a country
lawyer.”

“I am perfectly contented with my lot, Barbara,” he seriously said. “I
am too busy to be otherwise.”

“I know that; were you but a laboring man, toiling daily for the bread
you eat, you would be contented, feeling that you were fulfilling your
appointed duty to the utmost,” she impulsively said; “but, Archibald,
can you not still be a busy man at West Lynne, although you do become
its representative?”

“If I could not, I should never accept the honor, Barbara. For some few
months of the year I must of necessity be in town; but Dill is an
efficient substitute, and I can run down for a week or so between times.
Part of Saturday, Sunday, and part of Monday, I can always pass here, if
I please. Of course these changes have their drawbacks, as well as their
advantages.”

“Where would be the drawbacks in this?” she interrupted.

“Well,” smiled Mr. Carlyle, “in the first place, I suppose you could not
always be with me.”

Her hands fell--her color faded. “Oh, Archibald!”

“If I do become their member, I must go up to town as soon as elected,
and I don’t think it will do for my little wife to be quitting her home
to travel about just now.”

Barbara’s face wore a very blank look. She could not dissent from Mr.
Carlyle’s reasoning.

“And you must remain in London to the end of the session, while I am
here! Separated! Archibald,” she passionately added, while the tears
gushed into her eyes. “I could not live without you.”

“Then what is to be done? Must I decline it?”

“Decline it! Oh, of course not! I know we are looking on the dark side
of things. I can go very well with you for a month--perhaps two.”

“You think so?”

“I am sure so. And, mind you must not encourage mamma to talk me out of
it. Archibald,” she continued, resting her head upon his breast, her
sweet face turned up beseechingly to his, “you would rather have me with
you, would you not?”

He bent his own down upon it. “What do you think about it, my darling?”

Once more--an opportune moment for her to enter--Lady Isabel. Barbara
heard her this time, and sprang away from her husband. Mr. Carlyle
turned round at the movement, and saw Madame Vine. She came forward, her
lips ashy, her voice subdued.

Six months now had she been at East Lynne, and had hitherto escaped
detection. Time and familiarity render us accustomed to most things--to
danger among the rest; and she had almost ceased to fear recognition,
living--so far as that point went--far more peaceably than she had done
at first. She and the children were upon the best of terms. She had
greatly endeared herself to them; she loved them, and they loved her--
perhaps nature was asserting her own hidden claims.

She felt very anxious about William. He seemed to grow weaker, and she
determined to make her fears known to Mr. Carlyle.

She quitted the parlor. She had heard Mr. Carlyle come in. Crossing the
hall, she tapped softly at the drawing-room door, and then as softly
entered. It was the moment of Mr. Carlyle’s loud greeting to his wife.
They stood together heedless of her.

Gliding out again, she paced the hall, her hands pressed upon her
beating heart. How dared that heart rise up in sharp rebellion at these
witnessed tokens of love? Was Barbara not his wife? Had she not a legal
claim to all his tenderness? Who was she that she should resent them in
her jealousy? What, though they had once been hers, hers only, had she
not signed and sealed her own forfeit of them, and so made room for
Barbara?

Back to the gray parlor, there she stood, her elbow on the mantelpiece,
her eyes hidden by her hand. Thus she remained for some minutes, and
Lucy thought how sad she looked.

But Lucy felt hungry, and was casting longing glances to the tea-table.
She wondered how long her governess meant to keep it waiting. “Madame
Vine,” cried she presently, “don’t you know that tea is ready?”

This caused Madame Vine to raise her eyes. They fell on the pale boy at
her feet. She made no immediate answer, only placed her hand on Lucy’s
shoulder.

“Oh, Lucy dear, I--I have many sorrows to bear.”

“The tea will warm you, and there is some nice jam,” was Miss Lucy’s
offered consolation.

“Their greeting, tender as it may be, is surely over by this time,”
 thought Lady Isabel, an expression something like mockery curving her
lips. “I will venture again.”

Only to see him with his wife’s face on his breast, and his lips bent
upon it. But they had heard her this time, and she had to advance, in
spite of her spirit of misery and her whitened features.

“Would you be so good sir, as to come and look at William?” she asked in
a low tone, of Mr. Carlyle.

“Certainly.”

“What for?” interjected Barbara.

“He looks very ill. I do not like his looks. I am fearing whether he can
be worse than we have thought.”

They went to the gray parlor, all three of them. Mr. Carlyle was in
first, and had taken a long, silent look at William before the others
entered.

“What is he doing on the floor?” exclaimed Barbara, in her astonishment.
“He should not lie on the floor, Madame Vine.”

“He lays himself down there at the dusk hour, and I cannot get him up
again. I try to persuade him to use the sofa, but it is of no use.”

“The floor will not hurt him,” said Mr. Carlyle. This was the dark
shade: his boy’s failing health.

William opened his eyes. “Who’s that--papa?”

“Don’t you feel well, William?”

“Oh, yes, I’m very well; but I am tired.”

“Why do you lie down here?”

“I like lying here. Papa, that pretty white rabbit of mine is dead.”

“Indeed. Suppose you get up and tell me all about it.”

“I don’t know about it myself yet,” said William, softly rising. “The
gardener told Lucy when she was out just now: I did not go; I was tired.
He said--”

“What has tired you?” interrupted Mr. Carlyle, taking hold of the boy’s
hand.

“Oh, nothing. I am always tired.”

“Do you tell Mr. Wainwright that you are tired?”

“No. Why should I tell him? I wish he would not order me to take that
nasty medicine, that cod liver oil.”

“But it is to make you strong, my boy.”

“It makes me sick. I always feel sick after it, papa. Madame Vine says I
ought to have cream. That would be nice.”

“Cream?” repeated Mr. Carlyle, turning his eyes on Madame Vine.

“I have known cream to do a great deal of good in a case like
William’s,” she observed. “I believe that no better medicine can be
given; that it has in fact no substitute.”

“It can be tried,” said Mr. Carlyle.

“Pray give your orders, Madame Vine, for anything you think may be
beneficial to him,” Mrs. Carlyle added. “You have had more experience
with children than I. Joyce--”

“What does Wainwright say?” interrupted Mr. Carlyle, speaking to his
wife, in his low tone.

“I do not always see him when he comes, Archibald. Madame Vine does, I
believe.”

“Oh, dear!” cried Lucy, “can’t we have tea? I want some bread and jam.”

Mr. Carlyle turned round, smiled and nodded at her. “Patience is good
for little girls, Miss Lucy. Would you like some bread and jam, my boy?”

William shook his head. “I can’t eat jam. I am only thirsty.”

Mr. Carlyle cast a long and intent look at him, and then left the room.
Lady Isabel followed him, her thoughts full of her ailing child.

“Do you think him very ill, sir?” she whispered.

“I think he looks so. What does Mr. Wainwright say?”

“He says nothing to me. I have not inquired his true condition. Until
to-night it did not come to me that there was any apprehension.”

“Does he look so much worse to-night?”

“Not any worse than customary. Latterly he had looked just like this in
the evening. It was a remark of Hannah’s that roused my alarm: she
thinks he is on the road to death. What can we do to save him?”

She clasped her hands as she spoke, in the intensity of her emotion. She
almost forgot, as they stood there together talking of the welfare of
the child, their child, that he was no longer her husband. Almost, not
quite, utterly impossible would it be for her wholly to forget the
dreadful present. Neither he nor the child could again belong to her in
this world.

A strange rising of the throat in her wild despair, a meek courtesy, as
she turned from him, his last words ringing in her ears: “I shall call
in further advice for him, Madame Vine.”

William was clinging round Mrs. Carlyle, in a coaxing attitude, when she
re-entered the gray parlor. “I know what I could eat, mamma, if you’d
let me have it,” cried he, in answer to her remonstrance that he must
eat something.

“What could you eat?”

“Some cheese.”

“Cheese! Cheese with tea!” laughed Mrs. Carlyle.

“For the last week or two he has fancied strange things, the effect of a
diseased appetite,” exclaimed Madame Vine; “but if I allow them to be
brought in he barely tastes them.”

“I am sure, mamma, I could eat some cheese now,” said William.

“You may have it,” answered Mrs. Carlyle.

As she turned to leave the room, the impatient knock and ring of a
visitor was heard. Barbara wondered who could be arriving at that, their
dinner hour. Sailing majestically into the hall, her lips compressed,
her aspect threatening, came Miss Carlyle.

Now it turned out that Miss Corny had been standing at her own window,
grimly eyeing the ill doings of the street, from the fine housemaid
opposite, who was enjoying a flirting interview with the baker, to the
ragged urchins, pitch-polling in the gutter and the dust. And there she
caught sight of the string, justices and others, who came flowing out of
the office of Mr. Carlyle. So many of them were they that Miss Corny
involuntarily thought of a conjuror flinging flowers out of a hat--the
faster they come, the more it seems there are to come. “What on earth is
up?” cried Miss Corny, pressing her nose flat against the pane, that she
might see better.

They filed off, some one way, some another. Miss Carlyle’s curiosity was
keener than her appetite, for she stayed on the watch, although just
informed that her dinner was served. Presently Mr. Carlyle appeared and
she knocked at the window with her knuckles. He did not hear it; he had
turned off at a quick pace toward home. Miss Corny’s temper rose.

The clerks came out next, one after another; and the last was Mr. Dill.
He was less hurried than Mr. Carlyle had been, and heard Miss Corny’s
signal.

“What in the name of wonder, did all that stream of people want at the
office?” began she, when Mr. Dill had entered in obedience to it.

“That was the deputation, Miss Cornelia.”

“What deputation?”

“The deputation to Mr. Archibald. They want him to become their new
member.”

“Member of what?” cried she, not guessing at the actual meaning.

“Of parliament, Miss Corny; to replace Mr. Attley. The gentlemen came to
solicit him to be put in nomination.”

“Solicit a donkey!” irascibly uttered Miss Corny, for the tidings did
not meet her approbation. “Did Archibald turn them out again?”

“He gave them no direct answer, ma’am. He will consider of it between
now and to-morrow morning.”

“Consider of it!” shrieked she. “Why, he’d never, never be such a flat
as to comply. He go into parliament! What next?”

“Why should he not, Miss Corny? I’m sure I should be proud to see him
there.”

Miss Corny gave a sniff. “You are proud of things more odd than even
John Dill. Remember that fine shirt front! What has become of it? Is it
laid up in lavender?”

“Not exactly in lavender, Miss Corny. It lies in the drawer; for I have
never liked to put it on since, after what you said.”

“Why don’t you sell it at half-price, and buy a couple of good useful
ones with the money?” returned she, tartly. “Better that than keep the
foppish thing as a witness of your folly. Perhaps he’ll be buying
embroidered fronts next, if he goes into that idle, do-nothing House of
Commons. I’d rather enter myself for six months at the treadmill.”

“Oh, Miss Corny! I don’t think you have well considered it. It’s a great
honor, and worthy of him. He will be elevated above us all, as it were,
and he deserves to be.”

“Elevate him on a weathercock!” raged Miss Corny. “There, you may go.
I’ve heard quite enough.”

Brushing past the old gentleman, leaving him to depart or not, as he
might please, Miss Carlyle strode upstairs, flung on her shawl and
bonnet, and strode down again. Her servant looked considerably
surprised, and addressed her as she crossed the hall.

“Your dinner, ma’am?” he ventured to say.

“What’s my dinner to you?” returned Miss Corny, in her wrath. “You have
had yours.”

Away she strode. And thus it happened that she was at East Lynne almost
as soon as Mr. Carlyle.

“Where’s Archibald?” began she, without ceremony, the moment she saw
Barbara.

“He is here. Is anything the matter?”

Mr. Carlyle, hearing the voice, came out and she pounced upon him with
her tongue.

“What’s this about your becoming the new member for West Lynne?”

“West Lynne wishes it,” said Mr. Carlyle. “Sit down, Cornelia.”

“Sit down yourself,” retorted she, keeping on her feet. “I want my
question answered. Of course you will decline?”

“On the contrary, I have made up my mind to accept.”

Miss Corny untied the strings of her bonnet, and flung them behind her.

“Have you counted the cost?” she asked, and there was something quite
sepulchral in her solemn tone.

“I have given it consideration, Cornelia; both as regards money and
time. The expenses are not worth naming, should there be no opposition.
And if there is any--”

“Ay!” groaned Miss Corny. “If there is?”

“Well? I am not without a few hundred to spare for the playing,” he
said, turning upon her the good-humored light of his fine countenance.

Miss Carlyle emitted some dismal groans.

“That ever I should have lived to see this day! To hear money talked of
as though it were dirt. And what’s to become of your business?” she
sharply added. “Is that to be let run to rack and ruin, while you are
kicking up your heels in that wicked London, under plea of being at the
House night after night?”

“Cornelia,” he gravely said, “were I dead, Dill could carry on the
business just as well as it is being carried on now. I might go into a
foreign country for seven years and come back to find the business as
flourishing as ever, for Dill could keep it together. And even were the
business to drop off--though I tell you it will not do so--I am
independent of it.”

Miss Carlyle faced tartly round upon Barbara.

“Have you been setting him on to this?”

“I think he had made up his mind before he spoke to me. But,” added
Barbara, in her truth, “I urged him to accept it.”

“Oh, you did! Nicely moped and miserable you’ll be here, if he goes to
London for months on the stretch. You did not think of that, perhaps.”

“But he would not leave me here,” said Barbara, her eyelashes becoming
wet at the thought, as she unconsciously moved to her husband’s side.
“He would take me with him.”

Miss Carlyle made a pause, and looked at them alternately.

“Is that decided?” she asked.

“Of course it is,” laughed Mr. Carlyle, willing to joke the subject and
his sister into good-humor. “Would you wish to separate man and wife,
Cornelia?”

She made no reply. She rapidly tied her bonnet-strings, the ribbons
trembling ominously in her fingers.

“You are not going, Cornelia? You must stay to dinner, now that you are
here--it is ready--and we will talk this further over afterward.”

“This has been dinner enough for me for one day,” spoke she, putting on
her gloves. “That I should have lived to see my father’s son throw up
his business, and change himself into a lazy, stuck-up parliament man!”

“Do stay and dine with us, Cornelia; I think I can subdue your
prejudices, if you will let me talk to you.”

“If you wanted to talk to me about it, why did you not come in when you
left the office?” cried Miss Corny, in a greater amount of wrath than
she had shown yet. And there’s no doubt that, in his not having done so,
lay one of the sore points.

“I did not think of it,” said Mr. Carlyle. “I should have come in and
told you of it to-morrow morning.”

“I dare say you would,” she ironically answered. “Good evening to you
both.”

And, in spite of their persuasions, she quitted the house and went
stalking down the avenue.

Two or three days more, and the address of Mr. Carlyle to the
inhabitants of West Lynne appeared in the local papers, while the walls
and posts convenient were embellished with various colored placards,
“Vote for Carlyle.” “Carlyle forever!”

Wonders never cease. Surprises are the lot of man; but perhaps a greater
surprise had never been experienced by those who knew what was what,
than when it went forth to the world that Sir Francis Levison had
converted himself from--from what he was--into a red-hot politician.

Had he been offered the post of prime minister? Or did his conscience
smite him, as was the case with a certain gallant captain renowned in
song? Neither the one nor the other. The simple fact was, that Sir
Francis Levison was in a state of pecuniary embarrassment, and required
something to prop him up--some snug sinecure--plenty to get and nothing
to do.

Patch himself up he must. But how? He had tried the tables, but luck was
against him; he made a desperate venture upon the turf, a grand coup
that would have set him on his legs for some time, but the venture
turned out the wrong way, and Sir Francis was a defaulter. He began then
to think there was nothing for it but to drop into some nice government
nest, where, as I have told you, there would be plenty to get and
nothing to do. Any place with much to do would not suit him, or he it;
he was too empty-headed for work requiring talent; you may have remarked
that a man given to Sir Francis Levison’s pursuits generally is.

He dropped into something good, or that promised good--nothing less than
the secretaryship to Lord Headthelot, who swayed the ministers in the
upper House. But that he was a connection of Lord Headthelot’s he never
would have obtained it, and very dubiously the minister consented to try
him. Of course a condition was, that he should enter parliament the
first opportunity, his vote to be at the disposal of the ministry--
rather a shaky ministry--and supposed, by some, to be on its last legs.
And this brings us to the present time.

In a handsome drawing-room in Eaton Square, one sunny afternoon, sat a
lady, young and handsome. Her eyes were of violet blue, her hair was
auburn, her complexion delicate; but there was a stern look of anger,
amounting to sullenness, on her well-formed features, and her pretty
foot was beating the carpet in passionate impatience. It was Lady
Levison.

The doings of the past had been coming home to her for some time now--
past doings, be they good or be they ill, are sure to come home, one day
or another, and bring their fruits with them.

In the years past--many years past now--Francis Levison had lost his
heart--or whatever the thing might be that, with him, did duty for one--
to Blanche Challoner. He had despised her once to Lady Isabel--as Lord
Thomas says in the old ballad; but that was done to suit his own
purpose, for he had never, at any period, cared for Lady Isabel as he
had cared for Blanche. He gained her affection in secret--they engaged
themselves to each other. Blanche’s sister, Lydia Challoner, two years
older than herself suspected it, and taxed Blanche with it. Blanche,
true to her compact of keeping it a secret, denied it with many
protestations. “She did not care for Captain Levison; rather disliked
him, in fact.” “So much the better,” was Miss Challoner’s reply; for she
had no respect for Captain Levison, and deemed him an unlikely man to
marry.

Years went on, and poor, unhappy Blanche Challoner remained faithful to
her love.

He played fast and loose with her--professing attachment for her in
secret, and visiting at the house; perhaps he feared an outbreak from
her, an exposure that might be anything but pleasant, did he throw off
all relations between them. Blanche summoned up her courage and spoke to
him, urging the marriage; she had not yet glanced at the fear that his
intention of marrying her, had he ever possessed such, was over. Bad men
are always cowards. Sir Francis shrank from an explanation, and so far
forgot honor as to murmur some indistinct promise that the wedding
should be speedy.

Lydia Challoner had married, and been left a widow, well off. She was
Mrs. Waring; and at her house resided Blanche. For the girls were
orphans. Blanche was beginning to show symptoms of her nearly thirty
years; not the years, but the long-continued disappointment, the heart-
burnings, were telling upon her. Her hair was thin, her face was
pinched, her form had lost its roundness. “Marry her, indeed!” scoffed
to himself Sir Francis Levison.

There came to Mrs. Waring’s upon a Christmas visit a younger sister,
Alice Challoner, a fair girl of twenty years. She resided generally with
an aunt in the country. Far more beautiful was she than Blanche had ever
been, and Francis Levison, who had not seen her since she was a child,
fell--as he would have called it--in love with her. Love! He became her
shadow; he whispered sweet words in her ear; he turned her head giddy
with its own vanity, and he offered her marriage. She accepted him, and
preparations for the ceremony immediately began. Sir Francis urged
speed, and Alice was nothing loth.

And what of Blanche? Blanche was stunned. A despairing stupor took
possession of her; and, when she woke from it, desperation set in. She
insisted upon an interview with Sir Francis, and evade it he could not,
though he tried hard. Will it be believed that he denied the past--that
he met with mocking suavity her indignant reminders of what had been
between them? “Love! Marriage? Nonsense! Her fancy had been too much at
work.” Finally, he defied her to prove that he had regarded her with
more than ordinary friendship, or had ever hinted at such a thing as a
union.

She could not prove it. She had not so much as a scrap of paper written
on by him; she had not a single friend or enemy to come forward and
testify that they heard him breathe to her a word of love. He had been
too wary for that. Moreover there was her own solemn protestations to
her sister Lydia that there was not anything between her and Francis
Levison; who would believe her if she veered round now, and avowed these
protestations were false? No; she found that she was in a sinking ship;
one there was no chance of saving.

But one chance did she determine to try--an appeal to Alice. Blanche
Challoner’s eyes were suddenly and rudely opened to the badness of the
man, and she was aware now how thoroughly unfit he was to become the
husband of her sister. It struck her that only misery could result from
the union, and that, if possible, Alice should be saved from entering
upon it. Would she have married him herself, then? Yes. But it was a
different thing for that fair, fresh young Alice; she had not wasted her
life’s best years in waiting for him.

When the family had gone to rest, and the house was quiet, Blanche
Challoner proceeded to her sister’s bedroom. Alice had not begun to
undress; she was sitting in a comfortable chair before the fire, her
feet on the fender, reading a love letter from Sir Francis.

“Alice, I am come to tell you a story,” she said quietly. “Will you hear
it?”

“In a minute. Stop a bit,” replied Alice. She finished the perusal of
the letter, put it aside, and then spoke again. “What did you say,
Blanche? A story?”

Blanche nodded. “Several years ago there was a fair young girl, none too
rich, in our station of life. A gentleman, who was none too rich either,
sought and gained her love. He could not marry; he was not rich, I say.
They loved on in secret, hoping for better times, she wearing out her
years and her heart. Oh, Alice! I cannot describe to you how she loved
him--how she has continued to love him up to this moment. Through evil
report she clung to him tenaciously and tenderly as the vine clings to
its trellis, for the world spoke ill of him.”

“Who was the young lady?” interrupted Alice. “Is this a fable of
romance, Blanche, or a real history?”

“A real history. I knew her. All those years--years and years, I say--he
kept leading her on to love, letting her think that his love was hers.
In the course of time he succeeded to a fortune, and the bar to their
marriage was over. He was abroad when he came into it, but returned home
at once; their intercourse was renewed, and her fading heart woke up
once more to life. Still, the marriage did not come on; he said nothing
of it, and she spoke to him. Very soon now, should it be, was his
answer, and she continued to live on--in hope.”

“Go on, Blanche,” cried Alice, who had grown interested in the tale,
never suspecting that it could bear a personal interest.

“Yes, I will go on. Would you believe, Alice, that almost immediately
after this last promise, he saw one whom he fancied he should like
better, and asked her to be his wife, forsaking the one to whom he was
bound by every tie of honor--repudiating all that had been between them,
even his own words and promises?”

“How disgraceful! Were they married?”

“They are to be. Would you have such a man?”

“I!” returned Alice, quite indignant at the question. “It is not likely
that I would.”

“That man, Alice is Sir Francis Levison.”

Alice Challoner gave a start, and her face became scarlet. “How dare you
say so, Blanche? It is not true. Who was the girl, pray? She must have
traduced him.”

“She has not traduced him,” was the subdued answer. “The girl was
myself.”

An awkward pause. “I know!” cried Alice, throwing back her head
resentfully. “He told me I might expect something of this--that you had
fancied him in love with you, and were angry because he had chosen me.”

Blanche turned upon her with streaming eyes; she could no longer control
her emotion. “Alice, my sister, all the pride is gone out of me; all the
reticence that woman loves to observe as to her wrongs and her inward
feelings I have broken through for you this night. As sure as there is a
heaven above us, I have told you the truth. Until you came I was engaged
to Francis Levison.”

An unnatural scene ensued. Blanche, provoked at Alice’s rejection of her
words, told all the ill she knew or heard of the man; she dwelt upon his
conduct with regard to Lady Isabel Carlyle, his heartless after-
treatment of that unhappy lady. Alice was passionate and fiery. She
professed not to believe a word of her sister’s wrongs, and as to the
other stories, they were no affairs of hers, she said: “what had she to
do with his past life?”

But Alice Challoner did believe; her sister’s earnestness and distress,
as she told the tale, carried conviction with them. She did not very
much care for Sir Francis; he was not entwined round her heart, as he
was round Blanche’s; but she was dazzled with the prospect of so good a
settlement in life, and she would not give him up. If Blanche broke her
heart--why, she must break it. But she need not have mixed taunts and
jeers with her refusal to believe; she need not have triumphed openly
over Blanche. Was it well done? Was it the work of an affectionate
sister! As we sow, so shall we reap. She married Sir Francis Levison,
leaving Blanche to her broken heart, or to any other calamity that might
grow out of the injustice. And there sat Lady Levison now, her three
years of marriage having served to turn her love for Sir Francis into
contempt and hate.

A little boy, two years old, the only child of the marriage, was playing
about the room. His mother took no notice of him; she was buried in all-
absorbing thought--thought which caused her lips to contract, and her
brow to scowl. Sir Francis entered, his attitude lounging, his air
listless. Lady Levison roused herself, but no pleasant manner of tone
was hers, as she set herself to address him.

“I want some money,” she said.

“So do I,” he answered.

An impatient stamp of the foot and a haughty toss. “And I must have it.
I must. I told you yesterday that I must. Do you suppose I can go on,
without a sixpence of ready money day after day?”

“Do you suppose it is of any use to put yourself in this fury?” retorted
Sir Francis. “A dozen times a week do you bother me for money and a
dozen times do I tell you I have got none. I have got none for myself.
You may as well ask that baby for money as ask me.”

“I wish he had never been born!” passionately uttered Lady Levison;
“unless he had had a different father.”

That the last sentence, and the bitter scorn of its tone, would have
provoked a reprisal from Sir Francis, his flashing countenance betrayed.
But at that moment a servant entered the room.

“I beg your pardon, sir. That man, Brown, forced his way into the hall,
and--”

“I can’t see him--I won’t see him!” interrupted Sir Francis backing to
the furthest corner of the room, in what looked very like abject terror,
as if he had completely lost his presence of mind. Lady Levison’s lips
curled.

“We got rid of him, sir, after a dreadful deal of trouble, I was about
to say, but while the door was open in the dispute, Mr. Meredith
entered. He has gone into the library, sir, and vows he won’t stir till
he sees you, whether you are sick or well.”

A moment’s pause, a half-muttered oath, and the Sir Francis quitted the
room. The servant retired, and Lady Levison caught up her child.

“Oh, Franky dear,” she wailed forth, burying her face in his warm neck.
“I’d leave him for good and all, if I dared; but I fear he might keep
you.”

Now, the secret was, that for the last three days Sir Francis had been
desperately ill, obliged to keep his bed, and could see nobody, his life
depending upon quiet. Such was the report, or something equivalent to
it, which had gone in to Lord Headthelot, or rather, to the official
office, for that renowned chief was himself out of town; it had also
been delivered to all callers at Sir Francis Levison’s house; the royal
truth being that Sir Francis was as well as you or I, but, from
something that had transpired touching one of his numerous debts, did
not dare to show himself. That morning the matter had been arranged--
patched up for a time.

“My stars, Levison!” began Mr. Meredith, who was a whipper-in of the
ministry, “what a row there is about you! Why, you look as well as ever
you were.”

“A great deal better to-day,” coughed Sir Francis.

“To think that you should have chosen the present moment for skulking!
Here have I been dancing attendance at your door, day after day, in a
state of incipient fever, enough to put me into a real one, and could
neither get admitted nor a letter taken up. I should have blown the
house up to-day and got in amidst the flying debris. By the way, are you
and my lady two just now?”

“Two?” growled Sir Francis.

“She was stepping into her carriage yesterday when they turned me from
the door, and I made inquiry of her. Her ladyship’s answer was, that she
knew nothing either of Francis or his illness.”

“Her ladyship is subject to flights of distemper,” chafed Sir Francis.
“What desperate need have you of me, just now? Headthelot’s away and
there’s nothing doing.”

“Nothing doing up here; a deal too much doing somewhere else. Attley’s
seat’s in the market.”

“Well?”

“And you ought to have been down there about it three or four days ago.
Of course you must step into it.”

“Of course I shan’t,” returned Sir Francis. “To represent West Lynne
will not suit me.”

“Not suit you? West Lynne! Why, of all places, it is most suitable. It’s
close to your own property.”

“If you call ten miles close. I shall not put up for West Lynne,
Meredith.”

“Headthelot came up this morning,” said Mr. Meredith.

The information somewhat aroused Sir Francis. “Headthelot? What brings
him back?”

“You. I tell you, Levison, there’s a hot row. Headthelot expected you
would be at West Lynne days past, and he has come up in an awful rage.
Every additional vote we can count in the House is worth its weight in
gold; and you, he says are allowing West Lynne to slip through your
fingers! You must start for it at once Levison.”

Sir Francis mused. Had the alternative been given him, he would have
preferred to represent a certain warm place underground, rather than
West Lynne. But, to quit Headthelot, and the snug post he anticipated,
would be ruin irretrievable; nothing short of outlawry, or the queen’s
prison. It was awfully necessary to get his threatened person into
parliament, and he began to turn over in his mind whether he could bring
himself to make further acquaintance with West Lynne. “The thing must
have blown over for good by this time,” was the result of his
cogitations, unconsciously speaking aloud.

“I can understand your reluctance to appear at West Lynne,” cried Mr.
Meredith; “the scene, unless I mistake, of that notorious affair of
yours. But private feelings must give way to public interests, and the
best thing you can do is to start. Headthelot is angry enough as it is.
He says, had you been down at first, as you ought to have been, you
would have slipped in without opposition, but now there will be a
contest.”

Sir Francis looked up sharply. “A contest? Who is going to stand the
funds?”

“Pshaw! As if we should let funds be any barrier! Have you heard who is
in the field?”

“No,” was the apathetic answer.

“Carlyle.”

“Carlyle!” uttered Sir Francis, startled. “Oh, by George, though! I
can’t stand against him.”

“Well, there’s the alternative. If you can’t, Thornton will.”

“I should run no chance. West Lynne would not elect me in preference to
him. I’m not sure, indeed, that West Lynne would have me in any case.”

“Nonsense! You know our interest there. Government put in Attley, and it
can put you in. Yes, or no, Levison?”

“Yes,” answered Sir Francis.

An hour’s time, and Sir Francis Levison went forth. On his way to be
conveyed to West Lynne? Not yet. He turned his steps to Scotland Yard.
In considerably less than an hour the following telegram, marked
“Secret,” went down from the head office to the superintendent of police
at West Lynne.

“Is Otway Bethel at West Lynne? If not; where is he? And when will he be
returning to it?”

It elicited a prompt answer.

“Otway Bethel is not at West Lynne. Supposed to be in Norway. Movements
uncertain.”



CHAPTER XXXV.

A MISHAP TO THE BLUE SPECTACLES.

Mr. Carlyle and Barbara were seated at breakfast, when, somewhat to
their surprise, Mr. Dill was shown in. Following close upon his heels
came Justice Hare; and close upon his heels came Squire Pinner; while
bringing up the rear was Colonel Bethel. All the four had come up
separately, not together, and all four were out of breath, as if it had
been a race which should arrive soonest.

Quite impossible was it for Mr. Carlyle, at first, to understand the
news they brought. All were talking at once, in the utmost excitement;
and the fury of Justice Hare alone was sufficient to produce temporary
deafness. Mr. Carlyle caught a word of the case presently.

“A second man? Opposition? Well, let him come on,” he good-humoredly
cried. “We shall have the satisfaction of ascertaining who wins in the
end.”

“But you have not heard who it is, Mr. Archibald,” cried Old Dill, “It--
“

“Stand a contest with him?” raved Justice Hare. “He--”

“The fellow wants hanging,” interjected Colonel Bethel.

“Couldn’t he be ducked?” suggested Squire Pinner.

Now all these sentences were ranted out together, and their respective
utterers were fain to stop till the noise subsided a little. Barbara
could only look from one to the other in astonishment.

“Who is this formidable opponent?” asked Mr. Carlyle.

There was a pause. Not one of them but had the delicacy to shrink from
naming that man to Mr. Carlyle. The information came at last from Old
Dill, who dropped his voice while he spoke it.

“Mr. Archibald, the candidate who has come forward, is that man
Levison.”

“Of course, Carlyle, you’ll go into it now, neck and crop,” cried
Justice Hare.

Mr. Carlyle was silent.

“You won’t let the beast frighten you from the contest!” uttered Colonel
Bethel in a loud tone.

“There’s a meeting at the Buck’s Head at ten,” said Mr. Carlyle, not
replying to the immediate question. “I will be with you there.”

“Did you not say, Mr. Dill, that was where the scoundrel Levison is--at
the Buck’s Head?”

“He was there,” answered Mr. Dill. “I expect he is ousted by this time.
I asked the landlord what he thought of himself, for taking in such a
character, and what he supposed the justice would say to him. He vowed
with tears in his eyes that the fellow should not be there another hour,
and that he should never have entered it, had he known who he was.”

A little more conversation, and the visitors filed off. Mr. Carlyle sat
down calmly to finish his breakfast. Barbara approached him.

“Archibald, you will not suffer this man’s insolent doings to deter you
from your plans--you will not withdraw?” she whispered.

“I think not, Barbara. He has thrust himself offensively upon me in this
measure; I believe my better plan will be to take no more heed of him
than I should of the dirt under my feet.”

“Right--right,” she answered, a proud flush deepening the rose on her
cheeks.

Mr. Carlyle was walking into West Lynne. There were the placards, sure
enough, side by side with his own, bearing the name of that wicked
coward who had done him the greatest injury one man can do to another.
Verily, he must possess a face of brass to venture there.

“Archibald, have you heard the disgraceful news?”

The speaker was Miss Carlyle, who had come down upon her brother like a
ship with all sails set. Her cheeks wore a flush; her eyes glistened;
her tall form was drawn up to its most haughty height.

“I have heard it, Cornelia, and, had I not, the walls would have
enlightened me.”

“Is he out of his mind?”

“Out of his reckoning, I fancy,” replied Mr. Carlyle.

“You will carry on the contest now,” she continued, her countenance
flashing. “I was averse to it before, but I now withdraw all my
objection. You will be no brother of mine if you yield the field to
him.”

“I do not intend to yield it.”

“Good. You bear on upon your course, and let him crawl on upon his. Take
no more heed of him than if he were a viper. Archibald, you must canvass
now.”

“No,” said Mr. Carlyle, “I shall be elected without canvass. You’ll see,
Cornelia.”

“There will be plenty canvassing for you, if you don’t condescend to
take the trouble, my indifferent brother. I’ll give a thousand pounds
myself, for ale, to the electors.”

“Take care,” laughed Mr. Carlyle. “Keep your thousand pounds in your
pocket, Cornelia. I have no mind to be unseated, on the plea of ‘bribery
and corruption.’ Here’s Sir John Dobede galloping in, with a face as red
as the sun in a fog.”

“Well, it may be he has heard the news. I can tell you, Archibald, West
Lynne is in a state of excitement that has not been its lot for many a
day.”

Miss Carlyle was right. Excitement and indignation had taken possession
of West Lynne. How the people rallied around Mr. Carlyle! Town and
country were alike up in arms. But government interest was rife at West
Lynne, and, whatever the private and public feeling might be,
collectively or individually, many votes should be recorded for Sir
Francis Levison.

One of the first to become cognizant of the affair was Lord Mount
Severn. He was at his club one evening in London, poring over an evening
paper, when the names “Carlyle,” “West Lynne,” caught his view. Knowing
that Mr. Carlyle had been named as the probable member, and heartily
wishing that he might become such, the earl naturally read the
paragraph.

He read it, and read it again; he rubbed his eyes, he rubbed his
glasses, he pinched himself, to see whether he was awake or dreaming.
For believe what that paper asserted--that Sir Francis Levison had
entered the lists in opposition to Mr. Carlyle, and was at West Lynne,
busily canvassing--he could not.

“Do you know anything of this infamous assertion?” he inquired of an
intimate friend--“infamous, whether true or false.”

“It’s true, I heard of it an hour ago. Plenty of cheek that Levison must
have.”

“Cheek!” repeated the dismayed earl, feeling as if every part of him,
body and mind, were outraged by the news, “don’t speak of it in that
way. The hound deserves to be gibbeted.”

He threw aside the paper, quitted the club, returned home for a carpet
bag, and went shrieking and whistling down to West Lynne, taking his son
with him. Or, if he did not whistle and shriek the engine did. Fully
determined was the earl of Mount Severn to show his opinion of the
affair.

On these fine spring mornings, their breakfast over, Lady Isabel was in
the habit of going into the grounds with the children. They were on the
lawn before the house, when two gentlemen came walking up the avenue;
or, rather, one gentleman, and a handsome young stripling growing into
another. Lady Isabel thought she should have dropped, for she stood face
to face with Lord Mount Severn. The earl stopped to salute the children,
and raised his hat to the strange lady.

“It is my governess, Madame Vine,” said Lucy.

A silent courtesy from Madame Vine. She turned away her head and gasped
for breath.

“Is your papa at home, Lucy?” cried the earl.

“Yes; I think he is at breakfast. I’m so glad you are come!”

Lord Mount Severn walked on, holding William by the hand, who had
eagerly offered to “take him” to papa. Lord Vane bent over Lucy to kiss
her. A little while, a very few more years, and my young lady would not
hold up her rosy lips so boldly.

“You have grown a dearer girl than ever, Lucy. Have you forgotten our
compact?”

“No,” laughed she.

“And you will not forget it?”

“Never,” said the child, shaking her head. “You shall see if I do.”

“Lucy is to be my wife,” cried he, turning to Madame Vine. “It is a
bargain, and we have both promised. I mean to wait for her till she is
old enough. I like her better than anybody else in the world.”

“And I like him,” spoke up Miss Lucy. “And it’s all true.”

Lucy was a child--it may almost be said an infant--and the viscount was
not of an age to render important such avowed passions. Nevertheless,
the words did thrill through the veins of the hearer. She spoke, she
thought, not as Madame Vine would have spoken and thought, but as the
unhappy mother, the ill-fated Lady Isabel.

“You must not say these things to Lucy. It could never be.”

Lord Vane laughed.

“Why?” asked he.

“Your father and mother would not approve.”

“My father would--I know he would. He likes Lucy. As to my mother--oh,
well, she can’t expect to be master and mistress too. You be off for a
minute, Lucy; I want to say some thing to Madame Vine. Has Carlyle shot
that fellow?” he continued, as Lucy sprung away. “My father is so stiff,
especially when he’s put up, that he would not sully his lips with the
name, or make a single inquiry when we arrived; neither would he let me,
and I walked up here with my tongue burning.”

She would have responded, what fellow? But she suspected too well, and
the words died away on her unwilling lips.

“That brute, Levison. If Carlyle riddled his body with shots for this
move, and then kicked him till he died, he’d only get his deserts, and
the world would applaud. He oppose Carlyle! I wish I had been a man a
few years ago, he’d have got a shot through his heart then. I say,”
 dropping his voice, “did you know Lady Isabel?”

“Yes--no--yes.”

She was at a loss what to say--almost as unconscious what she did say.

“She was Lucy’s mother, you know, and I loved her. I think that’s why I
love Lucy, for she is the very image of her. Where did you know her?
Here?”

“I knew her by hearsay,” murmured Lady Isabel, arousing to recollection.

“Oh, hearsay! Has Carlyle shot the beast, or is he on his legs yet? By
Jove! To think that he should sneak himself up, in this way, at West
Lynne!”

“You must apply elsewhere for information,” she gasped. “I know nothing
of these things.”

She turned away with a beating heart, and took Lucy’s hand, and
departed. Lord Vane set off on a run toward the house, his heels flying
behind him.

And now the contest began in earnest--that is, the canvass. Sir Francis
Levison, his agent, and a friend from town, who, as it turned out,
instead of being some great gun of the government, was a private chum of
the baronet’s by name Drake, sneaked about the town like dogs with their
tails burnt, for they were entirely alive to the color in which they
were held, their only attendants being a few young gentlemen and ladies
in rags, who commonly brought up the rear. The other party presented a
stately crowd--county gentry, magistrates, Lord Mount Severn. Sometimes
Mr. Carlyle would be with them, arm-and-arm with the latter. If the
contesting groups came within view of each other, and were likely to
meet, the brave Sir Francis would disappear down an entry, behind a
hedge, any place convenient; with all his “face of brass,” he could not
meet Mr. Carlyle and that condemning jury around him.

One afternoon it pleased Mrs. Carlyle to summon Lucy and the governess
to accompany her into West Lynne. She was going shopping. Lady Isabel
had a dread and horror of appearing in there while that man was in town,
but she could not help herself. There was no pleading illness, for she
was quite well; there must be no saying, “I will not go,” for she was
only a dependant. They started, and had walked as far as Mrs. Hare’s
gate, when Miss Carlyle turned out of it.

“Your mamma’s not well, Barbara.”

“Is she not?” cried Barbara, with quick concern. “I must go and see
her.”

“She has had one of those ridiculous dreams again,” pursued Miss
Carlyle, ignoring the presence of the governess and Lucy. “I was sure of
it by her very look when I got in, shivering and shaking, and glancing
fearfully around, as if she feared a dozen spectres were about to burst
out of the walls. So I taxed her with it, and she could make no denial.
Richard is in some jeopardy, she protests, or will be. And there she is,
shaking still, although I told her that people who put faith in dreams
were only fit for a lunatic asylum.”

Barbara looked distressed. She did not believe in dreams any more than
Miss Carlyle, but she could not forget how strangely peril to Richard
had supervened upon some of these dreams.

“I will go in now and see mamma,” she said. “If you are returning home,
Cornelia, Madame Vine can walk with you, and wait for me there.”

“Let me go in with you, mamma!” pleaded Lucy.

Barbara mechanically took the child’s hand. The gates closed on them,
and Miss Carlyle and Lady Isabel proceeded in the direction of the town.
But not far had they gone when, in turning a corner, the wind, which was
high, blew away with the veil of Lady Isabel, and, in raising her hand
in trepidation to save it before it was finally gone, she contrived to
knock off her blue spectacles. They fell to the ground, and were broken.

“How did you manage that?” uttered Miss Carlyle.

How, indeed? She bent her face on the ground, looking at the damage.
What should she do? The veil was over the hedge, the spectacles were
broken--how could she dare show her naked face? That face was rosy just
then, as in former days, the eyes were bright, and Miss Carlyle caught
their expression, and stared in very amazement.

“Good heavens above,” she uttered, “what an extraordinary likeness!” And
Lady Isabel’s heart turned faint and sick within her.

Well it might. And, to make matters worse, bearing down right upon them,
but a few paces distant, came Sir Francis Levison.

Would he recognize her?

Standing blowing in the wind at the turning of the road were Miss
Carlyle and Lady Isabel Vane. The latter, confused and perplexed, was
picking up the remnant of her damaged spectacles; the former, little
less perplexed, gazed at the face which struck upon her memory as being
so familiar. Her attention, however, was called off the face to the
apparition of Sir Francis Levison.

He was close upon them, Mr. Drake and the other comrade being with him,
and some tagrag in attendance, as usual. It was the first time he and
Miss Carlyle had met face to face. She bent her condemning brow, haughty
in its bitter scorn, full upon him, for it was not in the nature of Miss
Carlyle to conceal her sentiments, especially when they were rather of
the strongest. Sir Francis, when he arrived opposite, raised his hat to
her. Whether it was done in courtesy, in confused unconsciousness, or in
mockery, cannot be told. Miss Carlyle assumed it to have been the
latter, and her lips, in their anger grew almost as pale as those of the
unhappy woman who was cowering behind her.

“Did you intend that insult for me, Francis Levison?”

“As you please to take it,” returned he, calling up insolence to his
aid.

“You dare to lift off your hat to me! Have you forgotten that I am Miss
Carlyle?”

“It would be difficult for you to be forgotten, once seen.”

Now this answer was given in mockery; his tone and manner were redolent
of it, insolently so. The two gentlemen looked on in discomfort,
wondering what it meant; Lady Isabel hid her face as best she could,
terrified to death lest his eyes should fall on it: while the
spectators, several of whom had collected now, listened with interest,
especially some farm laborers of Squire Pinner’s who had happened to be
passing.

“You contemptible worm!” cried Miss Carlyle, “do you think you can
outrage me with impunity as you, by your presence in it, are outraging
West Lynne? Out upon you for a bold, bad man!”

Now Miss Corny, in so speaking, had certainly no thought of present and
immediate punishment for the gentleman; but it appeared that the mob
around had. The motion was commented by those stout-shouldered laborers.
Whether excited thereto by the words of Miss Carlyle--who, whatever may
have been her faults of manner, held the respect of the neighborhood,
and was looked up to only in a less degree than her brother; whether
Squire Pinner, their master, had let drop, in their hearing, a word of
the ducking he had hinted at, when at East Lynne, or whether their own
feelings alone spurred them on, was best known to the men themselves.
Certain it is, that the ominous sound of “Duck him,” was breathed forth
by a voice, and it was caught up and echoed around.

“Duck him! Duck him! The pond be close at hand. Let’s give him a taste
of his deservings! What do he the scum, turn himself up at West Lynne
for, bearding Mr. Carlyle? What have he done with Lady Isabel? Him put
up for others at West Lynne! West Lynne’s respectable, it don’t want
him; it have got a better man; it won’t have a villain. Now, lads!”

His face turned white, and he trembled in his shoes--worthless men are
frequently cowards. Lady Isabel trembled in hers; and well she might,
hearing that one allusion. They set upon him, twenty pairs of hands at
least, strong, rough, determined hands; not to speak of the tagrag’s
help, who went in with cuffs, and kicks, and pokes, and taunts, and
cheers, and a demoniac dance.

They dragged him through a gap in the hedge, a gap that no baby could
have got through in a cool moment; but most of us know the difference
between coolness and excitement. The hedge was extensively damaged, but
Justice Hare, to whom it belonged, would forgive that. Mr. Drake and the
lawyer--for the other was a lawyer--were utterly powerless to stop the
catastrophe. “If they didn’t mind their own business, and keep
themselves clear, they’d get served the same,” was the promise held out
in reply to their remonstrances; and the lawyer, who was short and fat,
and could not have knocked a man down, had it been to save his life,
backed out of the melee, and contented himself with issuing forth
confused threatenings of the terrors of the law. Miss Carlyle stood her
ground majestically, and looked on with a grim countenance. Had she
interfered for his protection, she could not have been heard; and if she
could have been, there’s no knowing whether she would have done it.

On, to the brink of the pond--a green, dank, dark, slimy sour, stinking
pond. His coat-tails were gone by this time, and sundry rents and
damages appeared in--in another useful garment. One pulled him, another
pushed him, a third shook him by the collar, half a dozen buffeted him,
and all abused him.

“In with him, boys!”

“Mercy! Mercy!” shrieked the victim, his knees bending and his teeth
chattering--“a little mercy for the love of Heaven!”

“Heaven! Much he knows of Heaven!”

A souse, a splash, a wild cry, a gurgle, and Sir Francis Levison was
floundering in the water, its green poison, not to mention its adders
and toads and frogs, going down his throat by bucketfuls. A hoarse,
derisive laugh, and a hip, hip, hurrah! broke from the actors; while the
juvenile ragtag, in wild delight, joined their hands round the pool, and
danced the demon’s dance, like so many red Indians. They had never had
such a play acted for them before.

Out of the pea-soup before he was quite dead, quite senseless. Of all
drowned rats, he looked the worst, as he stood there with his white,
rueful face, his shivery limbs, and his dilapidated garments, shaking
the wet off him. The laborers, their duty done, walked coolly away; the
tagrag withdrew to a safe distance, waiting for what might come next;
and Miss Carlyle moved away also. Not more shivery was that wretched man
than Lady Isabel, as she walked by her side. A sorry figure to cut,
that, for her once chosen cavalier. What did she think of his beauty
now? I know what she thought of her past folly.

Miss Carlyle never spoke a word. She sailed on, with her head up, though
it was turned occasionally to look at the face of Madame Vine, at the
deep distressing blush which this gaze called into her cheeks. “It’s
very odd,” thought Miss Corny. “The likeness, especially in the eyes,
is--Where are you going, madame?”

They were passing a spectacle shop, and Madame Vine had halted at the
door, one foot on its step. “I must have my glasses to be mended, if you
please.”

Miss Carlyle followed her in. She pointed out what she wanted done to
the old glasses, and said she would buy a pair of new ones to wear while
the job was about. The man had no blue ones, no green; plenty of white.
One ugly, old pair of green things he had, with tortoise-shell rims,
left by some stranger, ages and ages ago, to be mended, and never called
for again. This very pair of ugly old green things was chosen by Lady
Isabel. She put them on, there and then, Miss Carlyle’s eyes searching
her face inquisitively all the time.

“Why do you wear glasses?” began Miss Corny, abruptly as soon as they
were indoors.

Another deep flush, and an imperceptible hesitation.

“My eyes are not strong.”

“They look as strong as eyes can look. But why wear colored glasses?
White ones would answer every purpose, I should suppose.”

“I am accustomed to colored ones. I should not like white ones now.”

Miss Corny paused.

“What is your Christian name, madame?” began she, again.

“Jane,” replied madame, popping out an unflinching story in her alarm.

“Here! Here! What’s up? What’s this?”

It was a crowd in the street, and rather a noisy one. Miss Corny flew to
the window, Lady Isabel in her wake. Two crowds, it may almost be said;
for, from the opposite way, the scarlet-and-purple party--as Mr.
Carlyle’s was called, in allusion to his colors--came in view. Quite a
collection of gentlemen--Mr. Carlyle and Lord Mount Severn heading them.

What could it mean, the mob they were encountering? The yellow party,
doubtless, but in a disreputable condition. Who or what was that object
in advance of it, supported between Drake and the lawyer, and looking
like a drowned rat, hair hanging, legs tottering, cheeks shaking, and
clothes in tatters, while the mob, behind, had swollen to the length of
the street, and was keeping up a perpetual fire of derisive shouts,
groans, and hisses. The scarlet-and-purple halted in consternation, and
Lord Mount Severn, whose sight was not as good as it had been twenty
years back, stuck his pendent eye glasses astride on the bridge of his
nose.

Sir Francis Levison? Could it be? Yes, it actually was! What on earth
had put him into that state? Mr. Carlyle’s lip curled; he continued his
way and drew the peer with him.

“What the deuce is a-gate now?” called out the followers of Mr. Carlyle.
“That’s Levison! Has he been in a railway smash, and got drenched by the
engine?”

“He has been ducked!” grinned the yellows, in answer. “They have been
and ducked him in the rush pool on Mr. Justice Hare’s land.”

The soaked and miserable man increased his speed as much as his cold and
trembling legs would allow him; he would have borne on without legs at
all, rather than remain under the enemy’s gaze. The enemy loftily
continued their way, their heads in the air, and scorning further
notice, all, save young Lord Vane. He hovered round the ranks of the
unwashed, and looked vastly inclined to enter upon an Indian jig, on his
own account.

“What a thundering ass I was to try it on at West Lynne!” was the
enraged comment of the sufferer.

Miss Carlyle laid her hand upon the shrinking arm of her pale companion.

“You see him--my brother Archibald?”

“I see him,” faltered Lady Isabel.

“And you see him, that pitiful outcast, who is too contemptible to live?
Look at the two, and contrast them. Look well.”

“Yes!” was the gaping answer.

“The woman who called him, that noble man, husband, quitted him for the
other! Did she come to repentance, think you?”

You may wonder that the submerged gentleman should be walking through
the streets, on his way to his quarters, the Raven Inn--for he had been
ejected from the Buck’s Head--but he could not help himself. As he was
dripping and swearing on the brink of the pond, wondering how he should
get to the Raven, an empty fly drove past, and Mr. Drake immediately
stopped it; but when the driver saw that he was expected to convey not
only a passenger, but a tolerable quantity of water as well, and that
the passenger, moreover, was Sir Francis Levison, he refused the job.
His fly was fresh lined with red velvet, and he “weren’t a going to have
it spoilt,” he called out, as he whipped his horse and drove away,
leaving the three in wrathful despair. Sir Francis wanted another
conveyance procured; his friends urged that if he waited for that he
might catch his death, and that the shortest way would be to hasten to
the inn on foot. He objected. But his jaws were chattering, his limbs
were quaking, so they seized him between them, and made off, but never
bargained for the meeting of Mr. Carlyle and his party. Francis Levison
would have stopped in the pond, of his own accord, head downward, rather
than face them.

Miss Carlyle went that day to dine at East Lynne, walking back with Mrs.
Carlyle, Madame Vine and Lucy. Lord Vane found them out, and returned at
the same time; of course East Lynne was the headquarters of himself and
his father. He was in the seventh heaven, and had been ever since the
encounter with the yellows.

“You’d have gone into laughing convulsions, Lucy had you seen the
drowned cur. I’d give all my tin for six months to come to have a
photograph of him as he looked then!”

Lucy laughed in glee; she was unconscious, poor child, how deeply the
“drowned cur” had injured her.

When Miss Carlyle was in her dressing-room taking her things off--the
room where once had slept Richard Hare--she rang for Joyce. These two
rooms were still kept for Miss Carlyle--for she did sometimes visit them
for a few days--and were distinguished by her name--“Miss Carlyle’s
rooms.”

“A fine row we have had in the town, Joyce, this afternoon.”

“I have heard of it, ma’am. Served him right, if they had let him drown!
Bill White, Squire Pinner’s plowman, called in here and told us the
news. He’d have burst with it, if he hadn’t, I expect; I never saw a
chap so excited. Peter cried.”

“Cried?” echoed Miss Carlyle.

“Well, ma’am, you know he was very fond of Lady Isabel, was Peter, and
somehow his feelings overcame him. He said he had not heard anything to
please him so much for many a day; and with that he burst out crying,
and gave Bill White half a crown out of his pocket. Bill White said it
was he who held one leg when they soused him in. Afy saw it--if you’ll
excuse me mentioning her name to you, ma’am, for I know you don’t think
well of her--and when she got in here, she fell into hysterics.”

“How did she see it?” snapped Miss Carlyle, her equanimity upset by the
sound of the name. “I didn’t see her, and I was present.”

“She was coming here with a message from Mrs. Latimer to the governess.”

“What did she go into hysterics for?” again snapped Miss Carlyle.

“It upset her so, she said,” returned Joyce.

“It wouldn’t have done her harm had they ducked her too,” was the angry
response.

Joyce was silent. To contradict Miss Corny brought triumph to nobody.
And she was conscious, in her innermost heart, that Afy merited a little
wholesome correction, not perhaps to the extent of a ducking.

“Joyce,” resumed Miss Carlyle, abruptly changing the subject, “who does
the governess put you in mind of?”

“Ma’am?” repeated Joyce, in some surprise, as it appeared. “The
governess? Do you mean Madame Vine?”

“Do I mean you, or do I mean me? Are we governesses?” irascibly cried
Miss Corny. “Who should I mean, but Madame Vine?”

She turned herself round from the looking-glass, and gazed full in
Joyce’s face, waiting for the answer. Joyce lowered her voice as she
gave it.

“There are times when she puts me in mind of my late lady both in her
face and manner. But I have never said so, ma’am; for you know Lady
Isabel’s name must be an interdicted one in this house.”

“Have you seen her without her glasses?”

“No; never,” said Joyce.

“I did to-day,” returned Miss Carlyle. “And I can tell you, Joyce, that
I was confounded at the likeness. It is an extraordinary likeness. One
would think it was a ghost of Lady Isabel Vane come into the world
again.”

That evening after dinner, Miss Carlyle and Lord Mount Severn sat side
by side on the same sofa, coffee cups in hand. Miss Carlyle turned to
the earl.

“Was it a positively ascertained fact that Lady Isabel died?”

The earl stared with all his might; he thought it the strangest question
that ever was asked him. “I scarcely understand you, Miss Carlyle. Died?
Certainly she died.”

“When the result of the accident was communicated to you, you made
inquiry yourself into its truth, its details, I believe?”

“It was my duty to do so. There was no one else to undertake it.”

“Did you ascertain positively, beyond all doubt, that she did die?”

“Of a surety I did. She died in the course of the same night. Terribly
injured she was.”

A pause. Miss Carlyle was ruminating. But she returned to the charge, as
if difficult to be convinced.

“You deem that there could be no possibility of an error? You are sure
that she is dead?”

“I am as sure that she is dead as that we are living,” decisively
replied the earl: and he spoke but according to his belief. “Wherefore
should you be inquiring this?”

“A thought came over me--only to-day--to wonder whether she was really
dead.”

“Had any error occurred at that time, any false report of her death, I
should soon have found it out by her drawing the annuity I settled upon
her. It has never been drawn since. Besides, she would have written to
me, as agreed upon. No, poor thing, she is gone beyond all doubt, and
has taken her sins with her.”

Convincing proofs; and Miss Carlyle lent her ear to them.

The following morning while Madame Vine was at breakfast, Mr. Carlyle
entered.

“Do you admit intruders here Madame Vine?” cried he, with his sweet
smile, and attractive manner.

She arose; her face burning, her heart throbbing.

“Keep your seat, pray; I have but a moment to stay,” said Mr. Carlyle.
“I have come to ask you how William seems?”

“There was no difference,” she murmured, and then she took courage and
spoke more openly. “I understood you to say the other night, sir, that
he should have further advice.”

“Ay; I wish him to go over to Lynneborough, to Dr. Martin; the drive, I
think, will do him good,” replied Mr. Carlyle. “And I would like you to
accompany him, if you do not mind the trouble. You can have the pony
carriage, it will be better to go in that than boxed up in the railway
carriage. You can remind Dr. Martin that the child’s constitution is
precisely what his mother’s was,” continued Mr. Carlyle, a tinge
lightening his face. “It may be a guide to his treatment; he said
himself it was, when he attended him for an illness a year or two ago.”

“Yes, sir.”

He crossed the hall on his entrance to the breakfast-room. She tore
upstairs to her chamber, and sank down in an agony of tears and despair.
Oh, to love him as she did now! To yearn after his affection with this
passionate, jealous longing, and to know that they were separated for
ever and ever; that she was worse to him than nothing!

Softly, my lady. This is not bearing your cross.



CHAPTER XXXVI.

APPEARANCE OF A RUSSIAN BEAR AT WEST LYNNE.

Mr. Carlyle harangued the populace from the balcony of the Buck’s Head,
a substantial old House, renowned in the days of posting, now past and
gone. Its balcony was an old-fashioned, roomy balcony, painted green,
where there was plenty of space for his friends to congregate. He was a
persuasive orator, winning his way to ears and hearts; but had he spoken
with plums in his mouth, and a stammer on his tongue, and a break-down
at every sentence, the uproarious applause and shouts would be equally
rife. Mr. Carlyle was intensely popular in West Lynne, setting aside his
candidateship and his oratory; and West Lynne made common cause against
Sir Francis Levison.

Sir Francis Levison harangued the mob from the Raven, but in a more
ignoble manner. For the Raven possessed no balcony, and he was fain to
let himself down with a stride and a jump from the first floor window on
the top of the bow-window of the parlor, and stand there. The Raven,
though a comfortable, old established, and respectable inn, could boast
only of casements for its upper windows, and they are not convenient to
deliver speeches from. He was wont, therefore to take his seat on the
bow-window, and, that was not altogether convenient either, for it was
but narrow, and he hardly dared move an arm or a leg for fear of
pitching over on the upturned faces. Mr. Drake let himself down also, to
support him on one side, and the first day, the lawyer supported him on
the other. For the first day only; for that worthy, being not as high as
Sir Francis Levison’s or Mr. Drake’s shoulder, and about five times
their breadth, had those two been rolled into one, experienced a slight
difficulty in getting back again. It was accomplished at last, Sir
Francis pulling him up, and Mr. Drake hoisting him from behind, just as
a ladder was being brought out to the rescue amidst shouts of laughter.
The stout man wiped the perspiration from his face when he was landed in
safety, and recorded a mental vow never to descend from a window again.
After that the candidate and his friend shared the shelf between them.
The lawyer’s name was Rubiny, ill-naturedly supposed to be a corruption
of Reuben.

They stood there one afternoon, Sir Francis’ eloquence in full play, but
he was a shocking speaker, and the crowd, laughing, hissing, groaning
and applauding, blocking up the road. Sir Francis could not complain of
one thing--that he got no audience; for it was the pleasure of West
Lynne extensively to support him in that respect--a few to cheer, a
great many to jeer and hiss. Remarkably dense was the mob on this
afternoon, for Mr. Carlyle had just concluded his address from the
Buck’s Head, and the crowd who had been listening to him came rushing up
to swell the ranks of the other crowd. They were elbowing, and pushing,
and treading on each other’s heels, when an open barouche drove suddenly
up to scatter them. Its horses wore scarlet and purple rosettes; and one
lady, a very pretty one, sat inside of it--Mrs. Carlyle.

But the crowd could not be so easily scattered; it was too thick; the
carriage could advance but at a snail’s pace, and now and then came to a
standstill also, till the confusion should be subsided; for where was
the use of wasting words? He did not bow to Barbara; he remembered the
result of his having done so to Miss Carlyle, and the little interlude
of the pond had washed most of his impudence out of him. He remained at
his post, not looking at Barbara, not looking at anything in particular,
waiting till the interruption should have passed.

Barbara, under cover of her dainty lace parasol, turned her eyes upon
him. At that very moment he raised his right hand, slightly shook his
head back, and tossed his hair off his brow. His hand, ungloved, was
white and delicate as a lady’s, and his rich diamond ring gleamed in the
sun. The pink flush on Barbara’s cheek deepened to a crimson damask, and
her brow contracted with a remembrance of pain.

“The very action Richard described! The action he was always using at
East Lynne! I believe from my heart that the man is Thorn; that Richard
was laboring under some mistake when he said he knew Sir Francis
Levison.”

She let her hands fall upon her knee as she spoke, heedless of the
candidate, heedless of the crowd, heedless of all save her own troubled
thoughts. A hundred respected salutations were offered her; she answered
them mechanically; a shout was raised, “Long live Carlyle! Carlyle
forever!” Barbara bowed her pretty head on either side, and the carriage
at length got on.

The parting of the crowd brought Mr. Dill, who had come to listen for
once to the speech of the second man, and Mr. Ebenezer James close to
each other. Mr. Ebenezer James was one who, for the last twelve or
fifteen years, had been trying his hand at many trades. And had not come
out particularly well at any. A rolling stone gathers no moss. First, he
had been clerk to Mr. Carlyle; next, he had been seduced into joining
the corps of the Theatre Royal at Lynneborough; then he turned
auctioneer; then travelling in the oil and color line; then a parson,
the urgent pastor of some new sect; then omnibus driver; then collector
of the water rate; and now he was clerk again, not in Mr. Carlyle’s
office, but in that of Ball & Treadman, other solicitors of West Lynne.
A good-humored, good-natured, free-of-mannered, idle chap was Mr.
Ebenezer James, and that was the worst that could be urged against him,
save that he was sometimes out at pocket and out at elbows. His father
was a respectable man, and had made money in trade, but he had married a
second wife, had a second family, and his eldest son did not come in for
much of the paternal money, though he did for a large share of the
paternal anger.

“Well, Ebenezer, and how goes the world with you?” cried Mr. Dill by way
of salutation.

“Jogging on. It never gets to a trot.”

“Didn’t I see you turning into your father’s house yesterday?”

“I pretty soon turned out of it again. I’m like the monkey when I
venture there--get more kicks than halfpence. Hush, old gentleman! We
interrupt the eloquence.”

Of course “the eloquence” applied to Sir Francis Levison, and they set
themselves to listen--Mr. Dill with a serious face, Mr. Ebenezer with a
grinning one. But soon a jostle and movement carried them to the outside
of the crowd, out of sight of the speaker, though not entirely out of
hearing. By these means they had a view of the street, and discerned
something advancing to them, which they took for a Russian bear on its
hind legs.

“I’ll--be--blest,” uttered Mr. Ebenezer James, after a prolonged pause
of staring consternation, “if I don’t believe it’s Bethel!”

“Bethel!” repeated Mr. Dill, gazing at the approaching figure. “What has
he been doing to himself?”

Mr. Otway Bethel it was, just arrived from foreign parts in his
travelling costume--something shaggy, terminating all over with tails. A
wild object he looked; and Mr. Dill rather backed as he drew near, as if
fearing he was a real animal which might bite him.

“What’s your name?” cried he.

“It used to be Bethel,” replied the wild man, holding out his hand to
Mr. Dill. “So you are in the world, James, and kicking yet?”

“And hope to kick in it for some time to come,” replied Mr. James.
“Where did you hail from last? A settlement at the North Pole?”

“Didn’t get quite as far. What’s the row here?”

“When did you arrive, Mr. Otway?” inquired old Dill.

“Now. Four o’clock train. I say, what’s up?”

“An election; that’s all,” said Mr. Ebenezer. “Attley went and kicked
the bucket.”

“I don’t ask about the election; I heard all that at the railway
station,” returned Otway Bethel, impatiently. “What’s this?” waving his
hand at the crowd.

“One of the candidates wasting breath and words--Levison.”

“I say,” repeated Otway Bethel, looking at Mr. Dill, “wasn’t it rather--
rather of the ratherest, for him to oppose Carlyle?”

“Infamous! Contemptible!” was the old gentleman’s excited answer. “But
he’ll get his deserts yet, Mr. Otway; they have already begun. He was
treated to a ducking yesterday in Justice Hare’s green pond.”

“And he did look a miserable devil when he came out, trailing through
the streets,” added Mr. Ebenezer, while Otway Bethel burst into a laugh.
“He was smothered into some hot blankets at the Raven, and a pint of
burnt brandy put into him. He seems all right to-day.”

“Will he go in and win?”

“Chut! Win against Carlyle! He has not the ghost of a chance; and
government--if it is the government who put him on--must be a pack of
fools; they can’t know the influence of Carlyle. Bethel, is that style
of costume the fashion where you come from?”

“For slender pockets. I’ll sell ‘em to you now, James, at half price.
Let’s get a look at this Levison, though. I have never seen the fellow.”

Another interruption of the crowd, even as he spoke, caused by the
railway van bringing up some luggage. They contrived, in the confusion,
to push themselves to the front, not far from Sir Francis. Otway Bethel
stared at him in unqualified amazement.

“Why, what brings him here? What is he doing?”

“Who?”

He pointed his finger. “The one with the white handkerchief in his
hand.”

“That is Sir Francis.”

“No!” uttered Bethel, a whole world of astounded meaning in his tone.
“By Jove! He Sir Francis Levison?”

At that moment their eyes met, Francis Levison’s and Otway Bethel’s.
Otway Bethel raised his shaggy hat in salutation, and Sir Francis
appeared completely scared. Only for an instant did he lose his presence
of mind. The next, his eyeglass was stuck in his eye and turned on Mr.
Bethel, with a hard, haughty stare; as much as to say, who are you,
fellow, that you should take such a liberty? But his cheeks and lips
were growing as white as marble.

“Do you know Levison, Mr. Otway?” inquired old Dill.

“A little. Once.”

“When he was not Levison, but somebody else,” laughed Mr. Ebenezer
James. “Eh, Bethel?”

Bethel turned as reproving a stare on Mr. Ebenezer as the baronet had
just turned on him. “What do you mean, pray? Mind your own business.”

A nod to old Dill, and he turned off and disappeared, taking no further
notice of James. The old gentleman questioned the latter.

“What was that little bit of by-play, Mr. Ebenezer?”

“Nothing much,” laughed Mr. Ebenezer. “Only he,” nodding towards Sir
Francis, “was not always the great man he is now.”

“Ah!”

“I have held my tongue about it, for it’s no affair of mine, but I don’t
mind letting you into the secret. Would you believe that that grand
baronet there, would-be member for West Lynne, used, years ago, to dodge
about Abbey Wood, mad after Afy Hallijohn? He didn’t call himself
Levison then.”

Mr. Dill felt as if a hundred pins and needles were pricking at his
memory, for there rose up in it certain doubts and troubles touching
Richard Hare and one Thorn. He laid his eager hand upon the other’s arm.
“Ebenezer James, what did he call himself?”

“Thorn. A dandy, then, as he is now. He used to come galloping down the
Swainson road at dusk, tie his horse in the woods, and monopolize Miss
Afy.”

“How do you know this?”

“Because I’ve seen it a dozen times. I was spooney after Afy myself in
those days, and went down there a good deal in an evening. If it hadn’t
been for him, and--perhaps that murdering villain, Dick Hare, Afy would
have listened to me. Not that she cared for Dick; but, you see, they
were gentlemen. I am thankful to the stars, now, for my luck in escaping
her. With her for a wife, I should have been in a pickle always; as it
is, I do get out of it once in a while.”

“Did you know then that he was Francis Levison?”

“Not I. He called himself Thorn, I tell you. When he came down to offer
himself for member, and oppose Carlyle, I was thunderstruck--like Bethel
was a minute ago. Ho ho, said I, so Thorn’s defunct, and Levison has
risen.”

“What had Otway Bethel to do with him?”

“Nothing--that I know of. Only Bethel was fond of the woods also--after
other game than Afy, though--and may have seen Thorn often. You saw that
he recognized him.”

“Thorn--Levison, I mean--did not appear to like the recognition,” said
Mr. Dill.

“Who would, in his position?” laughed Ebenezer James. “I don’t like to
be reminded of many a wild scrape of my past life, in my poor station;
and what would it be for Levison, were it to come out that he once
called himself Thorn, and came running after Miss Afy Hallijohn?”

“Why did he call himself Thorn? Why disguise his own name?”

“Not knowing, can’t say. Is his name Levison, or is it Thorn?”

“Nonsense, Mr. Ebenezer!”

Mr. Dill, bursting with the strange news he had heard, endeavored to
force his way through the crowd, that he might communicate it to Mr.
Carlyle. The crowd was, however, too dense for him, and he had to wait
the opportunity of escaping with what patience he might. When it came he
made his way to the office, and entered Mr. Carlyle’s private room. That
gentleman was seated at his desk, signing letters.

“Why, Dill, you are out of breath!”

“Well I may be! Mr. Archibald, I have been listening to the most
extraordinary statement. I have found out about Thorn. Who do you think
he is?”

Mr. Carlyle put down his pen and looked full in the old man’s face; he
had never seen him so excited.

“It’s that man, Levison.”

“I do not understand you,” said Mr. Carlyle. He did not. It was as good
as Hebrew to him. “The Levison of to-day, your opponent, is the Thorn
who went after Afy Hallijohn. It is so, Mr. Archibald.”

“It cannot be!” slowly uttered Mr. Carlyle, thought upon thought working
havoc with his brain. “Where did you hear this?”

Mr. Dill told his tale. Otway Bethel’s recognition of him; Sir Francis
Levison’s scared paleness, for he had noticed that; Mr. Ebenezer’s
revelation. The point in it all, that finally settled most upon Mr.
Carlyle, was the thought that if Levison were indeed the man, he could
not be instrumental in bringing him to justice.

“Bethel has denied to me more than once that he knew Thorn, or was aware
of such a man being in existence,” observed Mr. Carlyle.

“He must have had a purpose in it, then,” returned Mr. Dill. “They knew
each other to-day. Levison recognized him for certain, although he
carried it off with a high hand, pretending not.”

“And it was not as Levison, but as Thorn, that Bethel recognized him?”

“There’s little doubt of that. He did not mention the name, Thorn; but
he was evidently struck with astonishment at hearing that it was
Levison. If they have not some secret between them, Mr. Archibald, I’ll
never believe my own eyes again.”

“Mrs. Hare’s opinion is that Bethel had to do with the murder,” said Mr.
Carlyle, in a low tone.

“If that is their secret, Bethel knows the murderer, rely upon it,” was
the answer. “Mr. Archibald, it seems to me that now or never is the time
to clear up Richard.”

“Aye; but how set about it?” responded Mr. Carlyle.

Meanwhile Barbara had proceeded home in her carriage, her brain as busy
as Mr. Carlyle’s, perhaps more troubled. Her springing lightly and
hastily out the moment it stopped, disdaining the footman’s arm, her
compressed lips and absent countenance, proved that her resolution was
set upon some plan of action. William and Madame Vine met her in the
hall.

“We have seen Dr. Martin, Mrs. Carlyle.”

“And he says--”

“I cannot stay to hear now, William. I will see you later, madame.”

She ran upstairs to her dressing-room, Madame Vine following her with
her reproachful eyes. “Why should she care?” thought madame. “It is not
her child.”

Throwing her parasol on one chair, her gloves on another, down sat
Barbara to her writing-table. “I will write to him; I will have him
here, if it be but for an hour!” she passionately exclaimed. “This shall
be, so far, cleared up. I am as sure as sure can be that it is that man.
The very action Richard described! And there was the diamond ring! For
better, for worse, I will send for him; but it will not be for worse if
God is with us.”

She dashed off a letter, getting up ere she had well begun it, to order
her carriage round again. She would trust none but herself to put it in
the post.

“MY DEAR MR. SMITH--We want you here. Something has arisen that it is
necessary to see you upon. You can get here by Saturday. Be in these
grounds, near the covered walk, that evening at dusk. Ever yours,

“B.”

And the letter was addressed to Mr. Smith, of some street in Liverpool,
the address furnished by Richard. Very cautious to see, was Barbara. She
even put “Mr. Smith,” inside the letter.

“Now stop,” cried Barbara to herself, as she was folding it. “I ought to
send him a five pound note, for he may not have the means to come; and I
don’t think I have one of that amount in the house.”

She looked in her secretaire. Not a single five-pound note. Out of the
room she ran, meeting Joyce, who was coming along the corridor.

“Do you happen to have a five-pound note, Joyce?”

“No, ma’am, not by me.”

“I dare say Madame Vine has. I paid her last week, and there were two
five-pound notes amongst it.” And away went Barbara to the gray parlor.

“Could you lend me a five-pound note, Madame Vine? I have occasion to
enclose one in a letter, and find I do not possess one.”

Madame Vine went to her room to get it. Barbara waited. She asked
William what Dr. Martin said.

“He tried my chest with--oh, I forget what they call it--and he said I
must be a brave boy and take my cod-liver oil well, and port wine, and
everything I liked that was good. And he said he should be at West Lynne
next Wednesday afternoon; and I am to go there, and he would call in and
see me.”

“Where are you to meet him?”

“He said, either at papa’s office or at Aunt Cornelia’s, as we might
decide. Madame fixed it for papa’s office, for she thought he might like
to see Dr. Martin. I say, mamma.”

“What?” asked Barbara.

“Madame Vine has been crying ever since. Why should she?”

“I’m sure I don’t know. Crying!”

“Yes but she wipes her eyes under her spectacles, and thinks I don’t see
her. I know I am very ill, but why should she cry for that?”

“Nonsense, William. Who told you you were very ill?”

“Nobody. I suppose I am,” he thoughtfully added. “If Joyce or Lucy
cried, now, there’d be some sense in it, for they have known me all my
life.”

“You are so apt to fancy things! You are always doing it. It is not
likely that madame would be crying because you are ill.”

Madame came in with the bank-note. Barbara thanked her, ran upstairs,
and in another minute or two was in her carriage.

She was back again, and dressing when the gentlemen returned to dinner.
Mr. Carlyle came upstairs. Barbara, like most persons who do things
without reflection, having had time to cool down from her ardor, was
doubting whether she had acted wisely in sending so precipitately for
Richard. She carried her doubt and care to her husband, her sure refuge
in perplexity.

“Archibald, I fear I have done a foolish thing.”

He laughed. “I fear we all do that at times, Barbara. What is it?”

He had seated himself in one of Barbara’s favorite low chairs, and she
stood before him, leaning on his shoulder, her face a little behind, so
that he could not see it. In her delicacy she would not look at him
while she spoke what she was going to speak.

“It is something that I have had upon my mind for years, and I did not
like to tell it to you.”

“For years?”

“You remember that night, years ago, when Richard was at the Grove in
disguise--”

“Which night, Barbara? He came more than once.”

“The night--the night that Lady Isabel quitted East Lynne,” she
answered, not knowing how better to bring it to his recollection and she
stole her hand lovingly into his, as she said it. “Richard came back
after his departure, saying he had met Thorn in Bean lane. He described
the peculiar motion of the hand as he threw back his hair from his brow;
he spoke of the white hand and the diamond ring--how it glittered in the
moonlight. Do you remember?”

“I do.”

“The motion appeared perfectly familiar to me, for I had seen it
repeatedly used by one then staying at East Lynne. I wondered you did
not recognize it. From that night I had little doubt as to the identity
of Thorn. I believed that he and Captain Levison were one.”

A pause. “Why did you not tell me so, Barbara?”

“How could I speak of that man to you, at that time? Afterwards, when
Richard was here, that snowy winter’s day, he asserted that he knew Sir
Francis Levison; that he had seen him and Thorn together; and that put
me off the scent. But to-day, as I was passing the Raven, in the
carriage--going very slow, on account of the crowd--he was perched out
there, addressing the people, and I saw the very same action--the old
action that I had used to see.”

Barbara paused. Mr. Carlyle did not interrupt her.

“I feel a conviction that they are the same--that Richard must have been
under some unaccountable mistake in saying that he knew Francis Levison.
Besides, who but he, in evening dress, would have been likely to go
through Bean lane that night? It leads to no houses, but one wishing to
avoid the high road could get into it from these grounds, and so on to
West Lynne. He must have gone back directly on foot to West Lynne, to
get the post carriage, as was proved, and he would naturally go through
Bean lane. Forgive me, Archibald, for recalling these things to you, but
I feel so sure that Levison and Thorn are one.”

“I know they are,” he quietly said.

Barbara, in her astonishment drew back and stared him in the face--a
face of severe dignity it was just then.

“Oh, Archibald! Did you know it at that time?”

“I did not know it until this afternoon. I never suspected it.”

“I wonder you did not. I have wondered often.”

“So do I now. Dill, Ebenezer James, and Otway Bethel--who came home to-
day--were standing before the Raven, listening to his speech, when
Bethel recognized him; not as Levison--he was infinitely astonished to
find he was Levison. Levison, they say, was scared at the recognition,
and changed color. Bethel would give no explanation, and moved away; but
James told Dill that Levison was the man Thorn who used to be after Afy
Hallijohn.”

“How did you know?” breathlessly asked Barbara.

“Because Mr. Ebenezer was after Afy himself, and repeatedly saw Thorn in
the wood. Barbara, I believe now that it was Levison who killed
Hallijohn, but I should like to know what Bethel had to do with it.”

Barbara clasped her hands. “How strange it is!” she exclaimed, in some
excitement. “Mamma told me, yesterday, that she was convinced something
or other was going to turn up relative to the murder. She had had the
most distressing dream, she said, connected with Richard and Bethel, and
somebody else, whom she appeared to know in the dream, but could not
recognize or remember when she was awake. She was as ill as could be--
she does put such faith in these wretched dreams.”

“One would think you did also, Barbara, by your vehemence.”

“No, no; you know better. But it is strange--you must acknowledge that
it is--that, so sure as anything fresh happens touching the subject of
the murder, so sure is a troubled dream the forerunner of it. Mamma does
not have them at other times. Bethel denied to you that he knew Thorn.”

“I know he did.”

“And now it turns out that he does know him, and he is always in mamma’s
dreams--none more prominent in them than Bethel. But, Archibald, I am
not telling you--I have sent for Richard.”

“You have?”

“I felt sure that Levison was Thorn. I did not expect that others would
recognize him, and I acted on the impulse of the moment and wrote to
Richard, telling him to be here on Saturday evening. The letter is
gone.”

“Well, we must shelter him as best we can.”

“Archibald--dear Archibald, what can be done to clear him?” she asked,
the tears rising to her eyes.

“Being Levison, I cannot act.”

“What!” she uttered. “Not act--not act for Richard!”

He bent his clear, truthful eyes upon her.

“My dearest, how can I?”

She looked a little rebellious, and the tears fell.

“You have not considered, Barbara. Any one in the world but Levison; it
would look like my own revenge.”

“Forgive me!” she softly whispered. “You are always right. I did not
think of it in that light. But, what steps do you imagine can be taken?”

“It is a case encompassed with difficulties,” mused Mr. Carlyle. “Let us
wait until Richard comes.”

“Do you happen to have a five-pound note in your pocket, Archibald? I
had not one to send to him, and borrowed it from Madame Vine.”

He took out his pocket book and gave it to her.

In the gray parlor, in the dark twilight of the April evening--or it was
getting far into the night--were William Carlyle and Lady Isabel. It had
been a warm day, but the spring evenings were still chilly, and a fire
burned in the grate. There was no blaze, the red embers were smoldering
and half dead, but Madame Vine did not bestir herself to heed the fire.
William lay on the sofa, and she sat by, looking at him. Her glasses
were off, for the tears wetted them continually; and it was not the
recognition of the children she feared. He was tired with the drive to
Lynneborough and back, and lay with eyes shut; she thought asleep.
Presently he opened them.

“How long will it be before I die?”

The words took her utterly by surprise, and her heart went round in a
whirl. “What do you mean, William? Who said anything about dying?”

“Oh, I know. I know by the fuss there is over me. You heard what Hannah
said the other night.”

“What? When?”

“When she brought in the tea, and I was lying on the rug. I was not
asleep, though you thought I was. You told her she ought to be more
cautious, for that I might not have been asleep.”

“I don’t remember much about it,” said Lady Isabel, at her wits’ ends
how to remove the impression Hannah’s words must have created, had he
indeed heard them. “Hannah talks great nonsense sometimes.”

“She said I was going on fast to the grave.”

“Did she? Nobody attends to Hannah. She is only a foolish girl. We shall
soon have you well, when the warm weather comes.”

“Madame Vine.”

“Well, my darling?”

“Where’s the use of your trying to deceive me? Do you think I don’t see
that you are doing it? I’m not a baby; you might if it were Archibald.
What is it that’s the matter with me?”

“Nothing. Only you are not strong. When you get strong again, you will
be as well as ever.”

William shook his head in disbelief. He was precisely that sort of child
from whom it is next to impossible to disguise facts; quick, thoughtful,
observant, and advanced beyond his years. Had no words been dropped in
his hearing, he would have suspected the evil, by the care evinced for
him, but plenty of words had been dropped; hints, by which he had
gathered suspicion; broad assertions, like Hannah’s, which had too fully
supplied it; and the boy in his inmost heart, knew as well that death
was coming for him as that death itself did.

“Then, if there’s nothing the matter with me, why could not Dr. Martin
speak to you before me to-day? Why did he send me into the other room
while he told you what he thought? Ah, Madame Vine, I am as wise as
you.”

“A wise little boy, but mistaken sometimes,” she said from her aching
heart.

“It’s nothing to die, when God loves us. Lord Vane says so. He had a
little brother who died.”

“A sickly child, who was never likely to live, he had been pale and
ailing from a baby,” spoke Lady Isabel.

“Why! Did you know him?”

“I--I heard so,” she replied, turning off her thoughtless avowal in the
best manner she could.

“Don’t you know that I am going to die?”

“No.”

“Then why have you been grieving since we left Dr. Martin’s? And why do
you grieve at all for me? I am not your child.”

The words, the scene altogether, overcame her. She knelt down by the
sofa, and her tears burst forth freely. “There! You see!” cried William.

“Oh, William, I--I had a little boy of my own, and when I look at you, I
think of him, and that is why I cry.”

“I know. You have told us of him before. His name was William, too.”

She leaned over him, her breath mingling with his; she took his little
hand in hers; “William, do you know that those whom God loves best He
takes first? Were you to die, you would go to Heaven, leaving all the
cares and sorrows of the world behind you. It would have been happier
for many of us had we died in infancy.”

“Would it have been happier for you?”

“Yes,” she faintly said. “I have had more than my share of sorrow.
Sometimes I think that I cannot support it.”

“Is it not past, then? Do you have sorrow now?”

“I have it always. I shall have it till I die. Had I died a child,
William, I should have escaped it. Oh! The world is full of it! full and
full.”

“What sort of sorrow?”

“All sorts. Pain, sickness, care, trouble, sin, remorse, weariness,” she
wailed out. “I cannot enumerate the half that the world brings upon us.
When you are very, very tired, William, does it not seem a luxury, a
sweet happiness, to lie down at night in your little bed, waiting for
the bliss of sleep?”

“Yes. And I am often tired; so tired as that.”

“Then just so do we, who are tired of the world’s cares, long for the
grave in which we shall lie down to rest. We covet it, William; long for
it; but you cannot understand that.”

“We don’t lie in the grave, Madame Vine.”

“No, no, child. Our bodies lie there, to be raised again in beauty at
the last day. We go into a blessed place of rest, where sorrow and pain
cannot come. I wish--I wish,” she uttered, with a bursting heart, “that
you and I were both there!”

“Who says the world’s so sorrowful, Madame Vine? I think it is lovely,
especially when the sun’s shining on a hot day, and the butterflies come
out. You should see East Lynne on a summer’s morning, when you are
running up and down the slopes, and the trees are waving overhead, and
the sky’s blue, and the roses and flowers are all out. You would not
call it a sad world.”

“A pleasant world one might regret to leave if we were not wearied by
pain and care. But, what is this world, take it at its best, in
comparison with that other world, Heaven? I have heard of some people
who are afraid of death; they fear they shall not go to it; but when God
takes a little child there it is because He loves him. It is a land, as
Mrs. Barbauld says, where the roses are without thorns, where the
flowers are not mixed with brambles--”

“I have seen the flowers,” interrupted William, rising in his
earnestness. “They are ten times brighter than our flowers here.”

“Seen the flowers! The flowers we shall see in Heaven?” she echoed.

“I have seen a picture of them. We went to Lynneborough to see Martin’s
picture of the Last Judgment--I don’t mean Dr. Martin,” said William
interrupting himself.

“I know.”

“There were three pictures. One was called the ‘Plains of Heaven,’ and I
liked that best; and so we all did. Oh, you should have seen it! Did you
ever see them, Madame Vine?”

“No. I have heard of them.”

“There was a river, you know, and boats, beautiful gondolas they looked,
taking the redeemed to the shores of Heaven. They were shadowy figures
in white robes, myriads of them, for they reached all up in the air to
the holy city; it seemed to be in the clouds coming down from God. The
flowers grew on the banks of the river, pink, and blue, and violet, all
colors they were, but so bright and beautiful; brighter than our flowers
are.”

“Who took you to see the pictures?”

“Papa. He took me and Lucy; and Mrs. Hare went with us, and Barbara--she
was not our mamma then. But, madame”--dropping his voice--“what stupid
thing do you think Lucy asked papa?”

“What did she ask him?”

“She asked whether mamma was amongst that crowd in the white robes;
whether she was gone up to Heaven? Our mamma that was, you know, and
lots of people could hear what she said.”

Lady Isabel dropped her face upon her hands.

“What did your papa answer?” she breathed.

“I don’t know. Nothing, I think; he was talking to Barbara. But it was
very stupid of Lucy, because Wilson has told her over and over again
that she must never talk of Lady Isabel to papa. Miss Manning told her
so too. When we got home, and Wilson heard of it, she said Lucy deserved
a good shaking.”

“Why must not Lady Isabel be talked of to him?”

A moment after the question had left her lips, she wondered what
possessed her to give utterance to it.

“I’ll tell you,” said William in a whisper. “She ran away from papa.
Lucy talks nonsense about her having been kidnapped, but she knows
nothing. I do, though they don’t think it, perhaps.”

“She may be among the redeemed, some time, William, and you with her.”

He fell back on the sofa-pillow with a weary sigh, and lay in silence.
Lady Isabel shaded her face, and remained in silence also. Soon she was
aroused from it; William was in a fit of loud, sobbing tears.

“Oh, I don’t want to die! I don’t want to die! Why should I go and leave
papa and Lucy?”

She hung over him; she clasped her arms around him; her tears, her sobs,
mingling with his. She whispered to him sweet and soothing words; she
placed him so that he might sob out his grief upon her bosom; and in a
little while the paroxysm had passed.

“Hark!” exclaimed William. “What’s that?”

A sound of talking and laughter in the hall. Mr. Carlyle, Lord Mount
Severn, and his son were leaving the dining-room. They had some
committee appointed that evening at West Lynne and were departing to
keep it. As the hall-door closed upon them, Barbara came into the gray
parlor. Up rose Madame Vine, scuffled on her spectacles, and took her
seat soberly upon a chair.

“All in the dark, and your fire going out!” exclaimed Barbara, as she
hastened to stir the latter and send it into a blaze. “Who’s on the
sofa? William, you ought to be to bed!”

“Not yet, mamma. I don’t want to go yet.”

“But it is quite time that you should,” she returned, ringing the bell.
“To sit up at night is not the way to make you strong.”

William was dismissed. And then she returned to Madame Vine, and
inquired what Dr. Martin had said.

“He said the lungs were undoubtedly affected; but, like all doctors, he
would give no decisive opinion. I could see that he had formed one.”

Mrs. Carlyle looked at her. The firelight played especially upon the
spectacles, and she moved her chair into the shade.

“Dr. Martin will see him again next week; he is coming to West Lynne. I
am sure, by the tone of his voice, by his evasive manner, that he
anticipates the worst, although he would not say so in words.”

“I will take William into West Lynne myself,” observed Barbara. “The
doctor will, of course, tell me. I came in to pay my debts,” she added,
dismissing the subject of the child, and holding out a five-pound note.

Lady Isabel mechanically stretched out her hand for it.

“Whilst we are, as may be said, upon the money topic,” resumed Barbara,
in a gay tone, “will you allow me to intimate that both myself and Mr.
Carlyle very much disapprove of your making presents to the children. I
was calculating, at a rough guess the cost of the toys and things you
have bought for them, and I think it must amount to a very large portion
of the salary you have received. Pray do not continue this, Madame
Vine.”

“I have no one else to spend my money on; I love the children,” was
madame’s answer, somewhat sharply given, as if she were jealous of the
interference between her and the children, and would resent it.

“Nay, you have yourself. And if you do not require much outlay, you
have, I should suppose, a reserve fund to which to put your money. Be so
kind as to take the hint, madame, otherwise I shall be compelled more
peremptorily to forbid your generosity. It is very good of you, very
kind; but if you do not think yourself, we must for you.”

“I will buy them less,” was the murmured answer. “I must give them a
little token of love now and then.”

“That you are welcome to do--a ‘little token,’ once in a way, but not
the costly toys you have been purchasing. Have you ever had an
acquaintance with Sir Francis Levison?” continued Mrs. Carlyle, passing
with abruptness from one point to another.

An inward shiver, a burning cheek, a heartpang of wild remorse, and a
faint answer. “No.”

“I fancied from your manner when I was speaking of him the other day,
that you knew him or had known him. No compliment, you will say, to
assume an acquaintance with such a man. He is a stranger to you, then?”

Another faint reply. “Yes.”

Barbara paused.

“Do you believe in fatality, Madame Vine?”

“Yes, I do,” was the steady answer.

“I don’t,” and yet the very question proved that she did not wholly
disbelieve it. “No, I don’t,” added Barbara, stoutly, as she approached
the sofa vacated by William, and sat down upon it, thus bringing herself
opposite and near to Madame Vine. “Are you aware that it was Francis
Levison who brought the evil to this house?”

“The evil----” stammered Madame Vine.

“Yes, it was he,” she resumed, taking the hesitating answer for an
admission that the governess knew nothing, or but little, of past
events. “It was he who took Lady Isabel from her home--though perhaps
she was as willing to go as he was to take her; I do know--”

“Oh, no, no!” broke from the unguarded lips of Madame Vine. “At least--I
mean--I should think not,” she added, in confusion.

“We shall never know; and of what consequence is it? One thing is
certain, she went; another thing, almost equally certain, is, she did
not go against her will. Did you ever hear the details?”

“N--o.” Her answer would have been “Yes,” but possibly the next question
might have been, “From whom did you hear them?”

“He was staying at East Lynne. The man had been abroad; outlawed; dared
not show his face in England; and Mr. Carlyle, in his generosity,
invited him to East Lynne as a place of shelter, where he would be safe
from his creditors while something was arranged. He was a connection in
some way of Lady Isabel’s, and they repaid Mr. Carlyle, he and she, by
quitting East Lynne together.”

“Why did Mr. Carlyle give that invitation?” The words were uttered in a
spirit of remorseful wailing. Mrs. Carlyle believed they were a question
put, and she rose up haughtily against it.

“Why did he give the invitation? Did I hear you aright, Madame Vine? Did
Mr. Carlyle know he was a reprobate? And, if he had known it, was not
Isabel his wife? Could he dream of danger for her? If it pleased Mr.
Carlyle to fill East Lynne with bad men to-morrow, what would that be to
me--to my safety, to my well-being, to my love and allegiance to my
husband? What were you thinking of, madame?”

“Thinking of?” She leaned her troubled head upon her hand. Mrs. Carlyle
resumed,--

“Sitting alone in the drawing-room just now, and thinking matters over,
it did seem to me very like what people call a fatality. That man, I
say, was the one who wrought the disgrace, the trouble to Mr. Carlyle’s
family; and it is he, I have every reason now to believe, who brought a
nearly equal disgrace and trouble upon mine. Did you know--” Mrs.
Carlyle lowered her voice--“that I have a brother in evil--in shame?”

Lady Isabel did not dare to answer that she did know it. Who had there
been likely to inform her, the strange governess of the tale of Richard
Hare!

“So the world calls it--shame,” pursued Barbara, growing excited. “And
it is shame, but not as the world thinks it. The shame lies with
another, who had thrust the suffering and shame upon Richard; and that
other is Francis Levison. I will tell you the tale. It is worth the
telling.”

She could only dispose herself to listen; but she wondered what Francis
Levison had to do with Richard Hare.

“In the days long gone by, when I was little more than a child, Richard
took to going after Afy Hallijohn. You have seen the cottage in the
wood; she lived there with her father and Joyce. It was very foolish for
him; but young men will be foolish. As many more went after her, or
wanted to go after her, as she could count upon her ten fingers. Among
them, chief of them, more favored even than Richard, was one called
Thorn, by social position a gentleman. He was a stranger, and used to
ride over in secret. The night of the murder came--the dreadful murder,
when Hallijohn was shot down dead. Richard ran away; testimony was
strong against him, and the coroner’s jury brought in a verdict of
‘Wilful Murder against Richard Hare the younger.’ We never supposed but
what he was guilty--of the act, mind you, not of the intention; even
mamma, who so loved him, believed he had done it; but she believed it
was the result of accident, not design. Oh, the trouble that has been
the lot of my poor mamma!” cried Barbara, clasping her hands. “And she
had no one to sympathize with her--no one, no one! I, as I tell you, was
little more than a child; and papa, who might have done it, took part
against Richard. It went on for three or four years, the sorrow, and
there was no mitigation. At the end of that period Richard came for a
few hours to West Lynne--came in secret--and we learnt for the first
time that he was not guilty. The man who did the deed was Thorn; Richard
was not even present. The next question was, how to find Thorn. Nobody
knew anything about him--who he was, what he was, where he came from,
where he went to; and thus more years passed on. Another Thorn came to
West Lynne--an officer in her majesty’s service; and his appearance
tallied with the description Richard had given. I assumed it to be the
one; Mr. Carlyle assumed it; but, before anything could be done or even
thought of Captain Thorn was gone again.”

Barbara paused to take breath, Madame Vine sat listless enough. What was
this tale to her?

“Again years went on. The period came of Francis Levison’s sojourn at
East Lynne. Whilst I was there, Captain Thorn arrived once more, on a
visit to the Herberts. We then strove to find out points of his
antecedents, Mr. Carlyle and I, and we became nearly convinced that he
was the man. I had to come here often to see Mr. Carlyle, for mamma did
not dare to stir in the affair, papa was so violent against Richard.
Thus I often saw Francis Levison; but he was visible to scarcely any
other visitor, being at East Lynne en cachette. He intimated that he was
afraid of encountering creditors. I now begin to doubt whether that was
not a false plea; and I remember Mr. Carlyle said, at the time, that he
had no creditors in or near West Lynne.”

“Then what was his motive for shunning society--for never going out?”
 interrupted Lady Isabel. Too well she remembered that bygone time;
Francis Levison had told that the fear of his creditors kept him up so
closely; though he had once said to her they were not in the immediate
neighborhood of East Lynne.

“He had a worse fear upon him than that of creditors,” returned Mrs.
Carlyle. “Singular to say, during this visit of Captain Thorn to the
Herberts, we received an intimation from my brother that he was once
more about to venture for a few hours to West Lynne. I brought the news
to Mr. Carlyle. I had to see him and consult with him more frequently
than ever; mamma was painfully restless and anxious, and Mr. Carlyle as
eager as we were for the establishment of Richard’s innocence; for Miss
Carlyle and papa are related, consequently the disgrace may be said to
reflect on the Carlyle name.”

Back went Lady Isabel’s memory and her bitter repentance. She remembered
how jealously she had attributed these meetings between Mr. Carlyle and
Barbara to another source. Oh! Why had she suffered her mind to be so
falsely and fatally perverted?

“Richard came. It was hastily arranged that he should go privately to
Mr. Carlyle’s office, after the clerks had left for the night, be
concealed there, and have an opportunity given him of seeing Captain
Thorn. There was no difficulty, for Mr. Carlyle was transacting some
matter of business for the captain, and appointed him to be at the
office at eight o’clock. A memorable night, that, to Mr. Carlyle, for it
was the one of his wife’s elopement.”

Lady Isabel looked up with a start.

“It was, indeed. She--Lady Isabel--and Mr. Carlyle were engaged to a
dinner party; and Mr. Carlyle had to give it up, otherwise he could not
have served Richard. He is always considerate and kind, thinking of
others’ welfare--never of his own gratification. Oh, it was an anxious
night. Papa was out. I waited at home with mamma, doing what I could to
sooth her restless suspense, for there was hazard to Richard in his
night walk through West Lynne to keep the appointment; and, when it was
over, he was to come home for a short interview with mamma, who had not
seen him for several years.”

Barbara stopped, lost in thought. Not a word spoke Madame Vine. She
still wondered what this affair touching Richard Hare and Thorn could
have to do with Francis Levison.

“I watched from the window and saw them come in at the garden gate--Mr.
Carlyle and Richard--between nine and ten o’clock, I think it must have
been then. The first words they said to me were that it was not the
Captain Thorn spoken of by Richard. I felt a shock of disappointment,
which was wicked enough of me, but I had been so sure he was the man;
and to hear that he was not, seemed to throw us further back than ever.
Mr. Carlyle, on the contrary, was glad for he had taken a liking to
Captain Thorn. Well, Richard went in to mamma, and Mr. Carlyle was so
kind as to accede to her request that he would remain and pace the
garden with me. We were so afraid of papa’s coming home; he was bitter
against Richard, and would inevitably have delivered him up at once to
justice. Had he come in, Mr. Carlyle was to keep him in the garden by
the gate whilst I ran in to give notice and conceal Richard in the hall.
Richard lingered; papa did not come; and I cannot tell how long we paced
there; but I had my shawl on, and it was a lovely moonlight night.”

That unhappy listener clasped her hands to pain. The matter-of-fact
tone, the unconscious mention of commonplace trifles, proved that they
had not been pacing about in disloyalty to her, or for their own
gratification. Why had she not trusted her noble husband? Why had she
listened to that false man, as he pointed them out to her walking there
in the moonlight? Why had she given vent, in the chariot, to that burst
of passionate tears, of angry reproach? Why, oh! why had she hastened to
be revenged? But for seeing them together, she might not have done as
she did.

“Richard came forth at last, and departed, to be again an exile. Mr.
Carlyle also departed; and I remained at the gate, watching for papa. By
and by Mr. Carlyle came back again; he had got nearly home when he
remembered that he had left a parchment at our house. It seemed to be
nothing but coming back; for just after he had gone a second time,
Richard returned in a state of excitement, stating that he had seen
Thorn--Thorn the murderer, I mean--in Bean lane. For a moment I doubted
him, but not for long, and we ran after Mr. Carlyle. Richard described
Thorn’s appearance; his evening dress, his white hands and diamond ring;
more particularly he described a peculiar motion of his hand as he threw
back his hair. In that moment it flashed across me that Thorn must be
Captain Levison; the description was exact. Many and many a time since
have I wondered that the thought did not strike Mr. Carlyle.”

Lady Isabel sat with her mouth open, as if she could not take in the
sense of the words; and when it did become clear to her, she utterly
rejected it.

“Francis Levison a murderer! Oh, no! bad man as he is, he is not that.”

“Wait,” said Mrs. Carlyle. “I did not speak of this doubt--nay, this
conviction--which had come; how could I mention to Mr. Carlyle the name
of the man who did him that foul wrong? And Richard has remained so long
in exile, with the ban of guilt upon him. To-day as my carriage passed
through West Lynne, Francis Levison was haranguing the people. I saw
that very same action--the throwing back of the hair with his white
hand. I saw the selfsame diamond ring; and my conviction that he was the
same man became more firmly seated than ever.”

“It is impossible!” murmured Lady Isabel.

“Wait, I say,” said Barbara. “When Mr. Carlyle came home to dinner, I,
for the first time, mentioned this to him. It was no news--the fact was
not. This afternoon during that same harangue, Francis Levison was
recognized by two witnesses to be the man Thorn--the man who went after
Afy Hallijohn. It is horrible.”

Lady Isabel sat and looked at Mrs. Carlyle. Not yet did she believe it.

“Yes, it does appear to me as being perfectly horrible,” continued Mrs.
Carlyle. “He murdered Hallijohn--he, that bad man; and my poor brother
has suffered the odium. When Richard met him that night in Bean lane, he
was sneaking to West Lynne in search of the chaise that afterward bore
away him and his companion. Papa saw them drive away. Papa stayed out
late; and, in returning home, a chaise and four tore past, just as he
was turning in at the gate. If that miserable Lady Isabel had but known
with whom she was flying! A murderer! In addition to his other
achievements. It is a mercy for her that she is no longer alive. What
would her feelings be?”

What were they, then, as she sat there? A murderer? And she had----In
spite of her caution, of her strife for self-command, she turned of a
deadly whiteness, and a low, sharp cry of horror and despair burst from
her lips.

Mrs. Carlyle was astonished. Why should her communication have produced
this effect upon Madame Vine? A renewed suspicion that she knew more of
Francis Levison than she would acknowledge, stole over her.

“Madame Vine, what is he to you?” she asked, bending forward.

Madame Vine, doing fierce battle with herself, recovered her outward
equanimity. “I beg your pardon, Mrs. Carlyle,” she said, shivering; “I
am apt to picture things too vividly. It is, as you say, so very
horrible.”

“Is he nothing to you? Don’t you know him?”

“He is nothing to me--less than nothing. As to knowing him--I saw him
yesterday, when they put him into the pond. A man like that! I should
shudder to meet him!”

“Ay, indeed!” said Barbara, reassured. “You will understand, Madame
Vine, that this history has been given to you in confidence. I look upon
you as one of ourselves.”

There was no answer. Madame Vine sat on, with her white face. She and it
wore altogether a ghastly look.

“It tells like a fable out of a romance,” resumed Mrs. Carlyle. “Well
for him if the romance be not ended in the gibbet. Fancy what it would
be for him--Sir Francis Levison--to be hung for murder!”

“Barbara, my dearest!”

The voice was Mr. Carlyle’s, and she flew off on the wings of love. It
appeared that the gentlemen had not yet departed, and now thought they
would take coffee first.

She flew off to her idolized husband, leaving her who had once been
idolized to her loneliness. She sank down on the sofa; she threw her
arms up in her heart-sickness; she thought she would faint; she prayed
to die. It was horrible, as Barbara had called it. For that man with the
red stain upon his hand and soul she had flung away Archibald Carlyle.

If ever retribution came home to woman, it came home in that hour to
Lady Isabel.



CHAPTER XXXVII.

MR. CARLYLE INVITED TO SOME PATE DE FOIE GRAS.

A sighing morning wind swept round the domains of East Lynne, bending
the tall poplar trees in the distance, swaying the oak and elms nearer,
rustling the fine old chestnuts in the park, a melancholy, sweeping,
fitful wind. The weather had changed from brightness and warmth, and
heavy, gathering clouds seemed to be threatening rain; so, at least,
deemed one wayfarer, who was journeying on a solitary road that Saturday
night.

He was on foot. A man attired in the garb of a sailor, with black,
curling ringlets of hair, and black, curling whiskers; a prodigious pair
of whiskers, hiding his neck above his blue, turned collar, hiding
partially his face. The glazed hat, brought low upon his brows,
concealed it still more; and he wore a loose, rough pea-jacket and wide
rough trousers hitched up with a belt. Bearing steadily on, he struck
into Bean lane, a by-way already mentioned in this history, and from
thence, passing through a small, unfrequented gate, he found himself in
the grounds of East Lynne.

“Let me see,” mused he as he closed the gate behind him, and slipped the
bolt. “The covered walk? That must be near the acacia trees. Then I must
wind round to the right. I wonder if either of them will be there,
waiting for me?”

Yes. Pacing the covered walk in her bonnet and mantle, as if taking an
evening stroll--had any one encountered her, which was very unlikely,
seeing that it was the most retired spot in the grounds--was Mrs.
Carlyle.

“Oh, Richard! My poor brother!”

Locked in a yearning embrace, emotion overpowered both. Barbara sobbed
like a child. A little while, and then he put her from him, to look at
her.

“So Barbara, you are a wife now?”

“Oh, the happiest wife! Richard, sometimes I ask myself what I have done
that God should have showered down blessings so great upon me. But for
the sad trouble when I think of you, my life would be as one long
summer’s day. I have the sweetest baby--nearly a year old he is now; I
shall have another soon, God willing. And Archibald--oh, I am so happy!”

She broke suddenly off with the name “Archibald;” not even to Richard
could she speak of her intense love for, and happiness in her husband.

“How is it at the Grove?” he asked.

“Quite well; quite as usual. Mamma has been in better health lately. She
does not know of this visit, but--”

“I must see her,” interrupted Richard. “I did not see her the last time,
you remember.”

“All in good time to talk of that. How are you getting on in Liverpool?
What are you doing?”

“Don’t inquire too closely, Barbara. I have no regular work, but I get a
job at the docks, now and then, and rub on. It is seasonable help, that,
which comes to me occasionally from you. Is it from you or Carlyle?”

Barbara laughed. “How are we to distinguish? His money is mine now, and
mine is his. We don’t have separate purses, Richard; we send it to you
jointly.”

“Sometimes I have fancied it came from my mother.”

Barbara shook her head. “We have never allowed mamma to know that you
left London, or that we hold an address where we can write to you. It
would not have done.”

“Why have you summoned me here, Barbara? What has turned up?”

“Thorn has--I think. You would know him again Richard?”

“Know him!” passionately echoed Richard Hare.

“Were you aware that a contest for the membership is going on at West
Lynne?”

“I saw it in the newspapers. Carlyle against Sir Francis Levison. I say,
Barbara, how could he think of coming here to oppose Carlyle after his
doing with Lady Isabel?”

“I don’t know,” said Barbara. “I wonder that he should come here for
other reasons also. First of all, Richard, tell me how you came to know
Sir Francis Levison. You say you did know him, and that you had seen him
with Thorn.”

“So I do know him,” answered Richard. “And I saw him with Thorn twice.”

“Know him by sight only, I presume. Let me hear how you came to know
him.”

“He was pointed out to me. I saw him walk arm-in-arm with a gentleman,
and I showed them to the waterman at the cab-stand hard by. ‘Do you know
that fellow?’ I asked him, indicating Thorn, for I wanted to come at who
he really is--which I didn’t do. ‘I don’t know that one,’ the old chap
answered, ‘but the one with him is Levison the baronet. They are often
together--a couple of swells they looked.’”

“And that’s how you got to know Levison?”

“That was it,” said Richard Hare.

“Then, Richard, you and the waterman made a mess of it between you. He
pointed out the wrong one, or you did not look at the right. Thorn is
Sir Francis Levison.”

Richard stared at her with all his eyes.

“Nonsense, Barbara!”

“He is, I have never doubted it since the night you saw him in Bean
lane. The action you described, of his pushing back his hair, his white
hands, his sparkling diamond ring, could only apply in my mind to one
person--Francis Levison. On Thursday I drove by the Raven, when he was
speechifying to the people, and I noticed the selfsame action. In the
impulse of the moment I wrote off for you, that you might come and set
the doubt at rest. I need not have done it, it seems, for when Mr.
Carlyle returned home that evening, and I acquainted him with what I had
done, he told me that Thorn and Francis Levison are one and the same.
Otway Bethel recognized him that same afternoon, and so did Ebenezer
James.”

“They’d both know him,” eagerly cried Richard. “James I am positive
would, for he was skulking down to Hallijohn’s often then, and saw Thorn
a dozen times. Otway Bethel must have seen him also, though he protested
he had not. Barbara!”

The name was uttered in affright, and Richard plunged amidst the trees,
for somebody was in sight--a tall, dark form advancing from the end of
the walk. Barbara smiled. It was only Mr. Carlyle, and Richard emerged
again.

“Fears still, Richard,” Mr. Carlyle exclaimed, as he shook Richard
cordially by the hand. “So you have changed your travelling toggery.”

“I couldn’t venture here again in the old suit; it had been seen, you
said,” returned Richard. “I bought this rig-out yesterday, second-hand.
Two pounds for the lot--I think they shaved me.”

“Ringlets and all?” laughed Mr. Carlyle.

“It’s the old hair oiled and curled,” cried Dick. “The barber charged a
shilling for doing it, and cut my hair into the bargain. I told him not
to spare grease, for I liked the curls to shine--sailors always do. Mr.
Carlyle, Barbara says that Levison and that brute Thorn--the one’s as
much of a brute as the other, though--have turned out to be the same.”

“They have, Richard, as it appears. Nevertheless, it may be as well for
you to take a private view of Levison before anything is done--as you
once did by the other Thorn. It would not do to make a stir, and then
discover that there was a mistake--that he was not Thorn.”

“When can I see him?” asked Richard, eagerly.

“It must be contrived somehow. Were you to hang about the doors of the
Raven--this evening, even--you’d be sure to get the opportunity, for he
is always passing in and out. No one will know you, or think of you,
either: their heads are turned with the election.”

“I shall look odd to people’s eyes. You don’t get many sailors in West
Lynne.”

“Not odd at all. We have a Russian bear here at present, and you’ll be
nobody beside him.”

“A Russian bear!” repeated Richard, while Barbara laughed.

“Mr. Otway Bethel has returned in what is popularly supposed to be a
bear’s hide; hence the new name he is greeted with. Will it turn out,
Richard that he had anything to do with the murder?”

Richard shook his head.

“He couldn’t have, Mr. Carlyle; I have said so all along. But about
Levison. If I find him to be the man Thorn, what steps can then be
taken?”

“That’s the difficulty,” said Mr. Carlyle.

“Who will set it agoing. Who will move in it?”

“You must, Richard.”

“I!” uttered Richard Hare, in consternation. “I move in it!”

“You, yourself. Who else is there? I have been thinking it well over,
and can hit upon no one.”

“Why, won’t you take it upon yourself, Mr. Carlyle?”

“No. Being Levison,” was the answer.

“Curse him!” impetuously retorted Richard. “Curse him doubly if he be
the double villain. But why should you scruple Mr. Carlyle? Most men,
wronged as you have been, would leap at the opportunity for revenge.”

“For the crime perpetrated upon Hallijohn I would pursue him to the
scaffold. For my own wrong, no. But the remaining negative has cost me
something. Many a time, since this appearance of his at West Lynne, have
I been obliged to lay violent control upon myself, or I should have
horsewhipped him within an ace of his life.”

“If you horsewhipped him to death he would only meet his deserts.”

“I leave him to a higher retribution--to One who says, ‘Vengeance is
mine.’ I believe him to be guilty of the murder but if the uplifting of
my finger would send him to his disgraceful death, I would tie down my
hand rather than lift it, for I could not, in my own mind, separate the
man from the injury. Though I might ostensibly pursue him as the
destroyer of Hallijohn, to me he would appear ever as the destroyer of
another, and the world, always charitable, would congratulate Mr.
Carlyle upon gratifying his revenge. I stir in it not, Richard.”

“Couldn’t Barbara?” pleaded Richard.

Barbara was standing with her arm entwined within her husband’s, and Mr.
Carlyle looked down as he answered,--

“Barbara is my wife.”

It was a sufficient answer.

“Then the thing’s again at an end,” said Richard, gloomily, “and I must
give up hope of ever being cleared.”

“By no means,” said Mr. Carlyle. “The one who ought to act in this is
your father, Richard; but we know he will not. Your mother cannot. She
has neither health nor energy for it; and if she had a full supply of
both, she would not dare to brave her husband and use them in the cause.
My hands are tied; Barbara’s equally so, as part of me. There only
remains yourself.”

“And what can I do?” wailed poor Dick. “If your hands are tied, I’m sure
my whole body is, speaking in comparison; hands, and legs, and neck.
It’s in jeopardy, that is, every hour.”

“Your acting in this affair need not put it any the more in jeopardy.
You must stay in the neighborhood for a few days--”

“I dare not,” interposed Richard, in a fright. “Stay in the neighborhood
for a few days! No; that I never may.”

“Listen, Richard. You must put away these timorous fears, or else you
must make up your mind to remain under the ban for good; and, remember,
your mother’s happiness is at stake equally with yours--I could almost
say her life. Do you suppose I would advise you for danger? You used to
say there was some place, a mile or two from this, where you could
sojourn in safety.”

“So there is. But I always feel safer when I get away from it.”

“There your quarters must be, for two or three days at any rate. I have
turned matters over in my own mind, and will tell you what I think
should be done, so far as the preliminary step goes, though I do not
interfere myself.”

“Only the preliminary step! There must be a pretty many to follow it,
sir, if it’s to come to anything. Well, what is it?”

“Apply to Ball & Treadman, and get them to take it.”

They were now slowly pacing the covered walk, Barbara on her husband’s
arm, Richard by the side of Mr. Carlyle. Dick stopped when he heard the
last words.

“I don’t understand you, Mr. Carlyle. You might as well advise me to go
before the bench of magistrates at once. Ball & Treadman would walk me
off there as soon as I showed myself.”

“Nothing of the sort, Richard. I do not tell you to go openly to their
office, as another client would. What I would advise is this--make a
friend of Mr. Ball; he can be a good man and true, if he chooses; tell
the whole story to him in a private place and interview, and ask him
whether he will carry it through. If he is fully impressed with the
conviction that you are innocent, as the facts appear to warrant, he
will undertake it. Treadman need know nothing of the affair at first;
and when Ball puts things in motion, he need not know that you are here,
or where you are to be found.”

“I don’t dislike Ball,” mused Richard, “and if he would only give his
word to be true, I know he would be. The difficulty will be, who is to
get the promise from him?”

“I will,” said Mr. Carlyle. “I will so far pave the way for you. That
done, my interference is over.”

“How will he go about it, think you, if he does take it up?”

“That is his affair. I know how I should.”

“How, sir?”

“You cannot expect me to say, Richard. I might as well act for you.”

“I know. You’d go at it slap-dash, and arrest Levison offhand on the
charge.”

A smile parted Mr. Carlyle’s lips, for Dick had just guessed it. But his
countenance gave no clue by which anything could be gathered.

A thought flashed across Richard’s mind; a thought which rose up on end
even his false hair. “Mr. Carlyle,” he uttered, in an accent of horror,
“if Ball should take it up in that way against Levison, he must apply to
the bench for a warrant.”

“Well?” quietly returned Mr. Carlyle.

“And they’d send and clap me into prison. You know the warrant is always
out against me.”

“You’d never make a conjurer, Richard. I don’t pretend to say, or guess
at, what Ball’s proceedings may be. But, in applying to the bench for a
warrant against Levison--should that form part of them--is there any
necessity for him to bring you in--to say: ‘Gentlemen, Richard Hare is
within reach, ready to be taken?’ Your fears run away with your common
sense, Richard.”

“Ah, well, if you had lived with the cord around your neck this many a
year, not knowing any one hour but it might get tied the next, you’d
lose your common sense, too, at times,” humbly sighed poor Richard.
“What’s to be my first move, sir?”

“Your first move, Richard, must be to go to this place of concealment,
which you know of, and remain quiet there until Monday. On Monday, at
dusk, be here again. Meanwhile, I will see Ball. By the way, though,
before speaking to Ball, I must hear from yourself that Thorn and
Levison are one.”

“I will go down to the Raven at once,” eagerly cried Richard. “I’ll come
back here, to this walk, as soon as I have obtained sight of him.” With
the last words he turned, and was speeding off, when Barbara caught him.

“You will be so tired, Richard.”

“Tired!” echoed Richard Hare. “A hundred miles on foot would not tire me
if Thorn was at the end of them, waiting to be identified. I may not be
back for two or three hours, but I will come, and wait here till you
come out to me.”

“You must be hungry and thirsty,” returned Barbara, the tears in her
eyes. “How I wish we dare have you in, and shelter you. But I can manage
to bring some refreshments out here.”

“I don’t require it, Barbara. I left the train at the station next
before West Lynne, and dropped into a roadside public house as I walked,
and got a good supper. Let me go, dear, I am all in a fever.”

Richard departed, reached the part of West Lynne where the Raven was
situated, and was so far favored by fortune that he had not long to
wait. Scarcely had he taken up his lounge outside, when two gentlemen
came forth from it, arm-in-arm. Being the headquarters of one of the
candidates, the idlers of the place thought they could not do better
than make it their headquarters also, and the road and pavement were
never free from loitering starers and gossipers. Richard Hare, his hat
well over his eyes, and his black ringlets made the most of, only added
one to the rest.

Two gentlemen came forth, arm-in-arm. The loiterers raised a feeble
shout of “Levison forever!” Richard did not join in the shout, but his
pulses were beating, and his heart leaped up within him. The one was
Thorn; the other the gentleman he had seen with Thorn in London, pointed
out to him--as he had believed--as Sir Francis Levison.

“Which of those two is Levison?” he inquired of a man near whom he
stood.

“Don’t you know him? Him with the hat off, bowing his thanks to us, is
Levison.”

No need to inquire further. It was the Thorn of Richard’s memory. His
ungloved hand, raised to his hat, was as white as ever; more sparkling
than ever, as it flashed in the street gaslight, was the diamond ring.
By the hand and ring alone Richard would have sworn to the man, had it
been needful.

“Who is the other one?” he continued.

“Some gent as came down from London with him. His name’s Drake. Be you
yellow, sailor, or be you scarlet-and-purple?”

“I am neither. I am only a stranger, passing through the town.”

“On the tramp?”

“Tramp? No.” And Richard moved away, to make the best of his progress to
East Lynne and report to Mr. Carlyle.

Now it happened, on that windy night, that Lady Isabel, her mind
disordered, her brow fevered with its weight of care, stole out into the
grounds, after the children had left her for the night, courting any
discomfort she might meet. As if they could, even for a moment, cool the
fire within! To the solitude of this very covered walk bent she her
steps; and, not long had she paced it, when she descried some man
advancing, in the garb of a sailor. Not caring to be seen, she turned
short off amidst the trees, intending to emerge again when he had
passed. She wondered who he was, and what brought him there.

But he did not pass. He lingered in the walk, keeping her a prisoner. A
minute more and she saw him joined by Mrs. Carlyle. They met with a
loving embrace.

Embrace a strange man? Mrs. Carlyle? All the blood in Lady Isabel’s body
rushed to her brain. Was she, his second wife, false to him--more
shamelessly false than even herself had been, inasmuch as she had had
the grace to quit him and East Lynne before--as the servant girls say,
when they change their sweethearts--“taking up” with another? The
positive conviction that such was the case seized firm hold upon her
fancy; her thoughts were in a tumult, her mind was a chaos. Was there
any small corner of rejoicing in her heart that it was so? And yet, what
was it to her? It could not alter by one iota her own position--it could
not restore to her the love she had forfeited.

Coupled lovingly together, they were now sauntering up the walk, the
sailor’s arm thrown round the waist of Mrs. Carlyle. “Oh! The shameless
woman!” Ay; she could be bitter enough upon graceless doings when
enacted by another.

But, what was her astonishment when she saw Mr. Carlyle advance, and
that his appearance caused not the slightest change in their
gracelessness, for the sailor’s arm was not withdrawn. Two or three
minutes they stood--the three--talking together in a group. Then the
good-nights were exchanged, the sailor left them, and Mr. Carlyle, his
own arm lovingly pressed where the other’s had been, withdrew with his
wife. The truth--that it was Barbara’s brother--dashed to the mind of
Lady Isabel.

“Was I mad?” she cried, with a hollow laugh. “She false to him? No, no;
that fate was reserved for me alone!”

She followed them to the house--she glanced in at the windows of the
drawing-room. Lights and fire were in the room, but the curtains and
windows were not closed for the night, for it was through those windows
that Mr. Carlyle and his wife had passed in and out on their visits to
the covered walk. There they were, alone in their happiness, and she
stopped to glance in upon it. Lord Mount Severn had departed for London,
to be down again early in the week. The tea was on the table, but
Barbara had not begun to make it. She sat on the sofa, by the fire, her
face, with its ever loving gaze upon it, turned up to her husband’s. He
stood near, was talking with apparent earnestness, and looking down at
Barbara. Another moment, and a smile crossed his lips, the same sweet
smile so often bent upon her in the bygone days. Yes, they were together
in their unclouded happiness, and she--she turned away toward her own
lonely sitting-room, sick and faint at heart.

Ball & Treadman, as the brass plate on their office door intimated, were
conveyancers and attorneys at law. Mr. Treadman, who attended chiefly to
the conveyancing, lived at the office, with his family. Mr. Ball, a
bachelor, lived away; Lawyer Ball, West Lynne styled him. Not a young
bachelor; midway, he may have been between forty and fifty. A short
stout man, with a keen face and green eyes. He took up any practice that
was brought to him--dirty odds and ends that Mr. Carlyle would not have
touched with his toe--but, as that gentleman had remarked, he could be
honest and true upon occasion, and there was no doubt that he would be
so to Richard Hare. To his house, on Monday morning, early, so as to
catch him before he went out, proceeded Mr. Carlyle. A high respect for
Mr. Carlyle had Lawyer Ball, as he had had for his father before him.
Many a good turn had the Carlyles done him, if only helping him and his
partner to clients whom they were too fastidious to take up. But the
two, Mr. Carlyle and Lawyer Ball did not rank alike, though their
profession was the same; Lawyer Ball knew that they did not, and was
content to feel humble. The one was a received gentleman; the other was
a country attorney.

Lawyer Ball was at breakfast when Mr. Carlyle was shown in.

“Halloo, Carlyle! You are here betimes.”

“Sit still; don’t disturb yourself. Don’t ring; I have breakfasted.”

“The most delicious pate de foie,” urged Lawyer Ball, who was a regular
gourmand. “I get ‘em direct from Strasbourg.”

Mr. Carlyle resisted the offered dainty with a smile. “I have come on
business,” said he, “not to feast. Before I enter upon it, you will give
me your word, Ball, that my communication shall be held sacred, in the
event of your not consenting to pursue it further.”

“Certainly I will. What business is it? Some that offends the delicacy
of the Carlyle office?” he added, with a laugh. “A would-be client whom
you turn over to me in your exclusiveness?”

“It is a client for whom I cannot act. But not from the motives you
assume. It concerns that affair of Hallijohn’s,” Mr. Carlyle continued,
bending forward, and somewhat dropping his voice. “The murder.”

Lawyer Ball, who had just taken in a delicious bonne bouche of the foie
gras, bolted it whole in his surprise. “Why, that was enacted ages and
ages ago; it is past and done with,” he exclaimed.

“Not done with,” said Mr. Carlyle. “Circumstances have come to light
which tend to indicate that Richard Hare was innocent--that it was
another who committed the murder.”

“In conjunction with him?” interrupted the attorney.

“No: alone. Richard Hare had nothing whatever to do with it. He was not
even present at the time.”

“Do you believe that?” asked Lawyer Ball.

“I have believed it for years.”

“Then who did do it?”

“Richard accuses one of the name of Thorn. Many years back--ten at
least--I had a meeting with Richard Hare, and he disclosed certain facts
to me, which if correct, could not fail to prove that he was not guilty.
Since that period this impression has been gradually confirmed by little
and by little, trifle upon trifle and I would now stake my life upon his
innocence. I should long ago have moved in this matter, hit or miss,
could I have lighted upon Thorn, but he was not to be found, neither any
clue to him, and we now know that this name, Thorn, was an assumed one.”

“Is he to be found?”

“He is found. He is at West Lynne. Mark you, I don’t accuse him--I do
not offer an opinion upon his guilt--I only state my belief in Richard’s
innocence; it may have been another who did it, neither Richard nor
Thorn. It was my firm intention to take Richard’s case up, the instant I
saw my way clearly in it, and now that that time has come I am debarred
from doing so.”

“What debars you?”

“Hence I come to you,” continued Mr. Carlyle, disregarding the question.
“I come on the part of Richard Hare. I have seen him lately, and
conversed with him. I gave him my reasons for not personally acting,
advised him to apply to you, and promised to come here and open the
matter. Will you see Richard in good faith, and hear his story, giving
the understanding that he shall depart unmolested, as he came, although
you do not decide to entertain the business?”

“I’ll give it with all the pleasure in life,” freely returned the
attorney. “I’m sure I don’t want to harm poor Dick Hare, and if he can
convince me of his innocence, I’ll do my best to establish it.”

“Of his own tale you must be the judge. I do not wish to bias you. I
have stated my belief in his innocence, but I repeat that I give no
opinion myself as to who else may be guilty. Hear his account, and then
take up the affair or not, as you may think fit. He would not come to
you without your previous promise to hold him harmless; to be his
friend, in short, for the time being. When I bear this promise to him
for you, my part is done.”

“I give it to you in all honor, Carlyle. Tell Dick he has nothing to
fear from me. Quite the contrary; for if I can befriend him, I shall be
glad to do it, and I won’t spare trouble. What can possibly be your
objection to act for him?”

“My objection applies not to Richard. I would willingly appear for him,
but I will not take proceedings against the man he accuses. If that man
is to be denounced and brought before justice, I will hold neither act
nor part in it.”

The words aroused the curiosity of Lawyer Ball, and he began to turn
over all persons, likely and unlikely, in his mind, never, according to
usage, giving a suspicion to the right one. “I cannot fathom you,
Carlyle.”

“You will do that better, possibly, when Richard shall have made his
disclosure.”

“It’s--it’s--never his own father that he accuses? Justice Hare?”

“Your wits must be wool-gathering, Ball.”

“Well, so they must, to give utterance to so preposterous a notion,”
 acquiesced the attorney, pushing back his chair and throwing his
breakfast napkin on the carpet. “But I don’t know a soul you could
object to go against except the justice. What’s anybody else in West
Lynne to you, in comparison to restoring Dick Hare to his fair fame? I
give it up.”

“So do I, for the present,” said Mr. Carlyle, as he rose. “And now,
about the ways and means for your meeting this poor fellow. Where can
you see him?”

“Is he at West Lynne?”

“No. But I can get a message conveyed to him, and he could come.”

“When?”

“To-night, if you like.”

“Then let him come here to this house. He will be perfectly safe.”

“So be it. My part is now over,” concluded Mr. Carlyle. And with a few
more preliminary words, he departed. Lawyer Ball looked after him.

“It’s a queer business. One would think Dick accuses some old flame of
Carlyle’s--some demoiselle or dame he daren’t go against.”



CHAPTER XXXVIII.

THE WORLD TURNED UPSIDE DOWN.

On Monday evening the interview between Lawyer Ball and Richard Hare
took place. With some difficulty would the lawyer believe his tale--not
as to its broad details; he saw that he might give credit to them but as
to the accusation against Sir Francis Levison. Richard persisted,
mentioned every minute particular he could think of--his meeting him the
night of the elopement in Bean lane, his meetings with him again in
London, and Sir Francis’s evident fear of him, and thence pursuit, and
the previous Saturday night’s recognition at the door of the Raven, not
forgetting to tell of the anonymous letter received by Justice Hare the
morning that Richard was in hiding at Mr. Carlyle’s. There was no doubt
in the world it had been sent by Francis Levison to frighten Mr. Hare
into dispatching him out of West Lynne, had Richard taken refuge in his
father’s home. None had more cause to keep Dick from falling into the
hands of justice than Francis Levison.

“I believe what you say--I believe all you say, Mr. Richard, touching
Thorn,” debated the attorney; “but it’s next to impossible to take in so
astounding a fact as that he is Sir Francis Levison.”

“You can satisfy yourself of the fact from other lips than mine,” said
Richard. “Otway Bethel could testify to it if he would, though I doubt
his willingness. But there’s Ebenezer James.”

“What does he know about it?” asked the attorney, in surprise. “Ebenezer
James is in our office at present.”

“He saw Thorn often enough in those days, and has, I hear, recognized
him as Levison. You had better inquire of him. Should you object to take
cause against Levison?”

“Not a bit of it. Let me be assured that I am upon safe grounds as to
the identity of the man, and I’ll proceed in it forthwith. Levison is an
out-and-out scoundrel, as Levison, and deserves hanging. I will send for
James at once, and hear what he says,” he concluded, after a pause of
consideration.

Richard Hare started wildly up. “Not while I am here; he must not see
me. For Heaven’s sake, consider the peril to me, Mr. Ball!”

“Pooh, pooh!” laughed the attorney. “Do you suppose I have but this one
reception-room? We don’t let cats into cages where canary birds are
kept.”

Ebenezer James returned with the messenger dispatched after him.

“You’ll be sure to find him at the singing saloon,” Mr. Ball had said;
and there the gentleman was found.

“Is it any copying, sir, wanted to be done in a hurry?” cried James,
when he came in.

“No,” replied the attorney. “I wish a question or two answered, that’s
all. Did you ever know Sir Francis Levison to go by any name but his
own?”

“Yes, sir. He has gone by the name of Thorn.”

A pause. “When was this?”

“It was the autumn when Hallijohn was killed. Thorn used to be prowling
about there in an evening--in the wood and at the cottage, I mean.”

“What did he prowl for?”

Ebenezer James laughed. “For the same reason that several more did--I,
for one. He was sweet upon Afy Hallijohn.”

“Where was he living at the time? I never remember him in West Lynne.”

“He was not at West Lynne, sir. On the contrary, he seemed to take
precious good care that West Lynne and he kept separate. A splendid
horse he rode, a thoroughbred; and he used to come galloping into the
wood at dusk, get over his chat with Miss Afy, mount, and gallop away
again.”

“Where to? Where did he come from?”

“From somewhere toward Swainson; a ten mile’s ride, Afy used to say he
had. Now that he has appeared here in his own plumage, of course I can
put two and two together, and not be at much fault for the exact spot.”

“And where’s that?” asked the lawyer.

“Levison Park,” said Mr. Ebenezer. “There’s little doubt he was stopping
at his uncle’s, and you know that is close to Swainson.”

Lawyer Ball thought things were becoming clearer--or darker, whatever
you may please to call it. He paused again, and then put a question
impressively.

“James, have you any doubt whatever, or shadow of doubt, that Sir
Francis Levison is the same man you know as Thorn?”

“Sir, have I any doubt that you are Mr. Ball, or that I am Eb. James?”
 retorted Mr. Ebenezer. “I am as certain of that man’s identity as I am
of yours.”

“Are you ready to swear to that fact in a court of justice?”

“Ready and willing, in any court in the world. To-morrow, if I am called
upon.”

“Very well. You may go back to your singing club now. Keep a silent
tongue in your head.”

“All close, sir,” answered Mr. Ebenezer James.

Far into the middle of the night sat Lawyer Ball and Richard Hare, the
former chiefly occupied in taking notes of Richard’s statement.

“It’s half a crochet, this objection of Carlyle’s to interfere with
Levison,” suddenly uttered Richard, in the midst of some desultory
conversation. “Don’t you think so, Mr. Ball?”

The lawyer pursed up his lips. “Um! A delicate point. Carlyle was always
fastidiously honorable. I should go at him, thunder and fury, in his
place; but I and Carlyle are different.”

The following day, Tuesday, Mr. Ball was much occupied, putting, to use
nearly Ebenezer James’ words, that and that together. Later in the day
he took a journey to Levison Park, ferreted out some information, and
came home again. On that same day, at evening, Richard departed for
Liverpool--he was done with for the present--Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle being,
as before, alone cognizant of his address.

Wednesday morning witnessed the arrival again of the Earl of Mount
Severn. Lord Vane, too. The latter ought to have gone back to Eton, but
he had teased and prayed to be allowed to “see the fun out,” meaning the
election. “And that devil’s discomfiture when he finds himself beaten,”
 he surreptitiously added, behind his father’s back, who was a great
stickler for the boy’s always being “gentlemanly.” So the earl had
yielded. They arrived, as before, about breakfast-time, having traveled
all night. Subsequently, they and Mr. Carlyle walked into West Lynne
together.

West Lynne was alive and astir. The election was to come off that week,
and people made it their business to be in a bustle over it,
collectively and individually. Mr. Carlyle’s committee sat at the Buck’s
Head, and the traffic in and out was enough to wear the stones away. The
bench of justices were remarkably warm over it, neglecting the judicial
business, and showing themselves at the Buck’s Head windows in purple
and scarlet streamers.

“I will be with you in ten minutes,” said Mr. Carlyle, withdrawing his
arm from Lord Mount Severn’s, as they approached his office, “but I must
go in and read my letters.”

So the earl went on to the Buck’s Head, and Lord Vane took a foot canter
down to the Raven, to reconnoiter it outside. He was uncommonly fond of
planting himself where Sir Francis Levison’s eyes were sure to fall upon
him--which eyes were immediately dropped, while the young gentleman’s
would be fixed in an audacious stare. Being Lord Vane--or it may be more
correct to say, being the Earl of Mount Severn’s son, and under control,
he was debarred from dancing and jeering after the yellow candidate, as
the unwashed gentry of his own age indulged in, but his tongue and his
feet itched to do it.

Mr. Carlyle took his seat in his private room, opened his letters,
assorted them, marked on the back of some what was to be the purport of
their answer, and then called in Mr. Dill. Mr. Carlyle put the letters
in his hand, gave some rapid instructions, and rose.

“You are in a hurry, Mr. Archibald?”

“They want me at the Buck’s Head. Why?”

“A curious incident occurred to me last evening, sir. I was an ear-
witness to a dispute between Levison and Otway Bethel.”

“Indeed!” carelessly replied Mr. Carlyle, who was busy at the time
looking for something in the deep drawer of the desk.

“And what I heard would go far to hang Levison, if not Bethel. As sure
as we are here, Mr. Archibald, they hold the secret of Hallijohn’s
murder. It appears that Levison--”

“Stop!” interposed Mr. Carlyle. “I would prefer not to hear this.
Levison may have murdered him, but it is no affair of mine, neither
shall I make it such.”

Old Dill felt checkmated. “Meanwhile Richard Hare suffers, Mr.
Archibald,” he observed, in a remonstrating tone.

“I am aware he does.”

“Is it right that the innocent should suffer for the guilty?”

“No; very wrong. But the case is all too common.”

“If some one would take up Richard Hare’s cause now, he might be proved
innocent,” added the old man, with a wistful look at Mr. Carlyle.

“It is being taken up, Dill.”

A pause and a glad look. “That’s the best news I have had for many a
day, sir. But my evidence will be necessary to your case. Levison--”

“I’m not taking up the case. You must carry your news elsewhere. It is
no affair of mine, I say.”

“Then who is taking it up?” echoed Mr. Dill, in astonishment.

“Ball. He has had a meeting with Richard, and is now acting for him
under the rose.”

Mr. Dill’s eyes sparkled. “Is he going to prosecute, Mr. Archibald?”

“I tell you I know nothing--I will know nothing. When the affair comes
out to the public--if it ever does come out--I shall share in the
information, Dill, and that is all.”

“Ah, well, I can understand. But I shall go on to their office at once,
Mr. Archibald, and inform them of what I overheard,” spoke old Dill, in
vehement decision.

“That is not my affair either,” laughed Mr. Carlyle, “it is yours. But
remember, if you do go, it is Ball, not Treadman.”

Waiting only to give certain orders to the head clerk, Mr. Dill
proceeded to the office of Ball & Treadman. A full hour was he closeted
there with the senior partner.

Not until three o’clock that afternoon did the justices take their seats
on the bench. Scarcely were they seated when Lawyer Ball bustled in and
craved a secret hearing. His application was of the last importance, he
promised, but, that the ends of justice might not be defeated it was
necessary their worships should entertain it in private; he therefore
craved the bench to accord it to him.

The bench consulted, looked wise, and, possibly possessing some latent
curiosity themselves upon the point, graciously acceded. They adjourned
to a private room, and it was full half-past four before they came out
of it. Very long faces, scared and grim, were their worships’, as if
Lawyer Ball’s communication had both perplexed and confounded them.

“This is the afternoon we are to meet Dr. Martin at papa’s office,”
 William Carlyle had suddenly exclaimed that day at dinner. “Do we walk
in, Madame Vine?”

“I do not know, William. Mrs. Carlyle is going to take you.”

“No, she is not; you are going to take me.”

A flush passed over Lady Isabel’s face at the bare thought, though she
did not believe it. She go to Mr. Carlyle’s office! “Mrs. Carlyle told
me herself that she should take you,” was the reply.

“All I know is, mamma told me this morning you would take me to West
Lynne to-day,” persisted William.

The discussion was interrupted by the appearance of Mrs. Carlyle--
interrupted and decided also.

“Madame Vine,” she said, “you will be ready at three o’clock to go in
with William?”

Lady Isabel’s heart beat. “I understood you to say that you should go
with him yourself, madame.”

“I know I did. I intended to do so, but I heard this morning that some
friends from a distance are coming this afternoon to call upon me,
therefore I shall not go out.”

How she, Lady Isabel, wished that she dare say, also, “I shall not go
out either.” But that might not be. Well, she must go through with it as
she had to go through with the rest.

William rode his pony into West Lynne, the groom attending to take it
back again. He was to walk home with Madame Vine, who walked both ways.

Mr. Carlyle was not in when they arrived at the office. The boy went
boldly on to the private room, leaving Madame Vine to follow him.

Presently Mr. Carlyle appeared. He was talking to Mr. Dill, who followed
him.

“Oh, you are here, Madame Vine! I left word that you were to go into
Miss Carlyle’s. Did I not leave word, Dill?”

“Not with me, sir.”

“I forgot it, then; I meant to do so. What is the time?” He looked at
his watch: ten minutes to four. “Did the doctor say at what hour he
should call?” Mr. Carlyle added to Madame Vine.

“Not precisely. I gathered that it would be very early in the
afternoon.”

“Here he is!” exclaimed Mr. Carlyle with alacrity, as he went into the
hall. She supposed he alluded to the physician--supposed he had seen him
pass the window. Their entrance together woke up William.

“Well,” said the doctor, who was a little man with a bald head, “and how
fares it with my young patient? Bon jour madame.”

“Bon jour, monsieur,” responded she. She wished everybody would address
her in French, and take her for French; there seemed less chance of
recognition. She would have to speak in good plain English, however, if
she must carry on conversation with the doctor. Beyond a familiar phrase
or two, he was something like Justice Hare--Nong parley Fronsay me!

“And how does the cod-liver oil get on?” asked the doctor of William, as
he drew him to the light. “It is nicer now than it used to be, eh?”

“No,” said William; “it is nastier than ever.”

Dr. Martin looked at the boy; felt his pulse, his skin, listened to his
breathing. “There,” said he, presently, “you may sit down and have your
nap out.”

“I wish I might have something to drink; I am very thirsty. May I ring
for some water, papa?”

“Go and find your aunt’s maid, and ask her for some,” said Mr. Carlyle.

“Ask her for milk,” called out Dr. Martin. “Not water.”

Away went William. Mr. Carlyle was leaning against the side of the
window; Dr. Martin folded his arms before it: Lady Isabel stood near the
latter. The broad, full light was cast upon all, but the thick veil hid
Lady Isabel’s face. It was not often she could be caught without that
veil, for she seemed to wear her bonnet at all sorts of seasonable and
unseasonable times.

“What is your opinion, doctor?” asked Mr. Carlyle.

“Well,” began the doctor, in a very professional tone, “the boy is
certainly delicate. But--”

“Stay, Dr. Martin,” was the interruption, spoken in a low, impressive
voice, “you will deal candidly with me. I must know the truth, without
disguise. Tell it me freely.”

Dr. Martin paused. “The truth is not always palatable, Mr. Carlyle.”

“True. But for that very reason, all the more necessary. Let me hear the
worst. And the child has no mother, you know, to be shocked with it.”

“I fear that it will be the worst.”

“Death?”

“Ay. The seeds of consumption must have been inherent in him. They are
showing out too palpably.”

“Is there no hope for the child?”

Dr. Martin looked at him. “You bade me give you the truth.”

“Nothing else; nothing but the truth,” returned Mr. Carlyle, his tone
one of mingled pain and command.

“Then, there is none; no hope whatever. The lungs are extensively
diseased.”

“And how long--”

“That I cannot say,” interrupted the doctor, divining what the next
question was to be. “He may linger on for months; for a year, it may
even be; or a very short period may see the termination. Don’t worry him
with any more lessons and stuff of learning; he’ll never want it.”

The doctor cast his eyes on the governess as he spoke; the injunction
concerned her as much as it did Mr. Carlyle. And the doctor started, for
he thought she was fainting; her face had become so ghastly white; he
could see it through her veil.

“You are ill, madame! You are ill? Trouve malade, don’t you?”

She opened her lips to speak; her trembling lips, that would not obey
her. Dr. Martin, in his concern, pulled off the blue spectacles. She
caught them from him with one hand, sat down on the nearest chair, and
hid her face with the other.

Mr. Carlyle, scarcely understanding the scuffle, came forward. “Are you
ill, Madame Vine?”

She was putting her spectacles under her veil, her face whiter than
ever. “Pray do not interrupt your conversation to pay attention to me! I
thank you; I thank you both. I am subject to--slight spasms, and they do
make me look ill for the moment. It has passed now.”

The doctor turned from her; Mr. Carlyle resumed his place by the window.
“What should be the treatment?” asked the latter.

“Almost anything you please--that the boy himself likes. Let him play or
rest, ride or walk, eat and drink, or let it alone; it cannot make much
difference.”

“Doctor! You yield it, as a last hope, very lightly.”

Dr. Martin shook his head. “I speak as I know. You insisted on having my
true opinion.”

“A warmer climate?” suggested Mr. Carlyle eagerly, the idea crossing his
mind.

“It might prolong the end for a little while--a few weeks, perhaps--
avert it it could not. And who could take him? You could not go; and he
has no mother. No! I should not advise it.”

“I wish you would see Wainwright--with reference to William.”

“I have seen him. I met him this afternoon, by chance, and told him my
opinion. How is Mrs. Carlyle?”

“Pretty well. She is not in robust health, you are aware, just now.”

Dr. Martin smiled. “These things will happen. Mrs. Carlyle has a
thoroughly good constitution; a far stronger one than--than----”

“Than what?” said Mr. Carlyle, wondering why he hesitated.

“You must grant me pardon. I may as well finish, now I have begun; but I
was not thinking when I spoke. She is stronger than was Lady Isabel. I
must be off to catch the six train.”

“You will come over from time to time to East Lynne to see William?”

“If you wish it. It may be a satisfaction, perhaps. Bon jour, madame.”

Lady Isabel bowed to him as he left the room with Mr. Carlyle. “How fond
that French governess of yours is of the boy!” the doctor whispered, as
they crossed the hall. “I detected it when she brought him to
Lynneborough. And you saw her just now! That emotion was all because he
could not live. Good-bye.”

Mr. Carlyle grasped his hand. “Doctor, I wish you could save him!” he
passionately uttered.

“Ah, Carlyle! If we humble mites of human doctors could but keep those
whom it is the Great Physician’s pleasure to take, how we should be run
after! There’s hidden mercy, remember, in the darkest cloud. Farewell my
friend.”

Mr. Carlyle returned to the room. He approached Lady Isabel, looking
down upon her as she sat; not that he could see much of her face. “These
are grievous tidings. But you were more prepared for them, I fancy, than
I was.”

She started suddenly up, approached the window, and looked out, as if
she saw somebody passing whom she would gaze at. All of emotion was
stirred up within her--her temples throbbed, her throat beat, her breath
became hysterical. Could she bear thus to hold confidential converse
with him over the state of their child? She pulled off her gloves for
coolness to her burning hands, she wiped the moisture from her pale
forehead, she struggled manfully for calmness. What excuse could she
offer to Mr. Carlyle?

“I had begun to like the boy so very much, sir,” she said, half turning
round. “And the doctor’s fiat, too plainly pronounced has given me pain;
pain to agitation.”

Again Mr. Carlyle approached her, following close up to where she stood.
“You are very kind, thus to feel an interest in my child.”

She did not answer.

“Here, papa, papa! I want you,” cried William, breaking into the room.
“Let me walk home with you? Are you going to walk?”

How could he find it in his heart to deny anything to the child then?

“Very well,” he said. “Stay here till I come for you.”

“We are going home with papa,” proclaimed William to Madame Vine.

Madame Vine did not relish the news. But there was no help for it. In a
very short time Mr. Carlyle appeared, and they set off; he holding
William’s hand; madame walking on the other side of the child.

“Where’s William Vane, papa?” asked the boy.

“He has gone on with Lord Mount Severn.”

Scarcely had the words been spoken, when some one came bolting out of
the post-office, and met them face to face; almost ran against them in
fact, creating some hindrance. The man looked confused, and slunk off
into the gutter. And you will not wonder that he did, when you hear that
it was Francis Levison. William, child like, turned his head to gaze at
the intruder.

“I would not be an ugly bad man like him for the world,” quoth he, as he
turned his back again. “Would you, papa?”

Mr. Carlyle did not answer, and Isabel cast an involuntary glance upon
him from her white face. His was impassive, save that a cast of
ineffable scorn marred the delicate beauty of his lips. If humiliation
for the past had never wrung Lady Isabel’s heart before, it would have
wrung it then.

At Mr. Justice Hare’s gate they encountered that gentleman, who appeared
to be standing there to give himself an airing. William caught sight of
Mrs. Hare seated on the garden bench, outside the window, and ran to
kiss her. All the children loved Mrs. Hare. The justice was looking--not
pale; that would not be a term half strong enough: but yellow. The curls
of his best wig were limp, and all his pomposity appeared to have gone
out of him.

“I say, Carlyle, what on earth’s this?” cried he, in a tone that, for
him, was wonderfully subdued and meek. “I was not on the bench this
afternoon, but Pinner has been telling me--of an application that was
made to them in private. It’s not true, you know; it can’t be; it’s too
far-fetched a tale. What do you know about it?”

“Nothing,” said Mr. Carlyle. “I do not know what you are talking of. I
have been privy to no application.”

“It seems they want to make out now that Dick never murdered Hallijohn,”
 proceeded the justice, in a half whisper, glancing round as if to be
sure that there were no eaves-droppers amidst the trees.

“Oh,” said Mr. Carlyle.

“But that Levison did. Levison!”

Mr. Carlyle made no reply, save by a gesture; his face more impassive
than before. Not so another face beside him, a fair face; that turned
white again with emotion as she listened.

“But it can’t be, you know. It can’t, I say.”

“So far as Richard’s innocence goes, of that I have long been
convinced,” spoke Mr. Carlyle.

“And that Levison’s guilty?” returned the justice, opening his eyes in
puzzled wonderment.

“I have no opinion upon that point,” was the cold rejoinder.

“It’s impossible, I say. Dick can’t be innocent. You may as well tell me
that the world’s turned upside down.”

“It is, sometimes, I think. That Richard was not the guilty man will be
proved yet, justice, in the broad face of day.”

“If--if--that other did do it, I should think you’d take the warrant out
of the hands of the police and capture him yourself.”

“I would not touch him with a pair of tongs,” spoke Mr. Carlyle, his
lips curling again. “If the man goes to his punishment, he goes; but I
do not help him on his road thither.”

“Can Dick be innocent?” mused the justice, returning to the thought
which so troubled his mind. “Then why has he kept away? Why did he not
come back and say so?”

“That you might deliver him up, justice. You know you took an oath to do
it.”

The justice looked green, and remarkably humble.

“Oh, but Carlyle,” impulsively spoke he, the thought occurring to him,
“what an awful revenge this would have been for you on--somebody--had
she lived. How her false step would have come home to her now!”

“False steps come home to most people,” responded Mr. Carlyle, as he
took William by the hand, who then ran up. And, lifting his hat to Mrs.
Hare in the distance, he walked on.

She, Lady Isabel, walked on, too, by the side of the child, as before,
walked on with a shivering frame, and a heart sick unto death. The
justice looked after her, his mind unoccupied. He was in a maze of
bewilderment. Richard innocent! Richard, whom he had striven to pursue
to a shameful end! And that other the guilty one! The world was turning
upside down.



CHAPTER XXXIX.

MRS. CARLYLE IN FULL DRESS, AFY ALSO.

Merrily rose West Lynne on Thursday morning; merrily rang out the bells,
clashing and chiming. The street was alive with people; the windows were
crowded with heads; something unusual was astir. It was the day of the
nomination of the two candidates, and everybody took the opportunity to
make a holiday.

Ten o’clock was the hour named; but, before that hour struck, West Lynne
was crammed. The country people had come in, thick and threefold; rich
and poor; people of note, and people of none; voters and non-voters, all
eager to mix themselves up with the day’s proceedings. You see the
notorious fact of Sir Francis Levison’s having come forward to oppose
Mr. Carlyle, caused greater interest in this election than is usual,
even in small country places--and that need not be. Barbara drove in her
carriage, the two children with her, and the governess. The governess
said she preferred to remain at home. Barbara would not hear of it;
almost felt inclined to resent it as a slight; besides, if she took no
interest in Mr. Carlyle, she must go to take care of Lucy; she, Barbara,
would be too much occupied to look after children. So Madame Vine,
perforce, stepped into the barouche and sat opposite to Mrs. Carlyle,
her thick veil shading her features, and their pallor contrasting with
the blue spectacles.

They alighted at the residence of Miss Carlyle. Quite a gathering was
already there. Lady and Miss Dobede, the Herberts, Mrs. Hare, and many
others; for the house was in a good spot for seeing the fun; and all the
people were eager to testify their respect to Mr. Carlyle, in
contradiction to that other one. Miss Carlyle was in full rig; a
brocaded dress, and a scarlet-and-purple bow in front of it, the size of
a pumpkin. It was about the only occasion, in all Miss Carlyle’s life,
that she deemed it necessary to attire herself beyond common. Barbara
wore no bow, but she exhibited a splendid bouquet of scarlet-and-purple
flowers. Mr. Carlyle had himself given it to her that morning.

Mr. Carlyle saw them all at the windows of the large upper drawing-room,
and came in; he was then on his way to the town-hall. Shaking hands,
laughter, hearty and hasty good wishes; and he quitted the room again.
Barbara stole after him for a sweeter farewell.

“God bless you and prosper you, Archibald, my dearest!”

The business of the day began. Mr. Carlyle was proposed by Sir John
Dobede, and seconded by Mr. Herbert. Lord Mount Severn, than whom not a
busier man was there, would willingly have been proposer and seconder
too, but he had no local influence in the place. Sir Francis Levison was
proposed also by two gentlemen of standing. The show of hands was
declared to be in favor of Mr. Carlyle. It just was in favor of him;
about twenty to one. Upon which the baronet’s friends demanded a poll.

Then all was bustle, and scuffle, and confusion, every one tearing away
to the hustings, which had been fixed in a convenient spot, the town-
hall, not affording the accommodation necessary for a poll. Candidates,
and proposers and seconders, and gentlemen, and officers, and mob,
hustling and jostling each other. Mr. Carlyle was linked arm-in-arm with
Sir John Dobede; Sir John’s arm was within Lord Mount Severn’s--but, as
to order, it was impossible to observe any. To gain the place they had
to pass the house of Miss Carlyle. Young Vane, who was in the thick of
the crowd, of course, cast his eyes up to its lined windows, took off
his hat and waved it. “Carlyle and honor forever!” shouted he.

The ladies laughed and nodded, and shook their handkerchiefs, and
displayed their scarlet and purple colors. The crowd took up the shout,
till the very air echoed with it. “Carlyle and honor forever!” Barbara’s
tears were falling; but she smiled through them at one pair of loving
eyes, which sought out hers.

“A galaxy of beauty!” whispered Mr. Drake in the ear of Sir Francis.
“How the women rally round him! I tell you what, Levison, you and the
government were stupid to go on with the contest, and I said so days
ago. You have no more chance against Carlyle than that bit of straw has
against the wind. You ought to have withdrawn in time.”

“Like a coward?” angrily returned Sir Francis. “No, I’ll go on with it
to the last, though I do get beaten.”

“How lovely his wife is,” observed Mr. Drake, his admiring eyes cast up
at Barbara. “I say, Levison, was the first one as charming?”

Sir Francis looked perfectly savage; the allusion did not please him.
But, ere another word could be spoken, some one in the garb of a
policeman, who had wound his way through the crowd, laid his hand upon
the baronet.

“Sir Francis Levison, you are my prisoner.”

Nothing worse than debt occurred at that moment to the mind of Sir
Francis. But that was quite enough, and he turned purple with rage.

“Your hands off, vermin! How dare you?”

A quick movement, a slight click, a hustle from the wondering crowd more
immediately around, and the handcuffs were on. Utter amazement alone
prevented Mr. Drake from knocking down the policeman. A dozen
vituperating tongues assailed him.

“I’m sorry to do it in this public place and manner,” spoke the officer,
partly to Sir Francis, partly to the gentlemen around, “but I couldn’t
come across you last night, do as I would. And the warrant has been in
my hands since five o’clock yesterday afternoon. Sir Francis Levison, I
arrest you for the wilful murder of George Hallijohn.”

The crowd fell back; the crowd was paralyzed with consternation; the
word was passed from one extreme to the other, and back and across
again, and the excitement grew high. The ladies looking from Miss
Carlyle’s windows saw what had happened, though they could not divine
the cause. Some of them turned pale at sight of the handcuffs, and Mary
Pinner, an excitable girl, fell into a screaming fit.

Pale! What was their gentle paleness compared with the frightfully livid
one of Francis Levison? His agitation was pitiable to witness, his face
a terror to look upon; once or twice he gasped, as if in an agony; and
then his eyes happened to fall on Otway Bethel, who stood near. Shorn of
his adornments--which might not be thought adornments upon paper--the
following was the sentence that burst involuntarily from his lips,--

“You hound! It is you who have done this!”

“No! by--” Whether Mr. Otway Bethel was about to swear by Jupiter or
Juno never was decided, the sentence being cut ignominiously short at
the above two words. Another policeman, in the summary manner exercised
towards Sir Francis, had clapped a pair of handcuffs upon him.

“Mr. Otway Bethel, I arrest you as an accomplice in the murder of George
Hallijohn.”

You may be sure that the whole assembly was arrested, too--figuratively-
-and stood with eager gaze and open ears. Colonel Bethel, quitting the
scarlet-and-purple, flashed into those of the yellows. He knew his
nephew was graceless enough; but--to see him with a pair of handcuffs
on!

“What does all this mean?” he authoritatively demanded of the officers.

“It’s no fault of ours, colonel, we have but executed the warrant,”
 answered one of them. “The magistrate, issued it yesterday against these
two gentlemen, on suspicion of their being concerned in the murder of
Hallijohn.”

“In conjunction with Richard Hare?” cried the astounded colonel, gazing
from one to the other, prisoners and officers, in scared bewilderment.

“It’s alleged now that Richard Hare didn’t have nothing to do with it,”
 returned the man. “It’s said he is innocent. I’m sure I don’t know.”

“I swear that I am innocent,” passionately uttered Otway Bethel.

“Well, sir, you have only got to prove it,” civilly rejoined the
policeman.

Miss Carlyle and Lady Isabel leaned from the window, their curiosity too
much excited to remain silent longer. Mrs. Hare was standing by their
side.

“What is the matter?” both asked of the upturned faces immediately
beneath.

“Them two--the fine member as wanted to be, and young Bethel--be
arrested for murder,” spoke a man’s clear voice in answer. “The tale
runs as they murdered Hallijohn, and then laid it on the shoulders of
young Dick Hare, who didn’t do it after all.”

A faint wailing cry of startled pain, and Barbara flew to Mrs. Hare,
from whom it proceeded.

“Oh, mamma, my dear mamma, take comfort! Do not suffer this to agitate
you to illness. Richard is innocent, and it will surely be so proved.
Archibald,” she added, beckoning to her husband in her alarm, “come, if
you can, and say a word of assurance to mamma!”

It was impossible that Mr. Carlyle could hear the words, but he could
see that his wife was greatly agitated, and wanted him.

“I will be back with you in a few moments,” he said to his friends, as
he began to elbow his way through the crowd, which made way when they
saw who the elbower was.

Into another room, away from the gay visitors, they got Mrs. Hare, and
Mr. Carlyle locked the door to keep them out, unconsciously taking out
the key. Only himself and his wife were with her, except Madame Vine, in
her bonnet, who had been dispatched by somebody with a bottle of
smelling salts. Barbara knelt at her mamma’s feet; Mr. Carlyle leaned
over her, her hands held sympathizingly in his. Madame Vine would have
escaped, but the key was gone.

“Oh, Archibald, tell me the truth. You will not, deceive me?” she
gasped, in earnest entreaty, the cold dew gathering on her pale, gentle
face. “Is the time come to prove my boy’s innocence?”

“It is.”

“Is it possible that it can be that false, bad man who is guilty?”

“From my soul I believe him to be,” replied Mr. Carlyle, glancing round
to make sure that none could hear the assertion save those present. “But
what I say to you and Barbara, I would not say to the world. Whatever be
the man’s guilt, I am not his Nemesis. Dear Mrs. Hare, take courage,
take comfort--happier days are coming round.”

Mrs. Hare was weeping silently. Barbara rose and laid her mamma’s head
lovingly upon her bosom.

“Take care of her, my darling,” Mr. Carlyle whispered to his wife.
“Don’t leave her for a moment, and don’t let that chattering crew in
from the next room. I beg your pardon, madame.”

His hand had touched Madame Vine’s neck in turning round--that is, had
touched the jacket that encased it. He unlocked the door and regained
the street, while Madame Vine sat down with her beating and rebellious
heart.

Amidst the shouts, the jeers, and the escort of the mob, Sir Francis
Levison and Otway Bethel were lodged in the station-house, preparatory
to their examination before the magistrates. Never, sure, was so
mortifying an interruption known. So thought Sir Francis’s party. And
they deemed it well, after some consultation amongst themselves, to
withdraw his name as a candidate for the membership. That he never had a
shadow of chance from the first, most of them knew.

But there’s an incident yet to tell of the election day. You have seen
Miss Carlyle in her glory, her brocaded silk standing on end with
richness, her displayed colors, her pride in her noble brother. But now
could you--or she, which it is more to the purpose--have divined who and
what was right above her head at an upper window, I know not what the
consequence would have been.

No less an eyesore to Miss Carlyle than that “brazen hussy,” Afy
Hallijohn! Smuggled in by Miss Carlyle’s servants, there she was--in
full dress, too. A green-and-white checked sarcenet, flounced up to the
waist, over a crinoline extending from here to yonder; a fancy bonnet,
worn on the plait of hair behind, with a wreath and a veil; delicate
white gloves, and a swinging handkerchief of lace, redolent of musk. It
was well for Miss Corny’s peace of mind ever after that she remained in
ignorance of that daring act. There stood Afy, bold as a sunflower,
exhibiting herself and her splendor to the admiring eyes of the mob
below, gentle and simple.

“He is a handsome man, after all,” quoth she to Miss Carlyle’s maids,
when Sir Francis Levison arrived opposite the house.

“But such a horrid creature!” was the response. “And to think that he
should come here to oppose Mr. Archibald!”

“What’s that?” cried Afy. “What are they stopping for? There are two
policemen there! Oh!” shrieked Afy, “if they haven’t put handcuffs on
him! Whatever has he done? What can he have been up to?”

“Where? Who? What?” cried the servants, bewildered with the crowd. “Put
handcuffs on which?”

“Sir Francis Levison. Hush! What is that they say?”

Listening, looking, turning from white to red, from red to white, Afy
stood. But she could make nothing of it; she could not divine the cause
of the commotion. The man’s answer to Miss Carlyle and Lady Dobede,
clear though it was, did not quite reach her ears.

“What did he say?” she cried.

“Good Heavens!” cried one of the maids, whose hearing had been quicker
than Afy’s. “He says they are arrested for the wilful murder of Hal---of
your father, Miss Afy! Sir Francis Levison and Otway Bethel.”

“What!” shrieked Afy, her eyes starting.

“Levison was the man who did it, he says,” continued the servant,
bending her ear to listen. “And young Richard Hare, he says, has been
innocent all along.”

Afy slowly gathered in the sense of the words. She gasped twice, as if
her breath had gone, and then, with a stagger and a shiver, fell heavily
to the ground.

Afy Hallijohn, recovered from her fainting fit, had to be smuggled out
of Miss Carlyle’s, as she had been smuggled in. She was of an elastic
nature, and the shock, or the surprise, or the heat, whatever it may
have been, being over, Afy was herself again.

Not very far removed from the residence of Miss Carlyle was a shop in
the cheese and ham and butter and bacon line. A very respectable shop,
too, and kept by a very respectable man--a young man of mild
countenance, who had purchased the good-will of the business through an
advertisement, and come down from London to take possession. His
predecessor had amassed enough to retire, and people foretold that Mr.
Jiffin would do the same. To say that Miss Carlyle dealt at the shop
will be sufficient to proclaim the good quality of the articles kept in
it.

When Afy arrived opposite the shop, Mr. Jiffin was sunning himself at
the door; his shopman inside being at some urgent employment over the
contents of a butter-cask. Afy stopped. Mr. Jiffin admired her
uncommonly, and she, always ready for anything in that way, had already
enjoyed several passing flirtations with him.

“Good day, Miss Hallijohn,” cried he, warmly, tucking up his white apron
and pushing it round to the back of his waist, in the best manner he
could, as he held out his hand to her. For Afy had once hinted in terms
of disparagement at that very apron.

“Oh--how are you Jiffin?” cried Afy, loftily, pretending not to have
seen him standing there. And she condescended to put the tips of her
white gloves into the offered hand, as she coquetted with her
handkerchief, her veil, and her ringlets. “I thought you would have shut
up your shop to-day, Mr. Jiffin, and taken a holiday.”

“Business must be attended to,” responded Mr. Jiffin, quite lost in the
contemplation of Afy’s numerous attractions, unusually conspicuous as
they were. “Had I known that you were abroad, Miss Hallijohn, and
enjoying a holiday, perhaps I might have done it, too, in the hope of
coming across you somewhere or other.”

His words were bona fide as his admiration. Afy saw that, so she could
afford to treat him rather de haut en bas. “And he’s as simple as a
calf,” thought she.

“The greatest pleasure I have in life, Miss Hallijohn, is to see you go
by the shop window,” continued Mr. Jiffin. “I’m sure it’s like as if the
sun itself passed.”

“Dear me!” bridled Afy, with a simper, “I don’t know any good that can
do you. You might have seen me go by an hour or two ago--if you had
possessed eyes. I was on my way to Miss Carlyle’s,” she continued, with
the air of one who proclaims the fact of a morning call upon a duchess.

“Where could my eyes have been?” exclaimed Mr. Jiffin, in an agony of
regret. “In some of those precious butter-tubs, I shouldn’t wonder! We
have had a bad lot in, Miss Hallijohn, and I am going to return them!”

“Oh,” said Afy, conspicuously resenting the remark. “I don’t know
anything about that sort of thing. Butter-tubs are beneath me.”

“Of course, of course, Miss Hallijohn,” deprecated poor Jiffin. “They
are very profitable, though, to those who understand the trade.”

“What is all that shouting?” cried Afy, alluding to a tremendous noise
in the distance, which had continued for some little time.

“It’s the voters cheering Mr. Carlyle. I suppose you know that he’s
elected, Miss Hallijohn?”

“No, I didn’t.”

“The other was withdrawn by his friends, so they made short work of it,
and Mr. Carlyle is our member. God bless him! there’s not many like him.
But, I say, Miss Hallijohn, whatever is it that the other one has done?
Murder, they say. I can’t make top nor tail of it. Of course we know he
was bad enough before.”

“Don’t ask me,” said Afy. “Murder’s not a pleasant subject for a lady to
discuss. Are all these customers? Dear me, you’ll have enough to do to
attend to them; your man can’t do it all; so I won’t stay talking any
longer.”

With a gracious flourish of her flounces and wave of the handkerchief
Afy sailed off. And Mr. Jiffin, when he could withdraw his fascinated
eyes from following her, turned into his shop to assist in serving four
or five servant girls, who had entered it.

“It wouldn’t be such a bad catch, after all,” soliloquized Afy, as she
and her crinoline swayed along. “Of course I’d never put my nose inside
the shop--unless it was to order things like another customer. The worst
is the name. Jiffin, Joe Jiffin. How could I ever bear to be called Mrs.
Joe Jiffin! Not but--Goodness me! what do you want?”

The interruption to Afy’s chickens was caused by Mr. Ebenezer James.
That gentleman, who had been walking with quick steps to overtake her,
gave her flounces a twitch behind, to let her know somebody had come up.

“How are you, Afy? I was going after you to Mrs. Latimer’s, not knowing
but you had returned home. I saw you this morning at Miss Corny’s
windows.”

“Now, I don’t want any of your sauce, Ebenezer James. Afy-ing me! The
other day, when you were on with your nonsense, I said you should keep
your distance. You took and told Mr. Jiffin that I was an old sweetheart
of yours. I heard of it.”

“So you were,” laughed Mr. Ebenezer.

“I never was,” flashed Afy. “I was the company of your betters in those
days: and if there had been no betters in the case, I should have
scorned you. Why! you have been a strolling player!”

“And what have you been?” returned Mr. Ebenezer, a quiet tone of meaning
running through his good-humored laughter.

Afy’s cheeks flushed scarlet, and she raised her hand with a quick,
menacing gesture. But that they were in the public street Mr. Ebenezer
might have found his ears boxed. Afy dropped her hand again, and made a
dead standstill.

“If you think any vile, false insinuations that you may concoct will
injure me, you are mistaken, Ebenezer James. I am too much respected in
the place. So don’t try it on.”

“Why, Afy, what has put you out? I don’t want to injure you. Couldn’t do
it, if I tried, as you say,” he added, with another quiet laugh. “I have
been in too many scrapes myself to let my tongue bring other folks into
one.”

“There, that’s enough. Just take yourself off. It’s not over reputable
to have you at one’s side in public.”

“Well, I will relieve you of my company, if you’ll let me deliver my
commission. Though, as to ‘reputable’--however, I won’t put you out
further. You are wanted at the justice-room at three o’clock this
afternoon. And don’t fail, please.”

“Wanted at the justice-room!” retorted Afy. “I! What for?”

“And must not fail, as I say,” repeated Mr. Ebenezer. “You saw Levison
taken up--your old flame----”

Afy stamped her foot in indignant interruption. “Take care what you say,
Ebenezer James! Flame! He? I’ll have you put up for defamation of
character.”

“Don’t be a goose, Afy. It’s of no use riding the high horse with me.
You know where I saw you--and saw him. People here said you were with
Dick Hare; I could have told them better; but I did not. It was no
affair of mine, that I should proclaim it, neither is it now. Levison
alias Thorn is taken up for your father’s murder, and you are wanted to
give evidence. There! that’s your subpoena; Ball thought you would not
come without one.”

“I will never give evidence against Levison,” she uttered, tearing the
subpoena to pieces, and scattering them in the street. “I swear I won’t.
There, for you! Will I help to hang an innocent man, when it was Dick
Hare who was the guilty one? No! I’ll walk myself off a hundred miles
away first, and stop in hiding till it’s over. I shan’t forget this turn
that you have chosen to play me, Ebenezer James.”

“I chosen! Why, do you suppose I have anything to do with it? Don’t take
up that notion, Afy. Mr. Ball put that subpoena in my hand, and told me
to serve it. He might have given it to the other clerk, just as he gave
it to me; it was all chance. If I could do you a good turn I’d do it--
not a bad one.”

Afy strode on at railroad speed, waving him off. “Mind you don’t fail,
Afy,” he said, as he prepared to return.

“Fail,” answered she, with flashing eyes. “I shall fail giving evidence,
if you mean that. They don’t get me up to their justice-room, neither by
force or stratagem.”

Ebenezer James stood and looked after her as she tore along.

“What a spirit that Afy has got, when it’s put up!” quoth he. “She’ll be
doing as she said--make off--unless she’s stopped. She’s a great
simpleton! Nothing particular need come out about her and Thorn, unless
she lets it out herself in her tantrums. Here comes Ball, I declare! I
must tell him.”

On went Afy, and gained Mrs. Latimer’s. That lady, suffering from
indisposition was confined to the house. Afy, divesting herself of
certain little odds and ends of her finery, made her way into Mrs.
Latimer’s presence.

“Oh, ma’am, such heartrending news as I have had!” began she. “A
relation of mine is dying, and wants to see me. I ought to be away by
the next train.”

“Dear me!” cried Mrs. Latimer, after a pause of dismay. “But how can I
do without you, Afy?”

“It’s a dying request, ma’am,” pleaded Afy, covering her eyes with her
handkerchief--not the lace one--as if in the depth of woe. “Of course I
wouldn’t ask you under any other circumstances, suffering as you are!”

“Where is it to!” asked Mrs. Latimer. “How long shall you be away?”

Afy mentioned the first town that came uppermost, and “hoped” she might
be back to-morrow.

“What relation is it?” continued Mrs. Latimer. “I thought you had no
relatives, except Joyce and your aunt, Mrs. Kane.”

“This is another aunt,” cried Afy, softly. “I have never mentioned her,
not being friends. Differences divided us. Of course that makes me all
the more anxious to obey her request.”

An uncommon good hand at an impromptu tale was Afy. And Mrs. Latimer
consented to her demand. Afy flew upstairs, attired herself once more,
put one or two things in a small leather bag, placed some money in her
purse, and left the house.

Sauntering idly on the pavement on the sunny side of the street was a
policeman. He crossed over to Afy, with whom he had a slight
acquaintance.

“Good-day, Miss Hallijohn. A fine day, is it not?”

“Fine enough,” returned Afy, provoked at being hindered. “I can’t talk
to you now, for I am in a hurry.”

The faster she walked, the faster he walked, keeping at her side. Afy’s
pace increased to a run. His increased to a run too.

“Whatever are you in such haste over?” asked he.

“Well, it’s nothing to you. And I am sure I don’t want you to dance
attendance upon me just now. There’s a time for all things. I’ll have
some chatter with you another day.”

“One would think you were hurrying to catch a train.”

“So I am--if you must have your curiosity satisfied. I am going on a
little pleasure excursion, Mr. Inquisitive.”

“For long?”

“U--m! Home to-morrow, perhaps. Is it true that Mr. Carlyle’s elected?”

“Oh, yes; don’t go up that way, please.”

“Not up this way?” repeated Afy. “It’s the nearest road to the station.
It cuts off all that corner.”

The officer laid his hand upon her, gently. Afy thought he was venturing
upon it in sport--as if he deemed her too charming to be parted with.

“What do you mean by your nonsense? I tell you I have not time for it
now. Take your hand off me,” she added grimly--for the hand was clasping
her closer.

“I am sorry to hurt a lady’s feelings, especially yours, miss, but I
daren’t take it off, and I daren’t part with you. My instructions are to
take you on at once to the witness-room. Your evidence is wanted this
afternoon.”

If you ever saw a ghost more livid than ghosts in ordinary, you may
picture to your mind the appearance of Afy Hallijohn just then. She did
not faint as she had done once before that day, but she looked as if she
should die. One sharp cry, instantly suppressed, for Afy did retain some
presence of mind, and remembered that she was in the public road--one
sharp tussle for liberty, over as soon, and she resigned herself,
perforce, to her fate.

“I have no evidence to give,” she said, in a calmer tone. “I know
nothing of the facts.”

“I’m sure I don’t know anything of them,” returned the man. “I don’t
know why you are wanted. When instructions are given us, miss, we can’t
ask what they mean. I was bid to watch that you didn’t go off out of the
town, and to bring you on to the witness-room if you attempted it, and I
have tried to do it as politely as possible.”

“You don’t imagine I am going to walk through West Lynne with your hand
upon me!”

“I’ll take it off, Miss Hallijohn, if you’ll give a promise not to bolt.
You see, ‘twould come to nothing if you did, for I should be up with you
in a couple of yards; besides, it would be drawing folks’ attention on
you. You couldn’t hope to outrun me, or be a match for me in strength.”

“I will go quietly,” said Afy. “Take it off.”

She kept her word. Afy was no simpleton, and knew that she was no match
for him. She had fallen into the hands of the Philistines, was
powerless, and must make the best of it. So they walked through the
street as if they were taking a quiet stroll, he gallantly bearing the
leather bag. Miss Carlyle’s shocked eyes happened to fall upon them as
they passed her window. She wondered where could be the eyes of the
man’s inspector.



CHAPTER XL.

THE JUSTICE-ROOM.

The magistrates took their seats on the bench. The bench would not hold
them. All in the commission of the peace flocked in. Any other day they
would not have been at West Lynne. As to the room, the wonder was how it
ever got emptied again, so densely was it packed. Sir Francis Levison’s
friends were there in a body. They did not believe a word of the
accusation. “A scandalous affair,” cried they, “got up, probably, by
some sneak of the scarlet-and-purple party.” Lord Mount Severn, who
chose to be present, had a place assigned him on the bench. Lord Vane
got the best place he could fight for amid the crowd. Mr. Justice Hare
sat as chairman, unusually stern, unbending, and grim. No favor would he
show, but no unfairness. Had it been to save his son from hanging, he
would not adjudge guilt to Francis Levison against his conscience.
Colonel Bethel was likewise on the bench, stern also.

In that primitive place--primitive in what related to the justice-room
and the justices--things were not conducted with the regularity of the
law. The law there was often a dead letter. No very grave cases were
decided there; they went to Lynneborough. A month at the treadmill, or a
week’s imprisonment, or a bout of juvenile whipping, were pretty near
the harshest sentences pronounced. Thus, in this examination, as in
others, evidence was advanced that was inadmissible--at least, that
would have been inadmissible in a more orthodox court--hearsay
testimony, and irregularities of that nature. Mr. Rubiny watched the
case on behalf of Sir Francis Levison.

Mr. Ball opened the proceedings, giving the account which had been
imparted to him by Richard Hare, but not mentioning Richard as his
informant. He was questioned as to whence he obtained his information,
but replied that it was not convenient at present to disclose the
source. The stumbling block of the magistrates appeared to be the
identifying Levison with Thorn. Ebenezer James came forward to prove it.

“What do you know of the prisoner, Sir Francis Levison?” questioned
Justice Herbert.

“Not much,” responded Mr. Ebenezer. “I used to know him as Captain
Thorn.”

“Captain Thorn?”

“Afy Hallijohn called him captain; but I understood he was but a
lieutenant.”

“From whom did you understand that?”

“From Afy. She was the only person I heard speak of him.”

“And you say you were in the habit of seeing him in the place mentioned,
the Abbey Wood?”

“I saw him there repeatedly; also at Hallijohn’s cottage.”

“Did you speak with him as Thorn?”

“Two or three times. I addressed him as Thorn, and he answered to the
name. I had no suspicion but that it was his name. Otway Bethel”--
casting his eyes on Mr. Otway, who stood in his shaggy attire--“also
knew him as Thorn, and so I have no doubt, did Locksley, for he was
always in the wood.”

“Anybody else?”

“Poor Hallijohn himself knew him as Thorn. He said to Afy one day, in my
presence, that he would not have that confounded dandy, Thorn, coming
there.”

“Were those the words he used?”

“They were; ‘that confounded dandy Thorn.’ I remember Afy’s reply--it
was rather insolent. She said Thorn was as free to come there as anybody
else, and she would not be found fault with, as though she was not fit
to take care of herself.”

“That is nothing to the purpose. Were any others acquainted with this
Thorn?”

“I should imagine the elder sister, Joyce, was. And the one who knew him
best of all of us was young Richard Hare.”

Old Richard Hare, from his place on the bench, frowned menacingly at an
imaginary Richard.

“What took Thorn into the wood so often?”

“He was courting Afy.”

“With an intention of marrying her?”

“Well--no,” cried Mr. Ebenezer, with a twist of the mouth; “I should not
suppose he entertained any intention of the sort. He used to come over
from Swainson, or its neighborhood, riding a splendid horse.”

“Whom did you suppose him to be?”

“I supposed him to be moving in the upper ranks of life. There was no
doubt of it. His dress, his manners, his tone, all proclaimed it. He
appeared to wish to shun observation, and evidently did not care to be
seen by any of us. He rarely arrived until twilight.”

“Did you see him there on the night of Hallijohn’s murder?”

“No. I was not there myself that evening, so could not have seen him.”

“Did a suspicion cross your mind at any time that he may have been
guilty of the murder?”

“Never. Richard Hare was accused of it by universal belief, and it never
occurred to me to suppose he had not done it.”

“Pray, how many years is this ago?” sharply interrupted Mr. Rubiny,
perceiving that the witness was done with.

“Let’s see!” responded Mr. Ebenezer. “I can’t be sure as to a year
without reckoning up. A dozen, if not more.”

“And you mean to say that you can swear to Sir Francis Levison being
that man, with all these years intervening?”

“I swear that he is the man. I am as positive of his identity as I am of
my own.”

“Without having seen him from that time to this?” derisively returned
the lawyer. “Nonsense, witness.”

“I did not say that,” returned Mr. Ebenezer.

The court pricked up its ears. “Have you seen him between then and now?”
 asked one of them.

“Once.”

“Where and when?”

“It was in London, about eighteen months after the period of the trial!”

“What communication had you with him?”

“None at all. I only saw him--quite by chance.”

“And whom did you suppose him to be then--Thorn or Levison?”

“Thorn, certainly. I never dreamt of his being Levison until he appeared
here, now, to oppose Mr. Carlyle.”

A wild, savage curse shot through Sir Francis’s heart as he heard the
words. What demon had possessed him to venture his neck into the lion’s
den? There had been a strong hidden power holding him back from it,
independent of his dislike to face Mr. Carlyle; how could he be so mad
as to disregard it? How? Could a man go from his doom? Can any?

“You may have been mistaken, witness, as to the identity of the man you
saw in London. It may not have been the Thorn you had known here.”

Mr. Ebenezer James smiled a peculiar smile. “I was not mistaken,” he
said, his tone sounding remarkably significant. “I am upon my oath.”

“Call Aphrodite Hallijohn.”

The lady appeared, supported by her friend, the policeman. And Mr.
Ebenezer James was desired by Mr. Ball to leave the court while she gave
her evidence. Doubtless he had his reasons.

“What is your name?”

“Afy,” replied she, looking daggers at everybody, and sedulously keeping
her back turned upon Francis Levison and Otway Bethel.

“Your name in full, if you please. You were not christened ‘Afy’?”

“Aphrodite Hallijohn. You all know my name as well as I do. Where’s the
use of asking useless questions?”

“Swear the witness,” spoke up Mr. Justice Hare. The first word he had
uttered.

“I won’t be sworn,” said Afy.

“You must be sworn,” said Mr. Justice Herbert.

“But I say I won’t,” repeated Afy.

“Then we must commit you to prison for contempt of court.”

There was no mercy in his tone, and Afy turned white. Sir John Dobede
interposed.

“Young woman, had you a hand in the murder of your father?”

“I?” returned Afy, struggling with passion, temper, and excitement. “How
dare you ask me such an unnatural question, sir? He was the kindest
father,” she added, battling with her tears. “I loved him dearly. I
would have saved his life with mine.”

“And yet you refuse to give evidence that may assist in bringing his
destroyer to justice.”

“No; I don’t refuse on that score. I should like his destroyer to be
hanged, and I’d go to see it. But who knows what other questions you may
be asking me, about things that concerned neither you nor anybody else?
That’s why I object.”

“We have only to deal with what bears upon the murder. The questions put
to you will relate to that.”

Afy considered. “Well, you may swear me, then,” she said.

Little notion had she of the broad gauge those questions would run upon.
And she was sworn accordingly. Very unwillingly yet; for Afy, who would
have told lies by the bushel unsworn, did look upon an oath as a serious
matter, and felt herself compelled to speak the truth when examined
under it.

“How did you become acquainted with a gentleman you often saw in those
days--Captain Thorn?”

“There,” uttered the dismayed Afy. “You are beginning already. He had
nothing to do with it--he did not do the murder.”

“You have sworn to answer the questions put,” was the uncompromising
rejoinder. “How did you become acquainted with Captain Thorn?”

“I met him at Swainson,” doggedly answered Afy. “I went over there one
day, just for a spree, and I met him at a pastrycook’s.”

“And he fell in love with your pretty face?” said Lawyer Ball, taking up
the examination.

In the incense to her vanity, Afy nearly forgot her scruples. “Yes, he
did,” she answered, casting a smile of general satisfaction round upon
the court.

“And got out of you where you lived, and entered upon his courting,
riding over nearly every evening to see you?”

“Well,” acknowledged Afy, “there was no harm in it.”

“Oh, certainly not!” acquiesced the lawyer, in a pleasant, free tone, to
put the witness at her ease. “Rather good, I should say: I wish I had
had the like luck. Did you know him at the time by the name of Levison?”

“No! He said he was Captain Thorn, and I thought he was.”

“Did you know where he lived?”

“No! He never said that. I thought he was stopping temporarily at
Swainson.”

“And--dear me! what a sweet bonnet that is you have on!”

Afy, whose egregious vanity was her besetting sin--who possessed enough
of it for any ten pretty women going--cast a glance out of the corners
of her eyes at the admired bonnet, and became Mr. Ball’s entirely.

“And how long was it, after your first meeting with him, before you
discovered his real name?”

“Not for a long time--several months.”

“Subsequent to the murder, I presume?”

“Oh, yes!”

Mr. Ball’s eyes gave a twinkle, and the unconscious Afy surreptitiously
smoothed, with one finger, the glossy parting of her hair.

“Besides Captain Thorn, what gentlemen were in the wood the night of the
murder?”

“Richard Hare was there. Otway Bethel and Locksley also. Those were all
I saw until the crowd came.”

“Were Locksley and Mr. Otway Bethel martyrs to your charms, as the other
two were?”

“No, indeed!” was the witness’s answer, with an indignant toss of the
head. “A couple of poaching fellows like them! They had better have
tried it on!”

“Which of the two, Hare or Thorn, was inside the cottage with you that
evening?”

Afy came out of her vanity and hesitated. She was beginning to wonder
where the questions would get to.

“You are upon your oath, witness!” thundered Mr. Justice Hare. “If it
was my--if it was Richard Hare who was with you, say so. But there must
be no equivocation here.”

Afy was startled. “It was Thorn,” she answered to Mr. Ball.

“And where was Richard Hare?”

“I don’t know. He came down, but I sent him away; I would not admit him.
I dare say he lingered in the wood.”

“Did he leave a gun with you?”

“Yes. It was one he had promised to lend my father. I put it down just
inside the door. He told me it was loaded.”

“How long after this was it, that your father interrupted you?”

“He didn’t interrupt us at all,” returned Afy. “I never saw my father
until I saw him dead.”

“Were you not in the cottage all the time?”

“No; we went out for a stroll at the back. Captain Thorn wished me good-
bye there, and I stayed out.”

“Did you hear the gun go off?”

“I heard a shot as I was sitting on the stump of a tree, and was
thinking; but I attached no importance to it, never supposing it was in
the cottage.”

“What was it that Captain Thorn had to get from the cottage after he
quitted you? What had he left there?”

Now, this was a random shaft. Lawyer Ball, a keen man, who had well
weighed all points in the tale imparted to him by Richard, as well as
other points, had colored them with his own deductions, and spoke
accordingly. Afy was taken in.

“He had left his hat there--nothing else. It was a warm evening, and he
had gone out without it.”

“He told you, I believe, sufficient to convince you of the guilt of
Richard Hare?” Another shaft thrown at random.

“I did not want convincing--I knew it without. Everybody else knew it.”

“To be sure,” equably returned Lawyer Ball. “Did Captain Thorn see it
done--did he tell you that?”

“He had got his hat, and was away down the wood some little distance,
when he heard voices in dispute in the cottage, and recognized one of
them to be that of my father. The shot followed close upon it, and he
guessed some mischief had been done, though he did not suspect its
extent.”

“Thorn told you this--when?”

“The same night--much later.”

“How came you to see him?”

Afy hesitated; but she was sternly told to answer the question.

“A boy came up to the cottage and called me out, and said a strange
gentleman wanted to see me in the wood, and had given him sixpence to
come for me. I went, and found Captain Thorn. He asked me what the
commotion was about, and I told him Richard Hare had killed my father.
He said, that now I spoke of him, he could recognize Richard Hare’s as
having been the other voice in the dispute.”

“What boy was that--the one who came for you?”

“It was Mother Whiteman’s little son.”

“And Captain Thorn then gave you this version of the tragedy?”

“It was the right version,” resentfully spoke Afy.

“How do you know that?”

“Oh! because I’m sure it was. Who else would kill him but Richard Hare?
It is a scandalous shame, your wanting to put it upon Thorn!”

“Look at the prisoner, Sir Francis Levison. Is it he whom you knew as
Thorn?”

“Yes; but that does not make him guilty of the murder.”

“Of course it does not,” complacently assented Lawyer Ball. “How long
did you remain with Captain Thorn in London--upon that little visit, you
know?”

Afy started like anybody moonstruck.

“When you quitted this place, after the tragedy, it was to join Captain
Thorn in London. How long, I ask, did you remain with him?”

Entirely a random shaft, this. But Richard had totally denied to Lawyer
Ball the popular assumption that Afy had been with him.

“Who says I was with him? Who says I went after him?” flashed Afy, with
scarlet cheeks.

“I do,” replied Lawyer Ball, taking notes of her confusion. “Come, it’s
over and done with--it’s of no use to deny it now. We all go upon visits
to friends sometimes.”

“I never heard anything so bold!” cried Afy. “Where will you tell me I
went next?”

“You are upon your oath, woman!” again interposed Justice Hare, and a
trembling, as of agitation, might be detected in his voice, in spite of
its ringing severity. “Were you with the prisoner Levison, or were you
with Richard Hare?”

“I with Richard Hare!” cried Afy, agitated in her turn, and shaking like
an aspen-leaf, partly with discomfiture, partly with unknown dread. “How
dare that cruel falsehood be brought up again, to my face? I never saw
Richard Hare after the night of the murder. I swear it. I swear that I
never saw him since. Visit him! I’d sooner visit Calcraft, the hangman.”

There was truth in the words--in the tone. The chairman let fall the
hand which had been raised to his face, holding on his eye-glasses; and
a sort of self-condemning fear arose, confusing his brain. His son,
proved innocent of one part, might be proved innocent of the other; and
then--how would his own harsh conduct show out! West Lynne, in its
charity, the justice in his, had cast more odium to Richard, with regard
to his after conduct touching this girl, than it had on the score of the
murder.

“Come,” said Lawyer Ball, in a coaxing tone, “let us be pleasant. Of
course you were not with Richard Hare--West Lynne is always ill-natured-
-you were on a visit to Captain Thorn, as--as any other young lady might
be?”

Afy hung her head, cowed down to abject meekness.

“Answer the question,” came forth the chairman’s voice again. “Were you
with Thorn?”

“Yes,” though the answer was feeble enough.

Mr. Ball coughed an insinuating cough.

“Did you remain with him--say two or three years?”

“Not three.”

“A little over two, perhaps?”

“There was no harm in it,” shrieked Afy, with a catching sob of temper.
“If I chose to live in London, and he chose to make a morning call upon
me, now and then, as an old friend, what’s that to anybody? Where was
the harm, I ask?”

“Certainly--where was the harm? I am not insinuating any,” returned
Lawyer Ball, with a wink of the eye furthest from the witness and the
bench. “And, during the time that--that he was making these little
morning calls upon you, did you know him to be Levison?”

“Yes. I knew him to be Captain Levison then.”

“Did he ever tell you why he had assumed the name of Thorn?”

“Only for a whim, he said. The day he spoke to me in the pastrycook’s
shop at Swainson, something came over him, in the spur of the moment,
not to give his right name, so he gave the first that came into his
head. He never thought to retain it, or that other people would hear of
him by it.”

“I dare say not,” laconically spoke Lawyer Ball. “Well, Miss Afy, I
believe that is all for the present. I want Ebenezer James in again,” he
whispered to an officer of the justice-room, as the witness retired.

Ebenezer James reappeared and took Afy’s place.

“You informed their worships, just now, that you had met Thorn in
London, some eighteen months subsequent to the murder,” began Lawyer
Ball, launching another of his shafts. “This must have been during the
period of Afy Hallijohn’s sojourn with him. Did you also see her?”

Mr. Ebenezer opened his eyes. He knew nothing of the evidence just given
by Afy, and wondered how on earth it had come out--that she had been
with Thorn at all. He had never betrayed it.

“Afy?” stammered he.

“Yes, Afy,” sharply returned the lawyer. “Their worships know that when
she took that trip of hers from West Lynne it was to join Thorn not
Richard Hare--though the latter has borne the credit of it. I ask you,
did you see her? for she was then still connected with him.”

“Well--yes, I did,” replied Mr. Ebenezer, his own scruples removed, but
wondering still how it had been discovered, unless Afy had--as he had
prophesied she would--let out in her “tantrums.” “In fact, it was Afy
whom I first saw.”

“State the circumstances.”

“I was up Paddington way one afternoon, and saw a lady going into a
house. It was Afy Hallijohn. She lived there, I found--had the drawing-
room apartments. She invited me to stay to tea with her, and I did.”

“Did you see Captain Levison there?”

“I saw Thorn--as I thought him to be. Afy told me I must be away by
eight o’clock, for she was expecting a friend who sometimes came to sit
with her for an hour’s chat. But, in talking over old times--not that I
could tell her much about West Lynne, for I had left it almost as long
as she had--the time slipped on past the hour. When Afy found that out
she hurried me off, and I had barely got outside the gate when a cab
drove up, and Thorn alighted from it, and let himself in with a latch-
key. That is all I know.”

“When you knew that the scandal of Afy’s absence rested on Richard Hare,
why could you not have said this, and cleared him, on your return to
West Lynne?”

“It was no affair of mine, that I should make it public. Afy asked me
not to say I had seen her, and I promised her I would not. As to Richard
Hare, a little extra scandal on his back was nothing, while there
remained on it the worse scandal of murder.”

“Stop a bit,” interposed Mr. Rubiny, as the witness was about to retire.
“You speak of the time being eight o’clock in the evening, sir. Was it
dark?”

“Yes.”

“Then how can you be certain it was Thorn who got out of the cab and
entered?”

“I am quite certain. There was a gas-lamp right at the spot, and I saw
him as well as I should have seen him in daylight. I knew his voice,
too; could have sworn to it anywhere; and I would almost have sworn to
him by his splendid diamond ring. It flashed in the lamplight.”

“His voice! Did he speak to you?”

“No. But he spoke to the cabman. There was a half dispute between them.
The man said Thorn had not paid him enough, that he had not allowed for
having been kept waiting twenty minutes on the road. Thorn swore at him
a bit, and then flung him an extra shilling.”

The next witness was a man who had been groom to the late Sir Peter
Levison. He testified that the prisoner, Francis Levison had been on a
visit to his master late in the summer and part of the autumn, the year
that Hallijohn was killed. That he frequently rode out in the direction
of West Lynne, especially toward evening; would be away three or four
hours, and come home with the horse in a foam. Also that he picked up
two letters at different times, which Mr. Levison had carelessly let
fall from his pocket, and returned them to him. Both the notes were
addressed “Captain Thorn.” But they had not been through the post, for
there was no further superscription on them; and the writing looked like
a lady’s. He remembered quite well hearing of the murder of Hallijohn,
the witness added, in answer to a question; it made a great stir through
out the country. It was just at that same time that Mr. Levison
concluded his visit, and returned to London.

“A wonderful memory!” Mr. Rubiny sarcastically remarked.

The witness, a quiet, respectable man, replied that he had a good
memory; but that circumstances had impressed upon it particularly the
fact that Mr. Levison’s departure followed close upon the murder of
Hallijohn.

“One day, when Sir Peter was round at the stables, gentlemen, he was
urging his nephew to prolong his visit, and asked what sudden freak was
taking him off. Mr. Levison replied that unexpected business called him
to London. While they were talking, the coachman came up, all in a heat,
telling that Hallijohn, of West Lynne, had been murdered by young Mr.
Hare. I remember Sir Peter said he could not believe it; and that it
must have been an accident, not murder.”

“Is that all?”

“There was more said. Mr. Levison, in a shameful sort of manner, asked
his uncle, would he let him have five or ten pounds? Sir Peter seemed
angry, and asked, what had he done with the fifty-pound note he had made
him a present of only the previous morning? Mr. Levison replied that he
had sent that away to a brother officer, to whom he was in debt. Sir
Peter refused to believe it, and said he had more likely squandered it
upon some disgraceful folly. Mr. Levison denied that he had; but he
looked confused, indeed, his manner altogether was confused that
morning.”

“Did he get the five or ten pounds?”

“I don’t know, gentlemen. I dare say he did, for my master was as
persuadable as a woman, though he’d fly out a bit sometimes at first.
Mr. Levison departed for London that same night.”

The last witness called was Mr. Dill. On the previous Tuesday evening,
he had been returning home from spending an hour at Mr. Beauchamp’s,
when, in a field opposite to Mr. Justice Hare’s, he suddenly heard a
commotion. It arose from the meeting of Sir Francis Levison and Otway
Bethel. The former appeared to have been enjoying a solitary moonlight
ramble, and the latter to have encountered him unexpectedly. Words
ensued. Bethel accused Sir Francis of “shirking” him. Sir Francis
answered angrily that he knew nothing of him, and nothing he wanted to
know.

“‘You were glad enough to know something of me the night of Hallijohn’s
murder,’ retorted Bethel to this. ‘Do you remember that I could hang
you. One little word from me, and you’d stand in Dick Hare’s place.’

“‘You fool!’ passionately cried Sir Francis. ‘You couldn’t hang me
without putting your own head in a noose. Did you not have your hush
money? Are you wanting to do me out of more?’

“‘A cursed paltry note of fifty pounds!’ foamed Otway Bethel, ‘which,
many a time since, I have wished my fingers were blown off before they
touched. I never should have touched it, but that I was altogether
overwhelmed with the moment’s confusion. I have not been able to look
Mrs. Hare in the face since, knowing that I held the secret that would
save her son from the hangman.’

“‘And put yourself in his place,’ sneered Sir Francis.

“‘No. Put you.’

“‘That’s as it might be. But, if I went to the hangman, you would go
with me. There would be no excuse or escape for you. You know it.’”

The warfare continued longer, but this was the cream of it. Mr. Dill
heard the whole, and repeated it now to the magistrate. Mr. Rubiny
protested that it was “inadmissible;” “hearsay evidence;” “contrary to
law;” but the bench oracularly put Mr. Rubiny down, and told him they
did not want any stranger to come there and teach them their business.

Colonel Bethel had leaned forward at the conclusion of Mr. Dill’s
evidence, dismay on his face, agitation in his voice. “Are you sure that
you made no mistake--that the other in this interview was Otway Bethel?”

Mr. Dill sadly shook his head. “Am I one to swear to a wrong man,
colonel? I wish I had not heard it--save that it may be the means of
clearing Richard Hare.”

Sir Francis Levison had braved out the proceedings with a haughty,
cavalier air, his delicate hands and his diamond ring remarkably
conspicuous. Was that stone the real thing, or a false one, substituted
for the real? Hard up as he had long been for money, the suspicion might
arise. A derisive smile crossed his features at parts of the evidence,
as much as to say, “You may convict me as to Mademoiselle Afy, but you
can’t as to the murder.” When, however, Mr. Dill’s testimony was given,
what a change was there! His mood tamed down to what looked like abject
fear, and he shook in his shoes as he stood.

“Of course your worships will take bail for Sir Francis?” said Mr.
Rubiny, at the close of the proceedings.

Bail! The bench looked at one another.

“Your worships will not refuse it--a gentleman in Sir Francis Levison’s
position!”

The bench thought they never had so insolent an application made to
them. Bail for him!--on this charge! No; not if the lord chancellor
himself came down to offer it.

Mr. Otway Bethel, conscious, probably, that nobody would offer bail for
him, not even the colonel, did not ask the bench to take it. So the two
were fully committed to take their trial for the “Wilful murder,
otherwise the killing and slaying of George Hallijohn;” and before night
would be on their road to the county prison at Lynneborough.

And that vain, ill-starred Afy! What of her? Well, Afy had retreated to
the witness-room again, after giving evidence, and there she remained to
the close, agreeably occupied in a mental debate. What would they make
out from her admission regarding her sojourn in London and the morning
calls? How would that precious West Lynne construe it? She did not much
care; she would brave it out, and assail them with towering indignation,
did any dare to cast a stone at her.

Such was her final decision, arrived at just as the proceedings
terminated. Afy was right glad to remain where she was, till some of the
bustle had gone.

“How was it ended?” asked she of Mr. Ball, who, being a bachelor, was
ever regarded with much graciousness by Afy, for she kept her eyes open
to contingencies; although Mr. Joe Jiffin was held in reserve.

“They are both committed for wilful murder--off to Lynneborough within
an hour!”

Afy’s color rose. “What a shame! To commit two innocent men upon such a
charge.”

“I can tell you what, Miss Afy, the sooner you disabuse your mind of
that prejudice, the better. Levison has been as good as proved guilty
to-day; but if proof were wanting, he and Bethel have criminated each
other. ‘When rogues fall out, honest men get their own.’ Not that I can
quite fathom Bethel’s share in the exploit, though I can pretty well
guess at it. And, in proving themselves guilty they have proved the
innocence of Richard Hare.”

Afy’s face was changing to whiteness; her confident air to one of dread;
her vanity to humiliation.

“It--can’t--be--true!” she gasped.

“It’s true enough. The part you have hitherto ascribed to Thorn, was
enacted by Richard Hare. He heard the shot from his place in the wood,
and saw Thorn run, ghastly, trembling, horrified, from his wicked work.
Believe me, it was Thorn who killed your father.”

Afy grew cold as she listened. That one awful moment, when conviction
that his words were true, forced itself upon her, was enough to sober
her for a whole lifetime. Thorn! Her sight failed; her head reeled; her
very heart turned to sickness. One struggling cry of pain; and, for the
second time that day, Afy Hallijohn fell forward in a fainting fit.

Shouts, hisses, execrations, yells! The prisoners were being brought
forth, to be conveyed to Lynneborough. A whole posse of constables was
necessary to protect them against the outbreak of the mob, which
outbreak was not directed against Otway Bethel, but against Sir Francis
Levison. Cowering like the guilty culprit that he was, shivered he,
hiding his white face--wondering whether it would be a repetition of
Justice Hare’s green pond, or tearing him asunder piecemeal--and cursing
the earth because it did not open and let him in!



CHAPTER XLI.

FIRM!

Miss Lucy was en penitence. She had been guilty of some childish fault
that day at Aunt Cornelia’s, which, coming to the knowledge of Mrs.
Carlyle, after their return home the young lady was ordered to the
nursery for the rest of the day, and to be regaled upon bread and water.

Barbara was in her pleasant dressing-room. There was to be a dinner
party at East Lynne that evening, and she had just finished dressing.
Very lovely looked she in her dinner dress, with purple and scarlet
flowers in her bosom. She glanced at her watch somewhat anxiously, for
the gentlemen had not made their appearance. Half-past six! And they
were to dine at seven.

Madame Vine tapped at the door. Her errand was to beg grace for Lucy.
She had been promised half an hour in the drawing-room, when the ladies
entered it from the dessert-table, and was now in agony of grief at the
disappointment. Would Mrs. Carlyle pardon her, and allow her to be
dressed?

“You are too lenient to the child, madame,” spoke Barbara. “I don’t
think you ever would punish her at all. But when she commits faults,
they must be corrected.”

“She is very sorry for her fault; she promises not to be rude again. She
is crying as if she would cry her heart out.”

“Not for her ill-behavior, but because she’s afraid of missing the
drawing-room to-night,” cried Barbara.

“Do, pray, restore her to favor,” pleaded madame.

“I shall see. Just look, Madame Vine! I broke this, a minute or two ago.
Is it not a pity?”

Barbara held in her hand a beautiful toilette ornament, set in pure
gold. One of the petals had come off.

Madame Vine examined it. “I have some cement upstairs that would join
it,” she exclaimed. “I could do it in two minutes. I bought it in
France.”

“Oh, I wish you would,” was Barbara’s delighted response. “Do bring it
here and join it now. Shall I bribe you?” she added, laughing. “You make
this all right, and then you shall bear back grace to Lucy--for I
perceive that is what your heart is set upon.”

Madame Vine went, and returned with her cement. Barbara watched her, as
she took the pieces in her hand, to see how the one must fit on to the
other.

“This has been broken once, as Joyce tells me,” Barbara said. “But it
must have been imperceptibly joined, for I have looked in vain for the
damage. Mr. Carlyle bought it for his first wife, when they were in
London, after their marriage. She broke it subsequently here, at East
Lynne. You will never do it, Madame Vine, if your hand shakes like that.
What is the matter?”

A great deal was the matter. First, the ominous words had been upon her
tongue. “It was here where the stem joins the flower;” but she
recollected herself in time. Next came up the past vision of the place
and hour when the accident occurred. Her hanging sleeve had swept it off
the table. Mr. Carlyle was in the room, and he had soothed her sorrow--
her almost childish sorrow with kisses sweet. Ah me! poor thing! I think
our hands would have shaken as hers did. The ornament and the kisses
were Barbara’s now.

“I ran quickly up the stairs and back again,” was the explanation she
offered to Mrs. Carlyle for her shaking hands.

At that moment Mr. Carlyle and their guests were heard to return, and
ascend to their respective apartments, Lord Vane’s gleeful voice echoing
through the house. Mr. Carlyle came into his wife’s dressing-room, and
Madame Vine would have made a precipitate retreat.

“No, no,” said Barbara, “finish it, now you have begun. Mr. Carlyle will
be going to his room. Look at the misfortune I have had. Archibald, I
have broken this.”

Mr. Carlyle glanced carelessly at the trinket, and at Madame Vine’s
white fingers. He crossed to the door of his dressing-room and opened
it, then held out his hand in silence for Barbara to approach and drew
her in with him. Madame Vine went on with her work.

Presently Barbara returned, and approached the table where stood Madame
Vine, while she drew on her gloves. Her eyelashes were wet.

“I could not help shedding a few tears of joy,” exclaimed Barbara, with
a pretty blush, perceiving that madame observed the signs. “Mr. Carlyle
has been telling me that my brother’s innocence is now all but patent to
the world. It came out upon the examination of those two men, Sir
Francis and Otway Bethel. Lord Mount Severn was present at the
proceedings, and says they have in some way incriminated each other.
Papa sat in his place as chairman; I wonder that he liked to do so.”

Lower bent the head of Madame Vine over her employment. “Has anything
been proved against them?” she asked, in her usual soft tone, almost a
whisper.

“There is not the least doubt of the guilt of Levison, but Otway
Bethel’s share in the affair is a puzzle yet,” replied Mrs. Carlyle.
“Both are committed for trial. Oh, that man! that man! how his sins come
out!” she continued in excitement.

Madame Vine glanced up through her spectacles.

“Would you believe,” continued Barbara, dropping her voice, “that while
West Lynne, and I fear ourselves also, gave that miserable Afy credit
for having gone away with Richard, she was all the time with Levison?
Ball, the lawyer got her to confess to-day. I am unacquainted with the
details; Mr. Carlyle would not give them to me. He said the bare fact
was quite enough, and considering the associations it involved, would
not do to talk of.”

Mr. Carlyle was right.

“Out it seems to come, little by little, one wickedness after another!”
 resumed Barbara. “I do not like Mr. Carlyle to hear it. No, I don’t. Of
course there is no help for it; but he must feel it terribly, as must
also Lord Mount Severn. She was his wife, you know, and the children are
hers; and to think that she--I mean he--must feel it for her,” went on
Barbara after her sudden pause, and there was some hauteur in her tone
lest she should be misunderstood. “Mr. Carlyle is one of the very few
men, so entirely noble, whom the sort of disgrace reflected from Lady
Isabel’s conduct cannot touch.”

The carriage of the first guest. Barbara ran across the room, and
rattled at Mr. Carlyle’s door. “Archibald do you hear?”

Back came the laughing answer. “I shan’t keep them long. But they may
surely accord a few minutes’ grace to a man who has just been converted
into an M. P.”

Barbara descended to the drawing-room, leaving her, that unhappy lady,
to the cement and the broken pieces, and to battle as best she could
with her bitter heart. Nothing but stabs; nothing but stabs! Was her
punishment ever to end? No. The step she had taken in coming back to
East Lynne had precluded that.

The guests arrived; all save Mr. and Mrs. Hare. Barbara received a note
from her instead. The justice did not feel well enough to join them.

I should think he did not.

A pleasant party it was at East Lynne, and twelve o’clock struck before
the carriage of the last guest drove away. It may have been from one to
two hours after that, and the house was steeped in moonlight and
quietness, everybody being abed and asleep when a loud summons at the
hall bell echoed through the stillness.

The first to put her head out the window was Wilson. “Is it fire?”
 shrieked she, in the most excessive state of terror conceivable. Wilson
had a natural dread of fire--some people do possess this dread more than
others--and had oftentime aroused the house to a commotion by declaring
she smelt it. “Is it fire?” shrieked Wilson.

“Yes!” was shouted at the top of a man’s voice, who stepped from between
the entrance pillars to answer.

Wilson waited for no more. Clutching at the baby with one hand--a fine
young gentleman now of near twelve months old, promising fair to be as
great a source of trouble to Wilson and the nursery as was his brother
Archibald, whom he greatly resembled--and at Archie with the other, out
she flew to the corridor screeching “Fire! fire! fire!” never ceasing,
down tore Wilson with the four children, and burst unceremoniously into
the sleeping apartment of Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle. By this time the
children, terrified out of their senses, not at Wilson’s cry of alarm,
but at the summary propelling downstairs, set up a shrieking, too.
Madame Vine, believing that half the house as least was in flames, was
the next to appear, throwing on a shawl she had caught up, and then came
Joyce.

“Fire! fire! fire!” shouted Wilson; “we are all being burnt up
together!”

Poor Mrs. Carlyle, thus wildly aroused from sleep, sprang out of bed and
into the corridor in her night-dress. Everybody else was in a night-
dress--when folks are flying for dear life, they don’t stop to look for
their dress-coats and best blonde caps. Out came Mr. Carlyle, who had
hastily assumed his pantaloons.

He cast a rapid glance down to the hall, and saw that the stairs were
perfectly free for escape; therefore to hurry was not so violent. Every
soul around him was shrieking in concert, making the confusion and din
terrific. The bright moonlight streamed in at the corridor windows, but
there was no other light; shadowy and indistinct enough looked the white
figures.

“Where is the fire?” he exclaimed. “I don’t smell any. Who gave the
first alarm?”

The bell answered him. The hall-bell, which rang out ten times louder
and longer than before. He opened one of the windows and leaned from it.
“Who’s there?” Madame Vine caught up Archie.

“It’s me, sir,” responded a voice, which he at once recognized to be
that of one of Mr. Hare’s men-servants. “Master has been took in a fit,
sir, and mistress sent me for you and Miss Barbara. You must please make
haste, sir, if you want to see him alive.”

Miss Barbara! It was more familiar to Jasper, in a moment of excitement,
than the new name.

“You, Jasper! Is the house on fire--this house?”

“Well, I don’t know, sir. I can hear a dreadful deal of screeching in
it.”

Mr. Carlyle closed the window. He began to suspect that the danger lay
in fear alone. “Who told you there was fire?” he demanded of Wilson.

“That man ringing at the door,” sobbed Wilson. “Thank goodness I have
saved the children!”

Mr. Carlyle felt somewhat exasperated at the mistake. His wife was
trembling from head to foot, her face of a deadly whiteness, and he knew
that she was not in a condition to be alarmed, necessarily or
unnecessarily. She clung to him in terror, asking if they could escape.

“My darling, be calm! There’s no fire; it’s a stupid mistake. You may
all go back to bed and sleep in peace,” he added to the rest, “and the
next time that you alarm the house in the night, Wilson, have the
goodness to make yourself sure, first of all, that there’s cause for
it.”

Barbara, frightened still, bewildered and uncertain, escaped to the
window and threw it open. But Mr. Carlyle was nearly as quick as she; he
caught her to him with one hand, and drew the window down with the
other. To have these tidings told to her abruptly would be worse than
all. By this time some of the servants had descended the other staircase
with a light, being in various stages of costume, and hastened to open
the hall-door. Jasper entered. The man had probably waited to help to
put out the “fire.” Barbara caught sight of him ere Mr. Carlyle could
prevent it, and grew sick with fear, believing some ill had happened to
her mother.

Drawing her inside their chamber, he broke the news to her soothingly
and tenderly, making light of it.

She burst into tears. “You are not deceiving me, Archibald? Papa is not
dead?”

“Dead!” cheerfully echoed Mr. Carlyle, in the same tone he might have
used had Barbara wondered whether the justice was taking a night airing
for pleasure in a balloon. “Wilson has indeed frightened you, love.
Dress yourself, and we will go and see him.”

At that moment Barbara recollected William. Strange that she should have
been the first to do so--before Lady Isabel--before Mr. Carlyle. She ran
out again to the corridors, where the boy stood shivering. “He may have
caught his death!” she uttered, snatching him up in her arms. “Oh,
Wilson! What have you done? His night-gown is damp and cold.”

Unfit as she was for the burden, she bore him to her own bed. Wilson was
not at leisure to attend to reproaches just then. She was engaged in a
wordy war with Jasper, leaning over the balustrades to carry it on.

“I never told you there was a fire!” indignantly denied Jasper.

“You did. I opened the nursery window and called out ‘Is it fire?’ and
you answered ‘Yes.’”

“You called out ‘Is it Jasper?’ What else should I say but ‘Yes,’ to
that? Fire? Where was the fire likely to be--in the park?”

“Wilson take the children back to bed,” authoritatively spoke Mr.
Carlyle, as he advanced to look down into the hall. “John, are you
there? The close carriage, instantly--look sharp. Madame Vine, pray
don’t continue to hold that heavy boy; Joyce can’t you relieve madame?”

In crossing back to his room, Mr. Carlyle had brushed past madame, and
noticed that she appeared to be shaking, as with the weight of
Archibald. In reality she was still alarmed, not understanding yet the
cause of the commotion. Joyce, who comprehended it as little, and had
stood with her arms round Lucy, advanced to take Archibald, and Mr.
Carlyle disappeared. Barbara had taken off her own warm night-gown then,
and put it upon William in place of his cold one--had struck a light and
was busily dressing herself.

“Just feel his night-gown Archibald! Wilson--”

A shrill cry of awful terror interrupted the words, and Mr. Carlyle made
one bound out again. Barbara followed; the least she thought was that
Wilson had dropped the baby in the hall.

That was not the catastrophe. Wilson, with the baby and Lucy, had
already disappeared up the staircase, and Madame Vine was disappearing.
Archibald lay on the soft carpet of the corridor, where madame had
stood; for Joyce, in the act of taking him, had let him slip to the
ground--let him fall from sheer terror. She held on to the balustrades,
her face ghastly, her mouth open, her eyes fixed in horror--altogether
an object to look upon. Archie gathered himself on his sturdy legs, and
stood staring.

“Why, Joyce! What is the matter with you?” cried Mr. Carlyle. “You look
as if you had seen a spectre.”

“Oh, master!” she wailed, “I have seen one.”

“Are you all going deranged together?” retorted he, wondering what had
come to the house. “Seen a spectre, Joyce?”

Joyce fell on her knees, as if unable to support herself, and crossed
her shaking hands upon her chest. Had she seen ten spectres she could
not have betrayed more dire distress. She was a sensible and faithful
servant, one not given to flights of fancy, and Mr. Carlyle gazed at her
in very amazement.

“Joyce, what is this?” he asked, bending down and speaking kindly.

“Oh, my dear master! Heaven have mercy upon us all!” was the
inexplicable answer.

“Joyce I ask you what is this?”

She made no reply. She rose up shaking; and, taking Archie’s hand,
slowly proceeded toward the upper stairs, low moans breaking from her,
and the boy’s naked feet pattering on the carpet.

“What can ail her?” whispered Barbara, following Joyce with her eyes.
“What did she mean about a spectre?”

“She must have been reading a ghost-book,” said Carlyle. “Wilson’s folly
has turned the house topsy-turvy. Make your haste, Barbara.”

Spring waned. Summer came, and would soon be waning, too, for the hot
days of July were now in. What had the months brought forth, since the
election of Mr. Carlyle in April? Be you very sure they had not been
without their events.

Mr. Justice Hare’s illness had turned out to be a stroke of paralysis.
People cannot act with unnatural harshness toward a child, and then
discover they have been in the wrong, with impunity. Thus it proved with
Mr. Justice Hare. He was recovering, but would never again be the man he
had been. The fright, when Jasper had gone to tell of his illness at
East Lynne, and was mistaken for fire, had done nobody any damage, save
William and Joyce. William had caught a cold, which brought increased
malady to the lungs; and Joyce seemed to have caught fear. She went
about, more like one in a dream than awake, would be buried in a reverie
for an hour at a time, and if suddenly spoken to, would start and
shiver.

Mr. Carlyle and his wife departed for London immediately that Mr. Hare
was pronounced out of danger; which was in about a week from the time of
his seizure. William accompanied them, partly for the benefit of London
advice, partly that Mr. Carlyle would not be parted from him. Joyce
went, in attendance with some of the servants.

They found London ringing with the news of Sir Francis Levison’s arrest.
London could not understand it; and the most wild and improbable tales
were in circulation. The season was at its height; the excitement in
proportion; it was more than a nine days’ wonder. On the very evening of
their arrival a lady, young and beautiful, was shown in to the presence
of Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle. She had declined to give her name, but there
arose to Mr. Carlyle’s memory, when he looked upon her, one whom he had
seen in earlier days as the friend of his first wife--Blanche Challoner.
It was not Blanche, however.

The stranger looked keenly at Mr. Carlyle. He was standing with his hat
in his hand, on the point of going out. “Will you pardon this
intrusion?” she asked. “I have come to you as one human being in need
comes to crave help of another. I am Lady Levison.”

Barbara’s face flushed. Mr. Carlyle courteously invited the stranger to
a chair, remaining standing himself. She sat for a moment, and then
rose, evidently in an excess of agitation.

“Yes, I am Lady Levison, forced to call that man husband. That he has
been a wicked man, I have long known; but now I hear he is a criminal. I
hear it, I say, but I can get the truth from none. I went to Lord Mount
Severn; he declined to give me particulars. I heard that Mr. Carlyle
would be in town to-day, and I resolved to come and ask them of him.”

She delivered the sentences in a jerking, abrupt tone, betraying her
inward emotion. Mr. Carlyle, looking somewhat unapproachable, made no
immediate reply.

“You and I have both been deeply wronged by him, Mr. Carlyle, but I
brought my wrong upon myself, you did not. My sister, Blanche, whom he
had cruelly treated--and if I speak of it, I only speak of what is known
to the world--warned me against him. Mrs. Levison, his grandmother, that
ancient lady who must now be bordering upon ninety, she warned me. The
night before my wedding day, she came on purpose to tell me that if I
married Francis Levison I should rue it for life. There was yet time to
retract she said. Yes; there would have been time; but there was no
will. I would not listen to either. I was led away by vanity, by folly,
by something worse--the triumphing over my own sister. Poor Blanche! But
which has the best of the bargain now, she or I? And I have a child,”
 she continued, dropping her voice, “a boy who inherits his father’s
name. Mr. Carlyle, will they condemn him?”

“Nothing, as yet, is positively proved against him,” replied Mr.
Carlyle, compassionating the unhappy lady.

“If I could but get a divorce!” she passionately uttered, apparently
losing all self-control. “I might have got one, over and over again,
since we married, but there would have been the expose and the scandal.
If I could but change my child’s name! Tell me--does any chance of
redress remain for me?”

There was none, and Mr. Carlyle did not attempt to speak of any. He
offered a few kind words of sympathy, very generally expressed, and then
prepared to go out. She moved, and stood in his way.

“You will not leave until you have given me the particulars! I pray you,
do not! I came trustingly to you, hoping to know them.”

“I am waited for, to keep an important engagement,” he answered. “And
were my time at liberty, I should decline to tell them to you, on my own
account, as well as on yours. Lay not discourtesy to my charge, Lady
Levison. Were I to speak of the man, even to you, his name would blister
my lips.”

“In every word of hate spoken by you I would sympathize; every
contemptuous expression of scorn, cast upon him from your heart, I would
join in, tenfold.”

Barbara was shocked. “He is your husband, after all,” she took leave to
whisper.

“My husband!” broke forth Lady Levison, in agitation, seemingly. “Yes!
there’s the wrong. Why did he, knowing what he was, delude me into
becoming his wife? You ought to feel for me, Mrs. Carlyle; and you do
feel for me, for you are a wife and mother. How dare these base men
marry--take to themselves an innocent, inexperienced girl, vowing,
before God, to love and honor and cherish her? Were not his other sins
impediment enough but he must have crime, also, and woo me! He has done
me deep and irredeemable wrong, and has entailed upon his child an
inheritance of shame. What had he or I done to deserve it, I ask?”

Barbara felt half frightened at her vehemence; and Barbara might be
thankful not to understand it. All her native gentleness, all her
reticence of feeling, as a wife and a gentlewoman, had been goaded out
of her. The process had been going on for some time, but this last
revelation was the crowning point; and Alice, Lady Levison, turned round
upon the world in her helpless resentment, as any poor wife, working in
a garret, might have done. There are certain wrongs which bring out
human nature in the high-born, as well as in the low. “Still he is your
husband,” was all Barbara could, with deprecation, again plead.

“He made himself my husband by deceit, and I will throw him off in the
face of day,” returned Lady Levison. “There is no moral obligation why I
should not. He has worked ill and ruin--ill and ruin upon me and my
child, and the world shall never be allowed to think I have borne my
share in it. How was it you kept your hands off him, when he reappeared,
to brave you, in West Lynne?” she added, in a changed tone, turning to
Mr. Carlyle.

“I cannot tell. I was a marvel oftentimes to myself.”

He quitted the room as he spoke, adding a few civil words about her with
Mrs. Carlyle. Barbara, not possessing the scruples of her husband,
yielded to Lady Levison’s request, and gave her the outline of the dark
tale. Its outline only; and generously suppressing Afy’s name beyond the
evening of the fatal event. Lady Levison listened without interruption.

“Do you and Mr. Carlyle believe him to have been guilty?”

“Yes; but Mr. Carlyle will not express his opinion to the world. He does
not repay wrong with revenge. I have heard him say that if the lifting
of his finger would send the man to his punishment, he would tie down
his hand rather than lift it.”

“Was his first wife, Isabel Vane, mad?” she presently asked.

“Mad!” echoed Barbara, in surprise.

“When she quitted him for the other. It could have been nothing else
than madness. I could understand a woman’s flying from him for love of
Mr. Carlyle; but now that I have seen your husband, I cannot understand
the reverse side of the picture. I thank you for your courtesy, Mrs.
Carlyle.”

And, without another word, Alice Levison quitted the room as abruptly as
she had entered it.

Well, the London visit came to an end. It was of little more than three
weeks’ duration, for Barbara must be safe at home again. Mr. Carlyle
remained for the rest of the season alone, but he varied it with
journeys to East Lynne. He had returned home for good now, July,
although the session had not quite terminated. There was another baby at
East Lynne, a lovely little baby, pretty as Barbara herself had been at
a month old. William was fading rapidly. The London physicians had but
confirmed the opinion of Dr. Martin, and it was evident to all that the
close would not be long protracted.

Somebody else was fading--Lady Isabel. The cross had been too heavy, and
she was sinking under its weight. Can you wonder at it?

An intensely hot day it was under the July sun. Afy Hallijohn was
sailing up the street in its beams, finer and vainer than ever. She
encountered Mr. Carlyle.

“So, Afy, you are really going to be married at last?”

“Jiffin fancies so, sir. I am not sure yet but what I shall change my
mind. Jiffin thinks there’s nobody like me. If I could eat gold and
silver, he’d provide it; and he’s as fond as fond can be. But then you
know, sir, he’s half soft.”

“Soft as to you, perhaps,” laughed Mr. Carlyle. “I consider him a very
civil, respectable man, Afy.”

“And then, I never did think to marry a shopkeeper,” grumbled Afy; “I
looked a little higher than that. Only fancy, sir, having a husband who
wears a white apron tied round him!”

“Terrible!” responded Mr. Carlyle, with a grave face.

“Not but what it will be a tolerable settlement,” rejoined Afy, veering
round a point. “He’s having his house done up in style, and I shall keep
two good servants, and do nothing myself but dress and subscribe to the
library. He makes plenty of money.”

“A very tolerable settlement, I should say,” returned Mr. Carlyle; and
Afy’s face fell before the glance of his eye, merry though it was. “Take
care you don’t spend all his money for him, Afy.”

“I’ll take care of that,” nodded Afy, significantly. “Sir,” she somewhat
abruptly added, “what is it that’s the matter with Joyce?”

“I do not know,” said Mr. Carlyle, becoming serious. “There does appear
to be something the matter with her, for she is much changed.”

“I never saw anybody so changed in my life,” exclaimed Afy. “I told her
the other day that she was just like one who had got some dreadful
secret upon their mind.”

“It is really more like that than anything else,” observed Mr. Carlyle.

“But she is one of the close ones, is Joyce,” continued Afy. “No fear
that she’ll give out a clue, if it does not suit her to do so. She told
me, in answer, to mind my own business, and not to take absurd fancies
in my head. How is the baby, sir, and Mrs. Carlyle?”

“All well. Good day, Afy.”



CHAPTER XLII.

THE TRIAL.

Spacious courts were the assize courts of Lynneborough; and it was well
they were so, otherwise more people had been disappointed, and numbers
were, of hearing the noted trial of Sir Francis Levison for the murder
of George Hallijohn.

The circumstances attending the case caused it to bear for the public an
unparalleled interest. The rank of the accused, and his antecedents,
more especially that particular local antecedent touching the Lady
Isabel Carlyle; the verdict still out against Richard Hare; the length
of time which had elapsed since; the part played in it by Afy; the
intense curiosity as to the part taken in it by Otway Bethel; the
speculation as to what had been the exact details, and the doubt of a
conviction--all contributed to fan the curiosity of the public. People
came from far and near to be present--friends of Mr. Carlyle, friends of
the Hares, friends of the Challoner family, friends of the prisoner,
besides the general public. Colonel Bethel and Mr. Justice Hare had
conspicuous seats.

At a few minutes past nine the judge took his place on the bench, but
not before a rumor had gone through the court--a rumor that seemed to
shake it to its centre, and which people stretched out their necks to
hear--Otway Bethel had turned Queen’s evidence, and was to be admitted
as a witness for the crown.

Thin, haggard, pale, looked Francis Levison as he was placed in the
dock. His incarceration had not in any way contributed to his personal
advantages, and there was an ever-recurring expression of dread upon his
countenance not pleasant to look upon. He was dressed in black, old Mrs.
Levison having died, and his diamond ring shone conspicuous still on his
white hand, now whiter than ever. The most eminent counsel were engaged
on both sides.

The testimony of the witnesses already given need not be recapitulated.
The identification of the prisoner with the man Thorn was fully
established--Ebenezer James proved that. Afy proved it, and also that
he, Thorn, was at the cottage that night. Sir Peter Levison’s groom was
likewise re-examined. But still there wanted other testimony. Afy was
made to re-assert that Thorn had to go to the cottage for his hat after
leaving her, but that proved nothing, and the conversation, or quarrel
overheard by Mr. Dill was now again, put forward. If this was all the
evidence, people opined that the case for the prosecution would break
down.

“Call Richard Hare” said the counsel for the prosecution.

Those present who knew Mr. Justice Hare, looked up at him, wondering why
he did not stir in answer to his name--wondering at the pallid hue which
overspread his face. Not he, but another came forward--a fair, placid,
gentlemanly young man, with blue eyes, fair hair, and a pleasant
countenance. It was Richard Hare the younger. He had assumed his
original position in life, so far as attire went, and in that, at least,
was a gentleman again. In speech also--with his working dress Richard
had thrown off his working manners.

A strange hubbub arose in court. Richard Hare, the exile--the reported
dead--the man whose life was in jeopardy! The spectators rose with one
accord to get a better view; they stood on tiptoe; they pushed forth
their necks; they strained their eyesight: and, amidst all the noisy
hum, the groan bursting from the lips of Justice Hare was unnoticed.
Whilst order was being called for, and the judge threatened to clear the
court, two officers moved themselves quietly up and stood behind the
witness. Richard Hare was in custody, though he might know it not. The
witness was sworn.

“What is your name?”

“Richard Hare.”

“Son of Mr. Justice Hare, I believe, of the Grove, West Lynne?”

“His only son.”

“The same against whom a verdict of wilful murder is out?” interposed
the judge.

“The same, my lord,” replied Richard Hare, who appeared, strange as it
may seem, to have cast away all his old fearfulness.

“Then, witness, let me warn you that you are not obliged to answer any
question that may tend to criminate yourself.”

“My lord,” answered Richard Hare, with some emotion, “I wish to answer
any and every question put to me. I have but one hope, that the full
truth of all pertaining to that fatal evening may be made manifest this
day.”

“Look round at the prisoner,” said the examining counsel. “Do you know
him?”

“I know him now as Sir Francis Levison. Up to April last I believed his
name to be Thorn.”

“State what occurred on the evening of the murder, as far as your
knowledge goes.”

“I had an appointment that evening with Afy Hallijohn, and went down to
their cottage to keep it--”

“A moment,” interrupted the counsel. “Was your visit that evening made
in secret?”

“Partially so. My father and mother were displeased, naturally, at my
intimacy with Afy Hallijohn; therefore I did not care that they should
be cognizant of my visits there. I am ashamed to confess that I told my
father a lie over it that very evening. He saw me leave the dinner-table
to go out with my gun, and inquired where I was off to. I answered that
I was going out with young Beauchamp.”

“When, in point of fact, you were not?”

“No. I took my gun, for I had promised to lend it to Hallijohn while his
own was being repaired. When I reached the cottage Afy refused to admit
me; she was busy, and could not, she said. I felt sure she had got Thorn
with her. She had, more than once before, refused to admit me when I had
gone there by her own appointment, and I always found that Thorn’s
presence in the cottage was the obstacle.”

“I suppose you and Thorn were jealous of each other?”

“I was jealous of him; I freely admit it. I don’t know whether he was of
me.”

“May I inquire what was the nature of your friendship for Miss Afy
Hallijohn?”

“I loved her with an honorable love, as I might have done by any young
lady in my own station of life. I would not have married her in
opposition to my father and mother; but I told Afy that if she was
content to wait for me until I was my own master I would then make her
my wife.”

“You had no views toward her of a different nature?”

“None; I cared for her too much for that; and I respected her father.
Afy’s mother had been a lady, too, although she had married Hallijohn,
who was but clerk to Mr. Carlyle. No; I never had a thought of wrong
toward Afy--I never could have had.”

“Now relate the occurrences of the evening?”

“Afy would not admit me, and we had a few words over it; but at length I
went away, first giving her the gun, and telling her it was loaded. She
lodged it against the wall, just inside the door, and I went into the
wood and waited, determined to see whether or not Thorn was with her,
for she had denied that he was. Locksley saw me there, and asked why I
was hiding. I did not answer; but I went further off, quite out of view
of the cottage. Some time afterward, less than half an hour, I heard a
shot in the direction of the cottage. Somebody was having a late pop at
the partridge, I thought. Just then I saw Otway Bethel emerge from the
trees, not far from me, and run toward the cottage. My lord,” added
Richard Hare, looking at the judge, “that was the shot that killed
Hallijohn!”

“Could the shot,” asked the counsel, “have been fired by Otway Bethel?”

“It could not. It was much further off. Bethel disappeared, and in
another minute there came some one flying down the path leading from the
cottage. It was Thorn, and evidently in a state of intense terror. His
face was livid, his eyes staring, and he panted and shook like one in
the ague. Past me he tore, on down the path, and I afterwards heard the
sound of his horse galloping away; it had been tied in the wood.”

“Did you follow him?”

“No. I wondered what had happened to put him in that state; but I made
haste to the cottage, intending to reproach Afy with her duplicity. I
leaped up the two steps, and fell over the prostrate body of Hallijohn.
He was lying dead within the door. My gun, just discharged, was flung on
the floor, its contents in Hallijohn’s side.”

You might have heard a pin drop in court, so intense was the interest.

“There appeared to be no one in the cottage, upstairs or down. I called
to Afy, but she did not answer. I caught up the gun, and was running
from the cottage when Locksley came out of the wood and looked at me. I
grew confused, fearful, and I threw the gun back again and made off.”

“What were your motives for acting in that way?”

“A panic had come over me, and in that moment I must have lost the use
of my reason, otherwise I never should have acted as I did. Thoughts,
especially of fear, pass through our minds with astonishing swiftness,
and I feared lest the crime should be fastened upon me. It was fear made
me snatch up my gun, lest it should be found near the body; it was fear
made me throw it back again when Locksley appeared in view--a fear you
understand, from which all judgment, all reason, had departed. But for
my own conduct, the charge never would have been laid to me.”

“Go on.”

“In my flight I came upon Bethel. I knew that if he had gone toward the
cottage after the shot was fired, he must have encountered Thorn flying
from it. He denied that he had; he said he had only gone along the path
for a few paces, and had then plunged into the wood again. I believed
him and departed.”

“Departed from West Lynne?”

“That night I did. It was a foolish, fatal step, the result of
cowardice. I found the charge was laid to me, and I thought I would
absent myself for a day or two, to see how things turned out. Next came
the inquest and the verdict against me, and I then left for good.”

“This is the truth, so far as you are cognizant of it?”

“I swear that it is truth, and the whole truth, so far as I am cognizant
of it,” replied Richard Hare, with emotion. “I could not assert it more
solemnly were I before God.”

He was subjected to a rigid cross-examination, but his testimony was not
shaken in the least. Perhaps not one present but was impressed with its
truth.

Afy Hallijohn was recalled, and questioned as to Richard’s presence at
her father’s house that night. It tallied with the account given by
Richard; but it had to be drawn from her.

“Why did you decline to receive Richard Hare into the cottage, after
appointing him to come?”

“Because I chose,” returned Afy.

“Tell the jury why you chose.”

“Well, I had got a friend with me--it was Captain Thorn,” she added,
feeling that she should only be questioned on this point, so might as
well acknowledge it. “I did not admit Richard Hare, for I fancied they
might get up a quarrel if they were together.”

“For what purpose did Richard Hare bring down his gun--do you know?”

“It was to lend to my father. My father’s gun had something the matter
with it, and was at the smith’s. I had heard him, the previous day, ask
Mr. Richard to lend him one of his, and Mr. Richard said he would bring
one, as he did.”

“You lodged the gun against the wall--safely?”

“Quite safely.”

“Was it touched by you, after placing it there, or by the prisoner?”

“I did not touch it; neither did he, that I saw. It was that same gun
which was afterward found near my father, and had been discharged.”

The next witness called was Otway Bethel. He also held share in the
curiosity of the public, but not in equal degree with Afy, still less
with Richard Hare. The substance of his testimony was as follows:--

“On the evening that Hallijohn was killed, I was in the Abbey Wood, and
I saw Richard Hare come down the path with a gun, as if he had come down
from his own home.”

“Did Richard Hare see you?”

“No; he could not see me; I was right in the thicket. He went to the
cottage door, and was about to enter, when Afy Hallijohn came hastily
out of it, pulling the door to behind her, and holding it in her hand,
as if afraid he would go in. Some colloquy ensued, but I was too far off
to hear it; and then she took the gun from him and went indoors. Some
time after that I saw Richard Hare amid the trees at a distance, farther
off the cottage, then, than I was, and apparently watching the path. I
was wondering what he was up to, hiding there, when I head a shot fired,
close, as it seemed, to the cottage, and--”

“Stop a bit, witness. Could that shot have been fired by Richard Hare?”

“It could not. He was a quarter of a mile, nearly, away from it. I was
much nearer the cottage than he.”

“Go on.”

“I could not imagine what that shot meant, or who could have fired it--
not that I suspected mischief--and I knew that poachers did not
congregate so near Hallijohn’s cottage. I set off to reconnoiter, and as
I turned the corner, which brought the house within my view, I saw
Captain Thorn, as he was called, come leaping out of it. His face was
white with terror, his breath was gone--in short, I never saw any living
man betray so much agitation. I caught his arm as he would have passed
me. ‘What have you been about?’ I asked. ‘Was it you that fired?’ He--”

“Stay. Why did you suspect him?”

“From his state of excitement--from the terror he was in--that some ill
had happened, I felt sure; and so would you, had you seen him as I did.
My arresting him increased his agitation; he tried to throw me off, but
I am a strong man, and I suppose he thought it best to temporize. ‘Keep
dark upon it, Bethel,’ he said, ‘I will make it worth your while. The
thing was not premeditated; it was done in the heat of passion. What
business had the fellow to abuse me? I have done no harm to the girl.’
As he thus spoke, he took out a pocket book with the hand that was at
liberty; I held the other--”

“As the prisoner thus spoke, you mean?”

“The prisoner. He took a bank-note from his pocket book, and thrust it
into my hands. It was a note for fifty pounds. ‘What’s done can’t be
undone, Bethel,’ he said, ‘and your saying that you saw me here can
serve no good turn. Shall it be silence?’ I took the note and answered
that it should be silence. I had not the least idea that anybody was
killed.”

“What did you suppose had happened, then?”

“I could not suppose; I could not think; it all passed in the haste and
confusion of a moment, and no definite idea occurred to me. Thorn flew
on down the path, and I stood looking after him. The next was I heard
footsteps, and I slipped within the trees. They were those of Richard
Hare, who took the path to the cottage. Presently he returned, little
less agitated than Thorn had been. I had gone into an open space, then,
and he accosted me, asking if I had seen ‘that hound’ fly from the
cottage? ‘What hound?’ I asked of him. ‘That fine fellow, that Thorn,
who comes after Afy,’ he answered, but I stoutly denied that I had seen
any one. Richard Hare continued his way, and I afterward found that
Hallijohn was killed.”

“And so you took a bribe to conceal one of the foulest crimes that man
ever committed, Mr. Otway Bethel!”

“I took the money, and I am ashamed to confess it. But it was done
without reflection. I swear that had I known what crime it was intended
to hush up, I never would have touched it. I was hard up for funds, and
the amount tempted me. When I discovered what had really happened, and
that Richard Hare was accused, I was thunderstruck at my own deed; many
a hundred times since have I cursed the money; and the fate of Richard
has been as a heavy weight upon my conscience.”

“You might have lifted the weight by confessing.”

“To what end? It was too late. Thorn had disappeared. I never heard of
him, or saw him, until he came to West Lynne this last spring, as Sir
Francis Levison, to oppose Mr. Carlyle. Richard Hare had also
disappeared--had never been seen or heard of, and most people supposed
he was dead. To what end then should I confess? Perhaps only to be
suspected myself. Besides, I had taken the money upon a certain
understanding, and it was only fair that I should keep to it.”

If Richard Hare was subjected to a severe cross-examination, a far more
severe one was awaiting Otway Bethel. The judge spoke to him only once,
his tone ringing with reproach.

“It appears then, witness, that you have retained within you, all these
years, the proofs of Richard Hare’s innocence?”

“I can only acknowledge it with contrition, my lord.”

“What did you know of Thorn in those days?” asked the counsel.

“Nothing, save that he frequented the Abbey Wood, his object being Afy
Hallijohn. I had never exchanged a word with him until that night; but I
knew his name, Thorn--at least, the one he went by, and by his
addressing me as Bethel, it appeared that he knew mine.”

The case for the prosecution closed. An able and ingenious speech was
made for the defence, the learned counsel who offered it contending that
there was still no proof of Sir Francis having been the guilty man.
Neither was there any proof that the catastrophe was not the result of
pure accident. A loaded gun, standing against a wall in a small room,
was not a safe weapon, and he called upon the jury not rashly to convict
in the uncertainty, but to give the prisoner the benefit of the doubt.
He should call no witnesses, he observed, not even to character.
Character! for Sir Francis Levison! The court burst into a grin; the
only sober face in it being that of the judge.

The judge summed up. Certainly not in the prisoner’s favor; but, to use
the expression of some amidst the audience, dead against him. Otway
Bethel came in for a side shaft or two from his lordship; Richard Hare
for sympathy. The jury retired about four o’clock, and the judge quitted
the bench.

A very short time they were absent. Scarcely a quarter of an hour. His
lordship returned into court, and the prisoner was again placed in the
dock. He was the hue of marble, and, in his nervous agitation, kept
incessantly throwing back his hair from his forehead--the action already
spoken of. Silence was proclaimed.

“How say you, gentlemen of the jury? Guilty, or not guilty?”

“GUILTY.”

It was a silence to be felt; and the prisoner gasped once or twice
convulsively.

“But,” said the foreman, “we wish to recommend him to mercy.”

“On what grounds?” inquired the judge.

“Because, my lord, we believe it was not a crime planned by the prisoner
beforehand, but arose out of the bad passions of the moment, and was so
committed.”

The judge paused, and drew something black from the receptacle of his
pocket, buried deep in his robes.

“Prisoner at the bar! Have you anything to urge why sentence of death
should not be passed upon you?”

The prisoner clutched the front of the dock. He threw up his head, as if
shaking off the dread fear which had oppressed him, and the marble of
his face changed to scarlet.

“Only this, my lord. The jury, in giving their reason for recommending
me to your lordship’s mercy, have adopted the right view of the case as
it actually occurred. The man Hallijohn’s life was taken by me, it will
be useless for me to deny, in the face of the evidence given this day,
but it was not taken in malice. When I quitted the girl, Afy, and went
to the cottage for my hat, I no more contemplated injuring mortal man
than I contemplate it at this moment. He was there, the father, and in
the dispute that ensued the catastrophe occurred. My lord, it was not
wilful murder.”

The prisoner ceased, and the judge, the black cap on his head, crossed
his hands one upon the other.

“Prisoner at the bar. You have been convicted by clear and undoubted
evidence of the crime of wilful murder. The jury have pronounced you
guilty; and in their verdict I entirely coincide. That you took the life
of that ill-fated and unoffending man, there is no doubt; you have,
yourself, confessed it. It was a foul, a barbarous, a wicked act. I care
not for what may have been the particular circumstances attending it; he
may have provoked you by words; but no provocation of that nature could
justify your drawing the gun upon him. Your counsel urged that you were
a gentleman, a member of the British aristocracy, and therefore deserved
consideration. I confess that I was much surprised to hear such a
doctrine fall from his lips. In my opinion, you being what you are, your
position in life makes your crime the worse, and I have always
maintained that when a man possessed of advantages falls into sin, he
deserves less consideration than does one who is poor, simple, and
uneducated. Certain portions of the evidence given to-day (and I do not
now allude to the actual crime) tell very greatly against you, and I am
sure not one in the court but must have turned from them with
abhorrence. You were pursuing the daughter of this man with no honorable
purpose--and in this point your conduct contrasts badly with the avowal
of Richard Hare, equally a gentleman with yourself. In this pursuit you
killed her father; and not content with that, you still pursued the
girl--and pursued her to ruin, basely deceiving her as to the actual
facts, and laying the crime upon another. I cannot trust myself to speak
further upon this point, nor is it necessary that I should; it is not to
answer for that, that you stand before me. Uncalled, unprepared, and by
you unpitied, you hurried that unfortunate man into eternity, and you
must now expiate the crime with your own life. The jury have recommended
you to mercy, and the recommendation will be forwarded in due course to
the proper quarter, but you must be aware how frequently this clause is
appended to a verdict, and how very rarely it is attended to, just cause
being wanting. I can but enjoin you, and I do so most earnestly, to pass
the little time that probably remains to you on earth in seeking
repentance and forgiveness. You are best aware, yourself, what your past
life has been; the world knows somewhat of it; but there is pardon above
for the most guilty, when it is earnestly sought. It now only remains
for me to pass the sentence of the law. It is, that you, Francis
Levison, be taken back to the place from whence you came, and thence to
the place of execution, and that you be there hanged by the neck until
you are dead. And may the Lord God Almighty have mercy on your soul!”

“Amen!”

The court was cleared. The day’s excitement was over, and the next case
was inquired for. Not quite over, however, yet, the excitement, and the
audience crowded in again. For the next case proved to be the
arraignment of Richard Hare the younger. A formal proceeding merely, in
pursuance of the verdict of the coroner’s inquest. No evidence was
offered against him, and the judge ordered him to be discharged.
Richard, poor, ill-used, baited Richard was a free man again.

Then ensued the scene of all scenes. Half, at least, of those present,
were residents of, or from near West Lynne. They had known Richard Hare
from infancy--they had admired the boy in his pretty childhood--they had
liked him in his unoffending boyhood, but they had been none the less
ready to cast their harsh stones at him, and to thunder down their
denunciations when the time came. In proportion to their fierceness
then, was their contrition now; Richard had been innocent all the while;
they had been more guilty than he.

An English mob, gentle or simple, never gets up its excitement by
halves. Whether its demonstration be of a laudatory or a condemnatory
nature, the steam is sure to be put on to bursting point. With one
universal shout, with one bound, they rallied round Richard; they
congratulated him; they overwhelmed him with good wishes; they expressed
with shame their repentance; they said the future would atone for the
past. Had he possessed a hundred hands, they would have been shaken off.
And when Richard extracted himself, and turned, in his pleasant,
forgiving, loving nature, to his father, the stern old justice,
forgetting his pride and pomposity, burst into tears and sobbed like a
child, as he murmured something about his also needing forgiveness.

“Dear father,” cried Richard, his own eyes wet, “it is forgiven and
forgotten already. Think how happy we shall be again together, you, and
I, and my mother.”

The justice’s hands, which had been wound around his son, relaxed their
hold. They were twitching curiously; the body also began to twitch, and
he fell upon the shoulder of Colonel Bethel in a second stroke of
paralysis.



CHAPTER XLIII.

THE DEATH CHAMBER.

By the side of William Carlyle’s dying bed knelt the Lady Isabel. The
time was at hand, and the boy was quite reconciled to his fate.
Merciful, indeed, is God to dying children! It is astonishing how very
readily, when the right means are taken, they may be brought to look
with pleasure, rather than fear, upon their unknown journey.

The brilliant hectic, type of the disease, had gone from his cheeks, his
features were white and wasted, and his eyes large and bright. His silky
brown hair was pushed off his temples, and his little hot hands were
thrown outside the bed.

“It won’t be very long to wait, you know, will it, Madame Vine?”

“For what, darling?”

“Before they all come. Papa and mamma, and Lucy, and all of them.”

A jealous feeling shot across her wearied heart. Was she nothing to him?
“Do you not care that I should come to you, William?”

“Yes, I hope you will. But do you think we shall know everybody in
Heaven? Or will it be only our own relations?”

“Oh, child! I think there will be no relations, as you call it, up
there. We can trust all that to God, however it may be.”

William lay looking upward at the sky, apparently in thought, a dark
blue, serene sky, from which shone the hot July sun. His bed had been
moved toward the window, for he liked to sit in it, and look at the
landscape. The window was open now, and the butterflies and bees sported
in the summer air.

“I wonder how it will be?” pondered he, aloud. “There will be the
beautiful city, its gates of pearl, and its shining precious stones, and
its streets of gold; and there will be the clear river, and the trees
with their fruits and their healing leaves, and the lovely flowers; and
there will be the harps, and music, and singing. And what else will
there be?”

“Everything that is desirable and beautiful, William; but, what we may
not anticipate here.”

Another pause. “Madame Vine, will Jesus come for me, do you think, or
will He send an angel?”

“Jesus has promised to come for His own redeemed--for those who love Him
and wait for Him.”

“Yes, yes, and then I shall be happy forever. It will be so pleasant to
be there, never to be tired or ill again.”

“Pleasant? Ay! Oh, William! Would that the time were come!”

She was thinking of herself--of her freedom--though the boy knew it not.
She buried her face in her hands and continued speaking; William had to
bend his ear to catch the faint whisper.

“‘And there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying: neither
shall there be any more pain; for the former things are passed away.’”

“Madame Vine, do you think mamma will be there?” he presently asked. “I
mean mamma that was.”

“Ay, ere long.”

“But how shall I know her? You see, I have nearly forgotten what she was
like.”

She leaned over him, laying her forehead upon his wasted arm, and burst
into a flood of impassioned tears. “You will know her, never fear,
William; she has not forgotten you.”

“But how can we be sure that she will be there?” debated William, after
a pause of thought. “You know”--sinking his voice, and speaking with
hesitation--“she was not quite good; she was not good enough to papa or
to us. Sometimes I think, suppose she did not grow good, and did not ask
God to forgive her!”

“Oh, William!” sobbed the unhappy lady, “her whole life, after she left
you, was one long scene of repentance, of seeking forgiveness. Her
repentance, her sorrow, was greater than she could bear, and----”

“And what?” asked William, for there was a pause.

“Her heart broke in it--yearning after you and your father.”

“What makes you think it?”

“Child, I know it!”

William considered. Then, had he been strong enough, he would have
started up with energy. “Madame Vine, you could only know that by
mamma’s telling you! Did you ever see her? Did you know her abroad?”

Lady Isabel’s thoughts were far away--up in the clouds perhaps. She
reflected not on the possible consequences of her answer, or she had
never given it.

“Yes, I knew her abroad.”

“Oh!” said the boy. “Why did you never tell us? What did she say? What
was she like?”

“She said”--sobbing wildly--“that she was parted from her children here;
but she should meet them in Heaven, and be with them forever. William,
darling! all the awful pain, and sadness, and guilt of this world will
be washed out, and God will wipe your tears away.”

“What was her face like?” he questioned softly.

“Like yours. Very much like Lucy’s.”

“Was she pretty?”

A momentary pause. “Yes.”

“Oh, dear, I am ill. Hold me!” cried out William, as his head sank to
one side, and great drops, as large as peas, broke forth upon his clammy
face. It appeared to be one of the temporary faint attacks that
overpowered him at times lately, and Lady Isabel rang the bell hastily.

Wilson came in, in answer. Joyce was the usual attendant upon the sick
room; but Mrs. Carlyle, with her infant, was passing the day at the
Grove; unconscious of the critical state of William, and she had taken
Joyce with her. It was the day following the trial. Mr. Justice Hare had
been brought to West Lynne in his second attack, and Barbara had gone to
see him, to console her mother, and to welcome Richard to his home
again. If one carriage drove, that day, to the Grove, with cards and
inquiries, fifty did, not to speak of the foot callers. “It is all meant
by way of attention to you, Richard,” said gentle Mrs. Hare, smiling
through her loving tears at her restored son. Lucy and Archie were
dining at Miss Carlyle’s, and Sarah attended little Arthur, leaving
Wilson free. She came in, in answer to Madame Vine’s ring.

“Is he off in another faint?” unceremoniously cried she, hastening to
the bed.

“I think so. Help to raise him.”

William did not faint. No; the attack was quite different from those he
was subject to. Instead of losing consciousness and power, as was
customary, he shook as if he had the ague, and laid hold both of Madame
Vine and Wilson, grasping them convulsively.

“Don’t let me fall! Don’t let me fall!” he gasped.

“My dear, you cannot fall,” responded Madame Vine. “You forget that you
are on the bed.”

He clasped them yet, and trembled still, as from fear. “Don’t let me
fall! Don’t let me fall” the incessant burden of his cry.

The paroxysm passed. They wiped his brow, and stood looking at him;
Wilson with a pursed up mouth, and a peculiar expression of face. She
put a spoonful of restorative jelly between his lips, and he swallowed
it, but shook his head when she would have given him another. Turning
his face to the pillow, in a few minutes he was in a doze.

“What could it have been?” exclaimed Lady Isabel, in an undertone, to
Wilson.

“I know,” was the oracular answer. “I saw this same sort of an attack
once before, madame.”

“And what caused it?”

“Twasn’t in a child though,” went on Wilson--“‘twas in a grown person.
But that’s nothing, it comes for the same thing in all. I think he was
taken for death.”

“Who?” uttered Lady Isabel, startled.

Wilson made no reply in words, but she pointed with her finger to the
bed.

“Oh, Wilson, he is not so ill as that. Mr. Wainwright said this morning,
that he might last a week or two.”

Wilson composedly sat herself down in the easiest chair. She was not
wont to put herself out of the way for the governess; and that governess
was too much afraid of her, in one sense, to let her know her place. “As
to Wainwright, he’s nobody,” quoth she. “And if he saw the child’s
breath going out before his face, and knew that the next moment would be
his last, he’d vow to us all that he was good for twelve hours to come.
You don’t know Wainwright as I do, madame. He was our doctor at
mother’s; and he has attended in all the places I have lived in since I
went out to service. Five years I was maid at Mrs. Hare’s. I came here
when Miss Lucy was a baby, and in all my places has he attended, like
one’s shadow. My Lady Isabel thought great guns of old Wainwright, I
remember. It was more than I did.”

My Lady Isabel made no response to this. She took a seat and watched
William through her glasses. His breathing was more labored than usual.

“That idiot, Sarah, says to me to-day, says she, ‘Which of his two
grandpapas will they bury him by, old Mr. Carlyle or Lord Mount Severn?’
‘Don’t be a calf!’ I answered her. ‘D’ye think they’ll stick him out in
the corner with my lord?--he’ll be put into the Carlyle vault, of
course,’ It would have been different, you see, Madame Vine, if my lady
had died at home, all proper--Mr. Carlyle’s wife. They’d have buried
her, no doubt, by her father, and the boy would have been laid with her.
But she did not.”

No reply was made by Madame Vine, and a silence ensued; nothing to be
heard but that fleeting breath.

“I wonder how that beauty feels?” suddenly broke forth Wilson again, her
tone one of scornful irony.

Lady Isabel, her eyes and her thoughts absorbed by William, positively
thought Wilson’s words must relate to him. She turned to her in
surprise.

“That bright gem in the prison at Lynneborough,” exclaimed Wilson. “I
hope he may have found himself pretty well since yesterday! I wonder how
many trainfuls from West Lynne will go to his hanging?”

Isabel’s face turned crimson, her heart sick. She had not dared to
inquire how the trial terminated. The subject altogether was too
dreadful, and nobody had happened to mention it in her hearing.

“Is he condemned?” she breathed, in a low tone.

“He is condemned, and good luck to him! And Mr. Otway Bethel’s let loose
again, and good luck to him. A nice pair they are! Nobody went from this
house to hear the trial--it might not have been pleasant, you know, to
Mr. Carlyle; but people came in last night and told us all about it.
Young Richard Hare chiefly convicted him. He is back again, and so nice-
looking, they say--ten times more so than he was when quite a young man.
You should have heard, they say, the cheering and shouts that greeted
Mr. Richard when his innocence came out; it pretty near rose off the
roof of the court, and the judge didn’t stop it.”

Wilson paused, but there was no answering comment. On she went again.

“When Mr. Carlyle brought the news home last evening, and broke it to
his wife, telling her how Mr. Richard had been received with
acclamations, she nearly fainted, for she’s not strong yet. Mr. Carlyle
called out to me to bring some water--I was in the next room with the
baby--and there she was, the tears raining from her eyes, and he holding
her to him. I always said there was a whole world of love between those
two; though he did go and marry another. Mr. Carlyle ordered me to put
the water down, and sent me away again. But I don’t fancy he told her of
old Hare’s attack until this morning.”

Lady Isabel lifted her aching forehead. “What attack?”

“Why, madame, don’t you know. I declare you box yourself up in the
house, keeping from everybody, and you hear nothing. You might as well
be living at the bottom of a coal-pit. Old Hare had another stroke in
the court at Lynneborough, and that’s why my mistress is gone to the
Grove to-day.”

“Who says Richard Hare’s come home, Wilson?”

The question--the weak, scarcely audible question--had come from the
dying boy. Wilson threw up her hands, and made a bound to the bed. “The
like of that!” she uttered, aside to Mrs. Vine. “One never knows when to
take these sick ones. Master William, you hold your tongue and drop to
sleep again. Your papa will be home soon from Lynneborough; and if you
talk and get tired, he’ll say it’s my fault. Come shut your eyes. Will
you have a bit more jelly?”

William, making no reply to the offer of jelly, buried his face again on
the pillow. But he was grievously restless; the nearly worn-out spirit
was ebbing and flowing.

Mr. Carlyle was at Lynneborough. He always had much business there at
assize time and the Nisi Prius Court; but the previous day he had not
gone himself, Mr. Dill had been dispatched to represent him.

Between seven and eight he returned home, and came into William’s
chamber. The boy brightened up at the well-known presence.

“Papa!”

Mr. Carlyle sat down on the bed and kissed him. The passing beams of the
sun, slanting from the horizon, shone into the room, and Mr. Carlyle
could view well the dying face. The gray hue of death was certainly on
it.

“Is he worse?” he exclaimed hastily, to Madame Vine, who was jacketed,
and capped, and spectacled, and tied up round the throat, and otherwise
disguised, in her universal fashion.

“He appears worse this evening, sir--more weak.”

“Papa,” panted William, “is the trial over?”

“What trial, my boy?”

“Sir Francis Levison’s.”

“It was over yesterday. Never trouble your head about him, my brave boy,
he is not worth it.”

“But I want to know. Will they hang him?”

“He is sentenced to it.”

“Did he kill Hallijohn?”

“Yes. Who has been talking to him upon the subject?” Mr. Carlyle
continued to Madame Vine, with marked displeasure in his tone.

“Wilson mentioned it, sir,” was the low answer.

“Oh, papa! What will he do? Will Jesus forgive him?”

“We must hope it.”

“Do you hope it, papa?”

“Yes. I wish that all the world may be forgiven, William, whatever may
have been their sins. My child, how restless you seem!”

“I can’t keep in one place; the bed gets wrong. Pull me up on the
pillow, will you Madame Vine?”

Mr. Carlyle gently lifted the boy himself.

“Madame Vine is an untiring nurse to you, William,” he observed,
gratefully casting a glance toward her in the distance, where she had
retreated, and was shaded by the window curtain.

William made no reply; he seemed to be trying to recall something. “I
forget! I forget!”

“Forget what?” asked Mr. Carlyle.

“It was something I wanted to ask you, or to tell you. Isn’t Lucy come
home?”

“I suppose not.”

“Papa, I want Joyce.”

“I will send her home to you. I am going for your mamma after dinner.”

“For mamma?--oh, I remember now. Papa, how shall I know mamma in Heaven?
Not this mamma.”

Mr. Carlyle did not immediately reply. The question may have puzzled
him. William continued hastily; possibly mistaking the motive of the
silence.

“She will be in Heaven, you know.”

“Yes, yes, child,” speaking hurriedly.

“Madame Vine knows she will. She saw her abroad; and mamma told her
that--what was it, madame?”

Madame Vine grew sick with alarm. Mr. Carlyle turned his eyes upon her
scarlet face--as much as he could get to see of it. She would have
escaped from the room if she could.

“Mamma was more sorry than she could bear,” went on William, finding he
was not helped. “She wanted you, papa, and she wanted us, and her heart
broke, and she died.”

A flush rose to Mr. Carlyle’s brow. He turned inquiringly to Madame
Vine.

“Oh, I beg your pardon, sir,” she murmured, with desperate energy. “I
ought not to have spoken; I ought not to have interfered in your family
affairs. I spoke only as I thought it must be, sir. The boy seemed
troubled about his mother.”

Mr. Carlyle was at sea. “Did you meet his mother abroad? I scarcely
understand.”

She lifted her hand and covered her glowing face. “No, sir.” Surely the
recording angel blotted out the words! If ever a prayer for forgiveness
went up from an aching heart, it must have gone up then, for the
equivocation over her child’s death-bed!

Mr. Carlyle went toward her. “Do you perceive the change in his
countenance?” he whispered.

“Yes, sir. He has looked like this since a strange fit of trembling that
came on in the afternoon. Wilson thought he might be taken for death. I
fear that some four and twenty hours will end it.”

Mr. Carlyle rested his elbow on the window frame, and his hand upon his
brow, his drooping eyelids falling over his eyes. “It is hard to lose
him.”

“Oh, sir, he will be better off!” she wailed, choking down the sobs and
the emotion that arose threateningly. “We can bear death; it is not the
worst parting that the earth knows. He will be quit of this cruel world,
sheltered in Heaven. I wish we were all there!”

A servant came to say that Mr. Carlyle’s dinner was served, and he
proceeded to it with what appetite he had. When he returned to the sick
room the daylight had faded, and a solitary candle was placed where its
rays could not fall upon the child’s face. Mr. Carlyle took the light in
his hand to scan that face again. He was lying sideways on the pillow,
his hollow breath echoing through the room. The light caused him to open
his eyes.

“Don’t, papa, please. I like it dark.”

“Only for a moment, my precious boy.” And not for more than a moment did
Mr. Carlyle hold it. The blue, pinched, ghastly look was there yet.
Death was certainly coming on quick.

At that moment Lucy and Archibald came in, on their return from their
visit to Miss Carlyle. The dying boy looked up eagerly.

“Good-bye, Lucy,” he said, putting out his cold, damp hand.

“I am not going out,” replied Lucy. “We have but just come home.”

“Good-bye, Lucy,” repeated he.

She laid hold of the little hand then, leaned over, and kissed him.
“Good-bye, William; but indeed I am not going out anywhere.”

“I am,” said he. “I am going to Heaven. Where’s Archie?”

Mr. Carlyle lifted Archie on to the bed. Lucy looked frightened, Archie
surprised.

“Archie, good-bye; good-bye, dear, I am going to Heaven; to that bright,
blue sky, you know. I shall see mamma there, and I’ll tell her that you
and Lucy are coming soon.”

Lucy, a sensitive child, broke into a loud storm of sobs, enough to
disturb the equanimity of any sober sick room. Wilson hastened in at the
sound, and Mr. Carlyle sent the two children away, with soothing
promises that they should see William in the morning, if he continued
well enough.

Down on her knees, her face buried in the counterpane, a corner of it
stuffed into her mouth that it might help to stifle her agony, knelt
Lady Isabel. The moment’s excitement was well nigh beyond her strength
of endurance. Her own child--his child--they alone around its death-bed,
and she might not ask or receive a word of comfort, of consolation!

Mr. Carlyle glanced at her as he caught her choking sobs just as he
would have glanced at any other attentive governess--feeling her
sympathy, doubtless, but nothing more; she was not heart and part with
him and his departing boy. Lower and lower bent he over that boy; for
his eyes were wet. “Don’t cry, papa,” whispered William, raising his
feeble hand caressingly to his father’s cheek, “I am not afraid to go.
Jesus is coming for me.”

“Afraid to go! Indeed I hope not, my gentle boy. You are going to God--
to happiness. A few years--we know not how few--and we shall all come to
you.”

“Yes, you will be sure to come; I know that. I shall tell mamma so. I
dare say she is looking out for me now. Perhaps she’s standing on the
banks of the river, watching the boats.”

He had evidently got that picture of Martin’s in his mind, “The Plains
of Heaven.” Mr. Carlyle turned to the table. He saw some strawberry
juice, pressed from the fresh fruit, and moistened with it the boy’s
fevered lips.

“Papa, I can’t think how Jesus can be in all the boats! Perhaps they
don’t go quite at the same time. He must be, you know, because He comes
to fetch us.”

“He will be yours, darling,” was the whispered, fervent answer.

“Oh, yes. He will take me all the way up to God, and say, ‘Here’s a poor
little boy come, you must please to forgive him and let him go into
Heaven, because I died for him!’ Papa did you know that mamma’s heart
broke?”

“William, I think it likely that your poor mamma’s heart did break, ere
death came. But let us talk of you, not of her. Are you in pain?”

“I can’t breathe; I can’t swallow. I wish Joyce was here.”

“She will not be long now.”

The boy nestled himself in his father’s arms, and in a few minutes
appeared to be asleep. Mr. Carlyle, after a while, gently laid him on
his pillow, and watched him, and then turned to depart.

“Oh, papa! Papa!” he cried out, in a tone of painful entreaty, opening
wide his yearning eyes, “say good-bye to me!”

Mr. Carlyle’s tears fell upon the little upturned face, as he once more
caught it to his breast.

“My darling, your papa will soon be back. He is going to bring mamma to
see you.”

“And pretty little baby Anna?”

“And baby Anna, if you would like her to come in. I will not leave my
darling boy for long; he need not fear. I shall not leave you again to-
night, William, when once I am back.”

“Then put me down, and go, papa.”

A lingering embrace--a fond, lingering, tearful embrace--Mr. Carlyle
holding him to his beating heart, then he laid him comfortably on his
pillow, gave him a teaspoonful of strawberry juice, and hastened away.

“Good-bye, papa!” came forth the little feeble cry.

It was not heard. Mr. Carlyle was gone, gone from his living child--
forever. Up rose Lady Isabel, and flung her arms aloft in a storm of
sobs!

“Oh, William, darling! in this dying moment let me be to you as your
mother!”

Again he unclosed his wearied eyelids. It is probable that he only
partially understood.

“Papa’s gone for her.”

“Not her! I--I----” Lady Isabel checked herself, and fell sobbing on the
bed. No; not even at the last hour when the world was closing on him,
dared she say, I am your mother.

Wilson re-entered. “He looks as if he were dropping off to sleep,” quoth
she.

“Yes,” said Lady Isabel. “You need not wait, Wilson. I will ring if he
requires anything.”

Wilson though withal not a bad-hearted woman, was not one to remain for
pleasure in a sick-room, if told she might leave it. She, Lady Isabel,
remained alone. She fell on her knees again, this time in prayer for the
departing spirit, on its wing, and that God would mercifully vouchsafe
herself a resting-place with it in heaven.

A review of the past then rose up before her, from the time of her first
entering that house, the bride of Mr. Carlyle, to her present sojourn in
it. The old scenes passed through her mind like the changing picture in
a phantasmagoria.

Why should they have come, there and then? She knew not.

William slept on silently; she thought of the past. The dreadful
reflection, “If I had not done as I did, how different would it have
been now!” had been sounding its knell in her heart so often that she
had almost ceased to shudder at it. The very nails of her hands had,
before now, entered the palms, with the sharp pain it brought. Stealing
over her more especially this night, there, as she knelt, her head lying
on the counterpane, came the recollection of that first illness of hers.
How she had lain, and, in that unfounded jealousy, imagined Barbara the
house’s mistress. She dead! Barbara exalted to her place. Mr. Carlyle’s
wife, her child’s stepmother! She recalled the day when, her mind
excited by a certain gossip of Wilson’s--it was previously in a state of
fever bordering on delirium--she had prayed her husband, in terror and
anguish, not to marry Barbara. “How could he marry her?” he had replied,
in his soothing pity. “She, Isabel, was his wife. Who was Barbara?
Nothing to them?” But it had all come to pass. She had brought it forth.
Not Mr. Carlyle; not Barbara; she alone. Oh, the dreadful misery of the
retrospect!

Lost in thought, in anguish past and present, in self-condemning
repentance, the time passed on. Nearly an hour must have elapsed since
Mr. Carlyle’s departure, and William had not disturbed her. But who was
this, coming into the room? Joyce.

She hastily rose up, as Joyce, advancing with a quiet step drew aside
the clothes to look at William. “Master says he has been wanting me,”
 she observed. “Why--oh!”

It was a sharp, momentary cry, subdued as soon as uttered. Madame Vine
sprang forward to Joyce’s side, looking also. The pale young face lay
calm in its utter stillness; the busy little heart had ceased to beat.
Jesus Christ had indeed come and taken the fleeting spirit.

Then she lost all self-control. She believed that she had reconciled
herself to the child’s death, that she could part with him without too
great emotion. But she had not anticipated it would be quite so soon;
she had deemed that some hours more would at least be given him, and now
the storm overwhelmed her. Crying, sobbing, calling, she flung herself
upon him; she clasped him to her; she dashed off her disguising glasses;
she laid her face upon his, beseeching him to come back to her, that she
might say farewell--to her, his mother; her darling child, her lost
William!

Joyce was terrified--terrified for consequences. With her full strength
she pulled her from the boy, praying her to consider--to be still. “Do
not, do not, for the love of Heaven! My lady! My lady!”

It was the old familiar title that struck upon her fears and induced
calmness. She stared at Joyce, and retreated backward, after the manner
of one receding from some hideous vision. Then, as recollection came to
her, she snatched her glasses up and hurried them on.

“My lady, let me take you into your room. Mr. Carlyle is come; he is
just bringing up his wife. Only think if you should give way before him!
Pray come away!”

“How did you know me?” she asked in a hollow voice.

“My lady, it was that night when there was an alarm of fire. I went
close up to you to take Master Archibald from your arms; and, as sure as
I am now standing here, I believe that for the moment my senses left me.
I thought I saw a spectre--the spectre of my dead lady. I forgot the
present; I forgot that all were standing round me; that you, Madame
Vine, were alive before me. Your face was not disguised then; the
moonlight shone full upon it, and I knew it, after the first few moments
of terror, to be, in dreadful truth, the living one of Lady Isabel. My
lady, come away! We shall have Mr. Carlyle here.”

Poor thing! She sank upon her knees, in her humility, her dread. “Oh,
Joyce, have pity upon me! don’t betray me! I will leave the house;
indeed I will. Don’t betray me while I am in it!”

“My lady, you have nothing to fear from me. I have kept the secret
buried within my breast since then. Last April! It has nearly been too
much for me. By night and by day I have had no peace, dreading what
might come out. Think of the awful confusion, the consequences, should
it come to the knowledge of Mr. and Mrs. Carlyle. Indeed, my lady, you
never ought to have come.”

“Joyce,” she said, hollowly, lifting her haggard face, “I could not keep
away from my unhappy children. Is it no punishment to me, think you, the
being here?” she added, vehemently. “To see him--my husband--the husband
of another! It is killing me.”

“Oh, my lady, come away! I hear him; I hear him!”

Partly coaxing, partly dragging her, Joyce took her into her own room,
and left her there. Mr. Carlyle was at that moment at the door of the
sick one. Joyce sprang forward. Her face, in her emotion and fear, was
of one livid whiteness, and she shook as William had shaken, poor child,
in the afternoon. It was only too apparent in the well-lighted corridor.

“Joyce,” he exclaimed, in amazement, “what ails you?”

“Sir! master!” she panted; “be prepared. Master William--Master William-
---”

“Joyce! Not dead!”

“Alas, yes, sir!”

Mr. Carlyle strode into the chamber. But ere he was well across it, he
turned back to slip the bolt of the door. On the pillow lay the white,
thin face, at rest now.

“My boy! my boy! Oh, my God!” he murmured, in bowed reverence, “mayest
Thou have received this child to rest in Jesus, even as, I trust, Thou
hadst already received his unhappy mother!”



CHAPTER XLIV.

LORD VANE DATING FORWARD.

To the burial of William Carlyle came Lord Mount Severn and his son.
Wilson had been right in her surmises as to the resting-place. The
Carlyle vault was opened for him, and an order went forth to the
sculptor for an inscription to be added to their marble tablet in the
church: “William Vane Carlyle, eldest son of Archibald Carlyle, of East
Lynne.” Amongst those who attended the funeral as mourners went one more
notable in the eyes of the gazers than the rest--Richard Hare the
younger.

Lady Isabel was ill. Ill in mind, and ominously ill in body. She kept
her room, and Joyce attended on her. The household set down madame’s
illness to the fatigue of having attended upon Master William; it was
not thought of seriously by any one, especially as she declined to see a
doctor. All her thoughts now were directed to the getting away from East
Lynne, for it would never do to remain there to die; and she knew that
death was on his way to her, and that no human power or skill--not all
the faculty combined--could turn him back again. The excessive dread of
detection was not upon her as it had been formerly. I mean she did not
dread the consequences so much, if detection came. In nearing the grave,
all fears and hopes, of whatever nature, relating to this world, lose
their force, and fears or hopes regarding the next world take their
place. Our petty feelings here are lost in the greater.

In returning to East Lynne, Lady Isabel had entered upon a daring act,
and she found, in the working, that neither strength nor spirit was
equal to it. Human passions and tempers were brought with us into this
world, and they can only quit us when we bid it farewell, to enter upon
immortality in the next.

When Lady Isabel was Mr. Carlyle’s wife, she had never wholly loved him.
The very utmost homage that esteem, admiration, affection could give was
his, but that mysterious passion called by the name of love, and which,
as I truly and heartily believe, cannot, in its refined etherealism, be
known to many of us, had not been given to him. It was now. From the
very night she came back to East Lynne, her love for Mr. Carlyle had
burst forth with an intensity never before felt. It had been smoldering
almost ever since she quitted him. “Reprehensible!” groans a moralist.
Very. Everybody knows that, as Afy would say. But her heart, you see,
had not done with human passions, and they work ill, and contrariness,
let the word stand, critic, if you please, and precisely everything they
should not.

I shall get in for it, I fear, if I attempt to defend her. But it was
not exactly the same thing, as though she suffered herself to fall in
love with somebody else’s husband. Nobody would defend that. We have not
turned Mormons yet, and the world does not walk upon its head. But this
was a peculiar case. She, poor thing, almost regarded Mr. Carlyle as her
husband. The bent of her thoughts was only too much inclined to this.
The evil human heart again. Many and many a time did she wake up from a
reverie, and strive to drive this mistaken view of things away from her,
taking shame to herself. Ten minutes afterward, she would catch her
brain reveling in the same rebellious vision. Mr. Carlyle’s love was not
hers now, it was Barbara’s. Mr. Carlyle did not belong to her, he
belonged to his wife. It was not only that he was not hers--he was
another’s. You may, therefore, if you have the pleasure of being
experienced in this sort of thing, guess a little of what her inward
life was. Had there been no Barbara in the case, she might have lived
and borne it; as it was, it had killed her before her time, that and the
remorse together.

There had been other things, too. The re-appearance of Francis Levison
at West Lynne, in fresh contact, as may be said, with herself, had
struck terror to her heart, and the dark charge brought against him
augmented awfully her remorse. Then, the sharp lances perpetually thrust
upon her memory--the Lady Isabel’s memory--from all sides, were full of
cruel stings, unintentionally though they were hurled. And there was the
hourly chance of discovery, and the never ceasing battle with her
conscience, for being at East Lynne at all. No wonder that the chords of
life were snapping; the wonder would have been had they remained whole.

“She brought it upon herself--she ought not to have come back to East
Lynne!” groans our moralist again.

Didn’t I say so? Of course she ought not. Neither ought she to have
suffered her thoughts to stray, in the manner they did, towards Mr.
Carlyle. She ought not, but she did. If we all did just what we “ought,”
 this lower proverb touching fruit defendu would go out as a dead letter.

She was nearer to death than she imagined. She knew, judging by her
declining strength and her inner feelings, that it could not be far off;
but she did not deem it was coming so very soon. Her mother had died in
a similar way. Some said of consumption--Dr. Martin did, you may
remember; some said of “waste;” the earl, her husband, said a broken
heart--you heard him say so to Mr. Carlyle in the first chapter of this
history. The earl was the one who might be supposed to know best.
Whatever may have been Lady Mount Severn’s malady, she--to give you the
phrase that was in people’s mouth’s at the time--“went out like the
snuff of a candle.” It was now the turn of Lady Isabel. She had no more
decided disorder than the countess had had, yet death had marked her.
She felt that it had, and in its approach she dreaded not, as she once
had done, the consequences that must ensue, did discovery come. Which
brings us back to the point whence ensued this long digression. I dare
say you are chafing at it, but it is not often I trouble you with one.

But she would not willingly let discovery come, neither had she the
least intention of remaining at East Lynne to die. Where she should take
refuge was quite a secondary consideration, only let her get smoothly
and plausibly away. Joyce, in her dread, was forever urging it. Of
course, the preliminary step was to arrange matters with Mrs. Carlyle,
and in the afternoon of the day following the funeral, Lady Isabel
proceeded to her dressing-room, and craved an interview.

Mr. Carlyle quitted the room as she entered it. Barbara, fatigued with a
recent drive, was lying on the sofa. She would scarcely take the notice.

“We shall be so sorry to lose you, Madame Vine. You are all we could
wish for Lucy, and Mr. Carlyle feels truly grateful for your love and
attention to his poor boy.”

“To leave you will give me pain also,” Madame Vine answered, in a
subdued tone. Pain? Ay. Mrs. Carlyle little guessed at its extent. All
she cared for on earth she should leave behind her at East Lynne.

“Indeed you must not leave,” resumed Barbara. “It would be unjust to
allow you to do so. You have made yourself ill, waiting upon poor
William, and you must stay here and take a holiday until you are cured.
You will soon get well, if you will only suffer yourself to be properly
waited on and taken care of.”

“You are very considerate. Pray do not think me insensible if I decline.
I believe my strength is beyond getting up--that I shall never be able
to teach again.”

“Oh, nonsense,” said Barbara, in her quick way. “We are all given to
fancy the worst when we are ill. I was feeling terribly weak, only a few
minutes ago, and said something of the same sort to Archibald. He talked
and soothed me out of it. I wish you had your dear husband living,
Madame Vine, to support you and love you, as I have him.”

A tinge of scarlet streaked Madame Vine’s pale face, and she laid her
hand upon her beating heart.

“How could you think of leaving? We should be glad to help re-establish
your health, in any case, but it is only fair to do it now. I felt sure,
by the news brought to me when I was ill, that your attention upon
William was overtasking your strength.”

“It is not the attendance upon William that has brought me into this
state,” was the quick answer. “I must leave; I have well considered it
over.”

“Would you like to go to the seaside?” exclaimed Barbara with sudden
energy. “I am going there on Monday next. Mr. Carlyle insists upon it
that I try a little change. I had intended only to take my baby, but we
can make different arrangements, and take you and Lucy. It might do you
good, Madame Vine.”

She shook her head. “No; it would make me worse. All that I want is
perfect quiet. I must beg you to understand that I shall leave. And I
should be glad if you could allow the customary notice to be dispensed
with, so that I may be at liberty to depart within a few days.”

“Look here, then,” said Barbara, after a pause of consideration, “you
remain at East Lynne until my return, which will be in a fortnight. Mr.
Carlyle cannot stay with me, so I know I shall be tired in less time
than that. I do not want you to remain to teach, you know, Madame Vine;
I do not wish you to do a single thing. Lucy shall have a holiday, and
Mr. Kane can come up for her music. Only I could not be content to leave
her, unless under your surveillance; she is getting of an age now not to
be consigned to servants, not to Joyce. Upon my return, if you still
wish to leave, you shall then be at liberty to do so. What do you say?”

Madame Vine said “Yes.” Said it eagerly. To have another fortnight with
her children, Lucy and Archibald, was very like a reprieve, and she
embraced it. Although she knew, as I have said, that grim Death was on
his way, she did not think he had drawn so near the end of his journey.
Her thoughts went back to the time when she had been ordered to the
seaside after an illness. It had been a marvel if they had not. She
remembered how he, her husband, had urged the change upon her; how he
had taken her, traveling carefully; how tenderly anxious he had been in
the arrangements for her comfort, when settling her in the lodgings;
how, when he came again to see her, he had met her with his passionate
fondness, thanking God for the visible improvement in her looks. That
one injunction which she had called him back to give him, as he was
departing for the boat, was bitterly present to her now: “Do not get
making love to Barbara Hare.” All this care, and love, and tenderness
belonged now of right to Barbara, and were given to her.

But now Barbara, although she pressed Madame Vine to remain at East
Lynne, and indeed would have been glad that she should do so, did not
take her refusal at heart. Barbara could not fail to perceive that she
was a thoroughly refined gentlewoman, far superior to the generality of
governesses. That she was truly fond of Lucy, and most anxious for her
welfare in every way, Barbara also saw. For Lucy’s sake, therefore, she
would be grieved to part with Madame Vine, and would raise her salary to
anything in reason, if she would but stay. But, on her own score,
Barbara had as soon Madame Vine went as not; for, in her heart of
hearts, she had never liked her. She could not have told why. Was it
instinct? Very probably. The birds of the air, the beasts of the field,
the fishes of the sea, have their instincts, and so does man have his.
Perhaps it was the unaccountable resemblance that Madame Vine bore to
Lady Isabel. A strange likeness! Barbara often thought, but whether it
lay in the face, the voice, or the manner, she could not decide. A
suspicion of the truth did not cross her mind. How should it? And she
never spoke of it; had the resemblance been to any one but Lady Isabel
she would have talked of it freely. Or, it may have been that there was
now and then a tone in Madame Vine’s voice that grated on her ear; a
wrung, impatient tone, wanting in respect, savoring of hauteur, which
Barbara did not understand, and did not like. However it may have been,
certain it is that Mrs. Carlyle would not shed tears after the
governess. Only for Lucy’s sake did she regret parting with her.

These different resemblances and reflections were separately passing
through the minds of the two ladies when their conference was over.
Madame Vine at length rose from her chair to depart.

“Would you mind holding my baby for one minute?” cried Barbara.

Madame Vine quite started.

“The baby there!” she uttered.

Barbara laughed.

“It is lying by my side, under the shawl, quiet little sleeping thing.”

Madame Vine advanced and took the sleeping baby. How could she refuse?
She had never had it in her arms before; she had, in fact, scarcely seen
it. One visit of ceremony she had paid Mrs. Carlyle, as in politeness
bound, a day or two after the young lady’s arrival, and had been shown a
little face, nearly covered with lace, in a cradle.

“Thank you. I can get up now. I might have half smothered it, had I
attempted before,” continued Barbara, still laughing. “I have been here
long enough, and am quite rested. Talking about smothering children,
what accounts have we in the registrar-general’s weekly returns of
health! So many children ‘overlaid in bed,’ so many children ‘suffocated
in bed.’ One week there were nearly twenty; and often there are as many
as eight or ten. Mr. Carlyle says he knows they are smothered on
purpose.”

“Oh, Mrs. Carlyle!”

“I exclaimed, just as you do, when he said it, and laid my hand over his
lips. He laughed, and told me I did not know half the wickedness of the
world. Thank you,” again repeated Mrs. Carlyle, taking her child from
Lady Isabel. “Is she not a pretty baby? Do you like the name--Anne?”

“It is a simple name,” replied Lady Isabel; “and simple names are always
the most attractive.”

“That is just what Archibald thinks. But he wanted this child’s to be
Barbara. I would not have had it Barbara for the world. I remember his
once saying, a long, long while ago that he did not like elaborate
names; they were mouthfuls; and he instanced mine and his sister’s, and
his own. I recalled his words to him, and he said he may not have liked
the name of Barbara then, but he loved it now. So we entered into a
compromise; Miss Baby was named Anne Barbara, with an understanding that
the first name is to be for use, and the last for the registers.”

“It is not christened?” said Lady Isabel.

“Only baptized. We should have had it christened before now, but for
William’s death. Not that we give christening dinners; but I waited for
the trial at Lynneborough to be over, that my dear brother Richard might
stand to the child.”

“Mr. Carlyle does not like christenings made into festivals,” Lady
Isabel dreamily observed, her thoughts buried in the past.

“How do you know that?” exclaimed Barbara, opening her eyes.

And poor Madame Vine, her pale face flushing, had to stammer forth some
confused words that she had “heard so somewhere.”

“It is quite true,” said Barbara. “He has never given a christening-
dinner for any of his children, and gets out of attending if invited to
one. He cannot understand the analogy between a solemn religious rite
and the meeting together afterward to eat and drink and make merry,
according to the fashion of this world.”

As Lady Isabel quitted the room, young Vane was careering through the
corridor, throwing his head in all directions, and calling out,--

“Lucy! I want Lucy!”

“What do you want with her?” asked Madame Vine.

“Il m’est impossible de vous le dire madame,” responded he. Being, for
an Eton boy, wonderfully up in French, he was rather given to show it
off when he got the chance. He did not owe thanks for it to Eton. Lady
Mount Severn had taken better care than that. Better care? What could
she want? There was one whole, real, live French tutor--and he an
Englishman!--for the eight hundred boys. Very unreasonable of her
ladyship to disparage that ample provision.

“Lucy cannot come to you just now. She is practicing.”

“Mais, il le faut. J’ai le droit de demander apres elle. Elle
m’appartient, vous comprenez, madame, cette demoiselle la.”

Madame could not forbear a smile. “I wish you would speak English sense,
instead of French nonsense.”

“Then the English sense is that I want Lucy and I must have her. I am
going to take her for a drive in the pony carriage, if you must know.
She said she’d come, and John’s getting it ready.”

“I could not possibly allow it,” said Madame Vine. “You’d be sure to
upset her.”

“The idea!” he returned, indignantly. “As if I should upset Lucy! Why,
I’m one of the great whips at Eton. I care for Lucy too much not to
drive steadily. She is to be my wife, you know, ma bonne dame.”

At this juncture two heads were pushed out from the library, close by;
those of the earl and Mr. Carlyle. Barbara, also, attracted by the
talking, appeared at the door of her dressing-room.

“What’s that about a wife?” asked my lord of his son.

The blood mantled in the young gentleman’s cheek as he turned round and
saw who had spoken, but he possessed all the fearlessness of an Eton
boy.

“I intend Lucy Carlyle to be my wife, papa. I mean in earnest--when we
shall both be grown up--if you will approve, and Mr. Carlyle will give
her to me.”

The earl looked somewhat impassable, Mr. Carlyle amused. “Suppose,” said
the latter, “we adjourn the discussion to this day ten years?”

“But that Lucy is so very young a child, I should reprove you seriously,
sir,” said the earl. “You have no right to bring Lucy’s name into any
such absurdity.”

“I mean it, papa; you’ll all see. And I intend to keep out of scrapes--
that is, of nasty, dishonorable scrapes--on purpose that Mr. Carlyle
shall find no excuse against me. I have made up my mind to be what he
is--a man of honor. I am right glad you know about it, sir, and I shall
let mamma know it before long.”

The last sentence tickled the earl’s fancy, and a grim smile passed over
his lips. “It will be war to the knife, if you do.”

“I know that,” laughed the viscount. “But I am getting a better match
for mamma in our battles than I used to be.”

Nobody saw fit to prolong the discussion. Barbara put her veto upon the
drive in the pony carriage unless John sat behind to look after the
driver, which Lord Vane still resented as an insult. Madame Vine, when
the corridor became empty again, laid her hand upon the boy’s arm as he
was moving away, and drew him to the window.

“In speaking as you do of Lucy Carlyle, do you forget the disgrace
reflected on her by the conduct of her mother?”

“Her mother is not Lucy.”

“It may prove an impediment, that, with Lord and Lady Mount Severn.”

“Not with his lordship. And I must do--as you heard me say--battle with
my mother. Conciliatory battle, you understand, madame; bringing the
enemy to reason.”

Madame Vine was agitated. She held her handkerchief to her mouth, and
the boy noticed how her hands trembled.

“I have learnt to love Lucy. It has appeared to me in these few months’
sojourn with her, that I have stood to her in light of a mother. William
Vane,” she solemnly added, keeping her hold upon him, “I shall soon be
where earthly distinctions are no more; where sin and sorrow are no
more. Should Lucy Carlyle indeed become your wife, in after years,
never, never cast upon her, by so much as the slightest word of
reproach, the sin of Lady Isabel.”

Lord Vane threw back his head, his honest eyes flashing in their
indignant earnestness.

“What do you take me for?”

“It would be a cruel wrong upon Lucy. She does not deserve it. That
unhappy lady’s sin was all her own; let it die with her. Never speak to
Lucy of her mother.”

The lad dashed his hand across his eyes for they were filling.

“I shall. I shall speak to her often of her mother--that is, you know,
after she’s my wife. I shall tell her how I loved Lady Isabel--that
there’s nobody I ever loved so much in the world, but Lucy herself. I
cast a reproach to Lucy on the score of her mother!” he hotly added. “It
is through her mother that I love her. You don’t understand, madame.”

“Cherish and love her forever, should she become yours,” said Lady
Isabel, wringing his hand. “I ask it you as one who is dying.”

“I will--I promise it. But I say, madame,” he continued, dropping his
fervent tone, “what do you allude to? Are you worse?”

Madame Vine did not answer. She glided away without speaking.

Later, when she was sitting by twilight in the gray parlor, cold and
shivering, and wrapped up in a shawl, though it was hot summer weather,
somebody knocked at the door.

“Come in,” cried she, apathetically.

It was Mr. Carlyle who entered. She rose up, her pulses quickening, her
heart thumping against her side. In her wild confusion she was drawing
forward a chair for him. He laid his hand upon it, and motioned her to
her own.

“Mrs. Carlyle tells me that you have been speaking to her of leaving--
that you find yourself too much out of health to continue with us.”

“Yes, sir,” she faintly replied, having a most imperfect notion of what
she did say.

“What is it that you find to be the matter with you?”

“I--think--it is chiefly--weakness,” she stammered.

Her face had grown as gray as the walls. A dusky, livid sort of hue, not
unlike William’s had worn the night of his death, and her voice sounded
strangely hollow. It, the voice, struck Mr. Carlyle and awoke his fears.

“You cannot--you never can have caught William’s complaint, in your
close attendance upon him?” he exclaimed, speaking in the impulse of the
moment, as the idea flashed across him. “I have heard of such things.”

“Caught it from him?” she rejoined, carried away also by impulse. “It is
more likely that he----”

She stopped herself just in time. “Inherited it from me,” had been the
destined conclusion. In her alarm, she went off volubly, something to
the effect that “it was no wonder she was ill: illness was natural to
her family.”

“At any rate, you have become ill at East Lynne, in attendance on my
children,” rejoined Mr. Carlyle, decisively, when her voice died away.
“You must therefore allow me to insist that you allow East Lynne to do
what it can toward renovating you. What is your objection to see a
doctor?”

“A doctor could do me no good,” she faintly answered.

“Certainly not, so long as you will not consult one.”

“Indeed, sir, doctors could not cure me, nor, as I believe prolong my
life.”

Mr. Carlyle paused.

“Are you believing yourself to be in danger?”

“Not in immediate danger, sir; only in so far as that I know I shall not
live.”

“And yet you will not see a doctor. Madame Vine, you must be aware that
I could not permit such a thing to go on in my house. Dangerous illness
and no advice!”

She could not say to him, “My malady is on the mind; it is a breaking
heart, and therefore no doctor of physic could serve me.” That would
never do. She had sat with her hand across her face, between her
spectacles and her wrapped-up chin. Had Mr. Carlyle possessed the eyes
of Argus, backed by Sam Weller’s patent magnifying microscopes of double
hextra power, he could not have made anything of her features in the
broad light of day. But she did not feel so sure of it. There was always
an undefined terror of discovery when in his presence, and she wished
the interview at an end.

“I will see Mr. Wainwright, if it will be any satisfaction to you, sir.”

“Madame Vine, I have intruded upon you here to say that you must see
him, and, should he deem it necessary, Dr. Martin also.”

“Oh, sir,” she rejoined with a curious smile, “Mr. Wainwright will be
quite sufficient. There will be no need of another. I will write a note
to him to-morrow.”

“Spare yourself the trouble. I am going into West Lynne, and will send
him up. You will permit me to urge that you spare no pains or care, that
you suffer my servants to spare no pains or care, to re-establish your
health. Mrs. Carlyle tells me that the question of your leaving remains
in abeyance until her return.”

“Pardon me, sir. The understanding with Mrs. Carlyle was that I should
remain here until her return, and should then be at liberty at once to
leave.”

“Exactly. That is what Mrs. Carlyle said. But I must express a hope that
by that time you may be feeling so much better as to reconsider your
decision and continue with us. For my daughter’s sake, Madame Vine, I
trust it will be so.”

He rose as he spoke, and held out his hand. What could she do but rise
also, drop hers from her face, and give it him in answer? He retained
it, clasping it warmly.

“How should I repay you--how thank you for your love to my poor, lost
boy?”

His earnest, tender eyes were on her blue double spectacles; a sad smile
mingled with the sweet expression of his lips as he bent toward her--
lips that had once been hers! A faint exclamation of despair, a vivid
glow of hot crimson, and she caught up her new black silk apron so
deeply bordered with crape, in her disengaged hand, and flung it up to
her face. He mistook the sound--mistook the action.

“Do not grieve for him. He is at rest. Thank you--thank you greatly for
your sympathy.”

Another wring of her hand, and Mr. Carlyle had quitted the room. She
laid her head upon the table, and thought how merciful would be death
when he should come.



CHAPTER XLV.

“IT WON’T DO, AFY!”

Mr. Jiffin was in his glory. Mr. Jiffin’s house was the same. Both were
in apple-pie order to receive Miss Afy Hallijohn, who was, in a very
short period, indeed, to be converted into Mrs. Jiffin.

Mr. Jiffin had not seen Afy for some days--had never been able to come
across her since the trial at Lynneborough. Every evening had he danced
attendance at her lodgings, but could not get admitted. “Not at home--
not at home,” was the invariable answer, though Afy might be sunning
herself at the window in his very sight. Mr. Jiffin, throwing off as
best he could the temporary disappointment, was in an ecstasy of
admiration, for he set it all down to Afy’s retiring modesty on the
approach of the nuptial day. “And they could try to calumniate her!” he
indignantly replied.

But now, one afternoon, when Mr. Jiffin and his shopman, and his shop,
and his wares, were all set out to the best advantage--and very tempting
they looked, as a whole, especially the spiced bacon--Mr. Jiffin
happening to cast his eyes to the opposite side of the street, beheld
his beloved sailing by. She was got up in the fashion. A mauve silk
dress with eighteen flounces, and about eighteen hundred steel buttons
that glittered your sight away; a “zouave” jacket worked with gold; a
black turban perched on the top of her skull, garnished in front with
what court milliners are pleased to term a “plume de coq,” but which, by
its size and height, might have been taken for a “coq” himself, while a
white ostrich feather was carried round and did duty behind, and a
spangled hair net hung down to her waist. Gloriously grand was Afy that
day and if I had but a photographing machine at hand--or whatever may be
the scientific name of the thing--you should certainly have been regaled
with the sight of her. Joyce would have gone down in a fit had she
encountered her by an unhappy chance. Mr. Jiffin, dashing his apron
anywhere, tore across.

“Oh, it is you!” said Afy, freezingly, when compelled to acknowledge
him, but his offered hand she utterly repudiated. “Really, Mr. Jiffin, I
should feel obliged if you would not come out to me in this offensive
and public manner.”

Mr. Jiffin grew cold. “Offensive! Not come out?” gasped he. “I do trust
I have not been so unfortunate as to offend you, Miss Afy!”

“Well--you see,” said Afy, calling up all her impudence to say what she
had made up her mind to say, “I have been considering it well over,
Jiffin, and I find that to carry out the marriage will not be for my--
for our happiness. I intended to write to inform you of this; but I
shall be spared the trouble--as you have come out to me.”

The perspiration, cold as ice, began to pour off Mr. Jiffin in his agony
and horror. You might have wrung every thread he had on. “You--don’t
mean--to--imply--that--you--give--me--up--Miss--Afy?” he jerked out,
unevenly.

“Well, yes, I do,” replied Afy. “It’s as good to be plain, and then
there can be no misapprehension. I’ll shake hands now with you, Jiffin,
for the last time; and I am very sorry that we both made such a
mistake.”

Poor Jiffin looked at her. His gaze would have melted a heart of stone.
“Miss Afy, you can’t mean it! You’d never, sure, crush a fellow in this
manner, whose whole soul is yours; who trusted you entirely? There’s not
an earthly thing I would not do to please you. You have been the light
of my existence.”

“Of course,” returned Afy, with a lofty and indifferent air, as if to be
“the light of his existence” was only her due. “But it’s all done and
over. It is not at all a settlement that will suit me, you see, Jiffin.
A butter and bacon factor is so very--so very--what I have not been
accustomed to! And then, those aprons! I never could get reconciled to
them.”

“I’ll discard the aprons altogether,” cried he, in a fever. “I’ll get a
second shopman, and buy a little gig, and do nothing but drive you out.
I’ll do anything if you will but have me still, Miss Afy. I have bought
the ring, you know.”

“Your intentions are very kind,” was the distant answer, “but it’s a
thing impossible; my mind is fully made up. So farewell for good,
Jiffin; and I wish you better luck in your next venture.”

Afy, lifting her capacious dress, for the streets had just been watered,
minced off. And Mr. Joe Jiffin, wiping his wet face as he gazed after
her, instantly wished that he could be nailed up in one of his pickled
pork barrels, and so be out of his misery.

“That’s done with, thank goodness,” soliloquized Afy. “Have him, indeed.
After what Richard let out on the trial. As if I should look after
anybody less than Dick Hare! I shall get him, too. I always knew Dick
Hare loved me above everything on earth; and he does still, or he’d
never had said what he did in open court. ‘It’s better to be born lucky
than rich.’ Won’t West Lynne envy me! Mrs. Richard Hare of the Grove.
Old Hare is on his last legs, and then Dick comes into his own. Mrs.
Hare must have her jointure house elsewhere, for we shall want the Grove
for ourselves. I wonder if Madame Barbara will condescend to recognize
me. And that blessed Corny? I shall be a sort of cousin of Corny’s then.
I wonder how much Dick comes into--three or four thousand a year? And to
think that I had nearly escaped this by tying myself to that ape of a
Jiffin! What sharks do get in our unsuspecting paths in this world!”

On went Afy, through West Lynne, till she arrived close to Mr. Justice
Hare’s. Then she paced slowly. It had been a frequent walk of hers since
the trial. Luck favored her to-day. As she was passing the gate, young
Richard Hare came up from the direction of East Lynne. It was the first
time Afy had obtained speech of him.

“Good day, Richard. Why! you were never going to pass an old friend?”

“I have so many friends,” said Richard, “I can scarcely spare time for
them individually.”

“But you might for me. Have you forgotten old days?” continued she,
bridling and flirting, and altogether showing herself off to advantage.

“No, I have not,” replied Richard. “And I am not likely to do so,” he
pointedly added.

“Ah, I felt sure of that. My heart told me so. When you went off, that
dreadful night, leaving me to anguish and suspense, I thought I should
have died. I never have had, so to say, a happy moment until this, when
I meet you again.”

“Don’t be a fool, Afy!” was Richard’s gallant rejoinder, borrowing the
favorite reproach of Miss Carlyle. “I was young and green once; you
don’t suppose I have remained so. We will drop the past, if you please.
How is Mr. Jiffin?”

“Oh, the wretch!” shrieked Afy. “Is it possible that you can have fallen
into the popular scandal that I have anything to say to him? You know
I’d never demean myself to it. That’s West Lynne all over! Nothing but
inventions in it from week’s end to week’s end. A man who sells cheese!
Who cuts up bacon! Well, I am surprised at you, Mr. Richard!”

“I have been thinking what luck you were in to get him,” said Richard,
with composure. “But it is your business not mine.”

“Could you bear to see me stooping to him?” returned Afy, dropping her
voice to the most insinuating whisper.

“Look you, Afy. What ridiculous folly you are nursing in your head I
don’t trouble myself to guess, but, the sooner you get it out again the
better. I was an idiot once, I don’t deny it; but you cured me of that,
and cured me with a vengeance. You must pardon me for intimating that
from henceforth we are strangers; in the street as elsewhere. I have
resumed my own standing again, which I periled when I ran after you.”

Afy turned faint. “How can you speak those cruel words?” gasped she.

“You have called them forth. I was told yesterday that Afy Hallijohn,
dressed up to a caricature, was looking after me again. It won’t do,
Afy.”

“Oh-o-o-oh!” sobbed Afy, growing hysterical, “and is this to be all my
recompense for the years I have spent pining after you, keeping single
for your sake!”

“Recompense! Oh, if you want that, I’ll get my mother to give Jiffin her
custom.” And with a ringing laugh, which, though it had nothing of
malice in it, showed Afy that he took her reproach for what it was
worth, Richard turned in at his own gate.

It was a deathblow to Afy’s vanity. The worst it had ever received; and
she took a few minutes to compose herself, and smooth her ruffled
feathers. Then she turned and sailed back toward Mr. Jiffin’s, her
turban up in the skies and the plume de coq tossing to the admiration of
all beholders, especially of Miss Carlyle, who had the gratification of
surveying her from her window. Arrived at Mr. Jiffin’s, she was taken
ill exactly opposite his door, and staggered into the shop in a most
exhausted state.

Round the counter flew Mr. Jiffin, leaving the shopman staring behind
it. What was the matter? What could he do for her?

“Faint--heat of the sun--walked too fast--allowed to sit down for five
minutes!” gasped Afy, in disjointed sentences.

Mr. Jiffin tenderly conducted her through the shop to his parlor. Afy
cast half an eye round, saw how comfortable were its arrangements, and
her symptoms of faintness increased. Gasps and hysterical sobs came
forth together. Mr. Jiffin was as one upon spikes.

“She’d recover better there than in the public shop--if she’d only
excuse his bringing her in, and consent to stop for a few minutes. No
harm could come to her, and West Lynne could never say it. He’d stand at
the far end of the room, right away from her; he’d prop open the two
doors and the windows; he’d call in the maid--anything she thought
right. Should he get her a glass of wine?”

Afy declined the wine by a gesture, and sat fanning herself. Mr. Jiffin
looking on from a respectful distance. Gradually she grew composed--grew
herself again. As she gained courage, Mr. Jiffin lost it, and he
ventured upon some faint words of reproach, of him.

Afy burst into a laugh. “Did I not do it well?” she exclaimed. “I
thought I’d play off a joke upon you, so I came out this afternoon and
did it.”

Mr. Jiffin clasped his hands. “Was it a joke” he returned, trembling
with agitation, uncertain whether he was in paradise or not. “Are you
still ready to let me call you mine?”

“Of course it was a joke,” said Afy. “What a soft you must have been,
Mr. Jiffin, not to see through it! When young ladies engage themselves
to be married, you can’t suppose they run back from it, close upon the
wedding-day?”

“Oh, Miss Afy!” And the poor little man actually burst into delicious
tears, as he caught hold of Afy’s hand and kissed it.

“A great green donkey!” thought Afy to herself, bending on him, however
the sweetest smile.

Rather. But Mr. Jiffin is not the only great donkey in the world.

Richard Hare, meanwhile, had entered his mother’s presence. She was
sitting at the open window, the justice opposite to her, in an invalid
chair, basking in the air and the sun. This last attack of the justice’s
had affected the mind more than the body. He was brought down to the
sitting-room that day for the first time; but, of his mind, there was
little hope. It was in a state of half imbecility; the most wonderful
characteristic being, that all its self-will, its surliness had gone.
Almost as a little child in tractability, was Justice Hare.

Richard came up to his mother, and kissed her. He had been to East
Lynne. Mrs. Hare took his hand and fondly held it. The change in her was
wonderful; she was a young and happy woman again.

“Barbara has decided to go to the seaside, mother. Mr. Carlyle takes her
on Monday.”

“I am glad, my dear, it will be sure to go her good. Richard”--bending
over to her husband, but still retaining her son’s hand--“Barbara has
agreed to go to the seaside, I will set her up.”

“Ay, ay,” nodded the justice, “set her up. Seaside? Can’t we go?”

“Certainly, dear, if you wish it; when you shall be a little stronger.”

“Ay, ay,” nodded the justice again. It was his usual answer now.
“Stronger. Where’s Barbara?”

“She goes on Monday, sir,” said Richard, likewise bending his head.
“Only for a fortnight. But they talk of going again later in the
autumn.”

“Can’t I go, too?” repeated the justice, looking pleadingly in Richard’s
face.

“You shall, dear father. Who knows but a month or two’s bracing would
bring you quite round again? We might go all together, ourselves and the
Carlyles. Anne comes to stay with us next week, you know, and we might
go when her visit is over.”

“Aye, all go together. Anne’s coming?”

“Have you forgotten, dear Richard? She comes to stay a month with us,
and Mr. Clitheroe and the children. I am so pleased she will find you
better,” added Mrs. Hare, her gentle eyes filling. “Mr. Wainwright says
you may go out for a drive to-morrow.”

“And I’ll be coachman,” laughed Richard. “It will be the old times come
round again. Do you remember, father, my breaking the pole, one
moonlight night, and your not letting me drive for six months
afterwards?”

The poor justice laughed in answer to Richard, laughed till the tears
ran down his face, probably not knowing in the least what he was
laughing at.

“Richard,” said Mrs. Hare to her son, almost in an apprehensive tone,
her hand pressing his nervously, “was not that Afy Hallijohn I saw you
speaking with at the gate?”

“Did you? What a spectacle she had made of herself! I wonder she is not
ashamed to go through the streets in such a guise! Indeed, I wonder she
shows herself at all.”

“Richard, you--you--will not be drawn in again?” were the next whispered
words.

“Mother!” There was a sternness in his mild blue eyes as he cast them
upon his mother. Those beautiful eyes--the very counterpart of
Barbara’s, both his and hers the counterpart of Mrs. Hare’s. The look
had been sufficient refutation without words.

“Mother mine, I am going to belong to you in the future, and to nobody
else. West Lynne is already busy for me, I understand, pleasantly
carving out my destiny. One marvels whether I shall lose myself with
Miss Afy; another, that I shall set on offhand, and court Louisa Dobede.
They are all wrong; my place will be with my darling mother,--at least,
for several years to come.”

She clasped his hand to her bosom in her glad delight.

“We want happiness together, mother, to enable us to forget the past;
for upon none did the blow fall, as upon you and upon me. And the
happiness we shall find, in our own home, living for each other, and
striving to amuse my poor father.”

“Aye, aye,” complacently put in Justice Hare.

So it would be. Richard had returned to his home, had become, to all
intent and purposes, its master; for the justice would never be in a
state to hold sway again. He had resumed his position; and regained the
favor of West Lynne, which, always in extremes, was now wanting to kill
him with kindness. A happy, happy home from henceforth; and Mrs. Hare
lifted up her full heart in thankfulness to God. Perhaps Richard’s went
up also.

One word touching that wretched prisoner in the condemned cell at
Lynneborough. As you must have anticipated, the extreme sentence was not
carried out. And, little favorite as Sir Francis is with you and with
me, we can but admit that justice did not demand that it should be. That
he had willfully killed Hallijohn, was certain; but the act was
committed in a moment of wild rage; it had not been premeditated. The
sentence was commuted to transportation. A far more disgraceful one in
the estimation of Sir Francis; a far more unwelcome one in the eyes of
his wife. It is no use to mince the truth, one little grain of comfort
had penetrated to Lady Levison; the anticipation of the time when she
and her ill-fated child should be alone, and could hide themselves in
some hidden nook of the wide world; he, and his crime, and his end gone;
forgotten. But it seems he was not to go and be forgotten; she and the
boy must be tied to him still; and she was lost in horror and rebellion.

He envied the dead Hallijohn, did that man, as he looked forth on the
future. A cheering prospect truly! The gay Sir Francis Levison working
in chains with his gang! Where would his diamonds and his perfumed
handkerchiefs and his white hands be then? After a time he might get a
ticket-of-leave. He groaned in agony as the turnkey suggested it to him.
A ticket-of-leave for him! Oh, why did they not hang him? he wailed
forth as he closed his eyes to the dim light. The light of the cell, you
understand; he could not close them to the light of the future. No;
never again; it shone out all too plainly, dazzling his brain as with a
flame of living fire.



CHAPTER XLVI.

UNTIL ETERNITY.

Barbara was at the seaside, and Lady Isabel was in her bed, dying. You
remember the old French saying, L’homme propose, et Dieu dispose. An
exemplification of it was here.

She, Lady Isabel, had consented to remain at East Lynne during Mrs.
Carlyle’s absence, on purpose that she might be with her children. But
the object was frustrated, for Lucy and Archibald had been removed to
Miss Carlyle’s. It was Mr. Carlyle’s arrangement. He thought the
governess ought to have entire respite from all charge; and that poor
governess dared not say, let them stay with me. Lady Isabel had also
purposed to be safely away from East Lynne before the time came for her
to die; but that time had advanced with giant strides, and the period
for removal was past. She was going out as her mother had done, rapidly
unexpectedly, “like the snuff of a candle.” Wilson was in attendance on
her mistress; Joyce remained at home.

Barbara had chosen a watering-place near, not thirty miles off, so that
Mr. Carlyle went there most evenings, returning to his office in the
mornings. Thus he saw little of East Lynne, paying one or two flying
visits only. From the Saturday to the Wednesday in the second week, he
did not come home at all, and it was in those few days that Lady Isabel
had changed for the worse. On the Wednesday he was expected home to
dinner and to sleep.

Joyce was in a state of frenzy--or next door to it. Lady Isabel was
dying, and what would become of the ominous secret? A conviction, born
of her fears, was on the girl’s mind that, with death, the whole must
become known; and who was to foresee what blame might not be cast upon
her, by her master and mistress, for not having disclosed it? She might
be accused of having been an abettor in the plot from the first! Fifty
times it was in Joyce’s mind to send for Miss Carlyle and tell her all.

The afternoon was fast waning, and the spirit of Lady Isabel seemed to
be waning with it. Joyce was in the room in attendance upon her. She had
been in a fainting state all day, but felt better now. She was partially
raised in bed by pillows, a white Cashmere shawl over her shoulders, her
nightcap off, to allow as much air as possible to come to her, and the
windows stood open.

Footsteps sounded on the gravel in the quiet stillness of the summer
air. They penetrated even to her ear, for all her faculties were keen
yet. Beloved footsteps; and a tinge of hectic rose to her cheeks. Joyce,
who stood at the window, glanced out. It was Mr. Carlyle.

“Joyce!” came forth a cry from the bed, sharp and eager.

Joyce turned round. “My lady?”

“I should die happily if I might see him.”

“See him!” uttered Joyce, doubting her own ears. “My lady! See him! Mr.
Carlyle!”

“What can it signify? I am already as one dead. Should I ask it or wish
it, think you, in rude life? The yearning has been upon me for days
Joyce; it is keeping death away.”

“It could not be, my lady,” was the decisive answer. “It must not be. It
is as a thing impossible.”

Lady Isabel burst into tears. “I can’t die for the trouble,” she wailed.
“You keep my children from me. They must not come, you say, lest I
should betray myself. Now you would keep my husband. Joyce, Joyce, let
me see him!”

Her husband! Poor thing! Joyce was in a maze of distress, though not the
less firm. Her eyes were wet with tears; but she believed she should be
infringing her allegiance to her mistress did she bring Mr. Carlyle to
the presence of his former wife; altogether it might be productive of
nothing but confusion.

A knock at the chamber door. Joyce called out, “Come in.” The two maids,
Hannah and Sarah, were alone in the habit of coming to the room, and
neither of them had ever known Madame Vine as Lady Isabel. Sarah put in
her head.

“Master wants you, Miss Joyce.”

“I’ll come.”

“He is in the dining-room. I have just taken down Master Arthur to him.”

Mr. Carlyle had got “Master Arthur” on his shoulder when Joyce entered.
Master Arthur was decidedly given to noise and rebellion, and was
already, as Wilson expressed it, “sturdy upon his pins.”

“How is Madame Vine, Joyce?”

Joyce scarcely knew how to answer. But she did not dare to equivocate as
to her precarious state. And where the use, when a few hours would
probably see the end of it?

“She is very ill, indeed, sir.”

“Worse?”

“Sir, I fear she is dying.”

Mr. Carlyle, in his consternation, put down Arthur. “Dying!”

“I hardly think she will last till morning, sir!”

“Why, what has killed her?” he uttered in amazement.

Joyce did not answer. She looked pale and confused.

“Have you had Dr. Martin?”

“Oh, no, sir. It would be of no use.”

“No use!” repeated Mr. Carlyle, in a sharp accent. “Is that the way to
treat dying people? Assume it is of no use to send for advice, and so
quietly let them die! If Madame Vine is as ill as you say, a telegraphic
message must be sent off at once. I had better see her,” he cried,
moving to the door.

Joyce, in her perplexity, dared to place her back against it, preventing
his egress. “Oh, master! I beg your pardon, but--it would not be right.
Please, sir, do not think of going into her room!”

Mr. Carlyle thought Joyce was taken with a fit of prudery. “Why can’t I
go in?” he asked.

“Mrs. Carlyle would not like it, sir,” stammered Joyce, her cheeks
scarlet now.

Mr. Carlyle stared at her. “Some of you take up odd ideas,” he cried.
“In Mrs. Carlyle’s absence, it is necessary that some one should see
her! Let a lady die in my house, and never see after her! You are out of
your senses, Joyce. I shall go in after dinner; so prepare Madame Vine.”

The dinner was being brought in then. Joyce, feeling like one in a
nervous attack, picked up Arthur and carried him to Sarah in the
nursery. What on earth was she to do?

Scarcely had Mr. Carlyle begun his dinner, when his sister entered. Some
grievance had arisen between her and the tenants of certain houses of
hers, and she was bringing the dispute to him. Before he would hear it,
he begged her to go up to Madame Vine, telling her what Joyce had said
of her state.

“Dying!” exclaimed Miss Corny, in disbelieving derision. “That Joyce has
been more like a simpleton lately than like herself. I can’t think what
has come to the woman.”

She took off her bonnet and mantle, and laid them on a chair, gave a
twitch or two to her cap, as she surveyed it in the pier-glass, and went
upstairs. Joyce answered her knock at the invalid’s door; and Joyce,
when she saw who it was, turned as white as any sheet.

“Oh, ma’am, you must not come in!” she blundered out, in her confusion
and fear, as she put herself right in the doorway.

“Who is to keep me out?” demanded Miss Carlyle, after a pause of
surprise, her tone of quiet power. “Move away, girl. Joyce, I think your
brain must be softening. What will you try at next?”

Joyce was powerless, both in right and strength, and she knew it. She
knew there was no help--that Miss Carlyle would and must enter. She
stood aside, shivering, and passed out of the room as soon as Miss
Carlyle was within it.

Ah! there could no longer be concealment now! There she was, her pale
face lying against the pillow, free from its disguising trappings. The
band of gray velvet, the spectacles, the wraps for the throat and chin,
the huge cap, all were gone. It was the face of Lady Isabel; changed,
certainly, very, very much; but still hers. The silvered hair fell on
either side of her face, like the silky curls had once fallen; the
sweet, sad eyes were the eyes of yore.

“Mercy be good to us!” uttered Miss Carlyle.

They remained gazing at each other, both panting with emotion; yes, even
Miss Carlyle. Though a wild suspicion had once crossed her brain that
Madame Vine might be Lady Isabel, it had died away again, from the sheer
improbability of the thing, as much as from the convincing proofs
offered by Lord Mount Severn. Not but what Miss Carlyle had borne in
mind the suspicion, and had been fond of tracing the likeness in Madame
Vine’s face.

“How could you dare come back here!” she abruptly asked, her tone of
sad, soft wailing, not one of reproach.

Lady Isabel humbly crossed her attenuated hands upon her chest. “My
children,” she whispered. “How could I stay away from them? Have pity,
Miss Carlyle! Don’t reproach me. I am on my way to God, to answer for
all my sins and sorrows.”

“I do not reproach you,” said Miss Carlyle.

“I am so glad to go,” she continued to murmur, her eyes full of tears.
“Jesus did not come, you know, to save the good like you; He came for
the sake of us poor sinners. I tried to take up my cross, as He bade us,
and bear it bravely for His sake; but its weight has killed me.”

The good like you! Humbly, meekly, deferentially was it expressed, in
all good faith and trust, as though Miss Corny was a sort of upper
angel. Somehow the words grated on Miss Corny’s ear: grated fiercely on
her conscience. It came into her mind, then, as she stood there, that
the harsh religion that she had through life professed, was not the
religion that would best bring peace to her dying bed.

“Child,” said she, drawing near to and leaning over Lady Isabel, “had I
anything to do with sending you from East Lynne?”

Lady Isabel shook her head and cast down her gaze, as she whispered:
“You did not send me; you did not help to send me. I was not very happy
with you, but that was not the cause--of my going away. Forgive me, Miss
Carlyle, forgive me!”

“Thank God!” inwardly breathed Miss Carlyle. “Forgive me,” she said,
aloud and in agitation, touching her hand. “I could have made your home
happier, and I wish I had done it. I have wished it ever since you left
it.”

Lady Isabel drew the hand in hers. “I want to see Archibald,” she
whispered, going back, in thought, to the old time and the old name. “I
have prayed Joyce to bring him to me, and she will not. Only for a
minute! Just to hear him say that he forgives me! What can it matter,
now that I am as one lost to the world? I should die easier.”

Upon what impulse or grounds Miss Carlyle saw fit to accede to the
request, cannot be told. Probably she did not choose to refuse a death-
bed prayer; possibly she reasoned, as did Lady Isabel--what could it
matter? She went to the door. Joyce was in the corridor, leaning against
the wall, her apron up to her eyes. Miss Carlyle beckoned to her.

“How long have you known of this?”

“Since that night in the spring, when there was an alarm of fire. I saw
her then, with nothing on her face, and knew her; though, at the first
moment, I thought it was her ghost. Ma’am, I have just gone about since,
like a ghost myself from fear.”

“Go and request your master to come up to me.”

“Oh, ma’am! Will it be well to tell him?” remonstrated Joyce. “Well that
he should see her?”

“Go and request your master to come to me,” unequivocally repeated Miss
Carlyle. “Are you mistress, Joyce, or am I?”

Joyce went down and brought Mr. Carlyle up from the dinner-table.

“Is Madame Vine worse, Cornelia? Will she see me?”

“She wishes to see you.”

Miss Carlyle opened the door as she spoke. He motioned her to pass in
first. “No,” she said, “you had better see her alone.”

He was going in when Joyce caught his arm. “Master! Master! You ought to
be prepared. Ma’am, won’t you tell him?”

He looked at them, thinking they must be moonstruck, for their conduct
seemed inexplicable. Both were in evident agitation, an emotion Miss
Carlyle was not given to. Her face and lips were twitching, but she kept
a studied silence. Mr. Carlyle knit his brow and went into the chamber.
They shut him in.

He walked gently at once to the bed, in his straightforward manner.

“I am grieved, Madame Vine----”

The words faltered on his tongue. He was a man as little given to show
emotion as man can well be. Did he think, as Joyce had once done, that
it was a ghost he saw? Certain it is that his face and lips turned the
hue of death, and he backed a few steps from the bed. The falling hair,
the sweet, mournful eyes, the hectic which his presence brought to her
cheeks, told too plainly of the Lady Isabel.

“Archibald!”

She put out her trembling hand. She caught him ere he had drawn quite
beyond her reach. He looked at her, he looked round the room, as does
one awaking from a dream.

“I could not die without your forgiveness,” she murmured, her eyes
falling before him as she thought of her past. “Do you turn from me?
Bear with me a little minute! Only say you forgive me, and I shall die
in peace!”

“Isabel?” he spoke, not knowing in the least what he said. “Are you--are
you--were you Madame Vine?”

“Oh, forgive--forgive me! I did not die. I got well from the accident,
but it changed me dreadfully. Nobody knew me, and I came here as Madame
Vine. I could not stay away, Archibald, forgive me!”

His mind was in a whirl, his ideas had gone wool-gathering. The first
clear thought that came thumping through his brain was, that he must be
a man of two wives. She noticed his perplexed silence.

“I could not stay away from you and my children. The longing for you was
killing me,” she reiterated, wildly, like one talking in a fever. “I
never knew a moment’s peace after the mad act I was guilty of, in
quitting you. Not an hour had I departed when my repentance set in; and
even then I would have retraced and come back, but I did not know how.
See what it has done for me!” tossing up her gray hair, holding out her
attenuated wrists. “Oh, forgive--forgive me! My sin was great, but my
punishment was greater. It has been as one long scene of mortal agony.”

“Why did you go?” asked Mr. Carlyle.

“Did you not know?”

“No. It has always been a mystery to me.”

“I went out of love for you.”

A shade of disdain crossed his lips. She was equivocating to him on her
death-bed.

“Do not look in that way,” she panted. “My strength is nearly gone--you
must perceive that it is--and I do not, perhaps, express myself clearly.
I loved you dearly, and I grew suspicious of you. I thought you were
false and deceitful to me; that your love was all given to another; and
in my sore jealousy, I listened to the temptings of that bad man, who
whispered to me of revenge. It was not so, was it?”

Mr. Carlyle had regained his calmness, outwardly, at any rate. He stood
by the side of the bed, looking down upon her, his arms crossed upon his
chest, and his noble form raised to its full height.

“Was it so?” she feverishly repeated.

“Can you ask it, knowing me as you did then, as you must have known me
since? I never was false to you in thought, in word, or in deed.”

“Oh, Archibald, I was mad--I was mad! I could not have done it in
anything but madness. Surely you will forget and forgive!”

“I cannot forget. I have already forgiven!”

“Try and forget the dreadful time that has passed since that night!” she
continued, the tears falling on her cheeks, as she held up to him one of
her poor hot hands. “Let your thoughts go back to the days when you
first knew me; when I was here, Isabel Vane, a happy girl with my
father. At times I have lost myself in a moment’s happiness in thinking
of it. Do you remember how you grew to love me, though you thought you
might not tell it to me--and how gentle you were with me, when papa
died--and the hundred pound note? Do you remember coming to Castle
Marling?--and my promise to be your wife--and the first kiss you left
upon my lips? And, oh, Archibald! Do you remember the loving days after
I was your wife--how happy we were with each other? Do you remember when
Lucy was born, we thought I should have died; and your joy, your
thankfulness that God restored me? Do you remember all this?”

Aye. He did remember it. He took the poor hand into his, and
unconsciously played with its wasted fingers.

“Have you any reproach to cast to me?” he gently said, bending his head
a little.

“Reproach to you! To you, who must be almost without reproach in the
sight of Heaven! You, who were everlasting to me--ever anxious for my
welfare! When I think of what you were, and are, and how I quitted you,
I could sink into the earth with remorse and shame. My own sin, I have
surely expiated; I cannot expiate the shame I entailed upon you, and
upon our children.”

Never. He felt it as keenly now as he had felt it then.

“Think what it has been for me!” she resumed, and he was obliged to bend
his ear to catch her gradually weakening tones. “To live in this house
with your wife--to see your love for her--to watch the envied caresses
that once were mine! I never loved you so passionately as I have done
since I lost you. Think what it was to watch William’s decaying
strength; to be alone with him in his dying hour, and not to be able to
say he is my child as well as yours! When he lay dead, and the news went
forth to the household, it was her petty grief you soothed, not mine,
his mother’s. God alone knows how I have lived through it all; it has
been to me as the bitterness of death.”

“Why did you come back?” was the response of Mr. Carlyle.

“I have told you. I could not live, wanting you and my children.”

“It was wrong; wrong in all ways.”

“Wickedly wrong. You cannot think worse of it than I have done. But the
consequences and the punishment would be mine alone, as long as I
guarded against discovery. I never thought to stop here to die; but
death seems to have come on me with a leap, like it came to my mother.”

A pause of labored hard breathing. Mr. Carlyle did not interrupt it.

“All wrong, all wrong,” she resumed; “this interview with you, among the
rest. And yet--I hardly know; it cannot hurt the new ties you have
formed, for I am as one dead now to this world, hovering on the brink of
the next. But you were my husband, Archibald; and, the last few days, I
have longed for your forgiveness with a fevered longing. Oh! that the
past could be blotted out! That I could wake up and find it but a
hideous dream; that I were here as in old days, in health and happiness,
your ever loving wife. Do you wish it, that the dark past had never had
place?”

She put the question in a sharp, eager tone, gazing up to him with an
anxious gaze, as though the answer must be one of life or death.

“For your sake I wish it.” Calm enough were the words spoken; and her
eyes fell again, and a deep sigh came forth.

“I am going to William. But Lucy and Archibald will be left. Oh, do you
never be unkind to them! I pray you, visit not their mother’s sin upon
their heads! Do not in your love for your later children, lose your love
for them!”

“Have you seen anything in my conduct that could give rise to fears of
this?” he returned, reproach mingled in his sad tone. “The children are
dear to me, as you once were.”

“As I once was. Aye, and as I might have been now.”

“Indeed you might,” he answered, with emotion. “The fault was not mine.”

“Archibald, I am on the very threshold of the next world. Will you not
bless me--will you not say a word of love to me before I pass it! Let
what I am, I say, be blotted for the moment from your memory; think of
me, if you can, as the innocent, timid child whom you made your wife.
Only a word of love. My heart is breaking for it.”

He leaned over her, he pushed aside the hair from her brow with his
gentle hand, his tears dropping on her face. “You nearly broke mine,
when you left me, Isabel,” he whispered.

“May God bless you, and take you to His rest in Heaven! May He so deal
with me, as I now fully and freely forgive you.”

What was he about to do? Lower and lower bent his head, until his breath
nearly mingled with hers. To kiss her? He best knew. But, suddenly, his
face grew red with a scarlet flush, and he lifted it again. Did the form
of one, then in a felon’s cell at Lynneborough, thrust itself before
him, or that of his absent and unconscious wife?

“To His rest in Heaven,” she murmured, in the hollow tones of the
departing. “Yes, yes I know that God has forgiven me. Oh, what a
struggle it has been! Nothing but bad feelings, rebellion, and sorrow,
and repining, for a long while after I came back here, but Jesus prayed
for me, and helped me, and you know how merciful He is to the weary and
heavy-laden. We shall meet again, Archibald, and live together forever
and ever. But for that great hope I could hardly die. William said mamma
would be on the banks of the river, looking out for him; but it is
William who is looking for me.”

Mr. Carlyle released one of his hands; she had taken them both; and with
his own white handkerchief, wiped the death-dew from her forehead.

“It is no sin to anticipate it, Archibald, for there will be no marrying
or giving in marriage in Heaven: Christ said so. Though we do not know
how it will be, my sin will be remembered no more there, and we shall be
together with our children forever and forever. Keep a little corner in
your heart for your poor lost Isabel.”

“Yes, yes,” he whispered.

“Are you leaving me?” she uttered, in a wild tone of pain.

“You are growing faint, I perceive, I must call assistance.”

“Farewell, then; farewell, until eternity,” she sighed, the tears
raining from her eyes. “It is death, I think, not faintness. Oh! but it
is hard to part! Farewell, farewell my once dear husband!”

She raised her head from the pillow, excitement giving her strength; she
clung to his arm; she lifted her face in its sad yearning. Mr. Carlyle
laid her tenderly down again, and suffered his wet cheek to rest upon
hers.

“Until eternity.”

She followed him with her eyes as he retreated, and watched him from the
room: then turned her face to the wall. “It is over. Only God now.”

Mr. Carlyle took an instant’s counsel with himself, stopping at the head
of the stairs to do it. Joyce, in obedience to a sign from him, had
already gone into the sick-chamber: his sister was standing at the door.

“Cornelia.”

She followed him down to the dining-room.

“You will remain here to-night? With her?”

“Do you suppose I shouldn’t?” crossly responded Miss Corny; “where are
you off to now?”

“To the telegraph office, at present. To send for Lord Mount Severn.”

“What good can he do?”

“None. But I shall send for him.”

“Can’t one of the servants go just as well as you? You have not finished
your dinner; hardly begun it.”

He turned his eyes on the dinner-table in a mechanical sort of way, his
mind wholly preoccupied, made some remark in answer, which Miss Corny
did not catch, and went out.

On his return his sister met him in the hall, drew him inside the
nearest room, and closed the door. Lady Isabel was dead. Had been dead
about ten minutes.

“She never spoke after you left her, Archibald. There was a slight
struggle at the last, a fighting for breath, otherwise she went off
quite peacefully. I felt sure, when I first saw her this afternoon, that
she could not last till midnight.”



CHAPTER XLVII.

I. M. V.

Lord Mount Severn, wondering greatly what the urgent summons could be
for, lost no time in obeying it, and was at East Lynne the following
morning early. Mr. Carlyle had his carriage at the station--his close
carriage--and shut up in that he made the communication to the earl as
they drove to East Lynne.

The earl could with difficulty believe it. Never had he been so utterly
astonished. At first he really could not understand the tale.

“Did she--did she--come back to your house to die?” he blundered. “You
never took her in? I don’t understand.”

Mr. Carlyle explained further; and the earl at length understood. But he
did not recover his perplexed astonishment.

“What a mad act to come back here. Madame Vine! How on earth did she
escape detection?”

“She did escape it,” said Mr. Carlyle. “The strange likeness Madame Vine
possessed to my first wife did often strike me as being marvelous, but I
never suspected the truth. It was a likeness, and not a likeness, for
every part of her face and form was changed except her eyes, and those I
never saw but through those disguising glasses.”

The earl wiped his hot face. The news had ruffled him no measured
degree. He felt angry with Isabel, dead though she was, and thankful
that Mrs. Carlyle was away.

“Will you see her?” whispered Mr. Carlyle as they entered the house.

“Yes.”

They went up to the death-chamber, Mr. Carlyle procuring the key. It was
the only time that he entered it. Very peaceful she looked now, her pale
features so composed under her white cap and hands. Miss Carlyle and
Joyce had done all that was necessary; nobody else had been suffered to
approach her. Lord Mount Severn leaned over her, tracing the former
looks of Isabel; and the likeness grew upon him in a wonderful degree.

“What did she die of?” he asked.

“She said a broken heart.”

“Ah!” said the earl. “The wonder is that it did not break before. Poor
thing! Poor Isabel!” he added, touching her hand, “how she marred her
own happiness! Carlyle, I suppose this is your wedding ring?”

Mr. Carlyle cast his eyes upon the ring. “Very probably.”

“To think of her never having discarded it!” remarked the earl,
releasing the cold hand. “Well, I can hardly believe the tale now.”

He turned and quitted the room as he spoke. Mr. Carlyle looked
steadfastly at the dead face for a minute or two, his fingers touching
the forehead; but what his thoughts or feelings may have been, none can
tell. Then he replaced the sheet over her face, and followed the earl.

They descended in silence to the breakfast-room. Miss Carlyle was seated
at the table waiting for them. “Where could all your eyes have been?”
 exclaimed the earl to her, after a few sentences, referring to the event
just passed.

“Just where yours would have been,” replied Miss Corny, with a touch of
her old temper. “You saw Madame Vine as well as we did.”

“But not continuously. Only two or three times in all. And I do not
remember ever to have seen her without her bonnet and veil. That Carlyle
should not have recognized her is almost beyond belief.”

“It seems so, to speak of it,” said Miss Corny; “but facts are facts.
She was young and gay, active, when she left here, upright as a dart,
her dark hair drawn from her open brow, and flowing on her neck, her
cheeks like crimson paint, her face altogether beautiful. Madame Vine
arrived here a pale, stooping woman, lame of one leg, shorter than Lady
Isabel--and her figure stuffed out under those sacks of jackets. Not a
bit, scarcely, of her forehead to be seen, for gray velvet and gray
bands of hair; her head smothered under a close cap, large, blue, double
spectacles hiding the eyes and their sides, and the throat tied up; the
chin partially. The mouth was entirely altered in its character, and
that upward scar, always so conspicuous, made it almost ugly. Then she
had lost some of her front teeth, you know, and she lisped when she
spoke. Take her for all in all,” summed up Miss Carlyle, “she looked no
more like Isabel who went away from here than I look like Adam. Just get
your dearest friend damaged and disguised as she was, my lord, and see
if you’d recognize him.”

The observation came home to Lord Mount Severn. A gentleman whom he knew
well, had been so altered by a fearful accident, that little resemblance
could be traced to his former self. In fact, his own family could not
recognize him: and he used an artificial disguise. It was a case in
point; and--reader--I assure you it was a true one.

“It was the disguise that we ought to have suspected,” quietly observed
Mr. Carlyle. “The likeness was not sufficiently striking to cause
suspicion.”

“But she turned the house from that scent as soon as she came into it,”
 struck in Miss Corny, “telling of the ‘neuralgic pains’ that affected
her head and face, rendering the guarding them from exposure necessary.
Remember, Lord Mount Severn, that the Ducies had been with her in
Germany, and had never suspected her. Remember also another thing, that,
however great a likeness we may have detected, we could not and did not
speak of it, one to another. Lady Isabel’s name is never so much as
whispered among us.”

“True: all true,” nodded the earl. And they sat themselves down to
breakfast.

On the Friday, the following letter was dispatched to Mrs. Carlyle.

“MY DEAREST--I find I shall not be able to get to you on Saturday
afternoon, as I promised, but will leave here by the late train that
night. Mind you don’t sit up for me. Lord Mount Severn is here for a few
days; he sends his regards to you.

“And now, Barbara, prepare for news that will prove a shock. Madame Vine
is dead. She grew rapidly worse, they tell me, after our departure, and
died on Wednesday night. I am glad you were away.

“Love from the children. Lucy and Archie are still at Cornelia’s; Arthur
wearing out Sarah’s legs in the nursery.

“Ever yours, my dearest,

“ARCHIBALD CARLYLE.”

Of course, as Madame Vine, the governess, died at Mr. Carlyle’s house,
he could not, in courtesy, do less than follow her to the grave. So
decided West Lynne, when they found which way the wind was going to
blow. Lord Mount Severn followed also, to keep him company, being on a
visit to him, and very polite, indeed, of his lordship to do it--
condescending, also! West Lynne remembered another funeral at which
those two had been the only mourners--that of the earl. By some curious
coincidence the French governess was buried close to the earl’s grave.
As good there as anywhere else, quoth West Lynne. There happened to be a
vacant spot of ground.

The funeral took place on a Sunday morning. A plain, respectable
funeral. A hearse and pair, and mourning coach and pair, with a chariot
for the Rev. Mr. Little. No pall-bearers or mutes, or anything of that
show-off kind; and no plumes on the horses, only on the hearse. West
Lynne looked on with approbation, and conjectured that the governess had
left sufficient money to bury herself; but, of course, that was Mr.
Carlyle’s affair, not West Lynne’s. Quiet enough lay she in her last
resting-place.

They left her in it, the earl and Mr. Carlyle, and entered the mourning-
coach, to be conveyed back again to East Lynne.

“Just a little stone of white marble, two feet high by a foot and a half
broad,” remarked the earl, on their road, pursuing a topic they were
speaking upon. “With the initials ‘I. V.’ and the date of the year.
Nothing more. What do you think?”

“I. M. V.,” corrected Mr. Carlyle.

“Yes.”

At this moment the bells of another church, not St. Jude’s, broke out in
a joyous peal, and the earl inclined his ear to listen.

“What can they be ringing for?” he cried.

They were ringing for a wedding. Afy Hallijohn, by the help of two
clergymen and six bridesmaids, of which you may be sure Joyce was not
one, had just been converted into Mrs. Joe Jiffin. When Afy took a thing
into her head, she somehow contrived to carry it through, and to bend
even clergymen and bridesmaids to her will. Mr. Jiffin was blest at
last.

In the afternoon the earl left East Lynne, and somewhat later Barbara
arrived at it. Wilson scarcely gave her mistress time to step into the
house before her, and she very nearly left the baby in the fly.
Curiously anxious was Wilson to hear all particulars as to whatever
could have took off that French governess. Mr. Carlyle was much
surprised at their arrival.

“How could I stay away, Archibald, even until Monday, after the news you
sent me?” said Barbara. “What did she die of? It must have been awfully
sudden.”

“I suppose so,” was his dreamy answer. He was debating a question with
himself, one he had thought over a good deal since Wednesday night.
Should he, or should he not, tell his wife? He would have preferred not
to tell her; and, were the secret confined to his own breast, he would
decidedly not have done so. But it was known to three others--to Miss
Carlyle, to lord Mount Severn, and to Joyce. All trustworthy and of good
intention; but it was impossible for Mr. Carlyle to make sure that not
one of them would ever, through any chance and unpremeditated word, let
the secret come to the knowledge of Mrs. Carlyle. That would not do, if
she must hear it at all, she must hear it from him, and at once. He took
his course.

“Are you ill, Archibald?” she asked, noting his face. It wore a pale,
worn sort of look.

“I have something to tell you, Barbara,” he answered, drawing her hand
into his, as they stood together. They were in her dressing-room, where
she was taking off her things. “On the Wednesday evening when I got home
to dinner Joyce told me that she feared Madame Vine was dying, and I
thought it right to see her.”

“Certainly,” returned Barbara. “Quite right.”

“I went into her room, and I found that she was dying. But I found
something else, Barbara. She was not Madame Vine.”

“Not Madame Vine!” echoed Barbara, believing in good truth that her
husband could not know what he was saying.

“It was my former wife, Isabel Vane.”

Barbara’s face flushed crimson, and then grew white as marble; and she
drew her hand unconsciously from Mr. Carlyle’s. He did not appear to
notice the movement, but stood with his elbow on the mantelpiece while
he talked, giving her a rapid summary of the interview and its details.

“She could not stay away from her children, she said, and came back as
Madame Vine. What with the effects of the railroad accident in France,
and those spectacles she wore, and her style of dress, and her gray
hair, she felt secure in not being recognized. I am astonished now that
she was not discovered. Were such a thing related to me I should give no
credence to it.”

Barbara’s heart felt faint with its utter sickness, and she turned her
face from the view of her husband. Her first confused thoughts were as
Mr. Carlyle’s had been--that she had been living in his house with
another wife. “Did you suspect her?” she breathed, in a low tone.

“Barbara! Had I suspected it, should I have allowed it to go on? She
implored my forgiveness for the past, and for having returned here, and
I gave it to her fully. I then went to West Lynne, to telegraph to Mount
Severn, and when I came back she was dead.”

There was a pause. Mr. Carlyle began to perceive that his wife’s face
was hidden from him.

“She said her heart was broken. Barbara, we cannot wonder at it.”

There was no reply. Mr. Carlyle took his arm from the mantelpiece, and
moved so that he could see her countenance: a wan countenance, telling
of pain.

He laid his hand upon her shoulder, and made her look at him. “My
dearest, what is this?”

“Oh, Archibald!” she uttered, clasping her hands together, all her pent
up feelings bursting forth, and the tears streaming from her eyes, “has
this taken your love from me?”

He took both her hands in one of his, he put the other round her waist
and held her there, before him, never speaking, only looking gravely
into her face. Who could look at its sincere truthfulness, at the sweet
expression of his lips, and doubt him? Not Barbara. She allowed the
moment’s excitement to act upon her feelings, and carry her away.

“I had thought my wife possessed entire trust in me.”

“Oh, I do, I do; you know I do. Forgive me, Archibald,” she slowly
whispered.

“I deemed it better to impart this to you, Barbara. Had there been wrong
feeling on my part, I should have left you in ignorance. My darling, I
have told you it in love.”

She was leaning on his breast, sobbing gently, her repentant face turned
towards him. He held her there in his strong protection, his enduring
tenderness.

“My wife! My darling! now and always.”

“It was a foolish feeling to cross my heart, Archibald. It is done with
and gone.”

“Never let it come back, Barbara. Neither need her name be mentioned
again between us. A barred name it has hitherto been; so let it
continue.”

“Anything you will. My earnest wish is to please you; to be worthy of
your esteem and love, Archibald,” she timidly added, her eye-lids
drooping, and her fair cheeks blushing, as she made the confession.
“There has been a feeling in my heart against your children, a sort of
jealous feeling, you can understand, because they were hers; because she
had once been your wife. I knew how wrong it was, and I have tried
earnestly to subdue it. I have, indeed, and I think it is nearly gone,”
 her voice sunk. “I constantly pray to be helped to do it; to love them
and care for them as if they were my own. It will come with time.”

“Every good thing will come with time that we may earnestly seek,” said
Mr. Carlyle. “Oh, Barbara, never forget--never forget that the only way
to ensure peace in the end is to strive always to be doing right,
unselfishly under God.”





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